1974–75 Brentford F.C. season 1974–75 season of Brentford F.C.
Brentford 1974–75 football 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.
Season summary
Off the back of Brentford 's lowest finish in the Football League since the 1925–26 season, only three players were signed – defender Keith Lawrence on a permanent deal from Chelsea , goalkeeper Steve Sherwood on a season-long loan from Chelsea and Wimbledon midfield trialist Graham Smith .[ 1] Two long-serving players were released, winger John Docherty and full back Alan Hawley .[ 2] New chairman Les Davey announced that the club would move to a new stadium in West London and that there was talk of a £1,000,000 takeover bid by local firm Brentford Nylons, but nothing came of either plan.[ 2]
Brentford began the season poorly and after eight league matches were just two points above the Fourth Division re-election zone,[ 3] though one early season highlight was a League Cup second round tie versus First Division giants Liverpool at Anfield , where Roger Cross scored the opener in a 2–1 defeat.[ 2] The Liverpool match was also notable for it being the final appearance made by centre half Peter Gelson ,[ 2] then the club's second-highest appearance-maker, who had his contract cancelled and departed the club shortly afterwards.[ 1] Under recently appointed chairman Dan Tana , manager Mike Everitt was given a vote of confidence in November 1974 and strengthened the team by signing forward Willie Brown on loan from Newport County (and later permanently for £4,000) and midfielder Terry Johnson from Southend United for £15,000.[ 1]
The signings had the desired effect and Brentford rose into mid-table after winning four and drawing one of a seven-match spell from late November through to mid-January 1975,[ 3] but on 16 January, manager Mike Everitt was sacked.[ 2] Trainer Jess Willard took over as caretaker manager for the following match, before the appointment of former player John Docherty on 20 January.[ 2] Docherty turned Brentford's season around, losing just four of the remaining 19 matches of the season to finish in 8th place.[ 2] Four wins, two draws and just one defeat in April won Docherty the Football League Manager of the Month award.[ 2]
League table
Results
Brentford's goal tally listed first.
Legend
Pre-season and friendlies
No.
Date
Opponent
Venue
Result
Attendance
Scorer(s)
1
17 August 1974
Northampton Town
H
1–0
5,147
Woon
2
24 August 1974
Southport
A
0–3
1,285
3
31 August 1974
Swansea City
H
1–0
4,908
Cross
4
7 September 1974
Chester
A
0–2
2,625
5
14 September 1974
Cambridge United
H
1–0
5,313
Simmons
6
16 September 1974
Rotherham United
H
3–4
5,979
Simmons , Metchick , Bence
7
21 September 1974
Newport County
A
0–1
3,022
8
23 September 1974
Rochdale
A
0–0
1,587
9
28 September 1974
Crewe Alexandra
H
1–0
5,442
Simmons
10
30 September 1974
Stockport County
A
1–1
1,982
Woon
11
5 October 1974
Doncaster Rovers
A
1–2
1,692
Simmons
12
12 October 1974
Lincoln City
H
1–1
4,973
Lawrence
13
19 October 1974
Shrewsbury Town
A
0–1
4,099
14
23 October 1974
Bradford City
A
0–1
2,932
15
26 October 1974
Torquay United
H
3–1
4,496
Simmons (2), Graham
16
2 November 1974
Barnsley
A
1–1
4,158
Simmons
17
4 November 1974
Bradford City
H
0–0
5,131
18
9 November 1974
Mansfield Town
H
2–3
5,553
Foster (og ), Simmons
19
16 November 1974
Hartlepool
A
2–3
2,864
Simmons , Johnson
20
30 November 1974
Workington
A
1–0
1,325
Brown
21
7 December 1974
Darlington
H
3–0
4,925
Johnson , Brown (2)
22
21 December 1974
Scunthorpe United
H
2–0
4,364
Brown (2)
23
26 December 1974
Cambridge United
A
0–2
3,959
24
28 December 1974
Exeter City
H
2–0
5,608
Simmons , Johnson
25
4 January 1975
Northampton Town
A
0–0
4,735
26
11 January 1975
Darlington
A
1–2
2,095
Johnson
27
18 January 1975
Workington
H
2–2
9,983
