Valdavian Club
Full name | Gridiron Klub Valdavsky |
---|---|
Nicknames | Valdavyek Yellow Knights |
Short name | Valdavians |
Based in | Barbellon |
Stadium | Vazhilly Stadium |
Owner | Jletan Anonymous Holding |
Uniforms | |
The Valdavian Club is one of the oldest clubs in the history of Drevstranese Gridiron. It was founded in 1911 as an Omnisport association by Ostrozavans refugees in Barbellon, hence the name. Beside gymnastics, athletics and aquatic sports, it also introduced Oina as a sport to Drevstran. But although the Gridiron club has preserved the original name of the association, it is now an independent legal and sportive entity with little ties to the original Omnisport club until the latter closure in 2002.
History
Gridiron was introduced to Drevstran by Ottonian volunteers who served on the Republicans side, first Hortankh Bolsar then Vilvo Orbraggar. Ostrozavans migrants, including members of the Valdavian Club, notably formed their own militias during the civil war and participated in the defense of Barbellon and the other Alban Cities against the Royalists. In 1917, a Gridiron match was documented between Ostrozavans units who joined Orbraggar troops and ex-Bolsarists conscripts who introduced and taught the sport they had themselves learned from the Ottonians. When the Ostrozavans volunteers returned to Barbellon, Gridiron joined the range of sports offered by the Valdavian Club and other sport associations of the region and spread quickly from there.
In 1920, the clubs of the White Coast formed their own Amateur League, with the Valdavian Club being one of its founders. By 1940, the White Coast League was dissolved and merged into the greater Drevstran Gridiron Comitee (The Grïdbizot)’ own National leagues. During the Gridbizot era, the Valdavian Club notably reached the Honor Series and competed in the Finale once. It was generally considered to be the first “Golden Generation” of the Club.
After the dissolution of the Gridbizot in 1955, the Valdavian Club and others did not immediately join the new Gridsov and instead participated in a new independent amateur league in opposition to the Gridsov open tolerance to “brown amateurism” and even professionalism which was perceived as a corruption of the sport. but in 1988, the Valdavian Club Gridiron branch became an independent entity from its original association and professionalized. It officially joined the Gridsov the next year, and reached the National Division 1 in 1995 and has not been relegated once since.