Kettering Town F.C.
Kettering Town Football Club is a football club based in Burton Latimer, Northamptonshire, England. They are currently members of the and play at Latimer Park. Kettering were the first club to wear sponsorship on their shirts in 1976, and have scored more goals in the FA Cup than any other club.
History
The club was established in 1872 under the name Kettering Football Club. They joined the Football League (1889)|Midland League] in 1892 and were champions of the league in 1895β96, a season which also saw them beat two Football League clubs in the FA Cup; a 2β1 win over Loughborough in the third qualifying round was followed by a 2β1 win at Leicester Fosse in the fourth qualifying round before they lost 2β1 at Newton Heath in the first round. The club then also entered a team into the new United League, which they left in 1899. After winning the Midland League again in 1899β1900, the club applied for election to the Football League. However, they received only two votes and failed to gain entry to the League. Instead, the club joined Division One of the Southern League. In the 1900β01 FA Cup they reached the second round, beating Football League opponents Burton Swifts and Chesterfield before losing 5β0 at Middlesbrough.After finishing bottom of Division One of the Southern League in 1903β04, Kettering dropped into the Northamptonshire League, where the reserve team had been playing. They won the league at the first attempt and were runners-up in the next three seasons. In 1909 the club rejoined the Southern League, playing in Division Two B, but also continued to enter the first team into the Northamptonshire League for another season; they went on to finish the 1909β10 season as runners-up in both leagues. League reorganisation saw them placed in Division Two of the Southern League for the following season.
In 1912 Kettering left the Southern League again, transferring to the Central Alliance. They played in the Alliance until returning to the Southern League in 1923, where they were placed in the Eastern Division. In 1924 the club were renamed Kettering Town after becoming a limited company. They were runners-up in the Eastern Division in 1924β25, and after finishing fourth in 1926β27 the club applied for Football League membership again, receiving only one vote. They were Eastern Division champions the following season and went on to win the overall Southern League championship, beating Bristol City Reserves 5β0 in a play-off. Another attempt at Football League membership saw them receive only three votes. After retaining the Eastern Division title in 1928β29 the club lost the championship play-off 4β2 to Plymouth Argyle Reserves. In the subsequent Football League elections they received only one vote.
In 1930 the club joined the Birmingham & District League, taking the place of their reserve team. However, after a single season the club dropped back into the Northamptonshire League. They were Northamptonshire League runners-up in 1932β33, after which they left to join the Central Combination. The club rejoined the Northamptonshire League, now named the United Counties League, in 1935 and were runners-up in their first season back in the league. They went on to win the league in 1938β39. In 1946 the club rejoined the Birmingham & District League and were league champions in 1947β48 and runners-up the following season. In 1950 they rejoined the Southern League.
Kettering were Southern League champions in 1956β57, after which they applied for Football League membership again, failing to receive a single vote. Despite only finishing eighth the following season the club received one vote in the Football League elections, a result that was to be repeated every year until 1961. In 1958 the Southern League was restructured, with Kettering placed in the North West Division. They were North West Division runners-up in 1958β59, earning a place in the Premier Division as the league was restructured again in 1959. However, they finished bottom of the Premier Division the following season and were relegated to Division One. The club won Division One at the first attempt and were promoted back to the Premier Division. Another attempt at Football League membership in 1962 saw the club fail to receive a vote.
At the end of the 1963β64 season Kettering were relegated to Division One again. Further unsuccessful attempts were made at Football League membership in 1967 and 1969, but they failed to win a vote on either occasion. After four seasons in the Division One, they were runners-up in 1967β68, earning promotion back to the Premier Division. In the 1968β69 FA Cup the club reached the third round, knocking out non-League clubs Waterlooville and Dartford before losing 2β1 to Bristol Rovers in a third round replay. They were relegated in 1970β71, this time to Division One North. However, the club won Division One North the following season and went onto win the Premier Division title in 1972β73. Following their league title, they applied for Football League membership, this time receiving 12 votes, still well below the 26 received by Darlington, the lowest ranked successful club. The following season saw them receive 16 votes, finishing as the highest-ranked non-League club and only five votes behind Fourth Division Workington. In 1975 the club received 20 votes, again the top-ranked non-League club, but this time eight votes behind Workington. Another application in 1976 saw them fall behind Yeovil Town.
In 1975 Northern Irish international Derek Dougan was appointed player-manager and business manager. He negotiated a four figure shirt sponsorship with Kettering Tyres, which was the first such deal in England. After its use in the Southern League Premier Division match against Bath City on 24 January 1976 the FA demanded that the club remove the sponsor's logo threatening a fine of Β£1000, and were not impressed when Dougan initially attempted to circumvent the FA's demands by shortening the branding 'Kettering Tyres' to simply 'Kettering T', claiming the T stood for "Town". The logo was removed, though in June 1977 the FA decreed that a 2.5 square inch logo would be permitted in the future provided it was not "detrimental to the image of the game".
