Preview
Matchday Programme
Welcome
Saturday 11th April 2026
15:00
Cherry Red Records Combined Counties Football League Division One
We welcome the players, management team, club officials, and supporters of Wembley to French School Meadow for this fixture. It’s always a pleasure to host local clubs, and fixtures between our sides are consistently competitive and played in the right spirit.
We encourage respect for all and ask everyone attending to observe good fair play practice throughout the match. We hope you enjoy the game, make the most of our facilities, and have a safe journey home after the final whistle.
Match Officials
Referee
Andrew Tooley
Assistant Referees
Brian Capel & Edward Clifford
Penn & Tylers Green
Blue & White Striped Shirts, Blue Shorts, Blue SocksManagement
Joint-Managers: Giovanni Sepede & James Pritchard
Assistant Manager: Christian Williams
Physio: John Grimsdell
REGISTERED PLAYERS
Jordan Ajanlekoko
Kian Austin
Jack Avery
James Ayres
Daniel Bailey
Alfie Branwhite
Oliver Burger-Williams
Sam Butcher
Kyle Dawes
Harry Doyle
Fabian Driffill
Brandon Eaton
Chris Ellis
Joel Ellis
Jamie Essex
Fabian Etienne
Jeffrey Fordjour
Louis Fountain
Mackenzie Gould
Tyler Gregory
Kajtek Halatyn
Cory Hathaway
George Hennessey
David Hoar
Aaron Jewell
James Keeley
Elijah Layman
Josh Light
Charlie Losasso
Callum Mapley
Lennon Moore
James Mulley
Michael Neary
Mark Nisbet
Arthur Nkrumah
David Pearce
Josh Pedley
Ben Peters
Freddie Pritchard
Lennon Pritchard
Felix Prudden
Philip Pryor
Alex Sethi
Will Smith
Ben Sturgess
Jack Taylor
Michael Teather
Joshua Urquhart
Troy Williams
Wembley
Red Shirts, Red Shorts, Red SocksManagement
Manager: Ian Bates
REGISTERED PLAYERS
Richard Acheampong
Abdul-Rasheed Alaka
Cameron Anderson
Jack Baker
Alfie Bates
Frankie Bates
Oliver Cannon
Zachary Cheyette
Eden Dewar
Enos Duah
Rui-Felipe Barbosa
Luke Finnegan
Kayden Fitzgerald
Lucas Georgiou
Jermaine Heron
Jonathan Iley
Ned Jones
Avante Joseph
Mahdee Kayitta
Sam Langan
Ralique Lawrence
Benjamin Lawson-Hatch
Venance Lupumba
Lewis Morgan
Calvin Osborne
Henry Osei
Michael Power-Simpson
Ayushmaan Prasad
Oskar Prokop
Mark Purcell
Thady Sheehan
Benedict Statham
Frederick Stoner-Redfern
Gabriel Tshibangu
Ethan Tyrer
Sanjef Vigneswaran
Rhys Williams
Walid Zidani
THE OPPOSITION
About Wembley
The club was established in 1946 during the post-Second World War football boom, as many in the area felt it an anomaly that the area which proudly boasted the English national stadium did not have its own senior football team. It was formed from two local junior clubs: Sudbury Rangers and Sudbury Ratepayers. As a result of their efforts, the club took the motto ‘A Posse Ad Esse’ (From Possibility To Reality).
Wembley became champions of the Middlesex Senior League in only their second season of existence, in 1947/48. They then spent two seasons in the Spartan League Western Division, becoming champions in the 1950/51 season. The next season saw them move from the Spartan League to become one of the founder members of the Delphian League. Vale Farm’s record attendance was recorded in 1952 when 2,654 attended a derby game with local rivals Wealdstone. In the 1955/56 season, they finished as runners-up in the league. That season also saw them reach the finals of both the London Senior Cup (losing 3-1 to Briggs Sports at Ilford) and Middlesex Senior Cup (losing 2-1 to Hendon at Wealdstone). Notable players from this era were captain Len Berryman, prolific striker Stan Lowen and long-serving defenders Tony Carroll and Arthur Percy. The team played in red and white quartered shirt and joined the Corinthian League the following season (1956/57).
That competition merged with the Athenian League in 1963 and became the First Division, where the club remained until gaining promotion to the Premier Division in 1968. Malcolm Allison’s first job in football management was with Wembley but most of his reign unfortunately coincided with the Big Freeze of 1962/63, so his impact was minimal. Season 1967/68 saw Wembley’s best-ever FA Amateur Cup run as they reached the second round proper. The club in the 1972/73 season finished bottom of the Premier Division but were saved from relegation when a lot of clubs left the Athenian League to join the Isthmian League. With this loss, the Athenian League had to restructure into Divisions One and Two, and Wembley remained in the top division. However, they were elevated to the Isthmian League at the end of the 1974/75 season.
