1939–40 Brentford F.C. season 1939–40 season of Brentford F.C.
Brentford 1939–40 football season
During the 1939–40 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League , playing three matches before competitive football was suspended due to the outbreak of the Second World War . The club played in three unofficial wartime competitions for the remainder of the season – groups B and C of the Football League South and the Football League War Cup .
Season summary
After narrowly avoiding relegation towards the end of the 1938–39 season,[ 1] Brentford manager Harry Curtis allowed full back Joe Wilson and half backs Sam Briddon and Tally Sneddon to transfer away from the club.[ 2] [ 3] Curtis signed young Sunderland inside forward Percy Saunders and brought in former Manchester United wing half Tom Mansley as his new captain . The season opened with a heavy 5–1 Football League Jubilee Fund defeat to neighbours Chelsea on 19 August 1939. Brentford began the regular season with a win, a draw and a defeat, before competitive football was suspended following Britain's declaration of war on Germany on 3 September 1939.[ 6] Percy Saunders, who had scored on his debut on the opening day,[ 6] would be the only pre-war Brentford player to die on active service during the war, when his ship was torpedoed in the Indian Ocean in March 1942.
The cessation of competitive football was worrying for Brentford, with £12,000 having been spent on new players during the off-season (equivalent to £939,700 in 2025) and there was little prospect of recouping it through the turnstiles . 23 of Brentford's 30-man squad were called to arms, into the War Police Reserve or into the munitions industry . Within two weeks of the declaration of war, the Football League agreed that football could continue, in order to keep clubs in business and to raise funds.
Brentford entered Group B of the new Football League South in October 1939.[ 8] The squad was augmented by three guest players who had previously played for the club – Scottish half backs Duncan McKenzie and Archie Scott and inside forward Bert Stephens .[ 8] 30-year old centre forward Jack Holliday (a prolific goalscorer in the Third and Second Divisions between 1932 and 1935) experienced a renaissance, with 14 goals in 16 appearances.[ 8] Brentford finished the Group B campaign in mid-table.[ 9]
A further 18-match campaign followed in Group C in the first six months of 1940, with 13 players guesting, including two former international Brentford players – Scotland's David McCulloch and the United States ' Jim Brown .[ 8] The Bees finished 4th in the 10-team group and exited the Football League War Cup in the first round.[ 8]
League tables
Source:
[citation needed ] Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal average; 3) Goals scored
Results
Brentford's goal tally listed first.
Legend
No.
Date
Opponent
Venue
Result
Attendance
Scorer(s)
1
21 October 1939
Chelsea
H
2–2
6,628
Holliday , Gorman
2
28 October 1939
Portsmouth
A
1–3
3,000
Boulter
3
4 November 1939
Southampton
H
3–1
4,757
Boulter (2), Manley
4
11 November 1939
Queens Park Rangers
A
0–1
8,000
5
18 November 1939
Brighton & Hove Albion
H
4–1
3,533
Holliday (3), Townsend
6
25 November 1939
Aldershot
A
0–1
4,000
7
2 December 1939
Reading
H
3–0
4,077
Smith , Holliday (2)
8
9 December 1939
Bournemouth & Boscombe Athletic
H
5–2
4,680
Townsend (2), McKenzie , Hopkins , Boulter
9
16 December 1939
Fulham
A
4–2
5,000
Holliday , Hopkins , Manley
10
25 December 1939
Portsmouth
H
4–0
4,811
Holliday (3), Manley
11
26 December 1939
Southampton
A
3–2
6,000
Holliday , Hopkins , Townsend
12
30 December 1939
Queens Park Rangers
H
0–7
3,942
13
6 January 1940
Brighton & Hove Albion
A
2–3
2,071
Manley (2)
14
13 January 1940
Aldershot
H
4–3
1,836
Townsend (2), W. Brown , Hopkins
15
20 January 1940
Reading
A
1–3
1,900
Hopkins
16
24 January 1940
Chelsea
A
2–3
2,000
Griffith (og ), Holliday
17
27 January 1940
Bournemouth & Boscombe Athletic
A
2–2
3,000
James , Holliday
18
14 February 1940
Fulham
H
2–5
1,885
Wilkins , McKenzie
No.
