1971–72 Brentford F.C. season

Last updated • 3 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

Brentford
1971–72 season
ChairmanEric Radley-Smith
(until January 1972)
Les Davey & Walter Wheatley
(from January 1972)
Manager Frank Blunstone
Stadium Griffin Park
Fourth Division 3rd (promoted)
FA Cup First round
League Cup First round
Top goalscorerLeague: O'Mara (25)
All: O'Mara (27)
Highest home attendance18,521
Lowest home attendance8,712
Average home league attendance11,738
  1970–71
1972–73  

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.

Contents

Season summary

Despite the reduction of the club's debt to a manageable level and an average attendance higher than all but the top three finishers in the Third Division, Fourth Division Brentford went into the 1971–72 season with a squad of just 14 professionals. [1] Long-time goalkeeper Chic Brodie was released, as was bit-part winger Brian Tawse and in came two defensive youngsters on free transfersTerry Scales and Steven Tom. [1]

Despite the club record £30,000 departure of Roger Cross to rivals Fulham and Alan Hawley also moving to Craven Cottage on loan, Brentford's 12-man squad met pre-season expectations in the early part of the season, [1] holding onto top spot intermittently until a minor blip in October and November 1971. [2] Utility player Michael Allen was signed from Middlesbrough for an £8,000 fee in October and proved to be a vital cog in the midfield. [1] The team owed much of its success to prolific goalscoring from John O'Mara, with the centre forward reaching 20 goals for the season after a 6–2 thrashing of Darlington on 8 January 1972, a result which made Brentford the top scorers in the Football League and was also notable for a 13-minute hattrick from John Docherty. [1]

After another blip caused by the suspension of John O'Mara for five weeks dropped Brentford out of the promotion places, [3] the team was buoyed by the loan signing of winger Stewart Houston and entered the final five weeks of the season strongly, [1] winning five matches in a row in March. [2] Two draws and a defeat over Easter threatened to drop the Bees out of the promotion places, [2] but four successive wins meant that automatic promotion was assured with two matches to play, when captain Bobby Ross' penalty was enough to beat Exeter City at Griffin Park on 22 April. [1] Despite going top of the Fourth Division after victory over Barrow in the following match, a 3–0 defeat away to Workington in the final match of the season dropped the Bees to a 3rd-place finish. [2]

Two club records were set during the season:

Brentford finished top of the Fourth Division charts in the following statistical categories:

League table

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGAvPtsPromotion or relegation
1 Grimsby Town 462871188561.57163Division Champions, promoted
2 Southend United 4624121081551.47360Promoted
3 Brentford 4624111176441.72759
4 Scunthorpe United 4622131156371.51457
5 Lincoln City 4621141177591.30556Qualified for 1972 Watney Cup [lower-alpha 1]
Source: rsssf.com
  1. The two teams who scored the most goals in each division, and did not qualify for Europe and were not promoted, qualified for the Watney Cup.

Results

Brentford's goal tally listed first.

Legend

WinDrawLoss

Pre-season and friendlies

DateOpponentVenueResultScorer(s)
31 July 1971 Southampton H1–3Untraced (og)
4 August 1971 Hillingdon Borough A2–1 O'Mara, Scales
7 August 1971 Oxford United H2–4 O'Mara, Cross
2 May 1972Guernsey XIA6–0 O'Mara (4), Houston, Bence
4 May 1972Guernsey XIA7–1 O'Mara (2), Houston (2), Ross, Graham, Docherty
9 May 1972 Wimbledon A2–2 Docherty, Graham

