1942–43 Arsenal F.C. season

Last updated

Arsenal
1942–43 season
Chairman Robin Vane-Tempest-Stewart, 8th Marquess of Londonderry
Manager George Allison
Football League South 1st
Football League South Cup Winners
Football League War Cup Finalists
  1941–42
1943–44  

The 1942-43 season was Arsenal Football Club's fourth season playing wartime football during World War II. They won the Football League South and the Football League South Cup. Arsenal were finalists in the Football League War Cup.

Contents

Background

Arsenal played their home games at White Hart Lane, as Highbury had been transformed to support Air Raid Precautions. [1]

After participating in the rebel London War League for the 1941-42 season, the Football League allowed the London clubs to rejoin their system. After the rebel clubs wrote formal apology letters and fines, the League South was created for the new season. [2]

Arsenal won the Football League South and the League South Cup. In the League South Cup final, Arsenal faced Charlton whom they beat 7-1 at Wembley. [1] Reg Lewis, a prolific wartime scorer with 142 goals in 128 wartime appearances, scored 4 goals in that final. [3] [4] Lewis scored 53 goals in all competitions during the 1942-43 season, boosting the club's attendance numbers. [1]

Arsenal faced Blackpool in the finals of the Football League War Cup, a matchup which now pitted the winners of the League South and League North Cups against each other at Stamford Bridge. Blackpool won 4-2, making Arsenal the only team to reach two War Cup finals and lose. [5]

Results

Arsenal's score comes first [6]

Legend

WinDrawLoss

Football League South

Selected results from the league.

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
29 August 1942 Charlton Athletic A 6–2
5 September 1942 Southampton H 6–1
12 September 1942 Millwall A 2–1
19 September 1942 Luton Town H 2–0
26 September 1942 Portsmouth A 2–2
3 October 1942 Fulham A 4–3
10 October 1942 Clapton Orient A 4–1
17 October 1942 Brentford H 0–216,700
24 October 1942 Reading H 4–1
31 October 1942 Crystal Palace A 7–1
7 November 1942 Tottenham Hotspur A 0–1
14 November 1942 Queen's Park Rangers H 3–0
21 November 1942 Aldershot A 7–4
28 November 1942 Charlton Athletic H 3–0
5 December 1942 Southampton A 3–1
12 December 1942 Millwall H ?–?
19 December 1942 Luton Town A ?–?
25 December 1942 Chelsea A 2–5
26 December 1942 Chelsea H 1–5
2 January 1943 Portsmouth H ?–?
9 January 1943 Fulham H ?–?
16 January 1943 Clapton Orient H ?–?
23 January 1943 Brentford A 1–0
30 January 1943 Reading A ?–?
6 February 1943 Crystal Palace H ?–?
13 February 1943 Tottenham Hotspur H ?–?
20 February 1943 Queen's Park Rangers A ?–?
27 February 1943 Aldershot H ?–?

Final League table

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGRPts
1 Arsenal 282116102402.55043
2 Tottenham Hotspur 28166668282.42938
3 Queen's Park Rangers 28182864491.30638
4 Portsmouth 28163966521.26935
5 Southampton 28145986581.48333
6 West Ham United 28145980661.21233
7 Chelsea 281441052451.15632
8 Aldershot 281421287771.13030
9 Brentford 281251164631.01629
10 Charlton Athletic 281331268750.90729
11 Clapton Orient 281151254720.75027
12 Brighton & Hove Albion 281051364720.88925
13 Reading 28961367740.90524
14 Fulham 281021669780.88522
15 Crystal Palace 28751649750.65319
16 Millwall 28651766880.75017
17 Watford 28721951880.58016
18 Luton Town 306420471140.41216

Football League South Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
GS6 March 1943 Brighton & Hove Albion A 5–1
GS13 March 1943 Watford H 4–1
GS20 March 1943 West Ham United A 3–1
GS27 March 1943 Brighton & Hove Albion H 5–0
GS3 April 1943 Watford A 1–1
GS10 April 1943 West Ham United H 3–1
SF24 April 1943 Queen's Park Rangers N 4–1
F1 May 1943 Charlton Athletic N 7–175,000

Football League War Cup

The winners of the Football League South Cup and the Football League North Cup faced each other in the Football League War Cup.

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
F15 May 1943 Blackpool N 2–455,195

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References

  1. 1 2 3 Soar, Phil; Tyler, Martin (1995). Arsenal: Official History. London: Hamlyn. p. 98. ISBN   0600588262.
  2. Taylor, Matthew (2015). "The people's game and the people's war: football, class and nation in wartime Britain, 1939-1945". Historical Social Research. 40 (4): 270–297.
  3. "Reg Lewis". Arsenal. Archived from the original on 30 January 2023. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
  4. "Arsenal at War". Arsenal. 10 May 2017. Archived from the original on 16 October 2023. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  5. Becker, Matt (15 January 2015). "Keep Calm, Carry on and Play Soccer: The Football League War Cup". Paste. Archived from the original on 21 July 2023. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
  6. http://www.statto.com/football/teams/arsenal/1942-1943/results [ dead link ]