Newport Stadium : Stadium Way : Newport International Sports Village     

Newport : South Wales : NP19 4PT

Tel: 01633 662262 : Fax: 01633 666107


        
 
Honorary President : ........... David Hando Youth Recruitment Officer: ..... Roger Skyrme
Director: ........................... Chris Blight (Chairman) Youth Team Coach : .............. James Rowberry, John White
Director: ...........................

Matt Southall

Youth Team Physio : ......... Peter White
Director: ...........................

John Collingbourne

Backroom Staff : ............. Bobby Morris
Director: ...........................

John Bowkett

Football Secretary : ........ Mike Everett
Company Secretary ............ John Allison Operations Manager: .... Phil Morgan
Financial Director ............... John Percivel Matchday Manager: ........... Rob Santwris
General Manager :............... Tim Harris Club Shop : ......... Duncan Jardine, Neil Evans
Football Manager : .............. Dean Holdsworth Match Announcer: .......... Phil Morgan, Tim Thraves
Assistant Manager: ............. Fraser Skimming Club Chaplain : .............. Rev Keith Beardmore
  Coach: ............................ Matt Bishop Photography : ................ Colin Jeremiah, Sam Shingler
Academy Director : ............ Glyn Jones Video Camera  : ............. Glyn Neale, Steve Horton
Physiotherapist : ................ John Fitzgerald Programme Editor : ........ Ray Taylor
Assistant Physiotherapist: .. Jonny Evans Amber Line Radio Team

Phil Morgan, Ray Taylor and

Tim Thraves

Kit Manager : ..................... Tony Gilbert Programme Printers : ......... Harcourt Litho Ltd

                                   Link here for details of Newport Stadium

Web Master : Colin Jeremiah.  colin_jeremiah@yahoo.co.uk         Club e.mail : office@newport-county.co.uk

 

Programme Editor : Ray Taylor  Rayncafc@aol.com


Admission Prices 2009-10: Adults £11: Senior Citizen & Full Time Student £8: Junior (under 16) £4


     
 

 
 

The 2009/2010 Squad are as follows, Left to Right back row, Jonny Evans (Assistant Physio), Martyn Giles,

Wayne Turk, Kevin Cooper, Nathan Davies, Dave Gilroy, Craig Reid, Scott Armitage, Scott Rogers,

Ricky Manship, John Fitzgerald (Physio),

Middle row, Bobby Morris (Staff), Matt Smith, Aaron Cook, Paul Cochlin, Keiron Blackburn, Glyn Thompson, Gary Colborne, Gary Warren, Paul Bignot, Sam Foley, Tony Gilbert (Kit Manager),

Front row, Kris Leek, Takumi Ake, Matthew Bishop (Coach), Dean Holdsworth (Manager),

Chris Blight (Chairman), John Bowkett (Director), Tim Harris (General Manager),

Fraser Skimming (Assistant Manager), Danny Rose, Charlie Henry.

 
 
 
 

 
 

Home Kit

Away Kit

 
 

The history of football in Newport is a remarkable story.  Frequently fans have feared for its future, but their passion through the years has ensured its survival and, just occasionally, it thrives.  There are some memorable tales to tell.

 

To start at the beginning, in the late nineteenth century incoming ironworkers first tried to establish football in the area.  It took a few years for their missionary work to take effect in a rugby stronghold, though in 1906-07, a Newport FC, with its home ground on Corporation Road, played in Division Two of the Western League, finishing as runners-up.  Economic factors forced its closure and in 1912 the first Newport County was formed, originally taking the title ‘Newport & Monmouth County AFC’. 

 

They competed in the Southern League’s Second Division prior to the First World War, playing home games at Somerton Park.  Upon the resumption of organised football in 1919-20, County were elected to Division One and this, 12 months later, became the Third Division of an expanded Football League.  Money was always in short supply though and in 1931, County became the third club from the area to lose its League membership.  Long forgotten Aberdare Athletic had been voted out four years earlier while the old Merthyr Town club failed in their re-election bid in 1930 as the economic depression hit South Wales harder than anywhere.

 

However, after a season regrouping in the Southern League, County returned to the fold in 1932, though several more seasons of struggle followed before a remarkable campaign in 1938-39 when, with Billy McCandless at the helm, they strolled to the championship, and promotion to the Second Division.  Optimism that County could flourish at this exalted level was given substance by a comfortable win against Southampton on their Division Two debut, with a home draw with Tottenham Hotspur followed by a narrow defeat at Nottingham Forest.  However, with County just above halfway in the embryonic table, world war intervened for the second time in 25 years.  Organised football was again suspended and we will never know what Newport County might have achieved if they had not been so rudely interrupted!

