1968–69 Brentford F.C. season

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Brentford
1968–69 season
ChairmanRon Blindell
Manager Jimmy Sirrel
Stadium Griffin Park
Fourth Division 11th
FA Cup Second round
League Cup Third round
Top goalscorerLeague: Mansley (14)
All: Mansley (17)
Highest home attendance17,425
Lowest home attendance3,361
Average home league attendance6,419
  1967–68
1969–70  

During the 1968–69 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. Off the back of 18 months of extreme financial problems, the club finished in mid-table.

Contents

Season summary

After two tumultuous seasons off the pitch, a continued cash crisis meant that during the 1968 off-season, Brentford manager Jimmy Sirrel would not be provided with the funds to buy players who could guarantee a lasting run at promotion from the Fourth Division. [1] He was able to plug the gaps in his threadbare squad, bringing in full back Denis Hunt and journeyman forwards Pat Terry and Peter Deakin. [1] A need to balance the books led to Ian Lawther (one of the club's most consistent goalscorers since the 1964–65 season) being sold for a £3,000 fee a matter of days before the beginning of the season. [1]

Manager Sirrel's young team began the season in promising form, losing just two of the first 15 league matches to consolidate a position in the top six. [2] Brentford's position belied the club's personnel problems, with a growing catalogue of injuries, illness and suspensions. [1] £10,000 was spent on Arsenal winger Gordon Neilson in October 1968, an extravagant amount given Brentford's financial problems. [1] An inconsistent spell between November 1968 and April 1969 dropped the Bees as low as 19th, two places above the re-election zone, but six wins in the final seven matches of the season lifted the club to an 11th-place finish. [2]

League table

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGAvPts
9 Wrexham 4618141461521.17350
10 Swansea Town 4619111658541.07449
11 Brentford 4618121664650.98548
12 Workington 4615171440430.93047
13 Port Vale 4616141646461.00046
Source: rsssf.com
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal average; 3) number of goals scored.

Results

Brentford's goal tally listed first.

Legend

WinDrawLoss

Football League Fourth Division

No.DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorer(s)
110 August 1968 Colchester United H4–07,586 Deakin, Moughton (og), Terry, Ross
217 August 1968 Scunthorpe United A1–13,685 Terry
324 August 1968 Port Vale H3–17,443 Mansley, Fenton (2)
426 August 1968 Rochdale H1–19,149 Deakin
531 August 1968 Exeter City A2–28,835 Terry, Richardson
67 September 1968 Chesterfield H1–09,703 Fenton
714 September 1968 Peterborough United A1–26,435 Dobson
818 September 1968 Chester A2–28,410 Terry, Ross
921 September 1968 York City H5–18,360 Carr (og), Terry (3), Ross
1028 September 1968 Bradford City A0–36,491
115 October 1968 Newport County H1–17,825 Mansley
127 October 1968 Rochdale A0–05,181
1312 October 1968 Swansea Town A3–26,912 Neilson, Terry, Fenton
1419 October 1968 Wrexham H1–17,791 Mansley
1526 October 1968 Notts County A2–04,173 Mansley (2)
162 November 1968 Aldershot H2–49,806 Mansley, Higginson
174 November 1968 Darlington H0–18,550
189 November 1968 Lincoln City A0–16,121
1923 November 1968 Bradford Park Avenue A2–02,341 Fenton, Kirby
2030 November 1968 Halifax Town H1–16,002 Mansley
2114 December 1968 Swansea Town H2–14,321 Terry, Hawley
2221 December 1968 Wrexham A0–24,867
2326 December 1968 Newport County A1–13,750 Gelson
244 January 1969 Workington H0–36,081
2511 January 1969 Aldershot A2–19,280 Mansley (2)
2618 January 1969 Lincoln City H2–26,572 Terry, Ross
2725 January 1969 Darlington A1–35,184 Dobson
2831 January 1969 Southend United A0–410,969
2922 February 1969 Grimsby Town H4–25,697 Richardson, Neilson (2), Terry
3028 February 1969 Colchester United A1–27,268 Neilson
315 March 1969 Workington A0–12,318
328 March 1969 Scunthorpe United H2–15,456 Neilson, Nelmes
3310 March 1969 Southend United H1–16,030 Terry
3415 March 1969 Port Vale A1–44,478 Ross (pen)
3522 March 1969 Exeter City H0–15,242
3626 March 1969 Notts County H0–03,361
3729 March 1969 Chesterfield A2–13,261 Mansley, Neilson
388 April 1969 Doncaster Rovers A0–511,561
3912 April 1969 York City A1–23,767 Mansley
4014 April 1969 Doncaster Rovers H1–04,222 Richardson
4119 April 1969 Peterborough United H2–04,492 Fenton, Mansley
4221 April 1969 Bradford Park Avenue H3–04,137 Fenton (2), Ross (pen)
4328 April 1969 Halifax Town A0–26,948
4430 April 1969 Chester H2–14,090 Mansley, Fenton
453 May 1969 Grimsby Town A2–01,672 Gelson, Dobson
465 May 1969 Bradford City H2–15,720 Richardson, Mansley

