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Warwick County F.C.

Warwick County F.C. was the association football division of Warwickshire County Cricket Club.

Following the examples of Notts County and Derby County, both of which were, in origin, county cricket clubs, the Warwickshire CCC decided to start up a football division in 1887, playing at the Edgbaston ground during the winter, and receiving heavy backing from the Ansells brewery, which hinted at offering sinecure jobs for quasi-professional players. However, whereas Notts had a clean slate, and Derbyshire only had works or school sides with which to compete, by 1887 the Birmingham football scene was fully mature, with Aston Villa, West Bromwich Albion, Birmingham St George's, and Small Heath Alliance all being professional clubs with strong fanbases. Consequently, despite the resources of the cricket club, County failed to gain a foothold, with "good gates" being elusive, and the media "always asserted that the venture was a hopeless one".

Further, the name caused confusion, with a number of county football associations assuming the club was the representative club of the Warwickshire Football Association (an organization which did not exist) and inviting it to play representative fixtures.

The first competitive game the club played was in the Birmingham Senior Cup in 1887–88, losing 11–0 at home to Aston Villa, albeit in front of 5,000 spectators. Nevertheless, this showed the impossibility the new club faced in bridging the gap. In fact, in its four entries to the local competition, it only reached the second round once. The club's committee acknowledged this, and the club was the instigator for the new Warwickshire Association, to provide the club with less daunting competitive fixtures.

One week after the club's Birmingham Senior Cup debut, the club made its FA Cup debut, being drawn to play Birmingham Excelsior at home. Excelsior was a second-rank side in the town but easily won 4–1, the County goal being an own goal by Lovesey. Despite Lovesey's gift, the Football Association ordered a replay, on the basis that Lovesey did not appear on the list of professional players; it later turned out that Excelsior had sent the appropriate papers and it was an FA clerical error that had not included Lovesey's name on the list those eligible to play. It did County no good - Excelsior won the replay 5–0.

The club entered the Cup for the next three seasons. In the first qualifying round of 1888–89, the club, scored a notable shock by beating Stoke 2–1; the first example of a non-league team beating a Football League team. However, the county was not facing the Stoke first team, as League commitments required the Potters to play at Preston North End, so the match was against Stoke's reserve side Stoke Swifts - albeit supplemented by four first team men, supposedly to guarantee Stoke's progression into the next round. The 1888-89 competition marked the county's best Cup run, the club beating Aston Shakespeare F.C. after knocking out Stoke. The run ended at the third qualifying round, County losing 5–1 at Burton Wanderers, who in turn went down 9–0 to County's closest geographical rivals (Small Heath).

In 1889–90, the club was a founder member of the Midland Counties League. It had recruited heavily, with the new Warwickshire Association's representative side to face Manchester including three County players, plus five from Small Heath and three from Birmingham St George's, and winger Gray selected for the much more prestigious Birmingham and District side at the end of the season.

The club finished 6th out of 11 in its first season, with crowds usually around 1,000, and finished the year on a high note, beating champions Lincoln City 5–2, and sharing the Warwickshire Cup with Small Heath. The competition however was rather low-key, with only 10 entries, and County, Small Heath, and St George's all exempted to the semi-final stage. In the semi-final, St George's fielded a reserve side against County, who duly won 5–1.

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