Wembley remained in the second tier of the Isthmian League for 21 seasons, during which time they came close to promotion to the Premier Division on two occasions in the 1980s but finished third on both occasions. During this period, Wembley reached the first round proper of the FA Cup for the one and only time in 1980/81 where they lost 3-0 to Enfield. In 1983/84, Wembley reached the semi-finals of the Isthmian League Cup before losing 4–1 to the eventual winners Sutton United. Wembley were one of the most successful clubs in Middlesex throughout the 1980s, appearing in eight county cup finals – winning five, including doing the County Cup ‘double’ in 1986/87 by winning both the Middlesex Senior Cup and the Middlesex Senior Charity Cup. Wembley reached both finals again the following season but lost both. The Middlesex Senior Charity Cup final was played at Wembley Stadium in front of almost 5,000 supporters but the Lions succumbed 3–0 to Hendon. They had however beaten Football League side Brentford at Griffin Park in the semi-finals, coming from 1-0 down to win 2–1. It is the only time (thus far) in Wembley’s history that they have beaten Football League opposition in a competitive match.
The 1990s saw two excellent FA Cup runs, reaching the fourth qualifying round in 1992/93 before eventually going out to Nuneaton Borough after three replays (including one played in front of over 2,000 people) and the third qualifying round in 1994/95 – beating Welling United, then of the Conference – 4–1 away from home. Season ’94/95 also saw the Lions win the Middlesex Senior Charity Cup for the fifth time, beating Hampton 2–0 at Northwood. Hopes of promotion were high as Wembley entered their jubilee season in 1995/96 but the loss of key players Giuliano Grazioli to Football League side Peterborough United and Charlie Flaherty meant that the Lions struggled from the off and eventually were relegated for the first time in the club’s history. In a strange coincidence this season also saw Wembley’s best-ever FA Trophy run, reaching the second round proper before losing 2-0 to Conference side Northwich Victoria at Vale Farm. The club bounced straight back up to Division One in the 1996/97 campaign, and almost topped this off with another Middlesex Charity Cup win but lost the final 1-0 to local rivals Edgware Town.
Under the management of Errol Dyer, 1998/99 saw Wembley reach the Middlesex Senior Cup final at Enfield’s Southbury Road but they eventually lost to Hendon on penalties – the game having finished 2–2 after extra-time. However, that was the highlight of the season as the club was relegated back to Division Two. The club then spent the next three seasons in Division Two. As part of the re-organisation for the 2002/03 campaign of the Isthmian League, all Division Two clubs were elevated to the regionalised Division Ones and Wembley were put in Division one North. However, they could only survive one season in the higher league and were back in Division Two.
In the 2005/06 season, as a result of the restructuring of non-league football, Wembley were moved sideways into the Combined Counties League Premier Division. The club rounded off the 2010/11 season by reaching the Combined Counties League Premier Challenge Cup final – their first final in 12 years – but lost 1-0 to Sandhurst Town. The final was played at Farnborough Town FC’s Cherrywood Road ground.
In the 2011/12 season, their FA Cup extra preliminary-round tie against Ascot United was shown exclusively via a stream from Facebook; funded by the FA Cup’s new sponsors, multinational brewing company Budweiser (Anheuser-Busch), it was the first broadcast of its kind anywhere in sport. Wembley won the match 2–1, with second-half goals from Chris Korten and Roy Byron securing the win for the Lions in front of a record attendance of 1,149 at Ascot’s Racecourse ground.
On 15 March 2012, Budweiser (Anheuser-Busch) announced that they would now be sponsoring Wembley FC as part of a marketing campaign to promote their involvement with clubs at all levels after taking over the sponsorship of the FA Cup. The sponsorship deal included a clubhouse upgrade and provision of a team minibus, as well as the implementation of a new responsible drinking programme and promotion of the club in the wider Wembley community. On March 28th 2012, it was confirmed that Terry Venables would join the club in a technical advisor capacity.
Later that year, it was announced the club had recruited former internationals Ray Parlour, Martin Keown, Graeme Le Saux, Claudio Caniggia and Brian McBride to play in their FA Cup campaign that season, none of whom made a competitive appearance for the club. The north London side also hired David Seaman as goalkeeping coach. Ugo Ehiogu was drafted in later for the preliminary qualifying game against Uxbridge, but could not prevent Wembley from being knocked out.
At the end of the 2020/21 season, the club were transferred to the Premier Division North of the Combined Counties League. They were relegated to Division One in 2024/25.
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