FA Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorer(s)Notes
1R16 November 1968 Woking H2–05,990 Fenton, Ross [nb 1]
2R7 December 1968 Watford A0–112,883

Football League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorer(s)
1R14 August 1968 Aldershot A4–25,977 Rafferty (og), Deakin, Mansley, Terry
2R4 September 1969 Hull City H3–011,485 Mansley (2), Fenton
3R24 September 1969 Norwich City H0–217,425

Playing squad

Players' ages are as of the opening day of the 1968–69 season.
Pos.NameNat.Date of birth (age)Signed fromSigned inNotes
Goalkeepers
GK Chic Brodie Flag of Scotland.svg 22 February 1937 (aged 31) Northampton Town 1963
GK Gordon Phillips Flag of England.svg 17 November 1946 (aged 21) Hayes 1963Loaned to Queens Park Rangers
Defenders
DF Peter Gelson Flag of England.svg 18 October 1941 (aged 26)Youth1961
DF Alan Hawley Flag of England.svg 7 June 1946 (aged 22)Youth1962
DF Tommy Higginson Flag of Scotland.svg 6 January 1937 (aged 31) Kilmarnock 1959
DF Denis Hunt Flag of England.svg 8 September 1937 (aged 30) Gillingham 1968
DF Allan Jones Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg 6 January 1940 (aged 28) Liverpool 1963
DF Alan Nelmes Flag of England.svg 20 October 1948 (aged 19) Chelsea 1967
DF Dick Renwick Flag of England.svg 27 November 1942 (aged 25) Aldershot 1969
Midfielders
MF George Dobson Flag of England.svg 24 August 1949 (aged 18)Youth1966
MF Allan Mansley Flag of England.svg 31 August 1946 (aged 21) Blackpool 1968
MF Gordon Neilson Flag of Scotland.svg 28 May 1947 (aged 21) Arsenal 1968
MF John Richardson Flag of England.svg 5 February 1949 (aged 19) Millwall 1966
MF Bobby Ross Flag of Scotland.svg 10 May 1942 (aged 26) Shrewsbury Town 1966
Forwards
FW Ron Fenton (c) Flag of England.svg 21 September 1940 (aged 27) Birmingham City 1968Assistant manager
FW Ron Foster Flag of England.svg 22 November 1938 (aged 29) Dallas Tornado 1969
FW Pat Terry Flag of England.svg 2 October 1933 (aged 34) Swindon Town 1968
Players who left the club mid-season
GK Ron Willis Flag of England.svg 27 December 1947 (aged 20) Charlton Athletic 1968Returned to Charlton Athletic after loan
MF Brian Caterer Flag of England.svg 31 January 1943 (aged 25) Leatherhead 1968Amateur, released
FW Peter Deakin Flag of England.svg 25 March 1938 (aged 30) Peterborough United 1968Released
FW Keith Hooker Flag of England.svg 31 January 1950 (aged 18)Youth1965Loaned to Brentwood Town, released
FW George Kirby Flag of England.svg 20 December 1933 (aged 34) New York Generals 1968Transferred to Worcester City

Coaching staff

NameRole
Flag of Scotland.svg Jimmy Sirrel Manager
Flag of England.svg Ron Fenton Assistant Manager
Flag of England.svg Eddie Lyons Physiotherapist

Statistics

Appearances and goals

Substitute appearances in brackets.
PosNatNameLeagueFA CupLeague CupTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
GK Flag of Scotland.svg Chic Brodie 2202010250
GK Flag of England.svg Gordon Phillips 2300020250
DF Flag of England.svg Peter Gelson 4222030472
DF Flag of England.svg Alan Hawley 8 (2)1200010 (2)1
DF Flag of Scotland.svg Tommy Higginson 37 (2)1103041 (2)1
DF Flag of England.svg Denis Hunt 1200020140
DF Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Allan Jones 4502030500
DF Flag of England.svg Alan Nelmes 441202 (1)048 (1)1
DF Flag of England.svg Dick Renwick 170170
MF Flag of England.svg Brian Caterer 1010
MF Flag of England.svg George Dobson 22 (6)3003025 (6)3
MF Flag of England.svg Allan Mansley 411420334617
MF Flag of Scotland.svg Gordon Neilson 23 (4)62025 (4)6
MF Flag of England.svg John Richardson 41 (1)4202045 (1)4
MF Flag of Scotland.svg Bobby Ross 43 (1)6213048 (1)7
FW Flag of England.svg Peter Deakin 7 (1)2219 (1)3
FW Flag of England.svg Ron Fenton 39 (2)9212143 (2)11
FW Flag of England.svg Ron Foster 3 (1)03 (1)0
FW Flag of England.svg Keith Hooker 10000010
FW Flag of England.svg George Kirby 511 (1)06 (1)1
FW Flag of England.svg Pat Terry 291200213113
Players loaned in during the season
GK Flag of England.svg Ron Willis 1010

