Welcome
Good afternoon everyone and welcome to Colston Avenue for this Isthmian Premier ficture. I would especially like to welcome the officials, players, and fans of Folkestone Invicta FC
Please can I remind you:
- We serve a selection of draft beers and real ale in our clubhouse.
- We serve a wide range of food from our matchday kitchens from midday.
I would like to wish both teams the best of luck in this important fixture.
Paul Dipre – Chairman
Match Officials
Referee: | Daniel Malyon |
Assistant Referee: | Samuel Palmer |
Assistant Referee: | Connor Fanelli |
Carshalton Athletic
1 | Samuel Roberts |
15 | Luke Read |
16 | Bernard Tanner |
6 | Oluwafikayo Atewologun |
18 | Abdul Sankoh |
14 | Fabio Camacho-Saraiva |
10 | Tommy Bradford |
5 | Kwaku Frimpong |
11 | Mason Saunders Henry |
7 | Sharon Ifeanyi |
9 | David Smith |
2 | Charlie Kennett |
17 | Florian Kastrati |
4 | Oliver Hamstead |
3 | Paris Hamilton-Downes |
12 | Darnell Goather-Braithwaite |
Folkestone Invicta
1 | Jonathan Henly |
2 | Gavin Hoyte |
3 | Jamie Mascoll |
4 | Joel-Michael Odeniran |
5 | Marvel Ekpiteta |
6 | Amadou Kassarate |
7 | Sam Blackman |
8 | Jack Jebb |
9 | Daniel Smith |
10 | Khale Da Costa |
15 | Andy Drury |
11 | Matthias Fanimo |
12 | Frankie Morgan |
14 | Ezechukwu Ebuzoeme II |
16 | Joseph Turner |
17 | Ian Gayle |
History
Carshalton Athletic FC 1906
Hendon FC
The club was established in 1936 and joined the East Kent Wednesday League for the 1936–37 season. They continued in the league until World War II. In 1962 the club joined the new Division Two of the Eastern Section of the Kent County Amateur League. They won the division at the first attempt, earning promotion to Division One. The club were Division One champions in 1969–70 and were promoted to the Premier Division. However, they were relegated back to Division One at the end of the following season. After finishing as runners-up in Division One in 1976–77, the club were promoted back to the Premier Division. Two seasons after being promoted, Invicta were champions of the Eastern Section Premier Division. In 1980–81 they were beaten 2–0 by New Romney in the final of the League Cup. The Premier Division was renamed the Senior Division in 1984 and clubs in the division were granted ‘Intermediate’ status enabling them to enter a higher standard of county cup competition. The club were subsequently runners-up in the Kent Intermediate Shield in both the 1985–86 and 1989–90 seasons, losing 2–1 to Sevenoaks and 6–3 to Sangley Sports respectively.
Folkestone folded in 1990, with Invicta, now the highest-ranked club in the town, taking over their Cheriton Road the following year. In 1990–91 Invicta won the league’s Les Leckie Cup (defeating Kennington in the final) and finished third in the Premier Division, after which they were elected to Division Two of the Kent League,[6] which was largely composed of reserve teams. They went on to win the division, as well as the Division Two Cup and the Kent Intermediate Shield in the 1991–92 season, and were promoted to Division One, as well as being awarded senior status. Their first spell in Division One saw them reach the final of the Kent Senior Trophy twice; in 1993–94 they lost 3–1 to Alma Swanley and in 1993–94 were beaten in a penalty shoot-out 5–4 by Deal Town. The club were runners-up in Division One in 1997–98, earning promotion to the Southern Division of the Southern League, also losing another Kent Senior Trophy final 1–0 to Greenwich Borough. After losing 1–0 to Welling United in the final of the Kent Senior Cup in 1998–99, the club were transferred to the Eastern Division for the 1999–2000 season. They went on to finish as runners-up in the division, earning promotion to the Premier Division. However, a second successive Kent Senior Cup final appearance that season ended in a 3–0 defeat by Gravesend & Northfleet.
