Hendon F.C.

"Claremont Road" redirects here. For the street in London demolished in 1994, see M11 link road protest.
For the predecessor to the current club, see Hendon F.C. (1876).
Hendon
Full name Hendon Football Club
Nickname(s) The Greens, The Dons
Founded 1908 (1908)
(as Christ Church Hampstead)
Ground Earlsmead Stadium, South Harrow (Groundshare at Harrow Borough F.C.)
Ground Capacity 3,070
Chairman Simon Lawrence
Manager Gary McCann
League Isthmian League Premier Division
2015–16 Isthmian League Premier Division, 19th
The Hampstead Town side of 1919–20

Hendon Football Club is an English semi-professional football club based in Hendon in the London Borough of Barnet. The club is currently competing in the Ryman Isthmian Football League Premier Division with Earlsmead Stadium in South Harrow serving as their home ground.

History

Prior to the founding of the present club, there was a previous club with the same name which appeared in the FA Cup between 1877 and 1887. One of the former club's players, Charles Plumpton Wilson made two appearances for England in 1884.

The current club was originally formed as Christchurch Hampstead in 1908 and joined the Third Division of the Finchley & District League, which they won at the first attempt, earning promotion to Division Two.[1] At the start of the 1909–10 season the club were renamed Hampstead Town. They also won Division Two at the first attempt, earning promotion to the First Division, which they won in 1911–12.[1] The club then joined the London League and Middlesex League, before being elected to the Athenian League in 1914. However, the 1914–15 season was postponed due to World War I.[2]

In 1926 the club was renamed Hampstead, before becoming Golders Green in 1933.[3] In 1946 the club adopted its current name.[4] In 1952–53 the club won its first Athenian League title.[5] In 1954–55 they reached the final of the FA Amateur Cup, losing 2–0 to Bishop Auckland.[5] They went on to win the Athenian League title again in 1955–56, and reached a second Amateur Cup final in 1959–60, defeating Kingstonian 2–1. A third Athenian League title was achieved in 1960–61.

In 1963 the club switched to the Isthmian League, and have remained in the same division since. In 1964–65 the club won the Isthmian League and Amateur Cup double, defeating Whitby Town 3–1. They reached the final of the Cup again the following season, but lost 3–1 to Wealdstone. After winning their third Amateur Cup with a 2–0 win against Enfield in 1971–72, a second Isthmian League title was won in 1972–73. The following season they reached the third round of the FA Cup, where they drew Newcastle United. After holding Newcastle to a 1–1 draw at St James' Park, Hendon lost 4–0 in a replay played at Watford's Vicarage Road.[5] In 1975–76 the club defeated a Football League club for the first time, beating Reading 1–0 in the first round, before losing to Swindon Town in the second round.[5]

At the end of the 2005–06 season the club finished in the relegation zone, but were reprieved after Canvey Island's resignation from the Football Conference. In 2008–09 the club left its Claremont Road ground, initially groundsharing at nearby non-League clubs, before agreeing a three-year groundshare agreement with Wembley in 2009.

Stadium

Claremont Road

Hendon currently play their home games at Earlsmead, Carlyon Avenue, South Harrow, in a groundshare agreement with Harrow Borough.

Until 26 September 2009, Hendon played in the suburb of Cricklewood, within the London Borough of Barnet, at a ground simply known by the local road name, Claremont Road. The ground was officially opened on 18 September 1926 before an FA Cup tie with Berkhamsted. William Harbrow Ltd constructed the stand and the original bench seats were only replaced in 1993 when the club received some bucket seats from Watford's Vicarage Road. Claremont Road became such a popular venue it went on to host three England Amateur International matches and a Great Britain v West Germany qualifying match for the Olympic Games. The attendance record of 9,000 was set for the visit of Northampton Town in a FA Cup tie in 1952.

In the 1990s, Claremont Road served as an occasional home for the nomadic rugby league team then known as London Crusaders. It was also a popular location for production companies, with over 30 films, television programmes and adverts being shot there, including Nuts TV and the home ground of Fash FC.

Chairman Ivor Arbiter put in hand plans to move the club from the increasingly decrepit Claremont Road ground. The land where the stadium, clubhouse and banqueting suites stand was put on the market, to be sold for housing, while the plans were put in place to move the club to the Barnet Copthall Athletics Stadium. The move, however, stalled for a number of reasons, the most compelling of which was a deed of covenant preventing the stadium and associated buildings from being used for any other purpose than football or being returned to park land (the ground is surrounded by Claremont Park). The validity of the covenant, regarding its relevance in the modern era was challenged by Barnet Council and the matter is in the hands of the Lands Registry Commission, who will make the final decision on whether the covenant can be lifted. The cost of a move to Barnet Copthall was significantly underestimated, and, instead of £300,000 as originally thought, the figure was subsequently estimated to exceed £500,000, causing the planned move to be abandoned.