Goalscorers

Pos.NatPlayerFL4FACFLCTotal
MF Flag of England.svg Allan Mansley 140317
FW Flag of England.svg Pat Terry 120113
FW Flag of England.svg Ron Fenton 91111
MF Flag of Scotland.svg Bobby Ross 6107
MF Flag of Scotland.svg Gordon Neilson 606
MF Flag of England.svg John Richardson 4004
MF Flag of England.svg George Dobson 3003
FW Flag of England.svg Peter Deakin 213
DF Flag of England.svg Peter Gelson 2002
FW Flag of England.svg George Kirby 101
DF Flag of England.svg Alan Hawley 1001
DF Flag of Scotland.svg Tommy Higginson 1001
DF Flag of England.svg Alan Nelmes 1001
Opponents2013
Total642773

Management

NameNatFromToRecord All CompsRecord League
PWDLW %PWDLW %
Jimmy Sirrel Flag of Scotland.svg 10 August 19685 May 196951211218041.1846181216039.13

Summary

Games played51 (46 Fourth Division, 2 FA Cup, 3 League Cup)
Games won21 (18 Fourth Division, 1 FA Cup, 2 League Cup)
Games drawn12 (12 Fourth Division, 0 FA Cup, 0 League Cup)
Games lost18 (16 Fourth Division, 1 FA Cup, 1 League Cup)
Goals scored73 (64 Fourth Division, 2 FA Cup, 7 League Cup)
Goals conceded70 (65 Fourth Division, 1 FA Cup, 4 League Cup)
Clean sheets12 (10 Fourth Division, 1 FA Cup, 1 League Cup)
Biggest league win4–0 versus Colchester United, 10 August 1968; 5–1 versus York City, 21 September 1968
Worst league defeat5–0 versus Doncaster Rovers, 8 April 1969
Most appearances50, Allan Jones (45 Fourth Division, 2 FA Cup, 3 League Cup)
Top scorer (league)14, Allan Mansley
Top scorer (all competitions)17, Allan Mansley

Transfers & loans

Players transferred in
DatePos.NamePrevious ClubFeeRef.
29 May 1968FW Flag of England.svg Pat Terry Flag of England.svg Swindon Town n/a [5]
June 1968DF Flag of England.svg Denis Hunt Flag of England.svg Gillingham Free [6]
July 1968MF Flag of England.svg Peter Deakin Flag of England.svg Peterborough United n/a [7]
October 1968FW Flag of England.svg Brian Caterer Flag of England.svg Leatherhead Amateur [8]
October 1968FW Flag of England.svg George Kirby Flag of the United States.svg New York Generals n/a [9]
October 1968MF Flag of Scotland.svg Gordon Neilson Flag of England.svg Arsenal £10,000 [10]
February 1969DF Flag of England.svg Dick Renwick Flag of England.svg Aldershot £1,500 [11]
March 1969FW Flag of England.svg Ron Foster Flag of the United States.svg Dallas Tornado Trial [12]
Players loaned in
Date fromPos.NameFromDate toRef.
September 1968GK Flag of England.svg Ron Willis Flag of England.svg Charlton Athletic September 1968 [13]
Players transferred out
DatePos.NameSubsequent clubFeeRef.
August 1968FW Ulster Banner.svg Ian Lawther Flag of England.svg Halifax Town £3,000 [14]
1968FW Flag of England.svg George Kirby Flag of England.svg Worcester City n/a [9]
Players loaned out
Date fromPos.NameToDate toRef.
1969GK Flag of England.svg Gordon Phillips Flag of England.svg Queens Park Rangers 1969 [1]
n/aFW Flag of England.svg Keith Hooker Flag of England.svg Brentwood Town n/a [15]
Players released
DatePos.NameSubsequent clubJoin dateRef.
October 1968FW Flag of England.svg Brian Caterer Flag of England.svg Leatherhead October 1968 [8]
October 1968FW Flag of England.svg Peter Deakin Flag of England.svg Nuneaton Borough October 1968 [7]
May 1969FW Flag of England.svg Ron Foster Retired [12]
May 1969DF Flag of England.svg Denis Hunt Flag of England.svg Folkestone 1969 [6]
May 1969FW Flag of England.svg Pat Terry Flag of England.svg Hillingdon Borough July 1969 [5]
1969FW Flag of England.svg Keith Hooker Flag of South Africa (1928-1982).svg Durban Spurs 1969 [15]

Notes

  1. Both teams played in change colours, with Brentford borrowing Watford's home shirts for the match.

Related Research Articles

During the 1922–23 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division South and finished in 14th place.

