The New Saints F.C.

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The New Saints of Oswestry Town & Llansantffraid
File:Thenewsaints.png
Full name The New Saints of Oswestry Town & Llansantffraid Football Club
Nickname(s) The Saints
Short name TNS
Founded 1959; 65 years ago (1959)
Ground Park Hall
Oswestry
Ground Capacity 2,000
Chairman Mike Harris
Manager Craig Harrison
League Welsh Premier League
2014–15 Welsh Premier League, 1st
Current season

The New Saints of Oswestry Town & Llansantffraid Football Club (Welsh: Clwb Pêl-droed y Seintiau Newydd), also known as the New Saints or TNS is a full-time-professional British football club representing Llansantffraid-ym-Mechain in Powys, Wales and Oswestry in Shropshire, England – the two places are 8 miles (13 km) apart. They play in the Welsh Premier League, which they have won a record nine times – including the past four seasons. From 1997 to 2006, the club was known as Total Network Solutions F.C..

TNS play at Park Hall in Oswestry after moving there from the Recreation Ground in Llansantffraid-ym-Mechain. Park Hall accommodates 1,000 seated spectators and there are plans to upgrade the ground to 3,000 capacity in the future.[1]

The club's first choice strip is green and white hooped shirts, white shorts and socks. The second choice strip is blue shirts, shorts and socks.

History

Llansantffraid F.C.

The club was formed as Llansantffraid F.C. to represent the tiny border village of Llansantffraid-ym-Mechain (population: 1,000) in 1959, and played at the Recreation Ground.

They first tasted competitive football in the Montgomeryshire Amateur Football League (then the fourth level of the Welsh football league system), winning the championship seven times. At the end of the 1989–90 season they were elected to the Central Wales League (now the Mid-Wales League) but their stay was brief, winning promotion to the Cymru Alliance as runners-up on their first attempt. Llansantffraid's meteoric rise continued and in 1992–93 they gained promotion to the League of Wales, now the Welsh Premier League, as champions and won the Welsh Intermediate Cup (formerly the Welsh Amateur Cup).

Total Network Solutions

In 1996, Llansantffraid won the Welsh Cup and qualified for the first time for the European Cup Winners' Cup. At this time a local computer company, Total Network Solutions of Oswestry, arranged a £250,000 sponsorship deal which involved incorporating the company name into the club name. As Total Network Solutions Llansantffraid F.C. they met the Polish cup winners Ruch Chorzów and earned a 1–1 draw at home before losing 0–5 in Poland. Since then they have qualified for European competition several times. The club's European home games are generally played at either Newtown's or Wrexham's stadium as their old Recreation Ground was far below UEFA's standards (though for their 2003 meeting with Manchester City, they played their home game at the 72,000-seat Millennium Stadium in Cardiff).

In 1997 the club's name was changed to Total Network Solutions F.C., being the first instance in the United Kingdom of a football club renaming itself after its sponsor's name only. Following the financial meltdown of Barry Town in the summer of 2003, TNS became the only Welsh Premier League club which had a full-time playing staff. In the summer of 2005 however Llanelli AFC also announced plans to go full-time.

Merger with Oswestry Town

In the summer of 2003 a merger with their financially weak neighbours, Oswestry Town (who, despite being across the border in England, also played in Wales), was approved by Oswestry's shareholders, although not all the shareholders were aware of the meeting. It was also approved by the Football Association of Wales (FAW) and was eventually ratified on 14 August 2003 by UEFA (which initially objected to two clubs with different governing bodies merging).

The 2003–04 season was trophyless for TNS: they were runners-up in the League of Wales to Rhyl and were losing finalists in the Welsh Cup, also to Rhyl. The next season, 2004–05, proved much more successful, as TNS won a League and Cup double.

During the 2005–06 close season[clarification needed], after newly crowned Champions League winners Liverpool were initially denied a place in the next season's competition, TNS offered to play a one-legged tie against the Reds for TNS's place in the first qualifying round.[2] After UEFA reached a compromise by which Liverpool were placed in the first qualifying round of the competition, TNS and Liverpool ended up drawn against one another anyway. The first leg was at Anfield, when Liverpool won 3–0 by a Steven Gerrard hat-trick, while in the second leg, played at Wrexham, Gerrard scored two more after coming on as a substitute, to add to one by Djibril Cissé for another 3–0 TNS defeat. Although defeated, the team drew praise from many quarters, most notably the young Northern Irish goalkeeper Gerard Doherty, of whom Rafael Benítez said, "The goalkeeper saved a lot of goals and for me he was the best player in the two games".[3]

The New Saints F.C.