Date
Opponent
Venue
Result
Attendance
Scorer(s)
1
10 February 1940
Arsenal
A
1–3
5,000
Boulter
2
17 February 1940
West Ham United
H
4–3
1,885
Smith , Boulter , McKenzie (pen ), Wilkins
3
24 February 1940
Charlton Athletic
A
2–3
7,000
Wilkins , McKenzie (pen )
4
2 March 1940
Chelsea
H
1–1
7,110
McCulloch
5
9 March 1940
Tottenham Hotspur
A
1–1
9,815
Yorston
6
16 March 1940
Southampton
H
5–0
3,600
Yorston (2), Hunt
7
22 March 1940
Portsmouth
H
3–1
6,500
Wilkins , McKenzie (2)
8
23 March 1940
Millwall
A
1–4
14,490
Hunt
9
25 March 1940
Portsmouth
A
3–1
8,000
Holliday , Wilkins , Hunt
10
30 March 1940
Fulham
H
5–0
6,956
Hunt (2), Yorston , Wilkins , W. Brown
11
6 April 1940
Arsenal
H
2–4
8,000
Yorston , Doherty
12
10 April 1940
Southampton
A
1–4
4,000
Wilkins
13
13 April 1940
West Ham United
A
1–1
8,000
Hunt
14
17 April 1940
Millwall
H
1–1
5,000
Doherty
15
4 May 1940
Tottenham Hotspur
H
2–3
5,521
Wilkins , Hutchins (og )
16
11 May 1940
Chelsea
H
2–0
3,168
McKenzie (pen ), Hopkins
17
18 May 1940
Charlton Athletic
H
2–1
3,000
Hunt , Hopkins
18
3 June 1940
Fulham
A
5–3
1,000
Wilkins (2), Burgess (2), Holliday
Round
Date
Opponent
Venue
Result
Attendance
Scorer
1R (1st leg)
20 April 1940
Fulham
A
1–4
12,000
Smith
1R (2nd leg)
27 April 1940
Fulham
H
1–2 (lost 6–2 on aggregate)
7,695
J. Brown
Sources: A-Z Of Bees,[ 6] Rothmans Book of Football League Records 1888–89 to 1978–79,[ 10] 100 Years Of Brentford[ 8]
Playing squad
Players' ages are as of the opening day of the 1939–40 season.
Sources: Timeless Bees,[ 11] Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939,[ 12] 100 Years Of Brentford [ 8]
Coaching staff
Statistics
Appearances and goals
Brentford's highest appearance-makers in each position during the Football League South season.
Players listed in italics left the club mid-season.
Source: 100 Years Of Brentford[ 8]
Goalscorers
Players listed in italics left the club mid-season.
Source: 100 Years Of Brentford[ 8]
Wartime international caps
Management
Name
Nat
From
To
Record All Comps
P
W
D
L
W %
Harry Curtis
26 August 1939
3 June 1940
41
17
7
17
0 41.46
Summary
Games played
41 (3 Football League , 18 Football League South Group B , 18 Football League South Group C, 2 Football League War Cup )
Games won
17 (1 Football League, 8 Football League South Group B, 8 Football League South Group C, 0 Football League War Cup)
Games drawn
7 (1 Football League, 2 Football League South Group B, 4 Football League South Group C, 0 Football League War Cup)
Games lost
17 (1 Football League, 8 Football League South Group B, 6 Football League South Group C, 2 Football League War Cup)
Goals scored
89 (3 Football League, 42 Football League South Group B, 42 Football League South Group C, 2 Football League War Cup)
Goals conceded
84 (3 Football League, 41 Football League South Group B, 34 Football League South Group C, 6 Football League War Cup)
Clean sheets
6 (1 Football League, 2 Football League South Group B, 3 Football League South Group C, 0 Football League War Cup)
Biggest league win
5–0 on two occasions
Worst league defeat
7–0 versus Queens Park Rangers , 30 December 1939
Most appearances
39, Bill Gorman (3 Football League, 17 Football League South Group B, 17 Football League South Group C, 2 Football League War Cup)
Top scorer (league)
17, Jack Holliday
Top scorer (all competitions)
17, Jack Holliday
Transfers & loans
Guest players' arrival and departure dates correspond to their first and last appearances of the season.
References
^ Brentford F.C. at the Football Club History Database
^ a b c "Sneddon Leaves. Brentford Transfer Two Players To Swansea. Substantial Fee. "Bees" Hope To Sign Wing-half And Full Back". The Brentford & Twickenham Times . 14 July 1939.
^ a b "New Stars Were On Show. But Two "Unknowns" Stole Trial Match Limelight. Brentford Well Equipped. New Players Impress: Brilliance Of Young Kay And Waddell: Team For To-Morrow". The Brentford & Chiswick Times . 18 August 1939.
^ a b c Haynes, Graham (1998). A-Z Of Bees: Brentford Encyclopedia . Harefield, Middlesex: Yore Publications. p. 134. ISBN 1 874427 57 7 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y White, Eric, ed. (1989). 100 Years Of Brentford . Brentford FC. p. 375. ISBN 0951526200 .
^ "England 1939/40" . RSSSF . Retrieved 19 June 2016 .
^ Laschke, Ian (1980). Rothmans Book Of Football League Records, 1888–89 To 1978–79 . London & Sydney: Macdonald and Jane's. ISBN 0-354-08552-2 . OCLC 16476378 .
^ Haynes, Graham; Coumbe, Frank (2006). Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006 . Yore Publications. ISBN 978-0955294914 .
^ Joyce, Michael (2012). Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939 . Nottingham: Tony Brown. ISBN 190589161X .
^ "Dai Hopkins" . 11v11.com . Retrieved 23 May 2016 .
^ "Les Smith" . 11v11.com . Retrieved 24 May 2016 .
^ "Bob Thomas" . Barry Hugman's Footballers . Retrieved 8 June 2016 .
^ a b c d Litster, John. Record of Pre-War Scottish League Players . Norwich: PM Publications.
^ "Frank Clack" . Barry Hugman's Footballers . Retrieved 8 June 2016 .
^ "Nufc Season Review 1939/40" . www.nufctheyworethenewcastleshirt.btck.co.uk . Retrieved 20 June 2016 .
^ "Len Townsend" . GoS-DB . Retrieved 22 June 2016 .
^ "Fred Rowell" . Barry Hugman's Footballers . Retrieved 19 June 2016 .