Bloemfontein Celtic F.C.
Full name | Bloemfontein Celtic Football Club | ||
---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | Phunya Sele Sele, Siwelele | ||
Founded | 1969 | , as Mangaung United||
League | ABC Motsepe League | ||
|
Bloemfontein Celtic Football Club (simply known as Celtic) is a South African amateur football club based in Bloemfontein that competes in the ABC Motsepe League, the third tier of the South African football league system.
Bloemfontein Celtic had a large fan base in the Free State before selling their Premiership franchise to Royal AM before the start of the 2021–22 South African Premier Division season.[1][2][3]
Its supporters were known as Siwelele.
History
[edit]The club was founded by Norman Mathobisa and Victor Mahatane in 1969. They administered the club until the early 1980s when financial challenges forced them to sell the club to Petrus "Whitehead" Molemela.[4] In November 2001, after the relegation of Phunya Sele Sele, Molemela sold his shares in the club to Demetri "Jimmy" Augousti, a former Celtic player.
After only three years out of the top-flight, the club regained its PSL status with an impressive season in 2003–04 when they were crowned First Division champions. They also managed to win the 2005 SAA Supa 8 and the 2007 Telkom Charity Cup.
In 2009 they formed a partnership with Portuguese club Sporting CP, that included the creation of a youth academy, based in the capital of the Free State.[5]
Max Tshabalala, who also owns Roses United, took over from Augousti on 21 July 2014.[6]
Honours
[edit]- Mainstay Cup
- Winners: 1985
- MTN8/SAA Sup 8 Cup
- Winners (1): 2005
- Runners-up: 2020
- Telkom Charity Cup
- Winners: 2007
- First Division Inland Stream
- Winners: 2003–04
- Telkom Knockout
- Winner: 2012
- Charity Showdown
- Winners: 2014
- Nedbank Cup
- Runners-up: 2019–20
Club records
[edit]- Most starts: Willem Vries 306
- Most goals: Benjamin Reed 75
- Most capped player: Lehlohonolo Seema
- Most starts in a season: Jeffrey Lekgetla 39 (1992)
- Most goals in a season: Troy Saila 20 (1987)
- Record victory: 8–0 vs University of Stellenbosch (26/2/14, Nedbank Cup)
- Record defeat: 0–6 vs Kaizer Chiefs (29/3/91, NSL)
League record
[edit]Premiership
[edit]National First Division
[edit]- 2001–02 Inland Stream – 4th
- 2002–03 Inland Stream – 2nd
- 2003–04 Inland Stream – 1st (promoted)
Premiership
[edit]- 2004–05 – 8th
- 2005–06 – 10th
- 2006–07 – 8th
- 2007–08 – 11th
- 2008–09 – 14th
- 2009–10 – 6th
- 2010–11 – 5th
- 2011–12 – 8th
- 2012–13 – 5th
- 2013–14 – 6th
- 2014–15 – 7th
- 2015–16 – 11th
- 2016–17 – 12th
- 2017–18 – 11th
- 2018–19 – 8th
- 2019-20 – 8th
- 2020–21 – 11th (Premiership franchise sold)
SAFA Second Division
[edit]- 2021–22 Stream B – 1st
- 2023–24 Stream A – 2nd
Former players
[edit]Chairmen
[edit]- Norman Mathobisa and Victor Mahatanya (1969–1984)
- Petros Molemela (1984 – November 2001)
- Jimmy Augousti (November 2001 – 21 July 2014)
- Max Tshabalala (21 July 2014 – 22 July 2014)
- Khumo Molahlehi (23 July 2014 – present)
Coaches
[edit]- Paul Dolezar (2005–06)
- Tony De Nobrega (2006–07)
- Khabo Zondo (1 July 2007 – 9 April 2008)
- David Modise (interim) (April 2008 – 8 June)
- Mich d'Avray (1 July 2008 – 27 December 2008)
- Owen Da Gama (28 Dec 2008 – 30 June 2010)
- Clinton Larsen (9 Aug 2010 – 7 October 2013)
- Ernst Middendorp (11 Oct 2013 – 15 December 2014)
- Clinton Larsen (15 Dec 2014–2015)
- Serame Letsoaka ( 3 Dec 2015–30 Oct 2016)
- John Maduka & Lehlohonolo Seema(interim)(30 Oct 2016–3 Jul 2017)
- Veselin Jelusic (3 July 2017 – 14 June 2018)
- Steve Khompela ( 20 June 2018–27 Dec 2018)
- Lehlohonolo Seema (28 Dec 2018– 5 Jul 2020)
- John Maduka (6 July 2020–present)
References
[edit]- ^ Sibembe, Yanga (17 August 2021). "SOCCER: Royal AM finally make it into the Premiership after PSL confirms Bloem Celtic purchase". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
- ^ "OFFICIAL | PSL confirm Bloemfontein Celtic sale, club to be renamed Royal AM". Kick Off. 17 August 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
- ^ "PSL confirms sale of Bloemfontein Celtic to Royal AM". FS News Online. 18 August 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
- ^ "Celtic co-founder Mathobisa mourned". The Sowetan.
- ^ Bloemfontein Celtic FC (2009). "Academy: New academy to improve Celtic football". Archived from the original on 2 February 2019. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
- ^ "Max Tshabala Says He Is The New Bloem Celtic Owner". soccerladuma.co.za.