Invicta spent three seasons in the Premier Division, before finishing bottom of the table in 2002–03, after which they were relegated to the Eastern Division. A fifth-place finish the following season was enough for an immediate promotion due to the creation of the Conference North and South creating several spaces in the divisions above. However, the club were transferred to the Isthmian League, joining its Premier Division. The 2003–04 season also saw another Kent Senior Cup final appearance, in which they were beaten 2–1 by Margate. The following season striker Paul Sykes collapsed and died during a Senior Cup semi-final match against the same opponents, with the club withdrawing from the competition.
In 2005–06 Invicta reached the first round of the FA Cup for the first time, losing 2–1 at League Two Chester City. The club spent four seasons in the Isthmian League Premier Division before relegation to Division One South at the end of the 2008–09 season. In 2009–10 they were runners-up in Division One South, having missed out on the title due to having ten points deducted for going into administration. However, they qualified for the promotion play-offs, and after beating Leatherhead on penalties in the semi-finals, defeated Godalming Town 2–1 in the final, earning promotion back to the Premier Division. Another Kent Senior Cup final appearance in the same season ended with a 3–1 defeat to Sittingbourne. In the following season the club finished bottom of the Premier Division and were relegated straight back to Division One South.
The next four seasons saw Invicta finish in the top five, qualifying for the promotion play-offs; in 2011–12 they lost 2–1 to Dulwich Hamlet in the semi-finals and in 2012–13 they lost at the same stage to Maidstone United. In 2013–14 they won their semi-final, beating Hastings United 3–2, but lost on penalties to Leatherhead in the final after a 1–1 draw. They reached the final again in 2014–15 after defeating Whyteleafe in the semi-finals, but were beaten 3–0 in the final by Merstham.[10] After four successive play-off failures, the club won Division One South in 2015–16 to return to the Premier Division. They finished fourth in the Premier Division in 2017–18, going on to lose 4–0 in the play-off semi-finals to Hendon. They also lost the Kent Senior Cup final again, beaten 4–2 on penalties by Maidstone United. A sixth Senior Cup final appearance in 2021–22 ended with a 6–2 defeat to Dartford.
CAFC People
Chairman: Paul Dipre
Directors: Clare Dipre, Paul Williams, Kelly Riddel, Vicky Mannooch
Club Secretary: Bonnie Hare
General Manager: David Geddes
Match Day Tannoy: John Kistner
Admissions: Andy Rickman
Matchday Sec: Christian Kemble
Safety Officer: Clare Dipre
Programme: Christian Kemble
Media: Joe Turner & Lin Bartley
Club Vice Presidents:
Phillip Payne, Steve Friend, Alan Walker, Kay Maynard, John Kistner, David Reilly, Martin Reilly, Peter Clews, Alec Griffin, Gary Smith, Alan Clarke, Peter Lebihan, Peter Robins, Marc Haskins, John Hillarby, Graham Skipp, Matt Hillarby
Matchday:
1st Team Manager: Peter Adeniyi
Coaches: Charlie Acres
Physio: Dave Feasey
Kit Manager: David Geddes
Matchday Safeguarding Officer: Andy Rickman
The Club is owned by Paul Dipre & Family by way of controlling interest
CAFC Snapshot
Surrey County FA
London FA
Pitching-In Isthmian League Premier Division
Isthmian Development League
The National League U19 Alliance
Isthmian Youth League
Surrey Youth League
Surrey County Women’s & Girl’s League
Epsom and Ewell League
Registration Number: 05316320
Contact details
War Memorial Sports Ground, Colston Avenue.
Carshalton. Surrey SM5 2PW
Tel: 020 8642 2551
Email: enquiries@carshaltonathletic.com
Web: www.carshaltonathletic.co.uk
TV: www.robins.tv
Twitter: @CarshaltonA_FC
Instagram: (Link to your Instagram profile)
The Robins Choir
The Robins Choir are one of the best-known fans-groups in non-league.
