History
of Willand Rovers F. C.
Football
has been played in Willand for well over
100 years. Match reports exist from November
1907, when Willand Association Football
Club was under the chairmanship of Dr Henry
Tracey of the Gables and played their home
games at the Pavilion Ground, being the
field opposite the Halfway House. The football
club was still going strong by the years
of the Second World War, when it was known
as Willand Wanderers FC. There were two
members from the football club on the committee
of Willand United Services Club formed in
1942 to organize wartime social events.
At this time the club used the parish playing
field that was located on Southview Road,
where the warehouse that later became Mole
Valley Farmers was subsequently built.
By
the 70’s, the club moved to its current
Silver Street site, now known as the Stan
Robinson Stadium in deference to its main
sponsor, Stan Robinson Transport. In 1972
Willand started the season there against
near neighbors Tiverton Town in the Premier
Division of the Devon and Exeter League.
Interestingly enough, the K. O. was scheduled
for 3.15. (To allow the crowds time to enter?)
This season saw the first programme produced
for match days with 40% of the proceeds
on sales going to a prize draw. It also
saw the introduction of a refreshment caravan.
Whilst it is not clear what was sold from
the caravan, the programme advertisers included
current programme advertisers, Willand Service
Station and Cafe and Spearing's Coaches,
current stand sponsors, Lloyd Maunder and
the long departed Railway Inn at the original
Tiverton Junction station.
For
this opening match of 1972-3, the two teams
included any number of well known local
football names including, for Willand Rovers,
recently appointed reserve team joint manager,
Kenny Freeman and current club chairman,
Mike Mitchell. Tiverton included Colin Campion,
a relative of “The Rovers” football
secretary and budding club historian plus
Nick Seatherton, whose relative, Mark, was
one of the stars of the Devon County League
side in the 90’s.
Legend has it that the current grandstand
was built with timber from the then village
hall, which also had to make way for the
motorway. Despite the stand, disaster followed
in the early 1990’s when the Devon
and Exeter League ruled that the club did
not have adequate facilities to continue
to play in the Premier Division and demoted
the club to its senior leagues and the reserves
went to play in the North Devon League.
Looking at the club and its facilities now,
one has to admire the quick and positive
way the club fought back from this moment
of adversity. As a measure of the progress
the club made at that time, inspired by
current President and former player and
club manager, Peter Ward, “The Rovers”
not only got back into the Premier Division
of The Devon and Exeter League, it then
became one of the founder members of the
new Devon County League when it was set
up in time for the start of the 1992-3 season.
“The
Rovers” hosted their first ever County
league match, Bert Millichip of the F. A.
was in attendance to witness history being
made for the village side. The manager at
that time was Mike Howe, a well known local
former player with both Tiverton Town and
Elmore and further proof that “The
Rovers“ were on their way.
Under
current manager Clive Jones, the club’s
rise continued with the County League being
won in 1998-9 and again in 2000-1 followed
by promotion to the Western League Division
One and in season 2004-5, promotion as champions
to the Premier Division of the same league.
Success
like this on the pitch can only come with
hard work and dedication going hand in hand
off the pitch and the club have been blessed
with a series of loyal and unpaid servants
such as the already mentioned Peter Ward,
Dave Campion and Mike Mitchell plus such
people as Andy Jarrett, who served for 22
years as Secretary. There are many, in the
past and in the present, who have, and do,
work tirelessly for the club. The clubhouse,
post and rail pitch surround and floodlights
have all been put in place by the club members.
The
club have also had a number of fine players
wearing the shirt of “The Rovers“
- which incidentally started as white, later
changed to orange and is now back to the
accepted club colour of white - including
three Wembley winners, Kevin Smith, Steve
Hynds and Phil Everett, all of whom appeared
there for Tiverton Town in the F. A. Vase.
Phil is actually a double Vase winner, former
Non League Footballer of the Year and recently
appeared for the F. A. against Jersey. The
fourth Wembley connection for the club is
former Exeter City and Tiverton Town legend,
Hedley Steele, who played in Tiverton Town’s
first, and losing, F. A. Vase final team,
and was in the Willand side that won the
County league in 1998-9. Keeping it in the
family, his son, David, was a member of
the Western League championship winning
team in 2004-5. Other local notables to
have graced “The Rovers” colours
in more recent years include Steve Rowland's,
Martin Tregedeon, Mark Seatherton, who undoubtedly
is one of the areas greatest ever goal scorers,
Jason Reeves, Gavin Hudd, Nick Howe, Darren
Cork, Steve Venner, Phil Staddon and long
serving current goalkeeper, Brian Cann.
So
Willand Rovers stand proudly at the highest
point the club has reached in its short
history. The next sixty years will bring
a different set of challenges, not least
the decision as to whether the Stan Robinson
Stadium can be upgraded to meet the requirements
of the next step of the football pyramid,
namely the famous and historic Southern
League. Costs are rising in football and
the club are responding by appointing a
first ever Commercial Manager, introducing
a club lottery scheme in conjunction with
Blackpool F. C., this web-site, a club call
line, currently being set up, and a range
of branded merchandise which is on order
to be sold through the club house and the
web-site. Sponsors Stan Robinson Transport
have increased their involvement with the
club as “The Rovers”, seek to
maintain the impetus of the last few years.
The story goes on as the dream still unfolds
- Watch this space! |