1928–29 Southampton F.C. season explained

Club:Southampton F.C.
Season:1928–29
Chairman:Wyndham Portal
Manager:Arthur Chadwick
Stadium:The Dell
League:Second Division
League Result:4th
Cup1:FA Cup
Cup1 Result:Third round
League Topscorer:Willie Haines (16)
Season Topscorer:Willie Haines (16)
Highest Attendance:24,247 v Chelsea
Lowest Attendance:6,510 v Swansea Town
Average Attendance:15,164
Largest Win:8–2 v Blackpool
Largest Loss:0–3 and 1–4 (multiple)
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Prevseason:1927–28
Nextseason:1929–30

The 1928–29 season was the 34th season of competitive football by Southampton, and the club's seventh in the Second Division of the Football League. After finishing in the bottom half of the Second Division league table the last three seasons, the club returned to challenging for promotion to the First Division when they finished fourth, their highest position in the league to date. The team were strong throughout the campaign, picking up key wins over teams around them in the table to secure a strong position. They stayed in the top six of the league for most of the campaign from September, reaching third place on two occasions and dropping to seventh just twice. Southampton finished the season in fourth place with 17 wins, 14 draws and 11 losses, five points behind Grimsby Town in the first promotion place.

In the 1928–29 FA Cup, Southampton entered in the third round at home to divisional rivals Clapton Orient. After a goalless draw at The Dell, the sides played a replay at Clapton Stadium which the hosts won 2–1, eliminating the Saints at the first hurdle for the third time in four seasons. The club ended the 1928–29 season with two games against local rivals Portsmouth, for the Rowland Hospital Cup and the Hampshire Benevolent Cup. The Saints won both games, the former 2–1 at Fratton Park and the latter 3–2 at The Dell, marking the first time they had won both tournaments in a season. Southampton also played three friendly matches during the season, all in April 1929, beating Southern League side Guildford City, Wiltshire County League side Warminster Town and Dorset League side Wimborne Town.

Southampton used 25 different players during the 1928–29 season and had 14 different goalscorers. Their top scorer was centre-forward Willie Haines, who scored 16 goals in the Second Division. Outside-left Stan Cribb scored 13 times in the league, followed by inside-right Jerry Mackie with ten goals. Twelve players were signed by the club during the campaign, with seven released and sold to other clubs. The average attendance at The Dell during the 1928–29 season was 15,164. The highest attendance was 24,247 against Chelsea on 9 March 1929, which set a new league record for the stadium. The lowest attendance of the season was 6,510 against Swansea Town on 4 May 1929, in the last league game of the season. After the last game, the East Stand of The Dell burned down and had to be rebuilt.

Background and transfers

Southampton conducted a large amount of transfer activity throughout the 1928–29 season. The club's first signing in the summer was Portsmouth centre-forward Willie Haines, who joined from the First Division side having scored 119 goals in 164 league appearances. In June, Southampton manager Arthur Chadwick brought in centre-half Bill Stoddart from Third Division South side Coventry City, trading mainstay goalkeeper Tommy Allen and outside-right Bill Henderson for his services. Two months later, Scottish goalkeeper Willie White was signed from Heart of Midlothian as Allen's replacement, costing the Saints £800. In June, outside-right Cuthbert Coundon was sold to Wolverhampton Wanderers for £150, and inside-left Sam Taylor joined Halifax Town in the Third Division North. Right-back James Ellison left the Saints for Rochdale in July. In August, the club signed outside-right Bert Jepson from Huddersfield Town, as well as trialist Tom Sloan from Craghead United (he left a month later).

Transfers continued throughout the season for Southampton. In September the club signed outside-left Johnny Arnold from Oxford City, and in October they brought in inside-left Herbert Coates from the Royal Navy. Before the end of the year the club also signed Newport County centre-forward Archie Waterston, and broke their transfer record with the £1,000 signing of outside-right Bobby Weale from Swindon Town. Due to ongoing injury problems for his side's regular centre-forward Haines, in February 1929 Chadwick brought in former Royal Air Force aircraftsman Douglas Vernon to help with the end of season run-in. The final signings of the season were goalkeeper Bert Scriven from Totton and inside-left Ernie Warren from Third Division North side Lincoln City in March 1929. During the season, "big offers" had also been made by various clubs to sign players including Ted Hough, Arthur Bradford, Stan Cribb and Dick Rowley, although the club's directors had "wisely resisted" them.