Football League Fourth Division

No.DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorer(s)
114 August 1971 Bury A2–02,957 Gelson, Tom
221 August 1971 Aldershot H1–18,920 Turner
328 August 1971 Darlington A0–02,514
430 August 1971 Barrow H4–08,866 O'Mara, Cross, Turner, Ross
54 September 1971 Hartlepool H6–08,712 Turner (2), O'Mara (3), Cross
611 September 1971 Grimsby Town A1–311,683 O'Mara
718 September 1971 Peterborough United H5–18,770 Neilson, Graham, Docherty, O'Mara, Ross
825 September 1971 Chester A0–04,088
927 September 1971 Stockport County H2–010,445 Ross (2)
102 October 1971 Northampton Town H6–111,004 Gelson, Docherty, O'Mara (3), Neilson
118 October 1971 Southport A0–05,371
1216 October 1971 Bury H2–09,851 O'Mara, Graham
1320 October 1971 Reading A1–210,473 O'Mara
1423 October 1971 Southend United H1–214,001 O'Mara
1530 October 1971 Scunthorpe United A0–06,121
166 November 1971 Newport County H3–110,484 Docherty, Ross (2, 1 pen)
1713 November 1971 Colchester United A1–16,898 O'Mara
1827 November 1971 Gillingham H1–310,945 Ross
194 December 1971 Exeter City A1–03,809 O'Mara
2011 December 1971 Southport H1–09,624 Peat (og)
2118 December 1971 Hartlepool A2–12,199 Allen (2)
2227 December 1971 Crewe Alexandra H1–018,237 O'Mara
231 January 1972 Peterborough United A2–27,027 O'Mara (2)
248 January 1972 Darlington H6–210,582 Ross (pen), O'Mara (2), Docherty (3)
2515 January 1972 Lincoln City A1–47,552 O'Mara
2625 January 1972 Stockport County A1–03,247 Ross
2729 January 1972 Reading H1–212,144 Docherty
285 February 1972 Cambridge United A1–16,861 Graham
2912 February 1972 Southend United A1–39,841 Ross (pen)
3019 February 1972 Scunthorpe United H0–311,912
3126 February 1972 Newport County A0–03,271
324 March 1972 Colchester United H0–29,210
3313 March 1972 Lincoln City H2–012,065 O'Mara, Scales
3418 March 1972 Aldershot A2–16,989 O'Mara, Ross
3521 March 1972 Doncaster Rovers A3–05,256 Graham (2), Ross
3625 March 1972 Grimsby Town H2–014,635 Docherty, O'Mara
3727 March 1972 Workington H2–013,972 Docherty, Houston
3831 March 1972 Chester H1–118,521 Docherty
391 April 1972 Crewe Alexandra A1–22,072 Docherty
403 April 1972 Northampton Town A0–05,314
418 April 1972 Cambridge United H2–19,061 Docherty, Graham
4215 April 1972 Gillingham A1–05,819 Docherty
4317 April 1972 Doncaster Rovers H2–113,484 O'Mara (2)
4422 April 1972 Exeter City H1–014,540 Ross (pen)
4524 April 1972 Barrow A3–02,646 Houston, Allen, Graham
4629 April 1972 Workington A0–31,751

FA Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorer(s)
1R20 November 1971 Swansea City A1–17,915 O'Mara
1R (replay)22 November 1971 Swansea City H2–315,000 Ross, O'Mara

Football League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorer
1R18 August 1971 Colchester United A1–36,125 Ross

Playing squad

Players' ages are as of the opening day of the 1971–72 season.
Pos.NameNat.Date of birth (age)Signed fromSigned inNotes
Goalkeepers
GK Gordon Phillips Flag of England.svg 17 November 1946 (aged 24) Hayes 1963
Defenders
DF Paul Bence Flag of England.svg 21 December 1948 (aged 22) Reading 1970
DF Peter Gelson Flag of England.svg 18 October 1941 (aged 29)Youth1961
DF Alan Hawley Flag of England.svg 7 June 1946 (aged 25)Youth1962Loaned to Fulham
DF Alan Nelmes Flag of England.svg 20 October 1948 (aged 22) Chelsea 1967
DF Terry Scales Flag of England.svg 18 January 1951 (aged 20) West Ham United 1971
DF Steven Tom Flag of England.svg 1 May 1951 (aged 20) Queens Park Rangers 1971
Midfielders
MF Michael Allen Flag of England.svg 30 March 1949 (aged 22) Middlesbrough 1971
MF John Docherty Flag of Scotland.svg 29 April 1940 (aged 31) Reading 1970
MF Jackie Graham Flag of Scotland.svg 16 July 1946 (aged 25) Guildford City 1970
MF Gordon Neilson Flag of Scotland.svg 28 May 1947 (aged 24) Arsenal 1968
MF Brian Turner Flag of New Zealand.svg 31 July 1949 (aged 22) Portsmouth 1970
Forwards
FW Stewart Houston Flag of Scotland.svg 20 August 1949 (aged 21) Chelsea 1972On loan from Chelsea
FW John O'Mara Flag of England.svg 19 March 1947 (aged 24) Wimbledon 1971
FW Bobby Ross (c) Flag of Scotland.svg 10 May 1942 (aged 29) Shrewsbury Town 1966
Players who left the club mid-season
FW Roger Cross Flag of England.svg 20 October 1948 (aged 22) West Ham United 1970Transferred to Fulham
FW Trevor Dawkins Flag of England.svg 17 October 1945 (aged 25) Crystal Palace 1971Returned to Crystal Palace after loan
FW Ken Wallace Flag of England.svg 8 June 1952 (aged 19) West Ham United 1972Returned to West Ham United after loan

