Republic of Ireland Premier Division 04/19 18:45 11 Derry City v Shamrock Rovers - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 04/22 18:45 24 Derry City v St Patrick's Athletic - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 04/26 18:45 12 Waterford FC v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 05/03 19:45 13 Galway United v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 05/06 17:00 14 Derry City v Shelbourne - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 05/10 18:45 15 Derry City v Bohemians Dublin - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 05/17 18:45 16 St Patricks v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 05/20 18:45 25 Shamrock Rovers v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 05/24 18:45 17 Derry City v Sligo Rovers - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 05/31 18:45 18 Dundalk v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 06/03 16:00 19 Derry City v Waterford FC - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 06/07 18:45 20 Derry City v Galway United - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 06/13 18:45 21 Bohemians Dublin v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 06/28 18:45 22 Derry City v Drogheda United - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 07/04 18:45 23 Sligo Rovers v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 08/02 18:45 26 Shelbourne v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 08/09 18:45 27 Derry City v Dundalk - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 08/23 18:45 28 Waterford FC v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 08/30 18:45 29 Galway United v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 09/13 18:45 30 Derry City v Bohemians Dublin - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 09/20 18:45 31 Derry City v Shamrock Rovers - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 09/27 18:45 32 Drogheda United v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 10/04 18:45 33 Derry City v Sligo Rovers - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 10/18 18:45 34 Dundalk v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 10/25 18:45 35 St Patricks v Derry City - View
Republic of Ireland Premier Division 11/01 19:45 36 Derry City v Shelbourne - View

Wikipedia - Derry City F.C.

Derry City Football Club are a professional association football club based in Derry, Northern Ireland. They play in the League of Ireland Premier Division, the top tier of league football in the Republic of Ireland, and are the League of Ireland's only participant from Northern Ireland. The club's home ground is the Brandywell Stadium and the players wear red and white striped shirts from which their nickname, the Candystripes, derives. The club are also known as the Red and White Army, Derry or City.

The club, founded in 1928, initially played in the Irish League, the domestic league in Northern Ireland, and won a title in 1964–65. In 1971, security concerns related to the Troubles meant matches could not be played at the Brandywell. The team played home fixtures 30 miles (48 km) away in Coleraine. The security forces withdrew their objections to the use of the Brandywell the following year, but in the face of insistence from the Irish League that the unsustainable arrangement continue, the club withdrew from the league. After 13 years in junior football, it joined the League of Ireland's new First Division for 1985–86. Derry won the First Division title and achieved promotion to the Premier Division in 1987, and remained there until an administrative relegation in 2009. The club won a domestic treble in 1988–89, the only League of Ireland club so far to do so.

After spending the majority of its time in the League of Ireland in the Premier Division, the club was expelled in November 2009 when it was discovered there were secondary, unofficial contracts with players. It was reinstated a few weeks later but demoted to the First Division, the second tier, from where it made its way back to the Premier Division.

History

The staff and squad of Derry City in 1965

Founded in 1928, the club decided against using the controversial official title of the city – Londonderry – in its name, while also deciding against continuing the name of the city's previous main club, Derry Celtic, so as to be more inclusive to all identities and football fans in the city. Derry City was granted entry into the Irish League in 1929 as professionals and was given permission by the Londonderry Corporation to use the municipal Brandywell Stadium. The club's first significant success came in 1935 when it lifted the City Cup. It repeated the feat in 1937, but did not win another major trophy until 1949, when it beat Glentoran to win its first Irish Cup. It won the Irish Cup for a second time in 1954, beating Glentoran again, and for a third time in 1964 – that year also winning the Gold Cup – despite the club's conversion to part-time status after the abolition of the maximum wage in 1961. This led to the club's first entry into European competition, in the 1964–65 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, in which it was beaten by Steaua Bucharest 5–0 on aggregate. The club won the 1964–65 Irish League and subsequently became the first Irish League team to win a European tie over two legs, beating FK Lyn 8–6 on aggregate in the 1965–66 European Cup. Derry did not complete the next round, as the Irish Football Association (IFA) declared its ground was not up to standard, after a game had been played there during the previous round. Derry suspected sectarian motives, as it played in a mainly nationalist city and so had come to be supported largely by Catholics. The IFA, Belfast-based, was dominated by Protestants and it was widely suspected that it would rather have been represented by a traditionally unionist team. Relations between the club and IFA quickly deteriorated.

There had been no significant history of sectarian difficulties at matches in the first 40 years of the club's history, but in 1969 the Civil Rights campaign disintegrated into communal violence, which were followed by 30 years of the Troubles. Despite the social and political unrest, Derry reached the Irish Cup final in 1971, in which it was beaten 3–0 by Distillery. As the republican locality surrounding the Brandywell saw some of the worst violence, numerous unionist-supported clubs were reluctant to play there. The Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) ruled the zone unsafe for fixtures. With no other feasible local ground available, Derry had to travel to the majority unionist town of Coleraine, over 30 miles (48 km) away, to play its "home" games at the Showgrounds. This situation lasted from September 1971 until October 1972 when, faced with dwindling crowds (most Derry fans were unwilling to travel to Coleraine due to the political situation and the longer journey) and dire finances, the club formally requested permission to return to the Brandywell. Despite a new assessment by the security forces concluding that the Brandywell was no longer any more dangerous than any other league ground and a lifting of the security ban, Derry's proposal fell by one vote at the hands of its fellow Irish League teams. Continuing without a ground was seen as unsustainable and on 13 October 1972 Derry withdrew from the league amidst a perception that it was effectively forced out.

The club continued as a junior team during the 13-year-long 'wilderness years', playing in the local Saturday morning league, and sought re-admission to the Irish League. Each time, the club nominated the Brandywell as its chosen home ground but the Irish League refused re-admission. Suspecting refusal was driven by sectarianism, and believing it would never gain re-admission, Derry turned its attentions elsewhere.

