FC United vs BCAFC, 5th July 2025

The pre-season friendly with FC United of Manchester at Broadhurst Park in Moston, Manchester was an excellent opportunity to visit a new ground and one that had been on my bucket list.

Next month marks the tenth anniversary of the club’s first league game at the stadium when Stockport County were the visitors for a National League North (sixth tier) fixture. Whereas County now compete in the third tier, FC United are in the seventh tier and the club has been a member of the Northern Premier League, Premier Division since 2019/20.

FC United was formed in 2005 by supporters of Manchester United in response to the Glazer takeover of their club and originally played at Gigg Lane, Bury before the opening of Broadhurst Park. The club established a strong momentum with three successive promotions in its first three seasons and it seemed that FC United might emulate the rise of AFC Wimbledon, another supporter owned club formed in 2002. However it would take another seven years to reach the National League North in 2015 where the club remained for only four seasons before relegation back to the National Premier League, Premier Division.

Average attendances at Broadhurst Park have halved since the opening in 2015/16 when it was 3,395 to 1,667 last season and the gate for the friendly with Bradford City on 5th July – 1,688 – was therefore pretty representative of current league crowds. However if the atmosphere for our game was anything to go by, you’d be forgiven thinking that there were more in attendance and it compared very favourably with our recent visits to the likes of Salford and Bromley. (NB The record crowd for an FC United game is 6,731 at Bury in the FA Cup during 2010/11.) The ground is all-covered and has a capacity of 4,200 with room for expansion although it is questionable whether that is likely in the near-term.

Optimising the match day experience is a key objective for the club from a number of perspectives, for example through accessible pricing and decent refreshments and the encouragement of singing which benefits from a covered goal-end standing terrace (St. Mary’s Road End) the capacity of which is probably half that of the entire ground. There are numerous banners hung around the stands which makes the ground seem fuller although it also gives the feel of a teenager’s bedroom.

Mention needs to be made about the pre-match music which I thought was excellent, featuring in particular Manchester bands (Magazine, Joy Division, Buzzcocks, Stone Roses and The Smiths albeit Oasis notable by their absence in the playlist I heard) and new wave generally. Above all the fans are extremely friendly and welcoming of visitors.

The club is resolutely committed to supporter democracy as a mutual organisation and promotes itself as the largest fan-owned club in the UK. A similar (mutual) organisational structure existed at Valley Parade prior to incorporation in 1908. The historic record is that it handicapped decision-making, and that this became heavily politicised between different factions of the membership. It also impaired financial management and fundraising. How the modern incarnation at FC United works would be fascinating to know.

There is much to commend FC United and similarly its community initiatives are understood to have been impactful. Yet the obvious question is what of the future? The club has a principled rejection of corporate football although policies such as an aversion to shirt advertising have probably hindered its progress and financial budgeting. Not least the investment of £6.5m in the development of Broadhurst Park represents a commitment with financial obligations that still have to be paid. The dilemma facing the club in its third decade is whether to embrace commercialism or face stagnation. Limited progress in the last ten years highlights that despite all the attempts to escape football capitalism, the club remains trapped by the basic imperative of paying its way and the perennial struggle to compete with its rivals. Despite being one of the better supported non-league clubs – and the best supported in its division – this has not translated into sustained success.

The Premier League exacerbated football inequalities but those existed before 1992 and indeed Manchester United FC and its supporters had long been a beneficiary of football capitalism. The gulf in resources between Bradford City and Manchester United was there to be seen when the clubs played each other in 1982 and 1960 or well before that. The renaming of the original Newton Heath club to Manchester United in 1902 and relocation to Old Trafford in 1910 was nothing less than commercial opportunism such that Manchester United had been the product of football capitalism in the first place.

Malcolm Glazer’s takeover of Manchester United twenty years ago has proved to be disastrous for the club so you can hardly fault the founders of FC United for their opposition but at the time I couldn’t help a degree of cynicism about their venture. Why had it taken them so long to recognise the stench of football capitalism or see that there were losers out there? And why didn’t they give their support to any number of struggling sides in the north-west who had long suffered from football supporters opting for the bright lights of Old Trafford in preference to their local club?

For all the protests and virtue signalling of FC United, football capitalism has advanced unchecked in Manchester and in particular three miles down the road from Moston at the Etihad Stadium. The downward trend in gates at Broadhurst Park in the last ten years highlights that whilst the club has the support of a hardcore of followers it has ultimately failed to maintain its momentum and capture the affection of new generations of fans. For sure FC United offer a great match-day experience but in the final event you need more than a good juke box to get people coming back each year.

Dogs welcome

The case study of FC United points to the difficulty of launching a new club and winning new loyalties. The example of Bradford Park Avenue, reformed in 1988 and currently in the eighth tier comes to mind. The latter was launched on the back of a wave of nostalgia that followed the publication of Tim Clapham’s book about the history of the club the year before. However, coming 14 years after the liquidation of the original club it was effectively starting from scratch and it has reached no higher than the sixth tier. The disadvantage for Bradford Park Avenue has remained the ageing of its support base and the failure to persuade younger fans to follow a different Bradford club. By contrast the comparative success of AFC Wimbledon probably had more to do with that club becoming established so soon after the insolvency / relocation of the original as well as the media attention that it enjoyed. I also sense greater pragmatism on the part of the AFC Wimbledon leadership as to its commercial operation and suspect that the club had the benefit of suitably qualified and experienced individuals committing to its cause.

