New Brighton A.F.C. (New Zealand)

New Brighton A.F.C. is a soccer club in Christchurch, New Zealand. The original New Brighton Association Football Club was founded in 1924 but went into hiatus eight years later. The club was re-founded 27 years later in 1959.

New Brighton
Full nameNew Brighton Association Football Club
Nickname(s)The Seasiders[1]
Founded1924 re-formed 1959
GroundBexley Park, Christchurch
League?

The team entered the second division of the new Southern League in 1968, winning the league to gain promotion to the top flight. The following season saw their best-ever performance in the Chatham Cup, with them reaching the final only to lose to Auckland's Eastern Suburbs AFC. 1971 saw the team win the championship, gaining them entry to the New Zealand National Soccer League. The competed in this league for six seasons, spending much of that time in the bottom half of the table. Their best finish was third in 1974. They were relegated from the league in 1977.

The team gained new clubrooms in Bexley Road in 1979, which are still the club's location.

Prominent players

[William Brown]. [Richard Wilson] Goal keeper also All White Goal Keeper and the reason NZ made its first world cup final [Junior Team unbeaten from 1975 - 1981 Coached by John Brown] .. players Paul Harrison, Ronald Prinz, John Fairless, Steven Daley. Greg Cane. Daran Chinnery, Stephen Rowe, Lindsey Griffiths, Stephen Trowbridge Paul Stanley .Glynn McDonald, Karl Van Voorst 7 of the above players represented Canterbury throughout the grades Paul Harrison captained all teams and received his all grades Rep Cap .. and went on to play for the All Whites ..

gollark: You are!
gollark: Heavserver has about 5 bots with "bump" capability.
gollark: Actually it's closed timelike curves.
gollark: Done.
gollark: Idea: get ahead of the times by getting COVID-22.
  1. Hilton, T. (1991) An association with soccer. Auckland: The New Zealand Football Association. ISBN 0-473-01291-X. p. 88


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.