Sports Betting Centre

Wednesday, 22 July 2015

10 Things You May Not Have Known About Queen's Park Football Club


Despite being a modest footballing side currently plying its trade in Scotland's League Two, Queen's Park FC boasts an extraordinarily colourful history with which few can compare.

Here are 10 interesting facts you may not have known about Scotland's 35th best soccer team:

1. Queen's Park is the only fully amateur club remaining in the Scottish professional football league. Its motto is Ludere Causa Ludendi, which means "to play for the sake of playing".

2. Founded in 1867, it is Scotland's oldest club and the oldest outside of England and Wales.

3. The club was launched on 9th July 1867 with the immortal words: "Tonight at half past eight o'clock a number of gentlemen met at No. 3 Eglinton Terrace for the purpose of forming a football club".

4. Queen's Park is the only Scottish club to have played in an English FA Cup Final, which it did in both 1884 and 1885, losing on both occasions. It was customary in the early days of the competition for selected Scottish clubs to be invited to participate in the tournament.

5. Queen's Park has won the Scottish Cup more times than any other team except for Celtic and Rangers, although the last occasion was in 1893.

6. Home games are played at Hampden Park, also the home of the Scottish national side. The stadium's capacity is 51,866 although in the 2014/15 season Queen's Park's average home gate was 608.

7. Hampden was the largest stadium in the world until 1950 when the MaracanĂ£ was built in Rio de Janeiro.

8. In 2014 due to the Glasgow Commonwealth Games the team had to play its home fixtures at Airdrie's Excelsior Stadium.

9. Queen's Park are nicknamed The Spiders and some supporters call themselves the "Irn Bru Firm" and enjoy a close and friendly relationship with supporters of the German club SG Wattenscheid 09.

10. In a fixture held on 30 November 1872 Scotland played England at the West of Scotland Cricket Club ground in Hamilton Crescent. For the one and only time ever all eleven of the Scotland players were from Queen's Park. 4000 fans watched Scotland play with a 2–2–6 line-up and England in a 1–1–8 formation.

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