List of A.F.C. Fylde seasons

A.F.C. Fylde, a professional association football club based in Wesham in the Borough of Fylde, Lancashire, England, was founded in 1988.[1] They were originally named Kirkham & Wesham as a result of a merger between Kirkham Town and Wesham Football Clubs. The club assumed Kirkham Town's place in Division One of the West Lancashire League for the 1988–89 season. The following season they finished bottom of the league table and were relegated to Division Two. In 1993 they were promoted back into Division One but were relegated again after a two-season spell. The club finished as runners-up in 1996 to achieve promotion after one season. Kirkham & Wesham's third spell in Division One, which was renamed Premier Division in 1998, was successful as they spent 11 seasons in the division, winning the title seven times, including the 2007 title where they were allowed to be promoted into the North West Counties Football League (NWC) in their Division Two for the 2007–08 season.[2]

The club finished as runners-up in the division and achieved promotion to the Premier Division. Also during this season they entered the FA Vase for the first time and won the competition defeating Lowestoft Town 2–1 in the final.[3] At the end of the season the club adopted the new name A.F.C. Fylde.[4] In 2009 Fylde achieved their third successive promotion by winning the North West Counties Premier Division title, they were promoted into the Northern Premier League Division One North. Fylde were unable to successfully defend the FA Vase losing 2–1 in the fourth round to Needham Market. The club were entered into the FA Cup qualifying rounds for the first time in the 2008–09 season, losing to Sheffield in the preliminary round. The 2009–10 season saw the club play in the FA Trophy for the first time and the 2010–11 season they were runners-up in the promotion play-offs. Their third season in Division One North saw them win the championship title and were promoted into the Premier Division.

The club spent two seasons in the Premier Division qualifying for the play-offs in both, in the first season play-offs they were eliminated in the semi-finals by Hednesford Town in a penalty shoot-out; in the second they defeated Worksop Town in the semi-final and Ashton United in the final on penalties to achieve promotion to the Conference North.[5] In their first season in the Conference North they finished as runners-up in the league only two points behind champions Barrow and automatic promotion, in the play-offs they were eliminated by Guiseley in the two-legged semi-final 3–1 on aggregate. The following season the Conference North was renamed National League North.[6] The club's third place finish meant they qualified for their fourth consecutive play-offs, they reached the final but were runners-up to North Ferriby United.[7] Fylde won the 2016–17 National League North title and were promoted in the National League, the highest level of the National League System and fifth-highest of the overall English football league system.[8]

Fylde finished in seventh-place in their first National League season and qualified for their sixth play-offs tournament, this time losing to Boreham Wood in the quarter-final.[9] In the 2018–19 season they finished in fifth-place and once again qualified for the play-offs, beating Harrogate Town in the quarter-final and Solihull Moors in the semi-final before losing to Salford City in the final.[10] Also during this season the club reached the 2019 FA Trophy Final, their first FA Trophy final, where they played National League champions Leyton Orient and defeated them 1–0 to win the competition.[11][12][13]

Key

Seasons

Season League record FA Cup FA Trophy Other
Division Tier P W D L F A Pts Pos Competition Result
1988–89 WL Div 1321241651564011th
1989–90 WL Div 1 34632531752118th
1990–91 WL Div 2381471751704915th
1991–92 WL Div 2341391261674810th
1992–93 WL Div 2 34161265638603rd
1993–94 WL Div 1341371446604613th
1994–95 WL Div 1 34762133792716th
1995–96 WL Div 2 3423927522782nd
1996–97 WL Div 134991640613614th
1997–98 WL Div 1342068654463[lower-alpha 1]4th
1998–99 WL Premier[lower-alpha 2]11302055863362[lower-alpha 1]4th
1999–2000 WL Premier113024339822751st
2000–01 WL Premier112822519024711st
2001–02 WL Premier113022629020721st
2002–03 WL Premier113020288743622nd
2003–04 WL Premier113025508726801st
2004–05 WL Premier113025329417781st
2005–06 WL Premier113025509619801st
2006–07 WL Premier 113022626219721st
2007–08 NWC Div 2 103424558831772nd FA VaseW
2008–09 NWC Premier 942335412235104 1st PREFA VaseR4
2009–10 NPL Div 1N8421581967795313th QR2QR3
2010–11 NPL Div 1N844249119159815th PREPREPlay-offsRU[lower-alpha 3]
2011–12 NPL Div 1N 84231659029991st QR2QR1
2012–13 NPL Premier742236139351755thR1 QR3Play-offsSF[lower-alpha 4]
2013–14 NPL Premier 74628999741933rd QR2QR3Play-offs W[lower-alpha 5]
2014–15 Conference North642251079343852nd R1R3Play-offsSF[lower-alpha 6]
2015–16 National North[lower-alpha 7]642229117653753rdR1 R3Play-offsRU[lower-alpha 8]
2016–17 National North 642261061096088 1st QR2R1
2017–18 National League5462013138256737thR2 R1Play-offsQF[lower-alpha 9]
2018–19 National League546221597241815th QR4 WPlay-offsRU[lower-alpha 10]
2019–20 National League 5379121644603923rd[lower-alpha 11] R3R4

