Road-Sea Southampton F.C.

Road-Sea Southampton
Full nameRoad-Sea Southampton Football Club
Founded1973
Dissolved1987
GroundRoad-Sea Park, Marchwood, Nr Southampton

R.S. Southampton, commonly referred to locally as Road-Sea, were a semi-professional football club, based near Southampton, Hampshire. They only ran for fourteen years but enjoyed a very successful and unusual history which saw them bizarrely move directly from Sunday football into the semi-professional Southern League.

History

The club were founded in 1973 by player-manager Peter Price, and were named Road-Sea after his locally based freight shipping company. They originally played in the City of Southampton Sunday League, winning every possible honour as they rose up through the divisions. In 1976–77 they reached the semi-final of the FA Sunday Cup.

With the aid of the company's financial backing, the club purchased some land at Staplewood, Marchwood, near Southampton and soon developed the site into an impressive facility. This resulted in an ambitious application to join the semi-professional Southern League being surprisingly accepted in 1982, despite the club having no previous history of playing Saturday football.[1]

Whilst in the Southern League Southern Division, the club became known as R.S. Southampton and soon silenced their critics as they pushed for promotion to the Premier Division and after finishing a creditable 3rd in their debut season behind champions Fisher Athletic and Folkestone, they won promotion as champions in 1983–84.[2] That season, they also enjoyed a fine run in the FA Vase where they reached Round 5 before being eliminated 1–2 away at Leyton Wingate.

Road-Sea continued to thrive in the highly competitive Premier Division as they then finished 5th in 1984–85. The following season was much tougher and the club finished mid-table.

In 1986 Road-Sea decided to withdraw from the league and become founder members of the new Wessex League (formed that year mostly by the Hampshire League's top clubs with the best facilities).[3] Road-Sea then finished runners-up, reached the final of the Hampshire Senior Cup and won both the League Cup and Russell Cotes Cup, but the club's short but successful history was ended suddenly in 1987 when Price retired [4] and withdrew his financial backing.

The club's home ground, Road-Sea Park was later sold to Southampton F.C. who use it to stage reserve team and youth team games, as well as a training base.

Honours

Playing Records

League

FA Cup

FA Trophy

FA Vase

Famous Players

A number of former professionals played for Road-Sea Southampton during their Southern League days. These include Kevin Dawtry (former Southampton, Crystal Palace and Bournemouth), Pat Earles (former Southampton and Reading), goalkeeper Ian Turner (for Grimsby Town, Walsall and Southampton, where he played in the memorable 1976 FA Cup winning team), Paul Bennett (former Southampton, Reading and Aldershot) and Dean Mooney, the former Bournemouth striker.

References