Name
Gloucester City

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Gloucester City vs Scunthorpe (20 Apr)

Head Coach
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League Position
23

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Established
1883 (141 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Stadium/Home
The Spiers & Hartwell Jubilee Stadium
(3,000 Capacity)

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Location
Evesham, England

Nicknames

Competitions
English National League North
FA Trophy

Last Edit
avzubkof: 26/Nov/23


Upcoming
20/04 Gloucester C - Scunthorpe

Results
13/04 Curzon 4 - 1 Gloucester C
09/04 Alfreton Tow 3 - 0 Gloucester C
06/04 Gloucester C 1 - 6 Chester City
01/04 Peterborough 1 - 0 Gloucester C
29/03 Gloucester C 1 - 1 Brackley Tow

Description
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Gloucester City Association Football Club is an English semi-professional association football club currently based in Evesham, Worcestershire in South West England, via groundshare agreement.

The club was established in 1883 as Gloucester, they became Gloucester City in 1902, but were briefly known as Gloucester YMCA from 1910 to 1925, before returning to their previous name. The club have moved back to the National League North for the 2019/20 season. Previously it competed in the National League North from 2009 to 2017 and then spent two seasons in the National League South afterwards. Prior to that, it spent a record 70 years within the Southern Football League from 1939 until 2009. The club secured promotion after a playoff final win against Farnborough.

In July 2007, the club was considerably affected by the 2007 United Kingdom floods, which significantly affected Gloucestershire. and left the Meadow Park stadium under eight feet of water. The impact of the flooding has meant that the club has been in exile away from Gloucester ever since. The Tigers have played home games at Cheltenham Town's Whaddon Road, after spending three seasons sharing at Cirencester Town's Corinium Stadium and Forest Green Rovers' New Lawn stadium in Nailsworth. From the 2017–18 season, the club has played at Evesham United whilst construction continues on a new stadium on the old Meadow Park site.

The club received full planning permission from Gloucester City Council to build a new 3,060 capacity stadium, raised by several feet, on the site of their former home of Meadow Park with plans to expand to over 4,000. A revised plan was submitted in October 2018 however to retain the use of a former building and some alterations to the layout. This was approved by Gloucester City Council on 7 May.

The club is currently managed by James Rowe, who has been manager since November 2019. The club is affiliated to the Gloucestershire County FA.

Team Members




Cole





Galvin





Gunning



38

Jeacock





Lovett





MacDonald





McClure





Mensah



24

Nugent





Robert



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Stadium or Home

Throughout its history, the club has played at many grounds in Gloucester, the surrounding region of Gloucestershire and currently in Evesham, Worcestershire.

In the late 19th century the club played at Buddings Field near the city centre for 16 non-consecutive seasons, they then moved to the Avenue Road Ground on Tuffley Avenue for another non-consecutive 6 seasons. During this period the club also played at Co-operative Ground on India Road.

In 1910, Gloucester YMCA played at the Llanthony Ground in Hempsted for, believed to be only a stones throw from Meadow Park. During this period the club played multiple games at Gloucester R.F.C. and the Kingsholm Stadium.

In 1928 the club moved to Sutgrove Park, which is now the site for the Ribston Hall High School. They moved once again in 1934 to the Bon Marche Ground on Estcourt Road for two seasons.

In 1935, the club moved to The Ground in Longlevens. It spent the next 26 seasons at the stadium, where the club's all-time record attendance was set: 10,500 at home to Tottenham Hotspur in a friendly.

In 1964 the club moved to the massive Horton Road Stadium, a huge bowl which if fully developed could've held over 35,000 spectators. The club stayed here until 1986 until the move to Meadow Park in Hempsted.

The club had played at Meadow Park since 1986. The ground had a total capacity of 4,500 with a 560-seat stand.

Following the floods of summer 2007, on 22 July, Meadow Park was almost 8 feet under water. A combination of a lack of insurance due to previous flooding, this was the third time in seventeen years that the stadium had been flooded, and contamination by sewage water, the club had no choice but to abandon the ground for the foreseeable future.

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