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1948–49 Brentford F.C. season

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Chairman
  
Frank Davis

Second Division
  
18th

Stadium
  
FA Cup
  
Sixth round

1948–49 Brentford F.C. season

Manager
  
Harry Curtis(until 14 February 1949)Jackie Gibbons(from 15 February 1949)

Top goalscorer
  
League: Monk (11)All: Monk (13)

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.

Contents

Season summary

Brentford manager Harry Curtis prepared conservatively for the 1948–49 Second Division season, with inside forward Viv Woodward and wing half Paddy Harris being his only additions to the first team. It was announced on the eve of the season that Curtis would step down from the manager's position at the end of the campaign and he reflected the need to build for the future with his signing of youngster Les Devonshire in May 1948 and over the course of the following five months, Jimmy Anders, Micky Bull and Billy Dare would all sign, though Dare would go on to be the only one of the quartet to make an impact on the first team.

After two wins from the opening seven matches, Curtis signed Leicester City forward Peter McKennan for £8,000, though he failed to have an immediate effect on the team's goalscoring problems. Brentford were able to stay afloat in mid-table due to the low number of goals conceded. The Essential Work Order made it almost impossible for the Bees to sign any player aged under 30, due to the club having spent £28,300 (almost double the club's net income) on six new players during the previous financial year, with only Jack Chisholm and Fred Monk aged under 30. Amidst a dire run of form in league matches around the turn of the year, Peter McKennan finally came into form and scored 9 goals in a seven-match spell, firing Brentford into the sixth round of the FA Cup for the second time in four seasons. In the midst of the run was Brentford's biggest win of the season (8–2 versus Bury on 19 February 1949), in which McKennan became the third (and as of the end of the 2015–16 season) most recent Bees player to score five goals in a Football League match. The Bury fixture also marked the first match in charge for player/manager Jackie Gibbons, having replaced Harry Curtis, who would remain with the club until the end of the season as an advisor to Gibbons. Brentford's FA Cup run ended with defeat to Leicester City in the sixth round, with the 38,678 crowd setting a new Griffin Park record which still stands as of May 2016.

Brentford's form deserted them in the wake of the FA Cup exit, winning just two of the remaining 14 league matches of the season. Centre half Ron Greenwood was bought from Bradford Park Avenue for £9,000 in February, with all of the money being recouped following the sale of captain Jack Chisholm to Sheffield United for £16,000 a month later. Advanced preparations for the 1949–50 season continued in April, with the £7,000 purchase of Jackie Goodwin and Wally Quinton from Birmingham City. Brentford slumped to an 18th-place finish, just one point above 21st-place Nottingham Forest. Young forward Billy Dare was blooded in the final two months of the season and showed promise for the future with four goals in the final six matches.

League table

P = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GA = Goal average; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points

Results

Brentford's goal tally listed first.

FA Cup

  • Sources: Statto, 11v11, 100 Years Of Brentford
  • Playing squad

    Players' ages are as of the opening day of the 1948–49 season.
  • Sources: Brentford Football Club History, Timeless Bees, Barry Hugman's Footballers
  • Appearances and goals

  • Players listed in italics left the club mid-season.
  • Source: 100 Years Of Brentford
  • Goalscorers

  • Players listed in italics left the club mid-season.
  • Source: 100 Years Of Brentford
  • Transfers & loans

    Cricketers are not included in this list.

    References

    1948–49 Brentford F.C. season Wikipedia


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