You will find them behind the opposition goal cheering on the team come rain or shine.
Please come and join us if you want to join in the singing – everyone is welcome.
Ground Rules
Colston Avenue Ground Rules
Carshalton Athletic is a FA Charter Standard Community Club.
We do our best to make every matchday or event as safe and enjoyable as we can for players, fans, customers and officials. We also respect the amenity of our neighbours.
To those ends we have ground rules that we respectfully ask visitors to the ground to abide by.
Approaching and leaving the ground and stadium
Please respect the amenity of neighbours surrounding the ground when arriving and leaving the ground. If driving please drive very slowly and carefully in the access road approaching the ground and in the car parks inside the ground. Please avoid making unnecessary noise in the surrounding roads on your journey to the ground, please save it all up in support of your team!
Dogs
Dogs are not permitted in the stadium, regardless of size and nature. (Except guide dogs)
No Drums or clappers
Our operating licence prohibits the use of drums, clappers or musical instruments, they cannot be brought into the ground
Flags and Banners
There are plenty of places to hang flags and banners around the ground, but pleased don’t hang them over the pitch-side barriers where they cover advertising hoardings.
Bring Photo ID
Please bring photo ID. You may need it for purchasing alcohol. Seniors, U18s and all season ticket holders will need to show it at the turnstiles, no exceptions.
Challenge 25
If you are lucky enough to look under the age of 25, then you will need to show a driving license, passport or an id card bearing the PASS hologram. Staff will lose their jobs if they don’t adhere to the challenge 25 guidelines.
Video Filming
Any filming within the ground that is intended for publishing online must seek written permission before filming – except for the official videographers of opposition clubs who may film at the ground for the period beginning 2 hours before kickoff and ending two hours after kickoff. Other private or third party videographers must seek the clubs written permission prior to filming within the ground if the footage it to be published online.
Commercial Photography
Any filming within the ground that is intended for publishing online must seek written permission before filming – except for the official videographers of opposition clubs who may film at the ground for the period beginning 2 hours before kickoff and ending two hours after kickoff. Other private or third party videographers must seek the clubs written permission prior to filming within the ground if the footage it to be published online.
No foul language please
As a community club, many fans and customers are families with young children. Please help us to provide an environment suitable for the whole family.
Hospitality
Football on TV
Partners with Sky Sports & TNT Sports.
Every evening, every matchday, all the big games are showing on our big screens
Two viewing rooms – both with 75 inch LED screens, Dolby sound and fully stocked bars.
Matchday food
Gourmet Steak Burgers
Our steak burgers are fresh and from local sustainable suppliers – Scotts the Butchers.
Our Burgers are fresh, never frozen. Made with English Steak and cooked to perfection.
Our Buns are fresh, never frozen. Soft and squidgy.
Our Onions and fresh, never frozen. Slow-cooked for 4 hours and caramelised
WE DONT RIP YOU OFF – 1/4 POUNDER IS UNDER A FIVER
Chips
You wont find tastier chips anywhere.
Pies
We serve a range of meat and vegetable pies
Matchday food
Bean to Cup Coffee
Our coffee is freshly ground and brewed. Choose a cappuccino, latte, americano or flat white
Fully stocked free-house Bar
Choose from our wide selection of real ales, craft beers and a vast range of liquors.
Respect statement
“The Isthmian Football League strongly supports the FA statement that there should be a zero tolerance approach against racism and all forms of discrimination. Accordingly any form of discriminatory abuse whether it by reason of age, disability, gender reassignment, race, religion and belief, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, sex and sexual orientation or any other form of abuse will be reported to The Football Association for action by that Association.” (The FA 0800 085 0508 / Kick it Out 020 7253 0162). The Isthmian League and all Member Clubs in the League are committed to promoting equality by treating people fairly and with respect, by recognising that inequalities may exist, by taking steps to address them and providing access and opportunities for all members of the community.”