Mellieħa Sports Club is a
Maltesesports club based in the town of
Mellieħa. Founded in 1947, just after the end of the
Second World War, the primary aim was that of promoting and fostering the development of sports in the village and its surroundings, including
football,
baseball (Mellieħa Northenders),
softball (Mellieħa Curves),
netball and
snooker.
Mellieħa S.C. began as a football club in 1961 and has competed ever since. Their most notable achievement happened in 1992 when they finished runners-up in the
Maltese First Division, which earned them a promotion to the
Premier League, the top-tier in
Maltese football. For the 2020–21 season, they competed in the
National Amateur League, finishing 4th in group A before being knocked out in the first round of the promotion play-offs.
Player records
Appearances and goalscoring
Most appearances: Ray Vella, 377+ (no exact records held); Kevin Gauci, 383
Record goal scorer: Wayne Borg St. John, 159 in 317 games (2000–2016)
Most goals in one season: Wayne Borg St. John, 22 (2009–10)
Mellieħa Sports Club is a
Maltesesports club based in the town of
Mellieħa. Founded in 1947, just after the end of the
Second World War, the primary aim was that of promoting and fostering the development of sports in the village and its surroundings, including
football,
baseball (Mellieħa Northenders),
softball (Mellieħa Curves),
netball and
snooker.
Mellieħa S.C. began as a football club in 1961 and has competed ever since. Their most notable achievement happened in 1992 when they finished runners-up in the
Maltese First Division, which earned them a promotion to the
Premier League, the top-tier in
Maltese football. For the 2020–21 season, they competed in the
National Amateur League, finishing 4th in group A before being knocked out in the first round of the promotion play-offs.
Player records
Appearances and goalscoring
Most appearances: Ray Vella, 377+ (no exact records held); Kevin Gauci, 383
Record goal scorer: Wayne Borg St. John, 159 in 317 games (2000–2016)
Most goals in one season: Wayne Borg St. John, 22 (2009–10)