 

Upon the resumption in 1946-47, County were out of their depth and conceded 133 goals, 20 of them in a two game spell with a 7-2 defeat at home to West Bromwich Albion followed by a 13-0 thrashing at Newcastle in front of 52,000 Geordies.  Newport fans of that vintage preferred to recall the return game at Somerton when Newcastle were beaten 4-2 in a rare County triumph.

 

The highlight of the following seasons was the 1948-49 FA Cup run when County won 3-1 at Elland Road against Leeds United before returning to Yorkshire to win a Fourth Round replay against First Division Huddersfield Town.  That earned a glamour tie at Fratton Park against a Portsmouth side on their way to the League Championship.  County led the best team in the land 2-1 at one stage and would have earned a home replay if it had not been for a rule then allowing for extra time in the first cup meeting and Pompey scraped through 3-2.

 

County spent most of the next decade comfortably in mid-table, making the cut for the new national Third Division in 1958 when the upper halves of the northern and southern sections combined.  In 1961-62 however, county experienced more misery, finishing 12 points adrift at the bottom to drop into Division Four.  Most of the following 18 seasons were spent in the lower reaches of the basement division with four anxious but successful applications to the League’s AGM for re-election.

 

The appointment of first Colin Addison and then Len Ashurst heralded the most exciting period in the annals of Newport football as a thrilling squad was assembled who won a promotion and Welsh Cup double in 1980.  With the likes of John Aldridge and Tommy Tynan going into local folklore, County flourished in Division Three and reached the Quarter-Final of the European Cup-Winners Cup only to suffer an agonising aggregate defeat to the East Germans from Carl Zeiss Jena.

 

County beat Cardiff City at Somerton Park to go top of the Third Division on Easter Monday 1983 in front of 16,052 fans and promotion looked assured.  However, with just four points from the remaining seven games, County missed out on a dream return to the higher echelons.  The best team in their history was broken up and the club could not stop the slide towards its demise before the decade was out.  After becoming the second team to suffer automatic relegation from Division Four in 1988, County’s attempt to survive in the Football Conference ended in farcical failure as the club was first suspended and then expelled for failure to fulfil fixtures as the bailiffs moved into Somerton Park.

 

However, although supporter numbers were relatively small for the size of the community, the overwhelming desire of fans to see Newport back on the football map meant that a replacement club, Newport AFC, was formed in June 1989 and gained election to the Hellenic Football League as the first step on its intended journey back to the exclusive 92 club!

 

Football politics dictated that the Cotswolds town of Moreton-in-Marsh had to be home to the new club, nicknamed the Exiles, but a championship and league cup double secured a place in the Midland Division of the Southern League at a Somerton Park ground given a makeover by fans after a season of neglect.  Two years later it was back to Gloucestershire as the FAW refused to sanction Newport’s continued participation in the English football pyramid.  In 1994 in the High Court the Exiles won the right to return and home has since been at the council owned sports complex at Spytty Park.

 

The name Newport County AFC was restored in 1999, and in 2004 County qualified for the new tier of Conference football.  For two seasons however County fought a nail biting battle to avoid relegation back to the Southern League, though, with Peter Beadle at the helm, the 2006-07 season was much better.   County achieved a final placing of sixth in Conference South with an average league attendance of 932, an increase of 35% on the previous term and missed a promotion play-off place only on the last day of the season. 

 

That improvement continued with the club averaging exactly 1,000 in league games in 2007-08 and eliminating both Swansea City and Cardiff City on their way to the last ever final of the FAW Premier Cup. Then in front of a Newport Stadium attendance of 1,889, County beat Llanelli 1-0 to win the trophy and £100,000 in prize money.  However the league campaign tailed off badly and for the second season in succession, County missed the promotion play-offs on the season's last day and Peter Beadle's appointment as manager was terminated. 

 

Former England B international Dean Holdsworth was appointed in May 2008 and the following season was one of rebuilding.  However, County finished the season strongly with five wins and a draw from the last six games to clinch a top ten position for the third successive season and a financial restructuring during the summer of 2009 left a great mood of optimism.

 

The club continues to operate a first class football academy in partnership with the Newport City Council.  Its website and match programme have, for several seasons been acclaimed as among the best in football, and its fans continue to follow the club at home and away in substantial numbers.