Coaching staff

NameRole
Flag of England.svg Frank Blunstone Manager
Flag of England.svg Eddie Lyons Trainer

Statistics

Appearances and goals

Substitute appearances in brackets.
PosNatNameLeagueFA CupLeague CupTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
GK Flag of England.svg Gordon Phillips 4602010490
DF Flag of England.svg Paul Bence 32 (2)0201035 (2)0
DF Flag of England.svg Peter Gelson 36 (1)2001037 (1)2
DF Flag of England.svg Alan Hawley 2000000200
DF Flag of England.svg Alan Nelmes 4602010490
DF Flag of England.svg Terry Scales 4312010461
DF Flag of England.svg Steven Tom 13 (5)1201016 (5)1
MF Flag of England.svg Michael Allen 29 (1)32031 (1)3
MF Flag of Scotland.svg John Docherty 441320004613
MF Flag of Scotland.svg Jackie Graham 4572010487
MF Flag of Scotland.svg Gordon Neilson 8 (4)2000 (1)08 (5)2
MF Flag of New Zealand.svg Brian Turner 34 (1)4201037 (1)4
FW Flag of England.svg Roger Cross 521062
FW Flag of England.svg John O'Mara 402522104327
FW Flag of Scotland.svg Bobby Ross 44 (1)13211147 (1)15
Players loaned in during the season
FW Flag of England.svg Trevor Dawkins 3 (1)03 (1)0
FW Flag of Scotland.svg Stewart Houston 152152
FW Flag of England.svg Ken Wallace 3030

Goalscorers

Pos.NatPlayerFL4FACFLCTotal
FW Flag of England.svg John O'Mara 252027
FW Flag of Scotland.svg Bobby Ross 131115
MF Flag of Scotland.svg John Docherty 130013
MF Flag of Scotland.svg Jackie Graham 7007
MF Flag of New Zealand.svg Brian Turner 4004
MF Flag of England.svg Michael Allen 303
FW Flag of Scotland.svg Stewart Houston 22
FW Flag of England.svg Roger Cross 202
DF Flag of England.svg Peter Gelson 2002
MF Flag of Scotland.svg Gordon Neilson 2002
DF Flag of England.svg Terry Scales 1001
DF Flag of England.svg Steven Tom 1001
Opponents1001
Total763180

Management

NameNatFromToRecord All CompsRecord League
PWDLW %PWDLW %
Frank Blunstone Flag of England.svg 14 August 197129 April 197249241213048.9846241111052.17

Summary

Games played49 (46 Fourth Division, 2 FA Cup, 1 League Cup)
Games won24 (24 Fourth Division, 0 FA Cup, 0 League Cup)
Games drawn12 (11 Fourth Division, 1 FA Cup, 0 League Cup)
Games lost13 (11 Fourth Division, 1 FA Cup, 1 League Cup)
Goals scored80 (76 Fourth Division, 3 FA Cup, 1 League Cup)
Goals conceded51 (44 Fourth Division, 4 FA Cup, 3 League Cup)
Clean sheets22 (22 Fourth Division, 0 FA Cup, 0 League Cup)
Biggest league win6–0 versus Hartlepool, 4 September 1971
Worst league defeat3–0 on two occasions; 4–1 versus Lincoln City, 15 January 1972
Most appearances49, Alan Nelmes, Gordon Phillips (46 Fourth Division, 2 FA Cup, 1 League Cup)
Top scorer (league)25, John O'Mara
Top scorer (all competitions)27, John O'Mara

Transfers & loans

Players transferred in
DatePos.NamePrevious ClubFeeRef.
June 1971DF Flag of England.svg Steven Tom Flag of England.svg Crystal Palace Free [13]
July 1971DF Flag of England.svg Terry Scales Flag of England.svg West Ham United Free [13]
October 1971MF Flag of England.svg Michael Allen Flag of England.svg Middlesbrough £8,000 [13]
Players loaned in
Date fromPos.NameFromDate toRef.
September 1971FW Flag of England.svg Trevor Dawkins Flag of England.svg Crystal Palace October 1971 [13]
February 1972FW Flag of England.svg Ken Wallace Flag of England.svg West Ham United March 1972 [13]
March 1972FW Flag of Scotland.svg Stewart Houston Flag of England.svg Chelsea End of season [13]
Players transferred out
DatePos.NameSubsequent clubFeeRef.
September 1971FW Flag of England.svg Roger Cross Flag of England.svg Fulham £30,000 [13]
Players loaned out
Date fromPos.NameToDate toRef.
September 1971MF Flag of England.svg Alan Hawley Flag of England.svg Fulham October 1971 [13]
Players released
DatePos.NameSubsequent clubJoin dateRef.
May 1972MF Flag of Scotland.svg Gordon Neilson Flag of England.svg Hillingdon Borough 1972 [13]
May 1972DF Flag of England.svg Steven Tom Flag of England.svg Barnet 1972 [13]
May 1972MF Flag of New Zealand.svg Brian Turner Flag of New Zealand.svg Mount Wellington 1972 [13]

Awards

Related Research Articles

During the 1991–92 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. The club finished the season as champions to seal second-tier football for the first time since 1953–54. In 2013, it was voted as Brentford's best ever season by the club's supporters.

