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Ayr United F.C. wartime guest players (8 P) Pages in category "Ayr United F.C. players" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 656 total.
This is a category of association football players who played for Ayr Parkhouse F.C., which was founded in 1886 and dissolved in 1910. Ayr Parkhouse merged with Ayr F.C. to form Ayr United . Pages in category "Ayr Parkhouse F.C. players"
Ayr United Football Club are a football club in Ayr, Scotland, who play in the Scottish Championship, the second tier of the Scottish Professional Football League.Formed in 1910 by the merger of Ayr Parkhouse and Ayr F.C., their nickname is The Honest Men, from a line in the Robert Burns poem "Tam o' Shanter".
This is a category of association football players who played for Ayr F.C., which was founded in 1879 and dissolved in 1910. Ayr F.C. merged with Ayr Parkhouse to form Ayr United . Pages in category "Ayr F.C. players"
Ayr Parkhouse were formed in 1886 and took their name from the Parkhouse farmhouse where the club's players trained, William Frew, a centre-forward for Parkhouse, was the son of the farmer who owned it. [1] They initially played their home games at Ballantine Drive, before moving to the Ayr Racecourse ground, now known as the Old Racecourse.
Campbell (as Club Captain) led the team to the Scottish Second Division Championship title in April 2009. Campbell was involved in a serious car crash in February 2010 which ruled him out for nearly a year and threatened to cost him his career. [6] He made his return on Boxing Day 2010 eventually winning the Scottish First Division Player of ...
Ayr Football Club was a Scottish Football League club from Ayr, Scotland.They were formed in 1879 by a merger of the Ayr Thistle and Ayr Academicals football clubs. Their initial home ground was Springvale Park, which they left in 1884 to play home fixtures at Beresford Park, which they in turn left in 1888 to move to Somerset Park.
The club duly joined the Scottish Football Association in August 1889, in effect replacing the defunct Ayr Thistle, [16] and was able to enter the 1889–90 Scottish Cup.Its debut match in the competition, at Maybole, was a scarcely believable 6–6 draw, the Athletic coming from 4–2 behind at half-time, [17] and goalkeeper Dunbar being blamed for "glaring" mistakes.