Brown , Simmons
28
25 January 1975
Reading
H
1–0
6,485
Brown
29
1 February 1975
Mansfield Town
A
1–1
11,362
Graham
30
4 February 1975
Rotherham United
A
0–3
4,541
31
8 February 1975
Barnsley
H
3–0
5,080
Simmons , French , Brown
32
15 February 1975
Reading
A
0–1
6,013
33
22 February 1975
Hartlepool
H
1–0
5,516
Johnson
34
28 February 1975
Swansea City
A
1–0
1,706
Brown
35
8 March 1975
Rochdale
H
3–0
4,460
Johnson , Graham , Cross
36
15 March 1975
Crewe Alexandra
A
1–1
2,356
Johnson
37
22 March 1975
Chester
H
1–1
5,827
Cross
38
31 March 1975
Exeter City
A
0–1
3,301
39
1 April 1975
Newport County
H
0–0
5,569
40
5 April 1975
Torquay United
A
2–3
2,555
Cross , Scales
41
7 April 1975
Stockport County
H
3–0
4,434
Riddick , French (2)
42
12 April 1975
Doncaster Rovers
H
1–1
5,147
French
43
15 April 1975
Scunthorpe United
A
2–1
1,556
Cross , Johnson
44
19 April 1975
Lincoln City
A
1–1
6,956
Cross
45
21 April 1975
Southport
H
1–0
4,796
Cross
46
26 April 1975
Shrewsbury Town
H
2–1
5,810
Graham , Cross
FA Cup
Sources: 100 Years of Brentford,[ 4] The Big Brentford Book of the Seventies,[ 5] [ 6] Statto
Playing squad
Players' ages are as of the opening day of the 1974–75 season.
Sources: The Big Brentford Book of the Seventies,[ 7] Timeless Bees[ 8]
Coaching staff
Mike Everitt (17 August 1974 – 16 January 1975)
Jess Willard (16 – 20 January 1975)
Name
Role
Jess Willard
Caretaker Manager
Alan Humphries
Chief Scout
John Docherty (20 January – 26 April 1975)
Statistics
Appearances and goals
Substitute appearances in brackets.
Players listed in italics left the club mid-season.
Source: 100 Years of Brentford[ 4]
Goalscorers
Players listed in italics left the club mid-season.
Source: 100 Years of Brentford[ 4]
Management
Name
Nat
From
To
Record All Comps
Record League
P
W
D
L
W %
P
W
D
L
W %
Mike Everitt
17 August 1974
11 January 1975
30
11
6
13
0 36.67
26
9
6
11
0 34.62
Jess Willard (caretaker)
18 January 1975
18 January 1975
1
0
1
0
00 0.00
1
0
1
0
00 0.00
John Docherty
25 January 1975
26 April 1975
19
9
6
4
0 47.37
19
9
6
4
0 47.37
Summary
Games played
50 (46 Fourth Division , 2 FA Cup , 2 League Cup )
Games won
20 (18 Fourth Division, 1 FA Cup, 1 League Cup)
Games drawn
13 (13 Fourth Division, 0 FA Cup, 0 League Cup)
Games lost
17 (15 Fourth Division, 1 FA Cup, 1 League Cup)
Goals scored
61 (53 Fourth Division, 4 FA Cup, 4 League Cup)
Goals conceded
49 (45 Fourth Division, 2 FA Cup, 2 League Cup)
Clean sheets
20 (19 Fourth Division, 0 FA Cup, 1 League Cup)
Biggest league win
3–0 on four occasions
Worst league defeat
3–0 on two occasions
Most appearances
50, Steve Sherwood (46 Fourth Division, 2 FA Cup, 2 League Cup)
Top scorer (league)
12, Dave Simmons
Top scorer (all competitions)
13, Dave Simmons
Transfers & loans
Awards
Notes
References
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 108-111.
^ a b c d e f g h i White, p. 295-297.
^ a b "Brentford results for the 1974–1975 season" . Statto.com . Archived from the original on 21 March 2016. Retrieved 9 February 2017 .
^ a b c White, Eric, ed. (1989). 100 Years Of Brentford . Brentford FC. p. 393. ISBN 0951526200 .
^ Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 98-107.
^ Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 306.
^ Croxford, Mark; Lane, David; Waterman, Greville (2011). The Big Brentford Book of the Seventies . Sunbury, Middlesex: Legends Publishing. ISBN 978-1906796709 .
^ Haynes, Graham; Coumbe, Frank (2006). Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006 . Yore Publications. ISBN 978-0955294914 .
^ Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 128.
^ a b Croxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 295.
National teams
League competitions
Levels 1–4 Levels 5–6 Levels 7–9
Cup competitions
FA cups Football League cups
European competitions