Players transferred in

NameNationalityClubDateFeeRef.
Willie Haines PortsmouthMay 1928Unknown
Bill Stoddart Coventry CityJune 1928Exchange
Willie White Heart of MidlothianJuly 1928£800
Bert Jepson Huddersfield TownAugust 1928Unknown
Johnny Arnold Oxford CitySeptember 1928Unknown
Herbert Coates Royal NavyOctober 1928Free
Archie Waterston Newport CountyDecember 1928Unknown
Bobby Weale Swindon TownDecember 1928£1,000
Douglas Vernon Royal Air ForceFebruary 1929Unknown
Bert Scriven TottonMarch 1929Free
Ernie Warren Lincoln CityMarch 1929Free

Players transferred out

NameNationalityClubDateFeeRef.
Tommy Allen Coventry CityJune 1928Exchange
Cuthbert Coundon Wolverhampton WanderersJune 1928£150
Bill Henderson Coventry CityJune 1928Exchange
Sam Taylor Halifax TownJune 1928£300
James Ellison RochdaleJuly 1928Unknown

Players released

Players given trials

Second Division

See also: 1928–29 Football League. After a slow start to the 1928–29 season in which they picked up just two points in their opening three fixtures, Southampton won five games in a row to secure a top five place in the table by the end of September.[1] The run included a 2–1 defeat of recently relegated side Middlesbrough, home and away wins over Port Vale, and a 4–0 besting of Preston North End, who had finished just four points shy of promotion to the First Division the previous season. A largely winless run followed starting on 6 October, during which time the Saints picked up ten draws in thirteen games. The club's only win during this period was an 8–2 thrashing of Blackpool at The Dell, who had avoided relegation by just one point the previous year. Half of Southampton's goals against the Seasiders were scored by recent signing Willie Haines, who in doing so became the first player for the club to score more than three in a Second Division match. After two more wins, Southampton found themselves in fourth place at the end of the year.[2]

Despite winning just one of their three matches during the month, in January the Saints moved up to third in the table, keeping up with leaders Chelsea and Middlesbrough.[3] 2–1 wins over struggling sides Bristol City and Wolverhampton Wanderers in February helped them to remain in the running, holding off fellow challengers Grimsby Town who were in the middle of a five-game winning run.[4] However, the team began struggling for goals due to Haines being injured, with his replacement Douglas Vernon failing to score in his five league appearances. A string of three consecutive losses in March saw the team as low as seventh in the table, although wins over Nottingham Forest and Millwall at the tail end of the month brought them back into the top four.[5] Southampton continued to pick up wins, but Grimsby's ongoing form saw them pull ahead of the Saints and third-placed Bradford Park Avenue; the club finished in fourth with 17 wins, 14 draws and 11 losses, five points behind the first promotion place.

Results by matchday

FA Cup

See also: 1928–29 FA Cup. Southampton entered the 1928–29 FA Cup in the third round against fellow Second Division side Clapton Orient. Drawn at The Dell, the game ended goalless as Dick Rowley hit the post and top scorer Willie Haines had "a poor game at centre-forward". The replay at Clapton Stadium started well for the Saints, who went ahead through Arthur Bradford and almost doubled their lead courtesy of Stan Cribb. However, the hosts equalised before the end of the first half and continued to pressurise the visitors throughout the second, eventually scoring a second past deputising goalkeeper George Thompson.

Other matches

Outside of the league and the FA Cup, Southampton played five additional first-team matches during the 1928–29 season. The first was a friendly match against Southern League side Guildford City on 17 April, which ended in a 2–1 win to the visiting Saints thanks to goals from Willie Haines and Johnny Arnold. Five days later the club played another away friendly, this time against Warminster Town of the Wiltshire County League. The Saints won comfortably 6–1, with Haines (three), Arthur Bradford, Stan Cribb and Stan Woodhouse all getting on the scoresheet. A third friendly followed a week later against Dorset League club Wimborne Town. Southampton picked up another convincing win when they beat the Magpies 6–2, Haines and Dick Rowley scoring two each, and Arnold and Bobby Weale scoring the other two.

