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Work began on building the stadium in 2003 [2] after Brockville Park, the club's town centre home since 1885, was sold and demolished. [3]The project of building the stadium was a partnership between Falkirk Football Club and Falkirk Council who set up the Falkirk Community Stadium Ltd which provided the funds to construct and run the stadium. [4]
The Scottish Junior Football Association is affiliated to the Scottish Football Association and administers the Junior grade of association football in Scotland. The following is a list of Scottish Junior Football Association clubs, it does however include clubs which have moved to senior leagues and have remained SJFA members, allowing them to continue competing in the Scottish Junior Cup.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Young 26' Stadium: Falkirk Stadium Attendance: 3,582 Referee: Chris Graham: Scottish Cup
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide ... Stadium: Falkirk Stadium Attendance: 6,471 Referee: Ross Hardie
The Falkirk Stadium has been Falkirk's home since 2004. When the SPL was created in 1998, Brockville Park fell short of the SPL's stadium criteria, mainly because of the terraced stands. As a result, the club was denied entry to the league, despite winning the First Division or qualifying for a promotion play-off, on three occasions.
Pages in category "Sports venues in Falkirk (council area)" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Brockville Park was a football stadium located on Hope Street in Falkirk, Scotland, 0.25 miles (0.4 km) north-west of the town centre. It was the home of Falkirk F.C. from 1885 until the end of 2002–03 Scottish football season. [3] The record attendance at Brockville Park was 23,100 on 21 February 1953 in a match against Celtic.
In 2012, the school was selected as the Falkirk base for the Scottish Football Association's Performance Schools, a system devised to support the development of the best young talented footballers across the country (there are seven such schools across Scotland). As of 2018, the dedicated coach for the young players at Graeme High is Ian Ross. [4]