1945–46 Brentford F.C. season
1945–46 season of Brentford F.C.
Brentford 1945–46 football season
During the 1945–46 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League South , due to the cessation of competitive league football for one further season following the end of the Second World War in Europe in May 1945. A return to competitive cup football came in the form of the first FA Cup staged since before the war, with the Bees advancing to the sixth round and equalling the club record.
Season summary
Though the Second World War ended in Europe in May 1945, the first post-war football season would be played in the regionalised wartime format, due to players continuing to be dispersed on service around the world. Brentford again began the season with a shortage of first team players, though full back Bill Gorman would go on to be an ever-present, while centre half Buster Brown , outside forward Idris Hopkins and goalkeeper Joe Crozier would all miss just a handful of games each.[ 1]
Just two defeats in the opening two Football League South games gave way to a downturn in form,[ 1] which was not helped by the departure of misfiring former England international forward Les Smith to Aston Villa in October 1945. Pre-war forward Tommy Cheetham also left Griffin Park ,[ 3] so manager Harry Curtis strengthened the attack by re-signing Gerry McAloon from Wolverhampton Wanderers . Further signings came in the form of experienced half backs George Smith and Eric Jones . With excitement hard to come by in league play, Brentford's attention turned to the first FA Cup competition held since the 1938–39 season. Entering in the third round, the Bees battled through to the sixth round, equalling the club record, with Gerry McAloon scoring six goals in the eight matches played.[ 1] With the return of competitive First Division football looming, a number of amateurs were trialled during the season, with future regulars Alf Jefferies , Frank Latimer and Roddy Munro all going on to sign professional contracts.[ 9]
Former Brentford wartime guest player Albert Bonass was serving in the Royal Air Force and was killed when his Short Stirling , on a training flight, crashed in the village of Tockwith, North Yorkshire on 9 October 1945.[ 11] [ 12]
League table
Results
Brentford's goal tally listed first.
Legend
No.
Date
Opponent
Venue
Result
Attendance
Scorer(s)
1
25 August 1945
Newport County
H
2–1
13,980
Sloan , Townsend
2
1 September 1945
Newport County
A
5–0
8,862
Thomas (2), Sloan , Townsend (2)
3
6 September 1945
Leicester City
H
1–2
11,620
Sloan
4
8 September 1945
Wolverhampton Wanderers
A
0–1
20,000
5
13 September 1945
Derby County
H
0–0
11,050
6
15 September 1945
Wolverhampton Wanderers
A
0–0
20,080
7
22 September 1945
West Ham United
H
1–1
18,800
Thomas
8
29 September 1945
West Ham United
A
2–0
23,000
Sloan , Durrant
9
6 October 1945
West Bromwich Albion
A
4–3
28,000
Thomas (2), Tranter (og ), Hunt
10
13 October 1945
West Bromwich Albion
H
2–0
20,160
Durrant (2)
11
20 October 1945
Birmingham City
H
2–1
20,690
Wilkins (2)
12
27 October 1945
Birmingham City
A
0–1
35,000
13
3 November 1945
Tottenham Hotspur
A
0–1
28,000
14
10 November 1945
Tottenham Hotspur
H
1–3
19,269
Thomas
15
17 November 1945
Swansea Town
A
1–4
21,000
Roberts
16
24 November 1945
Swansea Town
H
2–2
12,090
Durrant , Hunt
17
1 December 1945
Chelsea
H
4–4
28,170
Townsend (2), Durrant (2)
18
8 December 1945
Chelsea
A
2–4
40,000
Durrant , Thomas
19
