Brecon Corinthians F.C. Explained

Clubname:Brecon Corinthians
Fullname:Brecon Corinthians Association Football Club
Nickname:Corries
Founded:1946
Coach:Damien Daniels (Player/ Manager)

Brecon Corinthians A.F.C. (Brecon Corries) are a Welsh football club from the town of Brecon in Powys. The club played for much of its history in the Welsh Football League, as well as spells in league in South and Mid Wales. They currently play in the .

History

The club was formed in 1946 at the Greyhound Coffee Tavern in Llanfaes and were accepted into the Mid Wales League (Southern Section).[1] In 1947–48 they achieved a league-cup double and for the 1949–50 season they joined the Welsh Football League Division Two East Division. The club played in the Welsh Football League until the end of the 1966–67 season when they left to play in the Brecon and District League. During their first spell in the Welsh Football League their most notable achievement was winning the Welsh Football League Cup in 1962–63, beating Abergavenny Thursdays.

They re-joined the Welsh Football League for the 1974–75 season, playing in Division Two - the third tier of the Welsh football pyramid. At the end of the 1979–80 season, they finished third, gaining promotion to Division One - the second tier. At the end of the 1981–82 season the club finished as champions gaining promotion to the Premier Division, the top tier of Welsh football. For ten seasons the club played in the top level division until the mid to late 1990's saw the club relegated across a number of seasons, dropping down to tier 4 - the bottom division of the Welsh Football League, with the club leaving the league at the end of the 1998–99 season.

The club then joined the South Wales Senior League but were relegated at the end of their first season from Division One. They earned promotion from Division Two at the end of 2001–02 season but at the end of the 2004–05 season were relegated again. In summer of 2006, decisions were made to focus on using local players and former Newtown midfielder Damien Daniel took over as player-manager. The team were promoted at the end of the 2008–09 season after finishing third, but relegated at the end of the following season having finished bottom of the first division. The following season they were again promoted, this time having finished as Division Two runners-up. At the end of the 2015 season the team transferred to the new South Wales Alliance League Premier Division, at level five of the pyramid. They finished in the top six in each of the new league's opening three seasons, before finishing 9th in their final season in the South Walian league structure.

For the 2019–20 season the club moved within the Welsh football structure to central Wales - and re-joined the Mid Wales South League at tier 5 level. In a season which was curtailed due to the coronavirus pandemic, the club were champions[2] with a 100% record of 16 wins from 16 games with 143 goals scored and just two conceded.[3] [4] having previously played in the South Wales Alliance League. In addition to these statistics the team recorded a 27–0 win at Knighton Town Reserves which was expunged from the record books following Knighton's withdrawal from the league. The club were promoted to the Mid Wales Football League's new East Division at tier 4 for the 2020–21 season, however the season was declared as abandoned without any games played due to the continued impact of the pandemic. Ahead of the 2021–22 season the club installed covered seating for 100 spectators, a criterion which needs to be met to play at tier 3 of the Welsh football pyramid.[5] The club earned their second league title win in two seasons by securing the East Division title in May 2022.[6] On 9 June 2022, it was announced that the club had been promoted to the tier 3 Ardal SE League for the 2022–23 season.[7]

Honours

League history

Information in this section is courtesy of Football Club History Database[10] and the Welsh Soccer Archive.[11]

