Kettering Town FC is a non-league club who come from the market town in Northamptonshire, around eighty three miles north of London. The club were originally formed as Kettering FC in 1872 playing in local leagues and competitions.
They turned semi professional in 1891 before joining the Midland League the following season. By 1900 Kettering had lifted two league titles, at which point they left to join the Southern League. The left that league on a couple of occasions, later rejoining and in 1924 they took on the title of Kettering Town FC.
In 1928, they won the Southern League title, but in 1930, Town joined the Birmingham & District League, where they took the place of their reserve team. After twenty years, the 'Poppies' rejoined the Southern League and in 1957 they lifted their second league title.
Ron Atkinson had a spell as manager, and then in 1976, with Derek Dougan as club chief executive and manager, the club received great publicity when it became the first British club to display a sponsor's name on its playing shirts. Kettering Tyres had to have their advert removed, and despite Dougan shortening it to Kettering T in the claim that the T stood for Town, the FA threatened the club with a £1,000 fine.
The Poppies reached Wembley in 1978-79 in the FA Trophy Final, but were beaten by Stafford Rangers. At the end of that season, they became founder members of the Alliance Premier League (later the National League). The club finished runners-up on three occasions, well before the days of automatic promotion and playoffs.
In 1989, Town reached the fourth round of the FA Cup, where Charlton Athletic ended their fine run at Selhurst Park. In 1992, they reached the third round, this time losing 4-1 away to Blackburn Rovers. Many earlier round games brought the club into the spotlight as their games were covered on live TV. In 1999-00, Kettering returned to Wembley for the FA Trophy Final, this time losing 3-2 against Kingstonian.
Morell Maison and then briefly Graham Westley had a go as manager before Mark Cooper was appointed. His side lifted the Conference North title in 2008, meaning a return to the non-league elite. Ladak made plenty of noise and a few enemies along the way as The Poppies reached the FA Cup Fourth Round the next season. Fulham won a stormy tie 4-2 at Rockingham Road.
More managers came and went before Maison was re-appointed at a very controversial time in the club's history at the end of the 2010-11 season. The lease for Rockingham Road only had a few years to run, and Ladak told fans that the owner was not willing to sign a new deal. Near neighbours and deadly rivals Rushden & Diamonds went bust that summer, meaning their Nene Park home was unoccupied.
The ground was situated six miles from Kettering in the village of Irthlingborough. Fans of both clubs were up in arms, but Ladak told them that this was the only option for Kettering Town moving forward. He signed a deal with landlord and former Diamonds chairman Keith Cousins for a twenty-five-year lease on the stadium, sounding alarm bells amongst the Poppies loyal fans that their club would never return to their home town.
Mark Stimson took over as manager after a few games at Nene Park as rumours of financial worries circulated, not for the first time, about the club. Stimpson was replaced by Mark Cooper and then Ashley Westwood. Sure enough, the Poppies were locked out of their new 'home' just over a season later.
This was after the controversial former Weymouth owner George Rolls had taken over. However, he was suspended from the game for five years in June 2012 and fined £10,000 for previous offences, leaving Ladak back in charge, as Kettering were relegated to the Conference North..
John Beck was left with the job of trying to put a team out. On one occasion, the side took the field with ten men as unpaid players departed. After a spell of not fulfilling fixtures, Kettering moved to play their home games at the home of Corby Town. The team were relegated to the Southern League for the 2012-13 season, with a ten-point deduction to start the new campaign.
Eventually, after several years of misery for Poppies fans, local businessman Richie Jeune bought the club, and plans were made to upgrade Latimer Park to share with local side Burton Latimer FC as Kettering looked to rebuild following yet another relegation to the Division One Central.
Dean Thomas was put in charge of the team as the club looked to stabilise. The team reached the playoffs, where they defeated Daventry Town in the semi-final. The reward was a promotion decider against Slough Town in front of a full house at Latimer Park. Despite leading 2-0, the Poppies eventually lost 3-2.
Thomas departed to be replaced by new Joint Managers, Thomas Baillie and Scott Machin. The duo led the team to the Division One Central title and promotion to the Premier Division, before they stepped aside for Marcus Law to take over in charge of team affairs. Law's side had a couple of finishes just outside the playoff places.