During the 1990–91 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. Five wins in the final six matches of the season propelled the Bees from mid-table into the play-offs, where the club was defeated by Tranmere Rovers in the semi-finals.

During the 1962–63 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division for the first time in the club's history. 67 goals from former international forwards John Dick, Billy McAdams and Johnny Brooks helped fire the Bees to the division title and an immediate return to the Third Division.

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 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.

During the 1970–71 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. A forgettable season was chiefly remembered for a run to the fifth round of the FA Cup, the furthest the Bees had progressed in the competition since 1948–49.

During the 1972–73 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. The early-season departures of goalscorers John O'Mara and Bobby Ross and 15 consecutive away league defeats led to Brentford's relegation straight back to the Fourth Division.

During the 1973–74 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. A dreadful season, marred by infighting at boardroom level, resulted in a 19th-place finish, Brentford's lowest in the Football League since the 1925–26 season.

During the 1974–75 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. After a poor first half of the season, manager Mike Everitt was sacked and replaced by John Docherty, who produced a strong run of results to finish the campaign in 8th place.

During the 1975–76 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. A poor middle third of the season led to an 18th-place finish, just three points above the re-election zone.

During the 1976–77 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. After a poor start to the season, Bill Dodgin Jr. appointed to replace inexperienced manager John Docherty. With re-election looking likely, Dodgin overhauled the playing squad and the Bees won 14 of the final 18 matches of the season to complete a remarkable turnaround and finish in mid-table.

During the 1977–78 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. 58 goals from Steve Phillips and Andrew McCulloch helped the club to a 4th-place finish and promotion to the Third Division. Phillips' 36 goals was the most in English league football by any player during the season.

During the 1978–79 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. After a rude awakening to third-tier football, the Bees ended the season strongly to finish in 10th position.

During the 1979–80 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. Despite challenging for promotion in the first half of the season, a barren run between December 1979 and March 1980 meant that the Bees' Third Division status was only preserved on the final day of the season.

During the 1980–81 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. In a mid-table season, the Bees drew a club-record 19 league matches.

During the 1981–82 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. After losing ground in January and February 1982, just one win from the final five matches of the season ended the Bees' hopes of promotion.

During the 1982–83 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. The high point of a mid-table season was a run to the fourth round of the League Cup, then the furthest the club had then progressed in the competition. The 107 goals scored during the season is a club record.

During the 1984–85 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. The season is best remembered for the club's first appearance in a Football League Trophy final, which was lost 3–1 to Wigan Athletic.

During the 1988–89 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. The gruelling 63-match season is best remembered for the Bees' run to the sixth round of the FA Cup. Brentford narrowly failed to qualify for the play-offs, but the club's final placing of 7th was its highest in the league pyramid since the 1964–65 season.

During the 1989–90 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. After showing relegation form during the first three months of the season, a revival between November 1989 and February 1990 ensured a mid-table finish.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 White, p. 284-287.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Brentford results for the 1971–1972 season". Statto.com. Archived from the original on 9 November 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  3. Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 34.
  4. Haynes, Graham (1998). A-Z Of Bees: Brentford Encyclopedia. Yore Publications. p. 30. ISBN   1 874427 57 7.
  5. Haynes & Coumbe, p. 179.
  6. 1 2 3 "Brentford Home Page for the 1971–1972 season". Statto.com. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  7. Haynes, p. 13.
  8. 1 2 3 White, Eric, ed. (1989). 100 Years Of Brentford. Brentford FC. p. 391. ISBN   0951526200.
  9. Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 36-48.
  10. Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 300.
  11. Croxford, Mark; Lane, David; Waterman, Greville (2011). The Big Brentford Book of the Seventies. Sunbury, Middlesex: Legends Publishing. ISBN   978-1906796709.
  12. Haynes, Graham; Coumbe, Frank (2006). Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006. Yore Publications. ISBN   978-0955294914.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 50-53.
  14. 1 2 Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 295.
  15. Haynes & Coumbe, p. 118.