Full name | Tuggeranong United Football Club |
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Nickname(s) | Tuggies, Tuggers, TUFC, United |
Founded | 1976 |
Ground | Kambah 2 |
Manager | Miro Trninic |
League | NPL Capital Football |
2016 | 7th |
Website | home |
Tuggeranong United FC are an association football club based in the southern Canberra region of Tuggeranong, ACT, Australia. The club competes in the highest level of football in the ACT, NPL Capital Football.
Tuggeranong United is one of the largest football clubs in Canberra with an extensive elite NPL pathway from U13s to first team for both men and women. The club also boasts a large number of recreational senior teams in the ACT State League structure, three Masters teams and a whole junior club setup.
Tuggeranong United was founded in 1976 as Kambah United Soccer Club. The senior First Team competed in the First Division of ACT football while the club catered for both junior and senior players in the Tuggeranong Valley. The club was located in the Tuggeranong suburb of Kambah, the largest residential suburb in the Southern Hemisphere. In 1989 TUSC won its first major trophy, the Federation Cup. A knock out competition run in conjunction with the entire league, involving teams from across the top divisions.
In 1977, Wanniassa Soccer Club was formed as a specialist junior football club for youngsters from the suburb of Wanniassa and its environs.
1983. Kambah United won its first ever title with an ACT Premier League ‘City’ conference premiership. The club pipped Narrabundah and Concordia Phillip to the title by one point. However, the club lost the Championship Grand Final to the ‘Country’ conference winners West Woden Juventus 0-3.
In 1985 Wanniassa SC changed its name to Tuggeranong Soccer Club.
1986, Kambah United and Tuggeranong SC merged to create Tuggeranong United Soccer Club to give a united development structure between juniors and seniors for the region. Juniors would predominantly be located out of Wanniassa and seniors out of Kambah.
Between 1989 and 1995 the newly united club from Canberra’s deep south experienced a period of great success both on and off the pitch. Off the pitch, the club was connecting with the ever-expanding local community in a fashion the two separate clubs never could. Participation numbers went through the roof with registrations reaching well over 1,300 players each season. On the pitch the merged club started picking up its first titles.