SeasonPyramid TierLeagueFinal position
1946–47
1947–48Mid Wales League (Southern Section)1st - Champions
1948–49
1949–502Welsh Football League Division Two East12th
1950–512Welsh Football League Division Two East9th
1951–522Welsh Football League Division Two East15th
1952–532Welsh Football League Division Two East14th
1953–542Welsh Football League Division Two East4th
1954–552Welsh Football League Division Two East1st - Champions
(promoted)
1955–561Welsh Football League Division One15th
1956–571Welsh Football League Division One16th
1957–581Welsh Football League Division One4th
1958–591Welsh Football League Division One14th
1959–601Welsh Football League Division One11th
1960–611Welsh Football League Division One10th
1961–621Welsh Football League Division One10th
1962–631Welsh Football League Division One5th
1963–641Welsh Football League Division One6th
1964–65[12] 1Welsh Football League Premier Division15th
(relegated)
1966–662Welsh Football League Division One4th
1966–672Welsh Football League Division One8th
(Left/joined
Brecon and District League)
1974–753Welsh Football League Division Two14th
1975–763Welsh Football League Division Two17th
1976–773Welsh Football League Division Two13th
1977–783Welsh Football League Division Two13th
1978–793Welsh Football League Division Two7th
1979–803Welsh Football League Division Two3rd
1980–812Welsh Football League Division One8th
1981–822Welsh Football League Division One1st - Champions
(promoted)
1982–831Welsh Football League Premier Division12th
1983–84[13] 1Welsh Football League National Division10th
1984–851Welsh Football League National Division8th
1985–861Welsh Football League National Division4th
1986–871Welsh Football League National Division10th
1987–881Welsh Football League National Division12th
1988–891Welsh Football League National Division5th
1989–901Welsh Football League National Division12th
1990–91[14] 1Welsh Football League National Division8th
1991–921Welsh Football League National Division14th
1992–93[15] 2Welsh Football League Division One2nd - Runners-Up
1993–942Welsh Football League Division One12th
1994–952Welsh Football League Division One12th
1995–962Welsh Football League Division One16th
(relegated)
1996–973Welsh Football League Division Two13th
1997–983Welsh Football League Division Two16th
(relegated)
1998–994Welsh Football League Division Three17th
(relegated)
1999–20005South Wales Senior League Division One16th
(relegated)
2000–016South Wales Senior League Division Two10th
2001–026South Wales Senior League Division Two2nd - Runners-Up
(promoted)
2002–035South Wales Senior League Division One4th
2003–045South Wales Senior League Division One12th
2004–055South Wales Senior League Division One14th
(relegated)
2005–066South Wales Senior League Division Two11th
2006–076South Wales Senior League Division Two8th
2007–086South Wales Senior League Division Two7th
2008–096South Wales Senior League Division Two3rd
(promoted)
2009–105South Wales Senior League Division One16th
(relegated)
2010–116South Wales Senior League Division Two2nd - Runners-Up
(promoted)
2011–125South Wales Senior League Division One8th
2012–135South Wales Senior League Division One7th
2013–145South Wales Senior League Division One10th
2014–155South Wales Senior League Division One6th
2015–165South Wales Alliance League Premier Division5th
2016–175South Wales Alliance League Premier Division5th
2017–185South Wales Alliance League Premier Division6th
2018–195South Wales Alliance League Premier Division9th
2019–205Mid Wales South League1st - Champions
(promoted)
2020–214Mid Wales Football League East DivisionSeason cancelled
(Coronavirus pandemic)
2021–224Mid Wales Football League East Division1st - Champions
(promoted)
Notes

Former players

See to see a list of notable Brecon Corries players, past and present.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Townsend . Stuart . The story of Brecon Corries – New adventures await following mid Wales return . Powys County Times . 20 July 2021 . 17 July 2021.
  2. Web site: Rich Field delight as Brecon Corries receive championship trophy . Powys County Times . 21 July 2021.
  3. Web site: Titles for the Daffs and Corries . Shropshire Star . 10 June 2020.
  4. Web site: Brecon Corinthians set for homecoming.
  5. Web site: Brecon Corries install 100 seats at Rich Field ahead of new season . Powys County Times . 21 July 2021.
  6. News: Grosvenor . Gavin . Brecon Corries and Meifod celebrate league titles in style . 17 May 2022 . Powys County Times . 14 May 2022.
  7. News: Ardal Leagues: A geographical look at the teams competing in the 2022/23 season . 10 June 2022 . Y Clwb Pel-Droed . 9 June 2022.
  8. News: Grosvenor . Gavin . Brecon Corries crowned Emrys Morgan Cup winners after extra-time win . 10 May 2022 . Powys County Times . 15 April 2022.
  9. News: Grosvenor . Gavin . Final glory for Llanidloes Town as Bird double sinks Brecon Corries . 22 May 2022 . Powys County Times . 21 May 2022.
  10. Web site: Football Club History Database - Brecon Corinthians.
  11. Web site: Welsh League.
  12. In this season Division 1 was renamed 'Premier Division', Division 2 East and West were replaced by 'Division 1' and 'Division 2' (effectively Division 2 and Division 3)
  13. In this season The Premier Division (Division 1) was renamed 'National Division'. The 2nd tier division was renamed 'Premier Division' with the 3rd tier division named 'Division 1'.
  14. In this season, The 2nd tier division was renamed 'Division One' with the 3rd tier division renamed 'Division Two'.
  15. In this season the League of Wales was created as the new national tier 1 league. The Welsh Football League covered South Wales and now exists at tier 2 (Division One); tier 3 (Division Two) and tier 4 (Division Three).