League: NIFL Championship 2024/25
Newry City
Formed as recently as 2013, Newry City’s rise through the ranks to the Sports Direct Premiership is nothing short of remarkable.
Emerging after the original club of the same name was the subject of a winding up order in September 2012, the ‘new’ Newry had to begin life in the lowest tier of the Mid Ulster Football League, Intermediate ‘B’.
Winning the title – and promotion – at the first attempt in 2013/14, it took a couple of seasons to lift the Intermediate ‘A’ title and another subsequent promotion to the third tier of the Northern Ireland Football League.
They finished runners-up in the Premier Intermediate League in 2016/17, winning another promotion to the Championship via a play-off defeat of Armagh City.
Now a senior club, City subsequently finished runners-up again in their first Championship campaign and earned yet another promotion to the top flight via the play-offs.
Unfortunately Newry only survived for one season before suffering relegation back to the Championship whereupon they stayed until the end of the 2021/22 campaign and a successful title winning season that earned them a return to the Premiership.
City go into the 2023/24 season without long term manager Darren Mullen, who was instrumental in their rise through the ranks since their formation but decided to step down after securing their top flight survival for another year. He will be replaced by assistant Gary Boyle.
Newington
Newington are one of the newer arrivals to the Northern Ireland Football League structure but their history as a club stretches back to the late 1970s.
Originally formed as Jubilee Olympic in 1979, the club began life in regional junior football, changed name to Newington Youth Club in 1986 and lifted the prestigious County Antrim Junior Shield at the beginning of the 1990s.
They joined the Northern Amateur Football League (NAFL) pyramid and rapidly progressed through the ranks to eventually be crowned the top junior club in the country with victory over Lisbellaw United to win the IFA Junior Cup in 1997.
Bolstered by this the Swans made the step up to intermediate football and again enjoyed considerable success, regularly clinching the NAFL Premier Division title and causing shockwaves with a famous Irish Cup win over Glentoran at The Oval.
A play-off defeat of Dollingstown earned promotion to NIFL Championship 2 in time for the 2013/14 campaign.
Finishing fourth in that first season the club have consolidated their status since then, formally dropped ‘Youth Club’ from their name and, in December 2017, landed their biggest piece of silverware to date when Padraig Scollay scored the only goal of the game in a Steel & Sons Cup final win over Linfield Swifts.