Duns F.C. Explained

Clubname:Duns
Fullname:Duns Football Club
Nickname:The Dingers
Founded:1882
Ground:New Hawthorn Park, Duns
Capacity:1,000
Mgrtitle:Manager
Manager:James Brydon
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Duns Football Club is a football club from Duns in Scotland, playing in the A League of the Border Amateur League. The club previously competed in the East of Scotland Football League before withdrawing prior to the 2016–17 season.[1]

History

There used to be a team called Duns F.C. that competed at the senior non-league level in Scotland, and for many years this team played in the East of Scotland League.[2] The current Duns club (often termed as Duns AFC or Duns Ams) regards itself as the successor of the original Duns senior side, and lists in its honours seven Border Cup successes, which spans the period of the different clubs.[3]

They played in the Scottish Cup proper on 21 occasions, including a match at Parkhead against Celtic.[4] In the 1956–57 cup Duns recorded an 11–1 first round victory over Edinburgh University, before losing to Eyemouth United in the next round.[5] Duns played continuously in the East of Scotland League from the league's expansion in 1928–29 until the end of the 1967–68 season.[2] Following this they had a couple of short spells in the league before their final appearance in the 1975–76 season.[2]

The current incarnation of the team won the A League of the Border AFL on six occasions,[6] including four championships won when the side was known as Duns Legion.[7]

James Keenan

During an Edinburgh City Cup tie in August 1937 against Leith Athletic at Meadowbank, Duns goalkeeper James Keenan, who had previously played for St Bernards, collapsed after reaching for a high ball. Keenan was rushed to hospital but he was declared dead on arrival. When news of Keenan's death reached the ground, the match was stopped. Keenan was 38 years old and his 10-year-old son was watching the match. He had captained Duns to triumph in the Scottish Qualifying Cup the previous season.[8]

Honours

SFA South Region Challenge Cup

King Cup

Multiple Border amateur league honours

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statement from Duns Football Club . 3 January 2019.
  2. Web site: East of Scotland Football League: Final tables 1923-date. Scottish Football Historical Archive. 2 August 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120301051106/http://scottish-football-historical-archive.com/eastofscotlandleaguetables.htm. 1 March 2012. dmy-all.
  3. http://www.clubwebsite.co.uk/dunsafc/history.pl Duns Official Site - Club Honours
  4. Web site: Club History. Duns FC. 4 September 2014.
  5. http://scottishfootballarchive.co.uk/seasons/1956-57/scottishcup 1956/57 Scottish Cup results at scottishfootballarchive
  6. Web site: List of A League champions - Border AFL . 3 January 2019 . 3 January 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190103210747/https://bafl.leaguerepublic.com/l/newsArticle/a_league.html . dead .
  7. Web site: About us . Duns FC . 18 February 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120518014400/http://www.clubwebsite.co.uk/dunsafc . 18 May 2012 .
  8. Edinburgh Football Tragedy . Scotsman . 18 August 1937 . 8.
  9. Web site: King Cup. 2021-06-06. sfha.org.uk.