East Stirlingshire F.C. - Club Records

Club Records

  • Greatest competitive Victory: 12–1 vs. Moorpark, Scottish Midlands Qualifying Cup 1st Round on 7 September 1946 at Moorpark
  • Greatest competitive Defeat: 1–12 vs. Dundee United, Scottish Division Two, 13 April 1936, at Tannadice
  • Great Scottish Cup Victory: 10–1 vs. Stenhousemuir, 1st Round, 1 September 1888 at Merchiston Park, Bainsford and 11–2 vs. Vale of Bannock, 2nd Round, 22 September 1888 at Merchiston Park, Bainsford
  • Greatest Victory in any game: 17–0 vs. Carron, Stirlingshire Cup 1st Round, 18th? October, 1884. Played at Carron.
  • Most capped player: Humphrey Jones (Wales), 5 Caps
  • Highest home attendance: 12,000 vs. Partick, Scottish Cup 3rd Round, 19 February 1921
  • Most league goals in one season: 36 - Malcolm Morrison, 1938–39 & Henry Morris, 1947–48
  • First match as Britannia (Bainsford): 0–7 vs. Falkirk 2nd XI, (Friendly match), 2nd ? December, 1880 at Burnhouse
  • First known match as East Stirlingshire: 0–5 vs. Falkirk (Friendly match), 27 August 1881 at Randyford Park, Falkirk
  • Most League Appearances: Gordon Russell 1983–2001, 415
  • Record transfer fee received: £35,000 for Jim Docherty to Chelsea, 1978
  • Record transfer fee paid: £6,000 for Colin McKinnon from Falkirk, 1991

Read more about this topic:  East Stirlingshire F.C.

Famous quotes containing the words club and/or records:

    At first, it must be remembered, that [women] can never accomplish anything until they put womanhood ahead of wifehood, and make motherhood the highest office on the social scale.
    “Jennie June” Croly 1829–1901, U.S. founder of the woman’s club movement, journalist, author, editor. Demorest’s Illustrated Monthly and Mirror of Fashions, pp. 24-5 (January 1870)

    What a wonderful faculty is memory!—the most mysterious and inexplicable in the great riddle of life; that plastic tablet on which the Almighty registers with unerring fidelity the records of being, making it the depository of all our words, thoughts and deeds—this faithful witness against us for good or evil.
    Susanna Moodie (1803–1885)