In 1976β77 Kettering reached the third round of the FA Cup again, beating Football League club Oxford United in the first round and non-League Tooting & Mitcham in the second round, before losing 3β2 at home to Colchester United in the third. The following season saw them reach the final of the FA Trophy, where they lost 2β0 to Stafford Rangers at Wembley. The club applied for the final time in 1979 after finishing as runners-up in the Southern League's Premier Division, by which time only two non-League clubs were allowed to enter the ballot, but they finished last behind Northern Premier League runners-up Altrincham. In 1979 the club were founder members of the Alliance Premier League, a single national division at the top of the non-League pyramid. They were runners-up in 1980β81 and again in 1988β89, a season which saw them reach the fourth round of the FA Cup; after beating Dartford in the first round, they defeated Football League opposition Bristol Rovers in the second round and Halifax Town in the third, before losing 2β1 at First Division Charlton Athletic in the fourth round.
Kettering were Conference runners-up again in 1993β94 and 1998β99. In 1999β2000 the club reached the final of the FA Trophy for a second time, losing 3β2 to Kingstonian in one of the last matches played at the old Wembley Stadium. They were relegated to the Southern League Premier Division at the end of the 2000β01 season, but won the division the following season, earning promotion back to the Football Conference. However, they finished bottom of the Conference in 2002β03 and were relegated again, this time of the Premier Division of the Isthmian League. A ninth-place finish in 2003β04 saw the club placed in the new Conference North for the 2004β05 season. A fourth-place finish led to them qualifying for the promotion play-offs, in which they beat Droylsden 2β1 in the semi-finals before losing 3β2 to Altrincham in the final. In 2006β07 the club were Conference North runners-up, but lost to 4β2 on aggregate Farsley Celtic in the play-off semi-finals. The following season saw them win the Conference North, earning promotion to the Conference National.
In the 2008β09 FA Cup Kettering reached the fourth round for a second time; after beating Lincoln City 2β1 in a first round replay and Notts County by the same score in a second round replay, the club defeated Eastwood Town in the third round. In the fourth they were drawn at home to Premier League club Fulham, where they lost 4β2. After losing their Rockingham Road ground in 2011, the club went into administration during the 2011β12 season, finishing bottom of the Conference National and were demoted two divisions to the Premier Division of the Southern League. They finished bottom of the Southern League Premier Division the following season and were relegated to Division One Central. A third-place finish in the division in 2013β14 saw them qualify for the play-offs, but after beating Daventry Town 1β0 in the semi-finals, they lost 3β2 to Slough Town in the final. In 2014β15 the club won the Division One Central title, earning promotion to the Premier Division. Following a fourth-place finish in the Premier Division in 2017β18, they lost 3β1 to Slough Town in the play-off semi-finals.
League reorganisation saw Kettering placed in the Premier Division Central for the 2018β19 season. The club went on to win the division, earning promotion to the National League North. In 2022β23 they finished fourth-from-bottom of the National League North and were relegated back to the Premier Division Central of the Southern League. In 2024β25 they beat county rivals Northampton Town 2β1 in the first round of the FA Cup, before losing 2β1 to Doncaster Rovers in the second round. The season saw them finish second in the league, going on to beat Harborough Town on penalties in the play-off semi-finals before losing 4β2 to AFC Telford United in the final.
Reserve team
Kettering reserves joined the Leicestershire Senior League in 1894, where they played for two seasons before joining Division One of the Northamptonshire League in 1896, winning it at the first attempt. They won the league again the following season, but were replaced by first team in 1904 and dropped into Division Two. When the first team left the league in 1910, the reserves took their place in Division One. In 1929β30 the reserves played in both the Northamptonshire League and the Birmingham & District League, with the first team replacing the reserves in the latter the following season. They finished bottom of Division One of the Northamptonshire League in 1930β31 and were relegated to Division Two as the first team rejoined the Northamptonshire League. The reserves were Division Two champions in 1932β33, and the following season saw them playing in the league's single division as the first team had left.The reserves left the renamed United Counties League in 1935 when they were replaced by the first team. In 1945 they rejoined the Leicestershire Senior League, where they played for two seasons, also entering the United Counties League in 1946 after the first team left. In 1956 the reserves began playing in Division One South of the Central Alliance, while still playing in the United Counties League. They left the United Counties League in 1960 and the Central Alliance in 1961, when they rejoined the United Counties League. However, they left the United Counties League after a single season, instead joining the Metropolitan League, where they played for two seasons. In 1966 the reserves returned to the United Counties League. They left the league again in 1972, joining the Leicestershire Senior League in 1975. However, they withdrew from the league during the 1976β77 season.