The official programme from a home game against Sligo Rovers on 17 November 1985 in Derry City's first League of Ireland season

Entry into the League of Ireland

Derry applied to join the reorganised League of Ireland (the league in the Republic of Ireland) in 1985 with the Brandywell as its home. The move required special dispensation from the IFA and FIFA, but eventually Derry was admitted to the league's new First Division for 1985, joining as semi-professionals. As its stadium was situated in a staunchly republican area once known as "Free Derry", with a history of scepticism towards the RUC in the local community, Derry received special permission from UEFA to steward its own games. The presence of the RUC was regarded as more likely to provoke trouble than help prevent it.

Derry's first match in the new system was a 3–1 League of Ireland Cup win over Home Farm of Dublin at the Brandywell on 8 September 1985. The return of senior football to Derry attracted large crowds. Later in the season, after turning professional, it won the League of Ireland First Division Shield with a 6–1 aggregate victory over Longford Town. The following year – 1987 – Derry won the First Division and promotion to the Premier Division, staying there since. The club reached the 1988 FAI Cup final, but lost to Dundalk. The next season – 1988–89 – the club was financially forced to revert to semi-professional status but Jim McLaughlin's side managed to win a treble; the league, the League Cup and the FAI Cup. Qualifying for the 1989–90 European Cup, it met past winners, Benfica, in the first round.

Modern highs and lows

Since 1989, Derry has won the League of Ireland Premier Division once – in 1996–97 – but has been runner-up on three occasions. It added five more FAI Cups to its tally in 1995, 2002, 2006, 2012, and 2022, and was runner-up in 1994, 1997, 2008, and 2014 and has also won ten further League Cups.

The Derry City team lined up prior to the game with Sligo Rovers in the 2006 FAI Cup semi-final at the Sligo Showgrounds on 29 October

The club has been beset by financial problems and was on the verge of bankruptcy due to an unpaid tax bill in 2000. An extensive fund-raising effort was undertaken by local celebrities and the city's people to save the club from extinction. Derry played high-profile friendlies against clubs such as Celtic, Manchester United, Barcelona and Real Madrid to raise extra money. This helped keep the club in operation, but difficulties remained and Derry nearly lost its Premier Division place in 2003 when it finished ninth and had to contest a two-legged relegation-promotion play-off with local rivals, Finn Harps. Derry won 2–1 on aggregate after extra-time at the Brandywell and remained in the top flight, avoiding further damage.

With finances secured, the club became the first in Ireland to be awarded a premier UEFA licence in 2004. Derry re-introduced professional football and its form improved, as it finished second in 2005. Derry's 2005 League Cup victory also saw the club qualify for the cross-border Setanta Cup for the first time in 2006. It entered the 2006–07 UEFA Cup's preliminary rounds, beating IFK Göteborg and Gretna to reach the first round where it faced Paris Saint-Germain; after a home 0–0 draw it lost 2–0 away. Derry finished second again in 2006, but went on to win the FAI Cup and League Cup double. It qualified for the 2007 Setanta Cup, as well as the preliminary rounds of the 2007–08 UEFA Champions League, and was accepted into the restructured Premier Division for 2007. The club had a disappointing league campaign in 2007, finishing seventh despite being pre-season favourites. It did manage to win its eighth League Cup, though, thanks to a 1–0 victory over Bohemians at the Brandywell.[]

The club, by owing huge debts, was expelled from the League of Ireland by the FAI in November 2009 for breaching the Participation Agreement and dissolved, but a new Derry club using the "Derry City" name joined for 2010 – with the FAI allowing it into the First Division By January 2010 with a new board, the new chairman, Philip O'Doherty was reported to have acquired a new kit deal with Hummel. Additionally, O'Doherty was quoted in the Derry Journal referring to the application to play in the First Division:

...I'm confident that we've provided a quality application and we're hopeful that we will secure the necessary UEFA Licence to compete in the First Division.

On Monday 15 February 2010, the new Derry City was awarded a First Division licence by the Independent Club Licensing Committee, allowing it eligibility to compete in the 2010 First Division. By the end of October 2010 Derry had clinched the First Division title and with it, promotion back to the premier division after winning 1–0 away at Monaghan United in the last game of the season.

Derry's top goalscorer that season, Mark Farren, who finished with a tally of 20 goals, scored the winner against Monaghan before retiring from football for medical reasons as he sought to fight a benign tumour located in his brain. Farren died of cancer in February 2016 and his number 18 shirt was retired by the club.

"Twenty goals (in the season) and he's had to deal with so much going through his mind about his future health, never mind his footballing career.

He's been unbelievably courageous, I don't think people realise how brave he's been, although certainly all the players do."

—Derry City manager Stephen Kenny.

Derry City Football Club is a professional soccer team based in Derry, Northern Ireland. The team was founded in 1928 and currently competes in the League of Ireland Premier Division, the top tier of Irish football.

Derry City is known for its passionate fan base and rich history in Irish football. The team plays their home matches at the Ryan McBride Brandywell Stadium, named after former captain Ryan McBride who tragically passed away in 2017.

The team's colors are red and white, and their crest features a traditional Irish harp. Derry City has a fierce rivalry with fellow Northern Irish team, Linfield FC, and matches between the two sides are always highly anticipated.

Over the years, Derry City has enjoyed success in domestic competitions, winning multiple League of Ireland titles and FAI Cups. The team has also competed in European competitions, representing Ireland on the continental stage.

Derry City is known for its attacking style of play and has produced talented players who have gone on to represent the Irish national team. The club continues to be a source of pride for the city of Derry and its loyal supporters.