During the 1923–24 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division South and finished in 17th place.

During the 1925–26 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division South and finished in 18th place, conceding a club record 94 goals.

During the 1927–28 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division South. A season of transition saw the Bees finish in mid-table and score 76 goals, which was at that time the club's best goalscoring tally since joining the Football League in 1920.

During the 1928–29 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division South. An unbeaten start to the season was cancelled out by a run of 11 defeats in 12 games which left the Bees bottom of the Football League, but the team recovered to finish in mid-table.

During the 1932–33 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division South. Brentford won the division championship and secured promotion to the second tier of English football for the first time in the club's history. Jack Holliday set a new club goalscoring record of 39 goals in a season, which as of 2023 has yet to be broken. It is statistically Brentford's second-best season, after 1929–30.

During the 1933–34 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Second Division for the first time in the club's history. A strong run in the middle of the season saw the Bees hold the second promotion place throughout March 1934, before a drop in form led the club to a 4th-place finish.

During the 1937–38 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League First Division. In the league, the Bees matched the previous season's finish of 6th and advanced to the 6th round of the FA Cup for the first time in club history. In 2013, the Brentford supporters voted 1937–38 as the club's second-best season.

During the 1950–51 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Second Division. Amidst a period of transition, the Bees repeated the previous season's 9th-place finish.

During the 1949–50 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Second Division. In his first season as manager, Jackie Gibbons guided the club to a 9th-place finish, a marked improvement on near-relegations in the previous two seasons.

During the 1948–49 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Second Division. It was Harry Curtis' final season as manager and he was replaced by Jackie Gibbons in February 1949. Brentford ended the season in 18th-place, just one point away from a second relegation in three seasons, though the Bees advanced to the sixth round of the FA Cup for the third time in the club's history.

During the 1954–55 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division South. In the club's first season back in the third-tier since 1932–33, the Bees finished in mid-table. The season was memorable for the debuts of youth products Jim Towers and George Francis, who went on to dominate Brentford's goalscoring charts until 1961.

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During the 1963–64 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. Despite expectations that the club could achieve a second-successive promotion, poor form in late 1963 and early 1964 led to a mid-table finish.

During the 1964–65 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. Despite topping the table between September and October 1964, the worst away record in the division and a change of managers in January 1965 derailed the club's promotion charge.

During the 1965–66 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. After an awful first half of the season, Brentford dropped into the relegation places in January 1966 and failed to recover, ending the club's three-season spell in the Third Division.

During the 1966–67 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. In a season overshadowed by the events of 19 January 1967, a promotion charge was derailed by five defeats in the final six matches of the campaign.

During the 1967–68 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. Weathering the storm of a severe financial crisis for the second successive season, the threadbare squad managed a mid-table finish.

During the 1969–70 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. Despite staying in the promotion places throughout much of the campaign, three-late season defeats cost the Bees promotion to the Third Division.

During the 1971–72 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. The club led the division for much of the first half of the season and 10 wins in the final 14 matches secured automatic promotion with a 3rd-place finish.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 White 1989, p. 271-273.
  2. 1 2 "Brentford results for the 1968–1969 season". Statto.com. Archived from the original on 12 September 2016. Retrieved 26 January 2017.
  3. 1 2 3 4 White, Eric, ed. (1989). 100 Years Of Brentford. Brentford FC. p. 390. ISBN   0951526200.
  4. Haynes, Graham; Coumbe, Frank (2006). Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006. Yore Publications. ISBN   978-0955294914.
  5. 1 2 "Swindon Town FC – Profile – Pat Terry". TownEnders.com. Retrieved 26 December 2024.
  6. 1 2 Haynes & Coumbe 2006, p. 83-84.
  7. 1 2 Haynes & Coumbe 2006, p. 46.
  8. 1 2 Haynes & Coumbe 2006, p. 35.
  9. 1 2 Haynes & Coumbe 2006, p. 92-93.
  10. Haynes & Coumbe 2006, p. 114.
  11. Croxford, Mark; Lane, David; Waterman, Greville (2011). The Big Brentford Book of the Seventies. Sunbury, Middlesex: Legends Publishing. pp. 357–358. ISBN   978-1906796709.
  12. 1 2 Haynes & Coumbe 2006, p. 59.
  13. Haynes & Coumbe 2006, p. 170.
  14. "Ian Lawther". nifootball.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 26 January 2017.
  15. 1 2 Haynes & Coumbe 2006, p. 80.