Ground
The club initially played at North Park, before moving to Green Lane and then Rockingham Road in 1897. In 2011, the club moved to Nene Park in Irthlingborough, but were forced to move to Steel Park in Corby in 2012. They moved to Burton Park Wanderers' Latimer Park in Burton Latimer the following year.Club officials
Managerial history
- 1956β1957: Tommy Lawton
- 1957β1958: Harry Mather
- 1958β1961: Jack Froggatt
- 1961β1963: Wally Akers
- 1963β1964: Tommy Lawton
- 1964β1965: Dick White
- 1965: George Swindin
- 1965β1971: Steve Gammon
- 1971β1974: Ron Atkinson
- 1974β1975: Geoff Vowden
- 1975β1977: Derek Dougan
- 1977β1979: Mick Jones
- 1979β1982: Colin Clarke
- 1983β1986: David Needham
- 1986β1988: Alan Buckley
- 1988β1992: Peter Morris
- 1992: Dave Cusack
- 1992β1995: Graham Carr
- 1995β1996: Gary Johnson
- 1996β1998: Steve Berry
- 1998β2001: Peter Morris
- 2001β2003: Carl Shutt
- 2003: Domenico Genovese
- 2003: Nick Platnauer
- 2003β2005: Kevin Wilson
- 2005: Paul Gascoigne
- 2005β2006: Kevin Wilson
- 2006β2007: Morell Maison
- 2007: Graham Westley
- 2007β2009: Mark Cooper
- 2009β2010: Lee Harper
- 2010: Morell Maison
- 2010β2011: Marcus Law
- 2011: Morell Maison
- 2011β2012: Mark Stimson
- 2012: Mark Cooper
- 2012: Ashley Westwood
- 2012: John Beck
- 2012β2013: Alan Doyle
- 2013: Thomas Baillie
- 2013β2014: Dean Thomas
- 2014β2015: Thomas Baillie & Scott Machin
- 2015β2019: Marcus Law
- 2019: Nicky Eaden
- 2019β2022: Paul Cox
- 2022: Ian Culverhouse
- 2022β2023: Lee Glover
- 2023-2024: Andy Leese
- 2023-2024: Jim LeMesurier
- 2024β2025: Richard Lavery
- 2025: Simon Hollyhead
- 2025: Liam McDonald
Honours
- National League
- *Conference North champions 2007β08
- *League Cup winners 1986β87
- Midland League
- *Champions 1895β96, 1899β1900
- Southern League
- *Champions 1927β28, 1956β57, 1972β73, 2001β02
- *Premier Division Central champions 2018β19
- *Division One champions 1960β61
- *Division One Central champions 2014β15
- *Division One North champions 1971β72
- *Eastern Division champions 1927β28, 1928β29
- *League Cup winners 1974β75
- United Counties League
- *Champions 1904β05, 1938β39
- Northamptonshire Senior Cup
- *Winners 1883β84, 1895β86, 1897β98, 1900β01, 1906β07, 1920β21, 1931β32, 1932β33, 1935β36, 1938β39, 1946β47, 1952β53, 1955β56, 1956β57, 1968β69, 1972β73, 1978β79, 1979β80, 1983β84, 1984β85, 1985β86, 1986β87, 1987β88, 1991β92, 1992β93, 1994β95, 1996β97, 2000β01, 2016β17, 2017β18
- Maunsell Cup
- *Winners 1912β13, 1919β20, 1923β24, 1924β25, 1928β29, 1947β48, 1951β52, 1954β55, 1959β60, 1984β85, 1987β88, 1988β89, 1992β93, 1993β94, 1998β99, 2016β17
Records
- Best FA Cup performance: Fourth round, 1988β89, 2008β09
- Best FA Trophy performance: Finalists, 1978β79, 1999β2000
- Record attendance: 11,536 vs Peterborough United, FA Cup first round replay, 1958β59
- Biggest win: 16β0 vs Higham YMCI, FA Cup, 1909
- Heaviest defeat: 13β0 vs Mardy, Southern League Division Two, 1911β12
- Most appearances: Roger Ashby
- Most goals: Roy Clayton, 171
- Record transfer fee received: Β£150,000 from Newcastle United for Andy Hunt, 1991
- Record transfer fee paid: Β£25,000 to Macclesfield Town for Carl Alford, 1994