Fixtures

Northern Premier League, Premier Division 04/27 14:00 42 맨체스터 유나이티드 vs 랜케스터 시티 - View

결과

Northern Premier League, Premier Division 04/13 14:00 40 Warrington Rylands v 랜케스터 시티 W 1-2
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 04/06 14:00 39 랜케스터 시티 v 게인즈보로 트리니티 W 2-1
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 04/01 14:00 38 랜케스터 시티 v 뱀버 브리지 W 3-2
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 03/30 15:00 37 [7] 기셀레이 AFC v 랜케스터 시티 [10] W 2-3
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 03/23 15:00 36 랜케스터 시티 v 머린 L 0-2
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 03/16 15:00 35 모르페쓰 타운 v 랜케스터 시티 L 2-0
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 03/09 15:00 20 [16] 매트록 타운 v 랜케스터 시티 [7] L 2-1
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 03/05 19:45 33 [10] 애쉬튼 v 랜케스터 시티 [6] L 5-0
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 03/02 15:00 34 랜케스터 시티 v 바스포드 Utd. W 1-0
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 02/27 19:45 28 [10] 휘트비 타운 v 랜케스터 시티 [8] D 1-1
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 02/24 15:00 33 애쉬튼 v 랜케스터 시티 - PPT.
Northern Premier League, Premier Division 02/17 15:00 32 랜케스터 시티 v 워킹턴 D 1-1

Stats

 TotalHomeAway
Matches played 48 27 21
Wins 23 14 9
Draws 11 8 3
Losses 14 5 9
Goals for 72 38 34
Goals against 68 32 36
Clean sheets 12 9 3
Failed to score 13 8 5

Wikipedia - Lancaster City F.C.

Lancaster City Football Club is an English semi-professional non-League football club based in the northern city of Lancaster, Lancashire. They currently compete in the Northern Premier League Premier Division, the seventh tier of English football, and play at Giant Axe. They are full members of the Lancashire County Football Association.

History

Two Lancaster-based clubs, Skerton F.C. (1897–1900) and Lancaster Athletic F.C. (1905–11), had competed in the Lancashire Combination but both clubs folded without completing their final season's fixtures, with Lancaster Athletic playing their final season in the West Lancashire Football League. The present club was then founded in the spring of 1911 as Lancaster Town F.C. and were admitted to Division Two of the Lancashire Combination for the start of the 1911–12 season having proved to the league and the Lancashire FA that they had no connection with the previous two clubs.

After World War I, the Combination was reduced to one division. The club finished as runners-up in 1919–20, and the following season the club made an unsuccessful bid to join the Third Division North of the Football League. Lancaster won the Combination for the first time in 1921–22 and in 1928–29 reached the first round of the FA Cup for the first time losing 3–1 at home to Lincoln City. The following year they again won the Combination whilst the first round was again reached in 1929–30, 1930–31, 1931–32 and 1933–34, losing on each occasion. Back to back league titles were won in 1934–35 and 1935–36, and in 1937 the club adopted its current name, Lancaster City F.C., after the town was awarded city status as part of King George VI's coronation celebrations.

The club continued in the Combination with varying degrees of success including an FA Cup second round appearance, losing to Gateshead, in 1947-48 and a Lancashire FA Challenge Trophy final victory in 1951–52, but by 1970 it was decided that a change was needed so for the 1970–71 season the club left the Combination to join the Northern Premier League. City again reached the second round of the FA Cup in 1972–73, losing 2–1 at Notts County and won the Lancashire FA Challenge Trophy for a sixth time in 1974–75, but after finishing seventeenth in 1981–82 the club resigned from the league and dropped into the North West Counties League when financial difficulties forced them to fold and reform. A first ever relegation followed three years later and despite only finishing thirteenth in 1986–87, City were accepted into the newly formed Division One of the Northern Premier League thanks to in no small part to ground standard and support.