15 December 1945
Millwall
H
7–0
16,190
Thomas , Townsend (4), Watson , Durrant
20
22 December 1945
Millwall
A
1–3
22,000
Townsend
21
25 December 1945
Southampton
H
1–4
14,350
McAloon
22
26 December 1945
Southampton
A
4–3
20,000
Townsend (2), McAloon , Thomas
23
29 December 1945
Derby County
A
2–3
22,751
McAloon , Durrant
24
12 January 1946
Coventry City
A
0–1
13,450
25
19 January 1946
Coventry City
H
1–2
10,300
Metcalf (og )
26
2 February 1946
Luton Town
A
4–1
8,348
Durrant , Gotts , Scott , Townsend
27
16 February 1946
Aston Villa
H
0–1
27,100
28
23 February 1946
Arsenal
H
6–3
22,250
Thomas (3, 1 pen ), Durrant , McAloon , Bamford
29
16 March 1946
Charlton Athletic
H
1–1
14,900
McAloon
30
23 March 1946
Fulham
H
1–2
23,400
McAloon
31
30 March 1946
Fulham
A
2–2
27,475
Thomas , Townsend
32
6 April 1946
Plymouth Argyle
A
1–1
20,000
McAloon
33
10 April 1946
Charlton Athletic
A
3–4
20,000
Thomas (3)
34
13 April 1946
Plymouth Argyle
H
3–2
13,200
G. Smith , Thomas , McAloon
35
17 April 1946
Aston Villa
A
1–1
n/a
McAloon
36
19 April 1946
Portsmouth
H
0–2
16,184
37
20 April 1946
Nottingham Forest
A
0–2
19,704
38
22 April 1946
Portsmouth
A
0–2
20,000
39
24 April 1946
Luton Town
H
6–1
7,050
McAloon (3), Durrant , Edelston , Jones
40
27 April 1946
Nottingham Forest
H
5–1
8,140
Scott (2), McAloon (3, 1 pen )
41
29 April 1946
Arsenal
A
1–1
5,250
Scott
42
4 May 1946
Leicester City
A
3–1
10,000
Durrant , McAloon (2)
FA Cup
Round
Date
Opponent
Venue
Result
Attendance
Scorer(s)
3R (1st leg)
5 January 1946
Tottenham Hotspur
A
2–2
30,202
Durrant , Thomas
3R (2nd leg)
10 January 1946
Tottenham Hotspur
H
2–0 (won 4–2 on aggregate)
21,050
Hopkins (2)
4R (1st leg)
26 January 1946
Bristol City
A
1–2
35,684
Townsend
4R (2nd leg)
31 January 1946
Bristol City
H
5–0 (won 6–2 on aggregate)
18,000
McAloon (3), Guy (og ), Durrant
5R (1st leg)
9 February 1946
Queens Park Rangers
A
3–1
19,855
McAloon , Durrant , Hopkins
5R (2nd leg)
14 February 1946
Queens Park Rangers
H
0–0 (won 3–1 on aggregate)
20,000
6R (1st leg)
2 March 1946
Charlton Athletic
A
3–6
40,060
McAloon (2), Durrant
6R (2nd leg)
6 March 1946
Charlton Athletic
H
1–3 (lost 4–9 on aggregate)
36,000
Scott
Playing squad
Players' ages are as of the opening day of the 1945–46 season.
Sources: 100 Years Of Brentford , [ 1] Timeless Bees,[ 14] Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939[ 15]
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 [ 1]
Goalscorers
Players listed in italics left the club mid-season.
Source: 100 Years Of Brentford [ 1]
Wartime international caps
Management
Name
Nat
From
To
Record All Comps
Record
P
W
D
L
W %
P
W
D
L
W %
Harry Curtis
25 August 1945
4 May 1946
50
17
12
21
0 34.00
42
14
10
18
0 33.33
Summary
Games played
50 (42 Football League South , 8 FA Cup )
Games won
17 (14 Football League South, 3 FA Cup)
Games drawn
12 (10 Football League South, 2 FA Cup)
Games lost
21 (18 Football League South, 3 FA Cup)
Goals scored
99 (82 Football League South, 17 FA Cup)
Goals conceded
86 (72 Football League South, 14 FA Cup)
Clean sheets
9 (6 Football League South, 3 FA Cup)
Biggest league win
7–0 versus Millwall , 15 December 1945
Worst league defeat
4–1 on two occasions
Most appearances
50, Bill Gorman (42 Football League South, 8 FA Cup)
Top scorer (league)
17, Gerry McAloon
Top scorer (all competitions)
23, Gerry McAloon
Transfers & loans
Guest players' arrival and departure dates correspond to their first and last appearances of the season.
References