In early 2006 the club's sponsor, Total Network Solutions, was taken over by British Telecom,[4] as a result of which the sponsorship arrangement lapsed at the end of the 2005–06 season and it became necessary to find a new name for the club. After a trawl for naming ideas, including an attempt to sell the naming rights on eBay, the name "The New Saints" was agreed upon as appropriate to the clubs' history — Llansantffraid was always known as "The Saints", while Oswestry had strong connections with Saint Oswald— while handily retaining the initials "TNS". A new club badge was also developed at the same time, featuring a dragon to represent Llansantffraid and a lion representing Oswestry.[5]

On 10 February 2010, the BBC reported that the New Saints had applied to play home games at Chester City's Deva Stadium in 2010–11, after having been turned down for a grant to help fund the construction of a new 1,000-seat stand at Park Hall. At the time, the mooted move was complicated by Chester City's financial struggles and by governance issues. Deva Stadium's pitch and stands lie in Wales, but outbuildings on the site that housed the club offices are in England, and Chester City were under the jurisdiction of the English Football Association.[6] Chester City were liquidated a month later due to overwhelming debts; in any event, the New Saints were granted a domestic licence by the FAW in April 2010 and remained at Park Hall for 2010–11 season. The New Saints were crowned 2009–10 Welsh Premier League Champions.

The New Saints entered the Champions League in 2010–2011. They were drawn against League of Ireland Premier Division Champions Bohemians in the Second Qualifying Round. They lost the first leg 1–0 at Dalymount Park in Dublin on 13 July 2010.[7] However they won the second leg at Park Hall 4–0 and won the tie 4–1 on aggregate, the first ever tie won by the club since their European debut in 1996.[8] Bohemians manager Pat Fenlon later labelled his team's performance as 'disgraceful' and said 'the players let the club, league and country down'.[9] The result was labelled by others as the worst result in Bohemians' 40-year European history.[10] The Saints advanced to play Belgian Pro League Champions and European Giants R.S.C. Anderlecht. The Saints were beaten 3–1 in the home leg played in Wrexham and 3–0 in the away game at the Constant Vanden Stock Stadium in Brussels. The Saints then played CSKA Sofia in the Europa League playoff round but were beaten 5–2 on aggregate. As league runners up during the 2010–11 season the Saints entered the Europa League qualifying rounds in 2011. They beat Belfast club Cliftonville 2–1 on aggregate in the First Round but were eliminated by Danish club FC Midtjylland 8–3 on aggregate in the following round.

Cultural references

"Dancing in the Streets"

On the Sky Sports football show Soccer Saturday, TNS's name was gently mocked by the programme's main presenter, Jeff Stelling. At the end of the day's classified check (in which the Welsh Premier League is always the last set of results given, and in which TNS are often alphabetically last), if TNS have played and won at home, Stelling invariably used his catchphrase "They'll be dancing in the streets of Total Network Solutions tonight!",[11] since updated to "dancing in the streets of the New Saints". Stelling's joke was also occasionally aimed at fellow Welsh side, Airbus UK in 2005–06. Stelling's joke may ultimately derive from the accidental 'they'll be dancing in the streets of Raith', claimed to have been said by football commentator Sam Leitch in the 1960s during a match played by the Kirkcaldy-based Raith Rovers, though the phrase is better known as a stock phrase of rugby commentator Bill McLaren, often stating "they'll be dancing in the streets of ..." and inserting in the name of the winning team.[12]

Other

TNS are mentioned in the song "This One's For Now" by the band Half Man Half Biscuit on the album Urge For Offal.

