Region | Wales |
---|---|
Current champions | FC Queens Park |
Most successful club(s) | Penley (4 wins) |
2022–23 |
The North East Wales FA Junior Cup (known as the Horace Wynne Cup) is a football knockout tournament involving teams from in North Wales who play in leagues administered and associated with the North East Wales Football Association.
Previous winners
Information sourced from NEWFA Handbook 2017.[1]
1970s
- 1971–72: – St Marys Ruabon
- 1972–73: – BICC
- 1973–74: – Buckley Rovers
- 1974–75: – Castell Alun Colts
- 1975–76: – Coedpoeth SC
- 1976–77: – Cefn Albion
- 1977–78: – Penley
- 1978–79: – Chirk AAA
- 1979–80: – Castell Alun Colts
1980s
1990s
- 1990–91: – Penley
- 1991–92: – Saltney CC
- 1992–93: – Saltney CC
- 1993–94: – Rhosddu
- 1994–95: – Rhostyllen/ Bersham Royal British Legion
- 1995–96: – Llangollen Town
- 1996–97: – Bala Town
- 1997–98: – Bradley Villa
- 1998–99: – Borras– Park Albion
- 1999–2000: – The Hand Chirk
2000s
- 2000–01: – Cefn United
- 2001–02: – Mynydd Isa
- 2002–03: – Rhostyllen United
- 2003–04: – Summerhill United
- 2004–05: – Brynteg Village[3]
- 2005–06: – Venture
- 2006–07: – Penyffordd
- 2007–08: – Penley
- 2008–09: – Garden Village
- 2009–10: – Penyffordd
2010s
- 2010–11: – Saltney Town[4]
- 2011–12: – Aston Park Rangers
- 2012–13: – Point of Ayr
- 2013–14: – FC Queens Park
- 2014–15: – Cefn Albion[5]
- 2015–16: – Rhostyllen
- 2016–17: – Cefn Mawr Rangers[6]
- 2017–18: – Penyffordd Lions[7]
- 2018–19: – Flint Mountain[8]
- 2019–20: – Competition not completed - Covid-19 pandemic
2020s
- 2020–21: – No competition - Covid-19 pandemic
- 2021–22: – FC Queens Park
- 2022–23: – FC Queens Park
Number of competition wins
- Penley – 4
- FC Queens Park – 3
- Penycae – 3
- Saltney CC/ Town – 3
- Bradley SC – 2
- Castell Alun Colts – 2
- Cefn Albion – 2
- Penyffordd – 2
- Aston Park Rangers – 1
- Bala Town – 1
- BICC – 1
- Borras Park Albion – 1
- Bradley Villa – 1
- Buckley Rovers – 1
- Brynteg Village – 1
- Cefn Mawr Rangers – 1
- Cefn United – 1
- Chirk AAA – 1
- Coedpoeth SC – 1
- Flint Mountain – 1
- Garden Village – 1
- Grapes – 1
- Llangollen Town – 1
- Mynydd Isa – 1
- New Broughton – 1
- Overton Athletic – 1
- Penyffordd Lions – 1
- Point of Ayr – 1
- Rhosddu – 1
- Rhostyllen – 1
- Rhostyllen/ Bersham Royal British Legion – 1
- Rhostyllen United – 1
- St Marys Ruabon – 1
- Summerhill United – 1
- The Hand – 1
- Tunnel Cement – 1
- Venture – 1
References
- ↑ "Official Handbook 2017" (PDF). NEWFA. p. 124. Retrieved 14 May 2022.
- 1 2 3 "Club Honours". Penycae FC. Retrieved 14 May 2022.
- ↑ "NEWFA HORACE WYNNE CUP FINAL BRYNTEG 2 GRESFORD ATHLETIC RESERVES 0". Gresford Athletic FC. 13 May 2005. Retrieved 14 May 2022.
- ↑ "Football: Saltney Town head for Europe after double cup success". Daily Post. 19 May 2011. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
- ↑ Jones, Dave (3 June 2015). "Celebrating the winners from the 2014/15 North Wales football season". Daily Post. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
- ↑ Jones, Dave (7 May 2017). "Round-ups from Thursday to Sunday in North Wales football". Daily Post. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
- ↑ Jones, Dave (13 May 2018). "North Wales football: Who's won what and what's still to be won?". Daily Post. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
- ↑ Jones, Dave. "Flint Mountain add an illustrious footballing name to their title". Grassroots North Wales. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.