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Old 11-01-2013, 04:02 PM   #3
NoSkillz
College Benchwarmer
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: St. Catharines, Canada
TABLE OF CONTENTS - LINKS TO YEARLY RECAPS AND SEASON-LONG WRITE-UPS

Yearly Recaps Only
2010-11: Blue Square Bet South (1st Place - Win Automatic Promotion)
2011-12: Blue Square Premier (2nd Place - Lose Playoff)
2012-13: Blue Square Premier (1st Place - Win Automatic Promotion)
2013-14: npower League Two (1st Place - Win Automatic Promotion)
2014-15: npower League One (7th Place)
2015-16: npower League One (5th Place - Lose Playoff)
2016-17: npower League One (1st Place - Win Automatic Promotion)
2017-18: npower Championship (2nd Place - Win Automatic Promotion)
2018-19: Barclays Premier League (11th Place)
2019-20: Barclays Premier League (11th Place)

Full Season Writeups Begin
2020-21: Barclays Premier League (4th Place)
2021-22: Barclays Premier League (3rd Place) / UEFA Champions League (Quarterfinals)
2022-23: Barclays Premier League (2nd Place) / UEFA Champions League (Quarterfinals)
2023-24: Barclays Premier League (1st Place) / UEFA Champions League (WINNER)
2024-25: Barclays Premier League (2nd Place) / UEFA Champions League (Quarterfinals)
2025-26: Barclays Premier League (1st Place) / UEFA Champions League (Semifinals)

Yearly Recaps Only
2026-27: Barclays Premier League (1st Place) / UEFA Champions League (WINNER)
2027-28: Barclays Premier League (1st Place) / UEFA Champions League (Finals)
2028-29: Barclays Premier League (1st Place) / UEFA Champions League (WINNER)


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Dover Athletic FC - Club History

Dover Athletic F.C. was formed in 1983 after the town's previous club, Dover, folded due to its debts. The new club took Dover's place in the Southern League Southern Division, with former Dover player Alan Jones as manager and a team consisting mainly of reserve players from the old club. Initially, Athletic struggled, finishing second from bottom of the table in the 1984–85 season. In November 1985, Steve McRae, who had succeeded Jones a year earlier, was sacked and replaced by Chris Kinnear.

Under Kinnear the club's fortunes turned around, with two top-five finishes followed by the Southern Division championship and with it, promotion in the 1987–88 season.

The team started strongly in the Premier Division, finishing in sixth place at the first attempt, and then winning the championship in the 1989–90 season. The club was denied promotion to the Football Conference, however, as Crabble Stadium did not meet the standard required for that league. After finishing fourth and second in the subsequent two seasons, Dover won the title again in the 1992–93 season and this time were admitted to the Conference.

Although Dover finished in eighth place in their first season in the Conference, the following season saw the club struggling against relegation, and Kinnear was dismissed due to a combination of the team's poor performances and his own personal problems. John Ryan was appointed as the club's new manager, but his reign was a short one and he was dismissed when the club lost seven of its first eight matches in the 1995–96 season. The club then appointed former England international Peter Taylor as manager but he was unable to steer the team away from the foot of the table. Dover held onto their place in the Conference only because Northern Premier League runners-up Boston United failed to submit their application for promotion before the required deadline.

Bill Williams took over as manager in 1997 and proved to be Dover's most successful Conference manager, leading the club to the FA Trophy semi-finals in the 1997–98 season and a best ever league finish of sixth place in the 1999–2000 season. Williams left the club to take a senior position with Conference rivals Kingstonian in May 2001. By now the club was in severe financial difficulties, with a number of directors resigning and debts exceeding £100,000. Amid the crisis, the entire board of directors resigned, forcing the club's Supporters' Trust to take over the running of the club and manager Gary Bellamy was sacked after just six months in the job. Former Everton goalkeeper Neville Southall took over but was dismissed just three months later, with Clive Walker taking over in March 2002 with the club rooted to the foot of the table. The club finished the season bottom of the Conference and was relegated back to the Southern League Premier Division.

The club's ongoing financial problems led to it entering a Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA), a process by which insolvent companies offset their debts against future profits, due to debts that were now estimated at £400,000.

In Dover's first season back in the Southern League Premier Division, the Whites finished in third place, albeit 17 points adrift of Tamworth, who claimed the one promotion place available that season. A poor start to the following season saw Walker replaced by Richard Langley. Dover finished the season in 19th place, before being switched to the Isthmian League Premier Division in the summer of 2004 following a re-organisation of the English football league system.

The new season started with six successive defeats, which saw Langley sacked, and the financial problems continued, with the club coming within two months of being closed down. Dover were relegated to the Isthmian League Division One at the end of the season, but were saved from possible extinction in January 2005 when former director Jim Parmenter returned to head up a consortium that took over the club. Parmenter quickly sacked manager Steve Browne and convinced Clive Walker to return to the club to replace him and also arranged for the club's outstanding CVA debts to be cleared, putting the club on a firm financial footing for the first time in many years.

Dover Athletic narrowly missed out on an immediate return to the Premier Division in the 2005–06 season, reaching the play-offs for promotion but losing out to Tonbridge Angels. The following season Dover again reached the play-offs but lost in the semi-final to Hastings United, after which Walker did not have his contract renewed and was replaced by former Gillingham manager Andy Hessenthaler. In his first season in charge he led the club to the Division One South championship and promotion to the Isthmian League Premier Division. He followed that up by guiding Dover Athletic back into the second tier of non-league football in 2008-09, with the club being placed in the Blue Square Bet South Division. In the 2009–10 season, Dover reached the play-offs for promotion to the Conference National, but lost at the semi-final stage to Woking.

Hessenthaler would be unceremoniously sacked and in July 2010, a completely unknown Canadian would be tabbed as his replacement...

Last edited by NoSkillz : 11-06-2016 at 05:53 PM. Reason: Added Table of Contents
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