Futsal

The club's Futsal side has also seen success, having been winners of the inaugural FAW Futsal Cup in 2011 and reaching the final in 2012.[13]

History in European competition

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1996–97 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup QR Poland Ruch Chorzów 1–1 0–5 1–6 Symbol delete vote.svg
2000–01 UEFA Champions League 1Q Estonia FC Levadia Tallinn 2–2 0–4 2–6 Symbol delete vote.svg
2001–02 UEFA Cup QR Poland Polonia Warsaw 0–2 0–4 0–6 Symbol delete vote.svg
2002–03 UEFA Cup QR Poland Amica Wronki 2–7 0–5 2–12 Symbol delete vote.svg
2003–04 UEFA Cup QR England Manchester City 0–2 0–5 0–7 Symbol delete vote.svg
2004–05 UEFA Cup 1Q Sweden Östers IF 1–2 0–2 1–4 Symbol delete vote.svg
2005–06 UEFA Champions League 1Q England Liverpool 0–3 0–3 0–6 Symbol delete vote.svg
2006–07 UEFA Champions League 1Q Finland MYPA 0–1 0–1 0–2 Symbol delete vote.svg
2007–08 UEFA Champions League 1Q Latvia FK Ventspils 3–2 1–2 4–4(a) Symbol delete vote.svg
2008–09 UEFA Cup 1Q Lithuania FK Sūduva 0–1 0–1 0–2 Symbol delete vote.svg
2009–10 UEFA Europa League 1Q Iceland Fram Reykjavik 1–2 1–2 2–4 Symbol delete vote.svg
2010–11 UEFA Champions League 2Q Republic of Ireland Bohemians 4–0 0–1 4–1 Symbol keep vote.svg
3Q Belgium Anderlecht 1–3 0–3 1–6 Symbol delete vote.svg
2010–11 UEFA Europa League PO Bulgaria CSKA Sofia 2–2 0–3 2–5 Symbol delete vote.svg
2011–12 UEFA Europa League 1Q Northern Ireland Cliftonville 1–1 1–0 2–1 Symbol keep vote.svg
2Q Denmark FC Midtjylland 1–3 2–5 3–8 Symbol delete vote.svg
2012–13 UEFA Champions League 2Q Sweden Helsingborgs IF 0–0 0–3 0–3 Symbol delete vote.svg
2013–14 UEFA Champions League 2Q Poland Legia Warsaw 1–3 0–1 1–4 Symbol delete vote.svg
2014–15 UEFA Champions League 2Q Slovakia ŠK Slovan Bratislava 0–2 0–1 0–3 Symbol delete vote.svg
2015–16 UEFA Champions League 1Q Faroe Islands B36 Tórshavn 4–1 2–1 6–2 Symbol keep vote.svg
2Q Hungary Videoton 0–1 1–1 1–2 Symbol delete vote.svg
Notes
  • QR: Qualifying round
  • 1Q: First qualifying round
  • 2Q: Second qualifying round
  • 3Q: Third qualifying round
  • PO: Play-off round

Honours

Biggest victories and losses

  • Biggest League of Wales win: 9–1 v. Bangor City FC in April 2014
  • Biggest League of Wales defeat: 0–10 v. Barry Town in 1997

Current squad

As of 17 August 2015.

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

No. Position Player
1 England GK Paul Harrison (Captain)
2 Wales DF Simon Spender
3 England DF Chris Marriott
4 England DF Philip Baker
5 Wales DF Steve Evans
6 Wales DF Kai Edwards
7 England MF Christian Seargeant
9 New Zealand FW Greg Draper
10 Wales FW Matthew Williams
14 England MF Jamie Mullan
16 Wales DF Connell Rawlinson
No. Position Player
17 Wales DF Ryan Edwards
18 England FW Michael Wilde
19 Wales FW Jamie Reed
20 Wales FW Alex Darlington
21 Poland FW Adrian Cieslewicz
22 England FW Scott Quigley
23 Wales MF Aeron Edwards
25 Wales GK Chris Mullock
32 England DF Ryan Pryce
35 England DF Andy Wycherley

Out on loan

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

No. Position Player
24 Wales MF Ryan Kershaw (on loan at Cefn Druids)

Notable Former Players

Managers

See also

References

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  2. Welsh club offer Liverpool lifeline, RTÉ, 26 May 2005
  3. Benitez praise for TNS goalkeeper, BBC Sport Online, 19 July 2005. Retrieved 12 May 2006
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  5. http://www.footballcrests.com/clubs/the-new-saints-fc
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External links