                                                       

 

1989/90

 Federated Homes (Hellenic) League Champions

1989/90

 Federated Homes (Hellenic) League Cup Winners

1993/94

 Gloucestershire Senior Challenge Cup Winners

1994/95

 Beazer Homes (Southern) League, Midland Division Champions

1994/95

 Southern League Merit Cup (joint holders)

1996/97

 Gwent Senior Cup Winners

1997/98

 Gwent Senior Cup Winners

1998/99

 Gwent Senior Cup Winners

1998/99

 Dr. Martens League (Midland Divison) Runners up

1998/99

 Southern League Merit Cup (joint holders)

1999/00

 Herefordshire Senior Cup Winners

1999/00

 Gwent Senior Cup Winners

2000/01

 Gwent Senior Cup Winners

2001/02

 Gwent Senior Cup Winners

2002/03

 FAW Premier Cup Runners up

2002/03

 Foresters South West Counties Youth League Champions

2002/03

 Herefordshire Youth Cup Winners

2003/04

 Foresters South West Counties Youth League Champions

2003/04

 Gwent Senior Cup Winners

2004/05

 Gwent Senior Cup Winners

2004/05

 FAW Youth Cup Winners

2005/06

 South West Counties Youth League Champions

2005/06

 Welsh Youth League East League Champions

2006/07

 FAW Premier Cup Runners up

2006/07

 Herefordshire Youth Cup Winners

2007/08

 FAW Premier Cup Winners

2007/08

 South West Counties Youth League Champions

2008/09

 South West Counties Youth League Runners up
 

                       

 

    Date

 League

P

W

D

L

F

A

Pts

Pos

1989-90

 Hellenic League

34

23

6

5

71

28

75

1st

1990-91

 Beazer Homes (Midland) 

42

19

6

17

54

46

63

7th

1991-92

 Beazer Homes (Midland) 

42

15

13

14

72

60

58

10th

1992-93

 Beazer Homes (Midland) 

42

23

8

11

73

58

77

5th

1993-94

 Beazer Homes (Midland) 

42

26

9

7

84

37

87

4th

1994-95

 Beazer Homes (Midland) 

42

29

8

5

106

39

95

1st

1995-96

 Beazer Homes (Premier) 

42

13

13

16

53

59

52

14th

1996-97

 Beazer Homes (Premier) 

42

 9

13

20

40

60

40

21st

1997-98

 Dr. Martens League (Southern)

42

21

6

15

83

65

69

7th

1998-99

 Dr. Martens League (Midland)

42

26

7

9

92

51

85

2nd

1999-00

 Dr. Martens League (Premier)

42

16

18

8

67

50

66

7th

2000-01

 Dr. Martens League (Premier)

42

17

10

15

70

61

61

10th 

2001-02

 Dr. Martens League (Premier)

42

19

9

14

61

48

66

5th 

2002-03

 Dr. Martens League (Premier)

42

15

11

16

53

52

56

10th 

2003-04

 Dr. Martens League (Premier)

42

15

14

13

52

50

59

7th 

2004-05

 Nationwide Conference South

42

13

11

18

56

61

50

18th

2005-06

 Nationwide Conference South 42 12 8 22 50 67 44 18th

2006-07

 Nationwide Conference South 42 21 7 14 83 57 70 6th

2007-08

 Blue Square South 42 18 12 12 64 49 66 9th

2008-09

 Blue Square South 42 16 11 15 50 51 59 10th
 

                                       

 

 Record Attendance:

2546

 AFC Wimbledon

 Conference South

 09/08/08

 Record Home Win:

8-0

 Ruislip Park

 Hellenic League

 17/02/90

 Record Away Win:

6-0

 Bloxwich Town

 Southern League

 12/12/98

 Record Defeat:

1-6

 Stafford Rangers

 Southern League

 06/01/96

 Unbeaten sequence:

20

  

 Conference South

 21/03/09 to 27/10/09

 Consecutive wins:

14

  

 Southern League

 16/11/94 to 21/01/95

 Unbeaten at home

31

  

 Southern League

 25/04/98 to 11/12/99

 

                    

 Moreton in Marsh

594

v

 Pegasus Juniors

 Hellenic League

19/08/89

 Somerton Park

2374

v

 Moreton Town

 Friendly

13/08/90

 Somerton Park

2271

v

 Redditch Utd

 Beazer Homes League

22/08/90

 Gloucester Meadow Park

810

v

 Sutton Utd

 FA Cup 4th Q Rd

24/10/92

 Newport Stadium

4616

v

 Swansea City

 FA Cup 1st Round

11/11/06

 

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