| Finn
Harps Club History
by Bartley Ramsay
and Rodney Dullaghan
Finn
Harps was formed in 1954 as a junior club. They first came to national
prominence by winning the FAI Junior Cup in 1968. This then enabled
them to play in the FAI Intermediate Cup in 1969. After they were knocked
out of that competition, local men Fran Fields and Patsy McGowan took
the decision to apply to the League of Ireland for membership. The club
was admitted into the senior ranks in May of 1969 and Harps were due
to play their first senior game on 17th August 1969.
Harps
were beaten by ten goals to two in that match by the mighty Shamrock
Rovers and there was much comment in the following week by the national
press, that the club were not up to the task and it had been a foolish
decision by the League to accept a team from Donegal. However, during
the seventies Finn Harps went on to become one of the most consistent
and top sides in the country.
Click
Here for Tribute to Brendan Bradley |
|

Harps
legend
Brendan Bradley
|
Harps
won their first senior trophy, the Dublin City Cup in 1971/2, when a
Brendan Bradley goal defeated Cork Hibernians in Dalymount Park. Two
years later Dalymount Park was again the scene of Harps' first and to
date only FAI Cup Final victory. Two goals from the legendary Brendan
Bradley and one by Charlie Ferry seeing off the challenge of St Patricks
Athletic by three goals to one. Click
Here for Cup Winning Team pic
Four
times during the 1970s Harps played European football. Three times as
runners up in the League Championship, playing in the UEFA Cup against
Aberdeen, Derby County and Everton. Once in the European Cup Winners
Cup when they appeared against Turkish Cup winners Bursaspor.
Harps
also finished runners up in the League Cup finals of 1974 and 1975 to
Waterford and Bohemians respectively. Throughout the seventies Harps
never once finished in the bottom half of the table and were widely
respected for their attractive and attacking football style. |
Sadly the eighties
saw a gradual decline of the club in terms of competing with the best
in Ireland. An FAI Cup semi final in 1981, a Shield final defeat by
EMFA (now Kilkenny City) and a League Cup Final defeat away to Waterford
were the highlights of the decade and by 1985 the club had been relegated
to the newly formed first division. A series of managerial changes
were effected over the next few years in an attempt to raise the club
but it wasn’t until the early 90s that Harps once again began
to become a force to be reckoned with.
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Patsy
McGowan stepped in as manager for the third time at the start of the
1992/93 season. The next three seasons saw Harps finish in the play
off position twice. Sadly, Harps were beaten both times, once by Cobh
Ramblers and once by Athlone Town. Patsy was let go by the club half
way through the 1995/96 season before the job could be completed, but
Harps went on to win promotion with Dermot Keely at the helm. Thus ending
eleven seasons in the dreaded First Division. |

Patsy McGowan |
| During
that summer a consortium of business men attempted to take control at
Finn Park, and when this offer was finally rejected it lead to resignations
of the manager and certain members of the club committee. Charlie McGeever
was appointed manager and despite time being against him, he managed
to assemble a squad for the opening of the season and by the seasons
end he ensured that Harps Premier Division status was retained.
Off
the field the remaining committee members, set the club up as a Co-Operative
Society, selling shares to the ordinary supporters, to ensure that the
Club would be owned and run by the people who truly cared about it.
A blueprint for the future was put in place that included a school of
excellence for the young Donegal footballers and major plans for the
renovation of Finn Park.
In
their third season in the Premier Division Harps finished in fourth
position, one point behind Shelbourne in third, just missing out on
Europe. More notably however they made the FAI Cup final against Bray
Wanderers. After a marathon series of matches Bray won leaving Finn
Harps with nothing to show for one of their best seasons in over 20
years but the Irish News Cup.
After
a very disappointing start to their fourth season having only one point
from a possible twenty one Charlie Mc Geever resigned. Gavin Dykes was
installed as manager. Once again Harps retained their Premiership status
but the club was forced to go public with their financial difficulties
which made it known that they were around £280,000 in debt.
Dykes
resigned after an absymal run of games and fan's favourite Jonathan
Speak took over as first team manager. New financial structures were
put in place and and a newly appointed fundraising committee with numerous
supporter clubs set up around the country. After a run of 14 games undefeated
and an amazing fightback from Harps they were still relegated to Division
One on the last day of the season after 5 years in the top flight. |
|
'Speakie's' first full season in charge saw Harps finish runners-up
in Division One to Drogheda United and they were then beaten on penalties
by Longford Town in the playoffs. The following season was much the
same with Waterford United running away with the league and third placed
Harps were dumped out of the playoffs at the semi-final stage by Galway
United.
Speak
managed to hold most of the squad together despite interest from a number
of Premier clubs including top scorer Kevin McHugh as they prepared
for another assault on Division One where they were installed as the
bookie's favourites to lift the title. |

Jonathan Speak
|
After
a good start from Harps they fell into a mini-slump in August and mid-way
through September having failed to win in a month, including a loss
at home to Sligo Rovers, Harps fell to fourth in the league. When leaders
Dublin City came to Finn Park five points ahead of Harps, Speak's troops
could only manage a draw in what was billed as a must-win game. Despite
having only lost two games all season, the nine draws was the Sion managers
downfall and he was sacked two days later.
Speak's
assistant, Sean 'Wizard' McGowan took temporary charge until a suitable
placement was found and steadied the ship with two wins from two. Noel
King was then appointed as the new manager going into the final third
of the season and Harps were temporairaily rejuvinated, storming back
to the top of the First Divsion table with a club record equalling six
wins on the trot. With only four games remaining, Harps led the pack
by a point but losses away to Bray Wanderers and Dublin City handed
the title to Dublin and left Harps in the dreaded playoffs once again.
They
confidently disposed of Bray Wanderers in the semi-finals on an aggregate
score of 3-1 to set-up an unbelievably tense derby final against neighbours
Derry City. |
|
The
first leg with a capacity crowd in Finn Park finished scoreless and
another sell-out crowd watched Derry nick it with a winner in extra-time
to win 2-1.
The
fall-out from what was termed in the press as 'The Battle of The Brandywell'
carried on into the new season with the Harps manager and two players
suspended from their sending-offs missing the start of the 2004 campaign.
|

Noel King |
| Noel
King lasted six games into that season (2004) and left the club by mutual
consent with the amount of travelling the Dubliner had to endure being
cited as one of the main reasons for his departure. His assistant, Sean
'The Wizard' McGowan took charge for two games but within ten days a shock
replacement was announced. |
|
The
new manager was ex-Derry City legend, Felix Healy. The Derryman had
won all the domestic major honours with his hometown club. Healy had
two spells in the Brandywell, one as a player and one as a manager.
It was seen as a bold move by the Harps board of directors to give someone
with such a history with Harps greatest rivals the managers job, but
it paid off beautifully.
Healy
not only delivered the promotion that had eluded so many other Harps
managers but done so in style with the Finn Park side winning their
first ever league title. It was the club's golden jubilee year and one
that Harps fans will never forget. |

Felix Healy |
|
The following season saw Harps struggle badly in the Premier Division and in July Healy paid the price with Anthony Gorman, a former Harps, Linfield, Portadown, Coleraine and Sligo Rovers player agreeing to become player-manager until the end of the season. At season's end with Harps relegated again, Gorman agreed to take the position on a full-time basis.
With many talented young local players in the squad, Harps are determined to make a swift and permanent return to the premier division. Off the field work continues on the new stadium project and on the elimination of the debts which so nearly destroyed the club. |

Anthony Gorman |