In 1994–95, after several years of consolidation, and now managed by former Preston North End and Bury player Alan Tinsley, Lancaster won the Northern Premier League Presidents Cup, a first trophy in twenty years, and the following season were promoted to the Premier division as champions of Division One, also winning the Division One League Challenge Cup to complete a League and cup double. Two consecutive Northern Premier League Challenge Cup wins followed in 1999–2000 and 2000–01 under Tony Hesketh and after finishing eighth in 2003–04 the club were placed in the newly established Conference North. This was a hugely successful period for Lancaster with the club enjoying healthy league positions and several cup successes as well as reaching the FA Cup first round proper on four occasions. More financial problems led to the club folding at the end of the 2006–07 season though, suffering a 10-point deduction for going into administration and finishing bottom of the league with one point. During the summer, the club reformed and were accepted back into Division One of the Northern Premier League.

2008–09 was the final season for ex-player Barrie Stimpson, who was replaced as manager by the returning Hesketh. Lancaster lost the 2009–10 play-off final 1–0 at home to Colwyn Bay and despite another Presidents Cup Final triumph in 2011, Hesketh could not guide the club to promotion, eventually leaving in September 2012 to be replaced by ex Sunderland player Neil Wainwright. Wainwright left in February 2013 and was, in turn, replaced by former Newcastle United defender Darren Peacock, who brought in former West Ham United winger Trevor Sinclair as his assistant. Both Peacock and Sinclair left the club in September 2015, and City appointed ex player Phil Brown as manager. He led the team to a top six finish and a narrow penalties defeat in the Lancashire FA Challenge Trophy final to Chorley. Brown then took City to the 2016–17 Northern Premier League Division One league title. After a bright start to the 2017–18 season the team then struggled, finishing eighteenth, and Brown left City early in the 2018–19 season. Former Nelson and Ramsbottom United manager Mark Fell was brought in as his replacement in October 2018. With assistant manager Graham Lancashire, he guided Lancaster to safety. The COVID-19 pandemic meant both the 2019–20 and the 2020-21 league seasons were abandoned with City challenging at the higher end of the league table in both campaigns.

City got the 2021–22 season underway by winning their first silverware in four years lifting the 2019-20 Lancashire FA Challenge Trophy for the first time since 1975, beating Prestwich Heys 6–1 at the County Ground, Leyland, in a rearranged final that was played over a year late due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

랜케스터 시티는 잉글랜드 랭커셔주 랜커스터를 연고로 하는 축구 클럽으로 현재 북부 프리미어 리그에서 활동하고 있습니다. 1904년에 창단된 이 클럽은 1960년대와 1970년대에 북부 프리미어 리그에서 상당한 성공을 거두었으며, 1965년에 FA 트로피에서 우승하기도 했습니다. 그 이후로 랜케스터 시티는 상대적으로 조용한 기간을 보냈지만, 2010년대에 다시 부활하기 시작해 2018년에 북부 프리미어 리그 디비전 1 노스에서 우승을 차지했습니다.

랜케스터 시티는 까만색과 황금빛 유니폼을 입고 플레이하며, 홈 경기는 자이언츠타운을 홈 구장으로 사용합니다. 클럽의 가장 큰 라이벌은 모어컴과 애크링턴 스탠리이며, 이 세 팀 간의 경기는 항상 치열한 경쟁을 펼칩니다.

랜케스터 시티의 역대 최고 선수로는 1960년대에 활약했던 스트라이커인 조지 톰슨이 손꼽힙니다. 톰슨은 랜케스터 시티에서 100골 이상을 기록했으며, 클럽의 전설로 불리고 있습니다.

랜케스터 시티는 작은 클럽이지만, 지역 사회에 깊이 뿌리 내리고 있으며, 많은 팬들에게 사랑받고 있습니다. 클럽은 최근 몇 년 동안 좋은 성적을 거두고 있으며, 앞으로 더욱 성장할 것으로 기대됩니다.