In 2013, Claremont Road made the headlines once more as members of the local police and the immigration authority had to evict people living on the site without permission to do so.[6]

The ground was sold to a property developer for approaching £20 million. It had been assumed that the last match would have taken place in April 2006 but the fans and the club enjoyed a stay of execution until September 2008 when after 81 years, the club were forced out. After the closure of Claremont Road, Hendon's home games were played at Northwood's Chestnut Avenue, Staines Town's Wheatsheaf Road (both during 2008-09 season), Wembley's Vale Farm (for four years since 2009-10 season) and Harrow Borough's Earlsmead ground (for three years since 2013-14 season).[7]

Current squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
England GK Joe Wright
England DF Elliott Brathwaite
England DF James Fisher
England DF Sam Flegg
England DF Charlie Kuehn
England DF Kevin Maclaren
England DF Chris Seeby
England DF Hassan Sulaiman
England DF Luke Tingey
England DF Mason Welch-Turner (dual registration with Egham Town)
England MF Scott Cousins (player/coach)
Senegal MF Dave Diedhiou
England MF Wesley Fonguck (on loan from Barnet)
England MF Courtney Harris
England MF Casey Maclaren
England MF Max McCann
England MF Carl McCluskey
No. Position Player
England MF Sam Murphy
England MF Finbarr Robins
England MF Russell Short
England MF Scott Shulton
England MF Oliver Sprague
England MF Tony Taggart
England FW Brandon Adams (on work experience from Queens Park Rangers)
Morocco FW Belal Aite-Ouakrim
Algeria FW Mahrez Battache
England FW Jake Cass
France FW Ismael Ehui (dual registration with Hayes & Yeading United)
England FW Ryan Gondoh
Ghana FW Kezie Ibe
England FW Ben Pattie (on loan from Queens Park Rangers)
England FW Omar Vassell (dual registration with Northwood)
England FW Adam Wallace

Backroom staff

Position Name
Manager England Gary McCann
Assistant Manager England Freddie Hyatt
Player/Coach England Scott Cousins
Goalkeeping Coach England Paul Faulkner
Sports Therapist England Mark Findley

Former players

Hendon's former players include a number who in recent years have gone on to play as professionals in The Football League or Premier League. Notable names include Iain Dowie, Phil Gridelet, Jermaine Darlington and Peter Taylor

Looking back further, England's three highest capped amateur internationals since the war were all Hendon players. Rod Haider leads the way with 65 caps, followed by goalkeeper John Swannell (61) and Mike Pinner (52). Peter Deadman (40) and Laurie Topp (32) also made the top ten list of cap winners for the amateur side. Gold Coast/Ghana international E.B. Wallace-Johnson turned out for Hendon in the 1951–52 season. Meanwhile, Denis Compton, born just two miles from Claremont Road, played for the club before leaving for Arsenal where he was to become one of England's most famous sportsmen, playing for his country at both football and cricket. Leslie Compton was also with the club before following his brother to Highbury. Miles Spector, who had played outside left for England Amateur XI and Chelsea while still a pupil at Hendon School in the early 1950s, went on to play regularly for Hendon.

Benjamin Odeje was the first black footballer to represent England at any level.[8] He played in five schoolboy internationals, making his debut against Northern Ireland at Wembley in 1971.

In recent years former professionals Byron Bubb, Frank Sinclair, Isaiah Rankin, Michael Bryan, Junior Lewis, Darren Currie, Michael Duberry , Kezie Ibe .

Honours

Club records

Former players

1. Players that have played/managed in the Football League or any foreign equivalent to this level (i.e. fully professional league).
2. Players with full international caps.
3. Players that hold a club record or have captained the club.

References

  1. 1 2 History Hendon FC
  2. Hampstead Town at the Football Club History Database
  3. Hampstead at the Football Club History Database
  4. Golders Green at the Football Club History Database
  5. 1 2 3 4 Hendon at the Football Club History Database
  6. "Shanty Town sham: Romanians evicted from squalid suburban site are offered a choice - free flights back home or move to the next camp". Daily Mail (London).
  7. "Hendon to ground share at Harrow Borough". Harrow Borough F.C. 4 September 2012. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  8. Ashdown, Marc (24 May 2013). "First black England player revealed to be Benjamin Odeje". BBC London News. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  9. "Memorandum Of Procedures For Dealing With Misconduct Occurring". Docstoc.com. 2010-04-24. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  10. RussWWFC (2012-04-19). "The Wycombe Wanderer: Metropolitan Police FC - Imber Court". Footygrounds.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  11. 2E0MCA Martin Addison+ Add Contact (2011-05-10). "Wingate & Finchley 3 vs Hendon FC 1 in the London Senior Cup | Flickr - Photo Sharing!". Flickr. Retrieved 2013-04-09.

External links

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