As usual, the club ended the season with two matches against local rivals Portsmouth. The first, for the Rowland Hospital Cup, saw the Saints edge Pompey 2–1 at Fratton Park, with goals from Rowley and Bert Jepson enough to hold off the hosts despite a controversial headed goal from Jack Smith, which had reportedly failed to cross the line. Southampton also won the Hampshire Benevolent Cup two days later, beating Pompey at The Dell 3–2. Jimmy Easson opened the scoring for the visitors within five minutes, before an Arthur Bradford penalty made it 1–1 going into half-time. After the break, Rowley scored Southampton's second and set up the third for Herbert Coates, giving the hosts enough despite a second late goal from Easson (another controversial goal, as he was claimed to have been offside).

Player details

Southampton used 25 different players during the 1928–29 season, 14 of whom scored during the campaign. The team played in a 2–3–5 formation throughout, using two full-backs, three half-backs, two outside forwards, two inside forwards and a centre-forward. Right-half Bert Shelley and goalkeeper Willie White made the most appearances for the club during the campaign, the former appearing in all but one league game and the end-of-season cups, and the latter playing in all but two league games and the FA Cup third round replay. Jerry Mackie and Stan Woodhouse both made 40 appearances in total during the season. Centre-forward Willie Haines finished as the season's top scorer with 16 goals, all in the Second Division. Outside-left Stan Cribb scored 13 league goals, followed by Dick Rowley who scored nine in the league and one each in the Rowland Hospital Cup and Hampshire Benevolent Cup. Arthur Bradford was the season's highest-scoring half-back, with three goals in all competitions.

Squad statistics

NameLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
Bill Adams00002020
Johnny Arnold50001060
Arthur Bradford2911121323
Herbert Coates1470021168
Stan Cribb311320103413
Willie Haines271610002816
George Harkus2501020280
Ted Hough3302020370
Bert Jepson1840021205
Michael Keeping3712000391
Bill Luckett50000050
Jerry Mackie401020004210
Billy Murphy61000061
Charlie Petrie92000092
Dick Rowley24920222811
Bert Shelley4112000431
Bill Stoddart40002060
Tommy Taylor42000042
George Thompson20100030
Douglas Vernon50000050
Archie Waterston61100071
Bobby Weale1862000206
Willie White4001020430
Stan Woodhouse3802020420
Players with appearances who left before the end of the season
Tom Sloan10000010

Most appearances

RankNameLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
1Bert Shelley4197.622100.0000.004393.48
Willie White4095.24150.002100.004393.48
3Jerry Mackie4095.242100.0000.004291.30
Stan Woodhouse3890.482100.002100.004291.30
5Michael Keeping3788.102100.0000.003984.78
6Ted Hough3378.572100.002100.003780.43
7Stan Cribb3173.812100.00150.003473.91
8Arthur Bradford2969.05150.002100.003269.57
9Willie Haines2764.29150.0000.002860.87
George Harkus2559.52150.002100.002860.87
Dick Rowley2457.142100.002100.002860.87

Top goalscorers

RankNameLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
1Willie Haines160.5900.0000.00160.57
2Stan Cribb130.4100.0000.00130.38
3Dick Rowley90.3700.0021.00110.39
4Jerry Mackie100.2500.0000.00100.23
5Herbert Coates70.5000.0010.5080.50
6Bobby Weale60.3300.0000.0060.30
7Bert Jepson40.2200.0010.5050.25
8Arthur Bradford10.0311.0010.5030.09
9Tommy Taylor20.5000.0000.00320.50
Charlie Petrie20.2200.0000.0020.22

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: League Division Two table after close of play on 29 September 1928 . 11v11.com . 22 April 2018 .
  2. Web site: League Division Two table after close of play on 29 December 1928 . 11v11.com . 22 April 2018 .
  3. Web site: League Division Two table after close of play on 26 January 1929 . 11v11.com . 22 April 2018 .
  4. Web site: Grimsby Town match record: 1929 . 11v11.com . 22 April 2018 .
  5. Web site: League Division Two table after close of play on 29 March 1929 . 11v11.com . 22 April 2018 .