Comparisons can also be made with other former Football League clubs that suffered financial collapse. For example the respective phoenix sides of the likes of Bury FC (who lost FL membership in 2019), Chester City (2009) and Darlington FC (2010) currently operate in the eighth, sixth and sixth tiers of English football, far removed from the prospect of a rapid return to the Football League. Had there been a new club to succeed Bradford City AFC when liquidation was a real prospect in 2004, how long would it have taken to rejoin the ’92’?

The visit to Broadhurst Park was very enjoyable (with BCAFC winning 1-0) and I genuinely wish FC United all the best in the forthcoming season in their division alongside the likes of Guiseley, Whitby Town and Workington AFC. It will certainly be interesting to see how the club progresses in the next ten years.

John Dewhirst

** If you are interested in football photography then have a look for issue #2 of BRADFORDIANA which features Valley Parade. BRADFORDIANA is a photozine with 12 issues being published during 2025 in celebration of Bradford.

In praise of the EFL Trophy

Published 19th February, 2025

The EFL Trophy competition (aka Vertu Trophy in its latest manifestation) has its critics and like others I am not comfortable with the inclusion of junior Premier League sides. Nevertheless, the experience of their participation since 2016 has probably been worthwhile if only because their failure to make an impact provides a strong counterweight to any suggestion that the experiment should be extended elsewhere in English football.

As far as Bradford City is concerned, the club has benefited enormously from taking the competition seriously in the last couple of seasons. Admittedly the attendances at games in the group stages have been modest but latterly there has been a much greater enthusiasm, reflected for example by respectable away followings to the likes of Aston Villa and Rotherham. The financial benefits of reaching the semi-finals in 2023/24 and 2024/25 are unlikely to have been massive (albeit better than nothing) but I believe the real gain has come from the opportunity to rekindle some self-belief from cup success. Whilst my preference would be that it was derived from either the FA Cup or the Football League Cup, the EFL Trophy has at least provided another chance for drama and excitement, if not some form of glory and the prospect of playing at Wembley.

Despite the defeat in Birmingham at St Andrews, the performance of the Bantams could not be faulted. It was exactly the sort of gutsy, against-the-odds display that tends to be remembered as well as being consistent with the club’s ‘Bantams’ identity. In fact it was a classic City cup performance and a reminder that Bradford City AFC, like its predecessor Manningham FC (a rugby club that competed in both the Rugby Union and Northern Union) has built a reputation based on performance in cup competitions.

Manningham FC for example came to prominence in the Yorkshire County Cup during the 1880s under the auspices of the Yorkshire Rugby Union. This included memorable ties with Bradford FC at Park Avenue and reaching the final of that competition in 1885 which helped to establish the club as a leading side in Yorkshire. In turn this provided the impetus and confidence to originally develop the Valley Parade site in 1886 when forced to relocate.

So too, Bradford City AFC is best known for having won the FA Cup in 1911 and it has been in cup competition as opposed to the league that Bradford City has continued to have most success, the ‘History Makers’ campaign in 2013 for instance following in the tradition of ‘Glorious 1911’.

There has been the continuity of celebrated giant-killings throughout the club’s history from defeat of first division Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1906 to that of then Premier League champions, Chelsea in 2015. The club’s self-identity as underdogs – plucky bantams – has come into its own in cup competition against ‘bigger’ clubs. Even in the bleakest years, the fact that Bradford City had won the FA Cup could not be taken away and provided the club with respectability.

Whilst we haven’t had any high profile giant-killing this season, and the EFL Trophy remains a lower profile competition than either the FA Cup or the Football League Cup, in no small way it has allowed the club to rediscover its historic mojo. A cold night in Birmingham has strengthened the self-confidence and self-belief among players and supporters alike and will hopefully provide the necessary springboard for the club to finally escape the basement division. Neither is the timing insignificant coming in the 40th anniversary of the Valley Parade disaster as well as the year in which Bradford is the City of Culture. Both are relevant to the identity of the city and there is no reason why BCAFC should not benefit from – and reinforce – the feelgood factor that will hopefully accrue from the City of Culture programme of events in 2025 alongside a successful promotion campaign.

The visit to Birmingham was a reminder not just of heroic cup exploits of old, but of the massive gulf in financial resources. But who knows, maybe the media exposure of cup campaigns including the drama at St Andrews last night will entice a billionaire to discover a love for BCAFC and come forth with funds to bankroll the club. Of course we can but hope but it was precisely the cup headlines in 2013 and 2015 that attracted outside interest in Bradford City to start with and made people consider investment.

For now let’s hope that the performance at Birmingham will generate further momentum for the remaining games of the season to ensure that we win promotion. As unglamorous as may be the case, the Vertu Trophy could well prove to have helped shape the season which is reason enough not to be dismissive about the competition.

Follow the links above for features about the history of Bradford City.