Notes

  1. The club were deducted three points.
  2. Division One was renamed Premier Division after league re-organisation.
  3. Beat Skelmersdale United 1–0 in the semi-final before losing 2–0 to Chorley in the 2011 Northern Premier League Division One North play-off Final.
  4. Lost in the play-off semi-final to Hednesford Town 3–1 in a penalty shoot-out after the match ended 3–3.
  5. Promoted to Conference North via the play-offs, beating Worksop Town 3–1 in the semi-final and Ashton United in a 4–3 penalty shoot-out in the 2014 Northern Premier League Premier Division play-off Final (the match had ended 1–1).
  6. Lost in the play-off semi-final to Guiseley 3–1 on aggregate.
  7. The Football Conference was renamed the National League; the North and South divisions were also renamed National League North and National League South respectively.[6]
  8. Beat Harrogate Town 2–1 on aggregate in the semi-final before losing 2–1 to North Ferriby United in the 2016 National League North play-off Final.
  9. Lost in the play-off quarter-final to Boreham Wood 2–1.[9]
  10. Beat Harrogate Town 3–1 in the quarter-final and Solihull Moors in the semi-final, before losing 3–0 to Salford City in the 2019 National League play-off Final.[10]
  11. The 2019–20 National League was curtailed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with league positions, promotions and relegations decided on a points-per-game basis.
gollark: Perhaps it would be less bad if it was focused on "meme science" or something like you said.
gollark: Yes, to "terrible memes" or something, which is hardly likely to make it better.
gollark: Rebrand the channel, I mean.
gollark: No, that's just removing all the "bad" stuff manually.
gollark: Maybe it *would* be possible to improve the quality through rebranding and relabelling of it somehow.

References

  1. "Club History". A.F.C. Fylde. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  2. Britt, Jamie (21 July 2016). "The rise of AFC Fylde". It's Round and It's White. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  3. George, Ricky (12 May 2008). "Kirkham & Wesham win FA Vase". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  4. "Kirkham & Wesham 2-1 Lowestoft T". BBC Sport. 11 May 2008. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  5. "AFC Fylde vs Ashton United". A.F.C. Fylde. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  6. "Football Conference to be renamed as National League". The Times. 6 April 2015. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  7. Foster, Richard (15 July 2016). "How North Ferriby's village football team made it to the National League". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  8. Chisnall, David (25 April 2017). "AFC Fylde celebrate in style after clinching promotion to the National League as champions". itv.com. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  9. "Boreham Wood 2–1 AFC Fylde". BBC Sport. 3 May 2018. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  10. Ames, Nick (11 May 2019). "Salford City beat AFC Fylde to win first promotion to Football League". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  11. Stevens, Rob (19 May 2019). "AFC Fylde 1–0 Leyton Orient". BBC Sport. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  12. Veevers, Nicholas (19 May 2019). "A stunning free-kick from hometown hero Danny Rowe sees AFC Fylde win the FA Trophy". The Football Association. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  13. McVeigh, Niall (19 May 2019). "Danny Rowe sinks Leyton Orient to seal FA Trophy triumph for AFC Fylde". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
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