Cockburn City SC

Cockburn City
Full name Cockburn City Soccer Club
Nickname(s) The Burn
Founded 1929
Ground Dalmatinac Park
Ground Capacity 2,000
Chairman Heidi Lazzaro
Manager Marc Anthony
League NPL Western Australia
Website Club home page

Cockburn City Soccer Club is an Australian soccer club currently playing in the National Premier Leagues Western Australia. They play their home games at Dalmatinac Park and train at Beale Park.

History

Cockburn City Soccer Club’s origin goes back to 1929 when they were known as Spearwood Rovers, in 1966 they amalgamated with Britannia to become Cockburn United. This club split in the early 1960s to become two separate clubs, Spearwood Dalmatinacs and Cockburn United. The two clubs enjoyed success in the period after, with facilities close to each other at Dalmatinac Park and Beale Park. The clubs reunited in 1998 under the negotiations of Angelko Petkovich and John Mijacika and became Cockburn City Soccer Club. The facilities at both parks are still used by the club's Junior and Senior teams.

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
1 Australia GK Struan Herd
3 Malaysia MF Shazalee Ramlee
4 Scotland DF Euen Grant
5 England DF Alan Carroll
6 Australia FW Ryan Haslett
7 Australia MF Jesse Fuller
8 Australia MF David Araya
9 Republic of Ireland MF Eamon McNelis (captain)
10 England FW Matty Barlow
11 Australia MF Devon Gibson
12 Myanmar MF Feisal Zaw
No. Position Player
13 Australia MF Blake Adams
14 Republic of Ireland MF Conor Kavanagh
16 Australia MF Julian Teles
17 Australia MF Ross Diamond
18 Scotland FW Liam Murray
19 Australia MF Kim Mengbon
23 Australia GK Dejan Aleksic
TBA Australia DF Jonathan Corness
TBA South Sudan DF Friday Zico

Current coaching and backroom staff

League Positions

(Spearwood/Fremantle Dalmatinac)

(Cockburn United/Spearwood Rovers)

(Cockburn City)

Ref:[1] [2]

References

  1. Kreider, R.N. (2012) Paddocks to Pitches. The Definitive History of Western Australian Football. Published by SportsWest Media
  2. http://www.foxsportspulse.com/comp_info.cgi?c=1-8273-0-201262-0&pool=1001&a=LADDER

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, November 14, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.