Ground Number: 1562
Saturday 4th July 2026
Haverfordwest County 0-4 Hamilton Academical
Friendly
HAVERFORDWEST COUNTY FC - A BRIEF HISTORY
The club was established in 1899 as Haverfordwest FC. They changed their name to Haverfordwest Town in 1901 and then Haverfordwest Athletic in 1936. They adopted their current name of Haverfordwest County in 1956. For many years, they played in local leagues such as the Pembrokeshire League. In 1936, they joined the Welsh Football League, a competition primarily based in the south of the country. They were in Division 1 at the start of the 1950s but suffered a drop to Division 2 West in 1954, spending two seasons here before they won the title in 1956. The top tier was renamed the Premier Division in 1964. In the mid 1970s, Haverfordwest became a yo-yo club between the Premier and Division 1, with them stabilising in the higher league at the start of the 1980s. They won the Premier Division in 1981 and then again in 1989, by which time it had been renamed the National Division.
Haverfordwest County were founder members of the League of Wales in 1992 but only stayed for two seasons. Having accepted an offer which involved the redevelopment of their Bridge Meadow ground, and unable to find a suitable alternative ground of League of Wales standard, they resigned from the League in 1994. Three seasons were spent in the Welsh League with two runner-up spots to Briton Ferry Athletic and Carmarthen Town respectively, before they were champions in 1997. The club achieved the first of their record 3rd-place finishes in 2004. The 2010s saw a period of decline, with the majority of the decade spent back in the Welsh Football League. In 2018, they came close to promotion after finishing as runners-up to Llanelli. The following year saw the Cymru South established, with Haverfordwest winning promotion in their debut season. They finished as runners-up to Swansea University but went up as the champions failed to gain a licence to play in the Cymru Premier. They've been in the top tier ever since, finishing 3rd again in 2025.
Haverfordwest is the county town of Pembrokeshire and has a population of just under 15,000. The location of the town is deliberate: it was the lowest bridging point of the Western Cleddau before the Cleddau Bridge opened in 1975. Haverfordwest is a market town, the county town of Pembrokeshire and an important road network hub between Milford Haven, Pembroke Dock, Fishguard and St David's as a result of its position at the tidal limit of the Western Cleddau. The name of the town means "ford used by goats", from Old English hæfer ford. In local dialect, it is pronounced: "Harford". Another local team, Merlins Bridge, play in the local Pembrokeshire League. Haverfordwest RFC, which formed in 1885, play rugby union at their Pembroke Road ground, and Haverfordwest Cricket Club play at Dale Road.
MY VISIT
Haverfordwest was the one ground that I had needed to complete the Cymru Premier last season, what with Caernarfon sharing at Llandudno. Their homecoming, along with Ammanford's promotion to an expanded top tier, meant that I was back to a target of three for this season, but hopefully got Ammanford done as part of this trip. This was the most westerly ground by some distance as far as the top three tiers were concerned in south Wales. I had planned to go last season, offering to drive a car full of hoppers from Essex if they could get to me. However, PuffPuff turned it down on behalf of his crew, saying that he didn't want a late night with work in the morning. That didn't stop him doing several trips out of Stansted Airport with far later finishes, or lumbering other drivers with long trips as long as he was picked up and dropped off at his front door, whatever the detour for the poor driver. I had first become aware of Haverfordwest when watching them on S4C against B36 Torshavn in 2023. They were extremely hard done by some refereeing decisions, if I recall correctly. I do love watching the Welsh sides try and upset the odds in European games, and the Welsh broadcaster must be applauded for providing an English-language commentary on YouTube; in fact, covering the tie at all is great.
The previous evening was spent at our hotel; I felt better after a few drinks. I was cheering on Cape Verde, but Messi, being the genius that he is, got the early goal for Argentina. But Cape Verde had been the sensation of the World Cup and equalised. I was a few drinks deep by now and also tired from my 3.50 alarm. With the gorilla snoozing, I myself got into bed and watched a bit of the game. I fell asleep, and when I woke up, Argentina were leading 3-2. I watched the end; sadly, no more goals, but they'd given it a brilliant go. I awoke after a decent night's sleep at around 7.30. I looked for a decent twin room for our stay in Dublin, but nothing was available at a fair price. Colin was happy to share a double bed, but that was a no-no for me; the same with dormitories and places with bad reviews. That said, I'd have been happy to go on the piss and spend the night in the airport, but the flights were more expensive. This way of booking also ensured that Colin paid for his own room rather than owed me money.
I had a shower, and that made me feel a lot better. Colin didn't bother for some reason, just putting some deodorant on. We left at 9.40 with Colin sleeping the entire 25-minute trip to the Mardy Inn Wetherspoons in Gorseinon. This was number 528 for me and the usual breakfast muffin, black pudding and energy drink that I have when driving. Colin had forgotten how to use the app, so I had to help him order. Service was mixed, but the food was hot, and I was happy despite the absence of my favourite chilli sauce. After filling up with petrol, we then had a 70-minute drive to Haverfordwest with Google Maps messing up during the journey and dumping us in a retail park full of zombies. It was a short ten-minute drive to the car park on the other side of the ground. We were there at 12.15 and walked to the William Owen Spoons, with the journey taking longer with Colin navigating. It was a great place for steak pudding, chips and peas along with a pint of Black Dragon for around £10.50. From there it was to Poundland for drinks and other essentials and then the Sheep Shop for some local Pembrokeshire cider.
From there it was around ten minutes to the ground, a good atmosphere and a decent crowd along with £8 entry. Both sides had beautiful warm-up tops, but sober, I couldn't justify the £30 for something I'd never wear. I did get a pint of Cold River cider, excellent value at £3.70 and a sensible strength. Haverfordwest had by far the better of the opening quarter, but couldn't score. Later on in the first half, Hamilton had a good spell. The visitors took the lead on 39 minutes, a low drive from the edge of the box by Dom Thomas. It was 2-0 on 43 minutes, a looping shot over the keeper by Cammy Blues. The attendance was given as 459. Both sides had good spells and chances during the early stages of the second half. Hamilton made it 3-0 on 74 minutes, a ball from the left and a finish by Kyle McDonald. A couple of minutes later, Dom Thomas made it 4-0 with a low shot. That was how it stayed, but Haverfordwest were no way four goals worse than Hamilton. We rushed back to the car, and I drove home without a break as I wanted to drop Colin at the bus stop. A slow lorry held us up at the start, but we made up the time. I dropped Colin off at 7.35, ten minutes before his bus. The ungrateful sod left rubbish in my car and buggared off without even saying goodbye or thank you. Sometimes I wonder why I bother, but then he had made the trip half price - petrol, hotel and servicing worked out at £68 each for the two games, making it most affordable.
THE GROUND
BRIDGE MEADOW is a pleasant venue to watch a game. There is a brick-built stand which holds around 350, plus a metal stand on the other side holding around 150. The rest of the ground is open hard standing, and the scenery is very pleasant. There is a decent range of merch, but not many small, low-price items. The bar is excellent; for example, a pint of Cold River cider is £3.70. The food is similarly well-priced. For a better range, the pleasant town is 15-minutes walk away and had a decent Wetherspoons. Car parking is plentiful, and public transport links are good as Haverfordwest has a train station.



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