Tividale F.C.

Tividale Football Club is a football club based in Tividale, near Dudley, West Midlands, England. They were established in 1954. In the 2011–12 season, under the management of Dean Whitehouse, they reached the 5th round of the FA Vase, the furthest the club has progressed in the competition.[1] They won the Midland Football Alliance in 2013–14. They now play in the Midland League Premier Division, having been relegated from the Northern Premier League Division One South at the end of the 2015–16 season.

Tividale
Full nameTividale Football Club
Nickname(s)The Dale
Founded1954
GroundThe Beeches
Tividale
West Midlands
Capacity2,800
ChairmanNeil Arnold
ManagerDave King
LeagueMidland League Premier Division
2019–20Midland League Premier Division (season abandoned)

History

Tividale (yellow shirts) playing Oadby Town in the FA Vase in 2010

Tividale F.C. was formed in 1954 as the senior branch of Tividale Hall Youth Club F.C and originally played in the Handsworth and District League, before moving on to the Warwickshire & West Midlands Alliance. In 1966 they joined the newly formed West Midlands (Regional) League Division One. In 1973 they gained promotion to the Premier Division and remained there for nearly 20 years, with a best-placed finish of 4th.

In the 1976–77 season, Tividale were the primary subject of a best-selling book, Journey to Wembley by Brian James, which charted that season's FA Cup tournament from the preliminary qualifying round to the final. It began at Tividale and focused on their progress through the competition until they were eliminated, the focus then shifting to the club that defeated them and so on till it ended with the eventual cupwinners.[2]

In 1991 the club were relegated to Division One due to no longer being able to meet the required ground standards for the top division, and these events led to a number of management and playing staff leaving the club. New manager Terry Jones was able to turn the club's fortunes around and in 1993 Tividale finished second in Division One and won promotion back into the Premier. Unfortunately in the same year the Midland Football Alliance was formed, moving the West Midlands League one step down the pyramid, so in a sense the club had not advanced.

Since their return to the Premier Division Tividale have generally been a mid-table side, although in 2001–02 they finished second, despite having three points deducted. Between 2002 and 2004 the club reached the final of the Walsall Senior Cup in three successive seasons, winning the trophy in 2003.

Ian Long joined as joint manager with Stuart Scriven in 2013. After Scriven left the club due to work commitments in 2013, Long assumed sole managership of the first team.[3] In their first season in the Northern Premier League Division One South Tividale finished in 8th position. Long left his position as manager in May 2015, and was replaced by Philip Male and Ross Thorpe as joint managers.

With the loss of the complete 201415 squad with Long, the 201516 season proved a season too long and Tividale suffered relegation from the Northern Premier League. With outside commitments taking its toll Male decided to step down after the one season and so Tividale were looking for their third manager in three seasons. Relegation meant a return to Step 5 football in the newly formed Midland Football League Premier Division. The club next appointed the prolific Stourbridge Youth team manager Dave King as Tividale manager. However, the following season saw the team suffer another relegation and a return to the West Midlands (Regional) League. In the 201718 season the club finished as runners up to Wolverhampton Sporting in the league, but the club was denied promotion. The team went one better in the 201819 season, winning the league by four points to return to the MFL Premier Division.

Ground

Tividale moved to their current ground in Packwood Road in 1974, renaming it The Beeches. This name was chosen to honour a British Waterways official who had granted the site's lease to the club. The new ground was situated in a newly developed residential street on the Tividale Hall Estate on land which had previously been inaccessible to motor vehicles and which had required the demolition of four houses in order to open up the land for development.

In 1991 a new rule was introduced by the West Midlands League that all Premier Division clubs must have floodlights. As Tividale could not afford to erect lights at The Beeches, they had no option but to step down to Division One. Floodlights were eventually erected two years later.

More recent development work has seen the building of a 200-seater stand, new changing rooms, a boardroom, and the refurbishment of the Social Club. In spring 2014 the club achieved the ground grading that allowed them to play in the Northern Premier League Division One South for the 2014–15 season.

Honours

  • Midland Football Alliance
    • Champions, 2013–14
  • West Midlands (Regional) League
    • Premier Division champions, 2010–11, 2018-19
    • Premier Division Cup winners, 2010–11
    • Premier Division runners-up, 2001–02
    • Division One champions, 1972–73
  • J.W. Hunt Cup winners 2013–14
  • Walsall Senior Cup
    • Winners, 2002–03
    • Runners-up, 2001–02, 2003–04

Club records

  • Best league performance: 8th in Northern Premier League Division One South , 2013–14[4]
  • Best FA Cup performance: 4th qualifying round, 1975–76[4]
  • Best FA Vase performance: 5th round, 2011–12[4]

Players

Current squad

As of 22 September 2017[5]

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

No. Position Player
GK Ryan Cheshire
GK Lewis Handley
GK Luke Kriskinans
DF Tom Hurdman
DF Frederick Watts
DF Daniel Bryson
DF Liam Smith
DF Benjamin Birch
DF Karl Gardner
DF Matthew Hunt
DF Bradley Wilding
DF Jamal Fuller
No. Position Player
MF Darragh Bustin
MF Lee Smith
MF TJ Munthali
MF Elliott Hartley
MF Liam Wilkinson
MF Harvey Walker
MF Curtis Cocking
MF Reece Shilvock
FW Daniel Smith
FW Tyree Clarke
FW Demetri Brown
FW Alex Bridges

References

  1. http://www.fchd.info/TIVIDALE.HTM.
  2. "Brian James, who forecast England 1966 win, dies at 87". Sports Journalists Association. 13 July 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  3. "Scriv Steps Down". tividalefc.com.
  4. Tividale at the Football Club History Database
  5. "First – Players & Coaches". Tividale F.C. Retrieved 10 September 2010.

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