by anfieldadorer » Fri Jun 24, 2005 5:35 pm
TNS is an acronym for Total Network Solutions, the club being named after their sponsors, a recent development after being launched in 1959 as FC Llansantfraid.
Their first trophy was the Welsh Village Cup in 1962, since when trophies from competitions as disparate as the Tommy Jarman Cup, Montgomeryshire Cup and Cymru Alliance have been on show at the Recreation Ground, the club's home which also goes by the name Treflan.
It was not until the early 1990s that Llansantfraid became a force in Welsh football, winning three promotions in four years to reach the top-flight.
The big money of TNS poured into the club in 1997, and they are now a fully professional unit, albeit one which draws crowds of 750 on a good day.
Their leading scorer, Marc Lloyd-Williams, fired 42 goals from 35 starts last season, but Liverpool probably need not fret about him.
Lloyd-Williams, 32, had spells in the English Football League with Stockport, Halifax and York, and since leaving Bootham Crescent in 2000 has flitted between the non-league game in England and the Welsh League.
TNS have, of course, been involved in European competition before, having made a habit of it recently.
They held Polish champions Ruch Chorzow to a draw in the first leg of their 1996 Cup-Winners' Cup tie, before being thrashed 5-0 in the return.
Another draw followed four years later, 2-2 against Estonian league champions Levadia Maardu, but that Champions League campaign was ended by a 4-0 defeat on away ground.
The Uefa Cup 12-2 aggregate defeat in 2002 by Polish outfit Amica Wronki was as one-sided as the scoreline suggests, but a year later TNS were drawn to face Manchester City.
A 5-0 defeat at the City of Manchester Stadium was followed by a 2-0 loss in the Millennium Stadium, TNS's home for a night.
Another reason to believe Liverpool will breeze through their first test was provided last year, when Swedish second division side Oster beat TNS 4-1 on aggregate.
teamtalk
