Wembley F.C.

Notable players from this era was the Captain Len Berryman, prolific striker Stan Lowen and long serving defenders Tony Carroll and Arthur Percy.The team played in red and white quartered shirts.

[5] 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.

The Middlesex Senior Charity Cup Final, was played at Wembley Stadium in front of almost 5,000 supporters but the Lions lost 3–0 to Hendon.

[8] 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.

[9] In a strange coincidence this season also saw Wembley's best ever FA Trophy, reaching the 2nd round proper before losing 0–2 to Conference side Northwich Victoria at Vale Farm.

The club though 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 0–1 to local rivals Edgware Town.

[8][9] 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.

[10] 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.

[12] 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.

[17] Tobias Piers Webb remained in the side, despite calls for him to step down due to a string of poor performances, alongside Martin Parry, Christopher Lidstone, Stephen Garner, Cliff Darby, Liam Connolly, Rob Collins, Ross Mackiewicz, Pardeep Rai, Paddy Barron and Colin O’Connor.

[1] The ground was used in 1966 as the training base for the England national football team during their successful FIFA World Cup campaign.

The entrance to the club's ground