Papakura City FC
![]() | |||
Full name | Papakura City Football Club | ||
---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | Papakura, Kura | ||
Founded | 1959 | ||
Ground | McLennan Park, Papakura | ||
Chairman | ![]() | ||
Coach | ![]() | ||
League | NRF League One | ||
2024 | NRF League One, 4th of 8 | ||
Website | www.papakuractyfc.org.nz | ||
|
Papakura City FC is a New Zealand football (soccer) club based in Papakura, Auckland, New Zealand. The club currently competes in the NRF League One division. The club also fields teams in all junior divisions, as well as a Women's team that competes in the NRF League One Women division. Papakura play their home games at McLennan Park, Papakura.
Club history
The club was founded in 1959 as Papakura Town A.F.C. by Fred Edwards, George Sheppard and Peter Simmonds.[1] The club initially adopted yellow and black colours and played their junior and youth matches at the fields located at the Papakura Army Camp, while McLennan Park in Papakura was being developed.
In 1964, the club was renamed Papakura A.F.C. and adopted blue and white as its primary colours. In 1975, coinciding with Papakura attaining city status, it became Papakura City A.F.C. and began a long-term lease of the lower ground at McLennan Park, which now serves as its senior match day pitch.
Facility development progressed with the completion of the lower clubroom in 1982, followed by the upper section in 1989. In the lead-up to the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup, Papakura City hosted the Spain women's national football team for a ten-day training camp. The event prompted a NZ$1.4 million upgrade of the club’s facilities, including a new kitchen, modernised referees’ room, and clubhouse renovations, funded in part by the Wiri Licensing Trust.[2] Spain went on to win the tournament, providing an inspirational experience for the club’s players, particularly its female members.
On the field, the club won the Men’s Northern League First Division in 2004 and reached the quarter-finals of the Chatham Cup in 2005. In 2006, it adopted its current name, Papakura City Football Club, and expanded to over 700 members. In 2019, Papakura City celebrated its 60th anniversary. The current membership exceeds 1,000, with 64 teams covering all age groups (junior and youth—boys and girls, senior men, and senior women).
Papakura City was the first club to be coached by future All Whites coach Ricki Herbert. Past and present internationals in the men’s squad have included Junior Bukalidi (Fiji), Apisai Smith (Fiji), Valerio Nawatu (Fiji), Nicholas Lawrence (Fiji), Daniel Billot (New Zealand U20s) and Harry Hillary-Jenkins (Papua New Guinea). Former club members to have achieved higher honours include Tim Payne (Wellington Phoenix FC and All Whites), Thomas Spragg (former New Zealand U-17 and U-20), and Alex Greive (San Antonio FC).
Building on the club's success across football codes, the women’s futsal side emerged as a national powerhouse in the 2020s. In 2023, the team retained the national Women’s Ford Futsal SuperLeague title, with Maxine Cooper netting the winning goal in extra time against WaiBOP Power in the final.[3] In 2025, the Papakura City x NRF team reclaimed the national title, defeating Waikato Rapids 2–1 in a closely contested final.[4] In the same campaign, Papakura City X NRF goalkeeper, Ashley Vincent, was awarded with the Golden Glove award. [5]
Honours
Men's honours
Year | Competition | Achievement |
---|---|---|
1971 | Northern League Division Three | Champions[6] |
1972 | Northern League Division Two | Champions[7] |
1991 | Northern Premier League – Top Five | Runners-up[8] |
2004 | Northern League Division One | Champions[9] |
2015 | Northern League Division Two | Champions[10] |
Women’s honours
Year | Competition | Achievement |
---|---|---|
1981 | AWFA Knockout Shield | Runners-up[11] |
1982 | AWFA Knockout Shield | Runners-up[12] |
2023 | Ford Futsal SuperLeague (Women) | Champions (retained title, extra-time winner Maxine Cooper)[13] |
2025 | Ford Futsal SuperLeague (Women) | Champions (defeated Waikato Rapids 2–1 in final)[14] |
External links
References
- ^ "Our History". Papakura City FC. Retrieved 10 August 2025.
- ^ "Papakura Football Club fit for champions". Wiri Licensing Trust. 27 July 2023. Retrieved 10 August 2025.
- ^ "Papakura City retain national women's futsal title after win in extra time". Friends of Football NZ. 2 April 2023. Retrieved 10 August 2025.
- ^ "National women's futsal title goes to Papakura City/NRF". Friends of Football NZ. 26 April 2025. Retrieved 10 August 2025.
- ^ "National women's futsal title goes to Papakura City/NRF". Friends of Football NZ. 26 April 2025. Retrieved 10 August 2025.
- ^ "Papakura City » Honours". The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website. Retrieved 10 August 2025.
- ^ Same as above
- ^ Same as above
- ^ Same as above
- ^ Same as above
- ^ "Papakura City » Honours". The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website. Retrieved 22 August 2025.
- ^ Same as above
- ^ "Papakura City retain national women's futsal title after win in extra time". Friends of Football NZ. 2 April 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2025.
- ^ "National women's futsal title goes to Papakura City/NRF". Friends of Football NZ. 26 April 2025. Retrieved 22 August 2025.