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The entrance to Latimer Park |
He stayed in charge until resigning in January 2022, when Ian Culverhouse was given the job, remaining in place until the following May. Lee Glover was next in the managerial chair for the 2022-23 campaign, in which the Poppies ended in the relegation places, returning to Premier Division North of the Southern League. Andy Leese became the new manager before being sacked in November 2023.
Richard Lavery was eventually appointed as the new team boss at Latimer Park in February 2024, helping to steer his side away from a relegation place a few months later. The playoffs were reached in 2024-25, with Harborough Town being defeated before a loss in the final to AFC Telford United. Simon Hollyhead was appointed Poppies boss in June 2025.
Kettering Town will play in the Southern League Premier Division Central in the 2025-26 season.My visits
Kettering Town 3 Scarborough 0 (Saturday 24th February 1979) FA Trophy Round Two (att: 2,112)
This FA Trophy encounter had been put back several times owing to the snow at that time of year. It had been rearranged for a Saturday, which was quite unusual. My Dad took me and my brothers, Paul and Nick, on one of the supporters' coaches. This was a big game for Boro as it had been only two seasons since their last Wembley triumph, although there were signs that the team was past their best, with one or two moving on.
I was most impressed on arriving at Rockingham Road. The floodlights were four huge corner pylons, and the lamps were shaped so they read K. We decided to sit in what seemed a massive Main Stand to us. It went along two-thirds of the pitch in a raised seating deck.
The Rockingham Road End was mainly open shale banking with a cover in the centre. The far Britannia Road Side had two separate covers with open standing at either end, and finally, the Cowper Street End was open banking and terracing. In the corner was an old pavilion building which had a refreshments kiosk and club shop downstairs and offices above. A section of open terrace with the clubhouse behind stood next to the Main Stand to complete the picture.
A man whom I presumed to be a town crier or something came out before the teams, ringing his bell. My comment of the time was, "blimey, it's the Pope in wellies". The first half of the game was very even, and we were pretty confident going into the break. It was cold with snow on parts of the open terrace and around the pitch edge, as Boro keeper Ian McKechnie found out when he ran out in the second half to be greeted by numerous snowballs.
It must have been a tough day for him, looking after three lads amongst a partisan home crowd with things going wrong by the minute on the pitch. I'd definitely seen him in better moods. We made our way out down the front of the stand from our front row seats and out to the coaches behind the Rockingham Road End after the police had moved on some gloating young home fans.
Kettering went on to the final that year, and we were not totally shocked.
Kettering Town 3 Scarborough 1 (Saturday 16th September 2006) Conference North (att: 1,235)
I had been to an end-of-season party with my colleagues at Lord's Cricket Ground on the Friday evening, so I was ever so slightly dehydrated the next morning! It had been an interesting evening near Goodge Street involving a meal and plate throwing in a Greek Taverna. I was ready for a pint to settle myself down.
I took the train on a very pleasant morning from St Pancras, arriving around half past twelve. Rather than stopping off at a pub in the town centre, I headed for the ground, which was around a mile and a half away. I figured that there must have been a pub up there? I was wrong, of course, so it looked like the clubhouse or nothing.
While behind the Main Stand, I was introduced to former Boro legendary goalkeeper Ted Smethurst, who lived in Kettering, by a home fan. He was heading to the hospitality area while I headed for a beer with the common man! The clubhouse was decent enough, although I was glad of some company when some other Seadogs arrived.
We went through the turnstiles by the clubhouse and soon realised that the rest of the away support were at the far end of the ground, so we made our way around. Rockingham Road had changed slightly since my last visit. More terracing had been added at the Cowper Street End. The Britannia Road side now had just one longer cover, and the roof had been removed from the Rockingham Road end.
Kettering were flying high in the league, whereas Boro were still on a negative points total and chasing their first win of the season following a points deduction for financial malpractices. Town weren't a bad side, but Boro equalled them for spells. Just before half time, the steward by the gate at the segregation fence let a few of us through so we could head round for some further libation.
I headed off back into town in good form. I went into a superb pub with good ale and music on the juke box and made a spontaneous decision to stay for the night! I went next door where rooms were advertised and booked in. I freshened up and went for a few more beers. The town wasn't as enticing as I first thought as it was going to be. I got something to eat and had an early night.
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A Boro fan spotted on the boundary at Wantage Road, Northampton! |
For images and a description of Nene Park, please go to the Rushden & Diamonds page.