1930–31 Port Vale F.C. season explained

Club:Port Vale
Season:1930–31
Manager:Tom Morgan
Chairman:Frank Huntbach
Stadium:The Old Recreation Ground
League: Second Division
League Result:5th (47 Points)
Cup1:FA Cup
Cup1 Result:Fourth Round
League Topscorer:Sam Jennings (16)
Season Topscorer:Sam Jennings (17)
Highest Attendance:18,043 vs. West Bromwich Albion, 3 April 1931
Lowest Attendance:5,570 vs. Bradford City, 2 May 1931
Average Attendance:10,445
Largest Loss:0–5 vs. Tottenham Hotspur, 29 November 1930
Pattern So1:_color_3_stripes_red
Leftarm1:ff0000
Body1:ff0000
Rightarm1:ff0000
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Prevseason:1929–30
Nextseason:1931–32

The 1930–31 season was Port Vale's 25th season of football in the English Football League, and their 34th in the Second Division following their promotion from the Third Division North the previous season.[1] They finished fifth with 47 points, making it the most successful season in the club's history in terms of league position. They were seven points short of promotion to the top flight and seventeen points clear of relegation.

Overview

Second Division

The pre-season saw the arrival of goalscoring forward Harry Roberts from Lincoln City; big goalkeeper Arthur Slater from Clapton Orient; and young outside-left Clarence Spencer from Birmingham F.C.

The season started with a stylish 5–2 victory over Barnsley in front of a disappointingly low attendance of under 10,000. Two defeats followed, and Albert Pynegar put in a transfer request after being dropped from the first team. Bob Connelly picked up an injury and so Jack Round was signed from Bolton Wanderers. On 20 September they travelled to Goodison Park to triumph over previously undefeated league leaders Everton 3–2 in front of 27,142 spectators. Two days later, they tore Bradford Park Avenue apart 8–2, with a four-goal haul from Sam Jennings.[2] On 4 October they travelled to Home Park, where they lost 2–1 to Plymouth Argyle; later in the day a horrific tragedy almost killed many of the Vale players – they had hired a speedboat at Devon resort which burst into flames whilst at sea, fortunately the pilot managed to extinguish the flames and returned them safely to harbour.

Pynegar left the club in October following rumours of a rift with teammate Jennings. He signed with Chesterfield of the Third Division North. Bert Fishwick was a more than able deputy. The defensive duo of Jimmy Oakes and Shino Shenton also proved formidable at the back. On 29 November promotion dreams took a knock at White Hart Lane, Spurs picking up a 5–0 win. Despite competing at the top end of the table The Old Recreation Ground rarely saw much more than 10,000 spectators. In December, reserve half-back George Whitcombe was sold to Notts County for 'a substantial amount', the money went towards ground improvements. The following month £10,000 worth of mortgage debenture bonds were released to the same ends. The Football Association would reject the club's ground improvement scheme without giving a reason.

As the season entered its final stretch, top scorer Jennings was dropped from the squad. No adequate replacement was found until Stewart Littlewood was re-signed from Oldham Athletic, with Fishwick sold to Tranmere Rovers to meet Oldham's demands. In early April, the "Valiants" beat high-flying West Bromwich Albion and Tottenham Hotspur, thereby keeping hopes of promotion high. West Brom won the return leg at The Hawthorns to put daylight between the two clubs. In late April, Vale travelled to the Netherlands for a short tour, beating Dutch Southern XI 5–1 and Zwaluwen 2–0.

They finished fifth with 47 points, making it the most successful season in the club's history regarding league position. They were seven points short of second placed West Bromwich Albion. Only 61 goals were conceded, a record bettered only by West Brom and Spurs. However, the 67 goals scored tally was almost half that of champions Everton. Sam Jennings finished with 17 goals, and Phil Griffiths and Harry Roberts were the only other major contributors. The ground improvements paid for were 3,500 seats on the Bryan Street stand, with a covered terrace.

Finances

On the financial side, an £800 loss was made, with the weather blamed for an average gate figure of 10,537. Numerous players were released, including Billy Briscoe, Frank Watkin, and Jack Maddock. Harry Roberts was also sold to Millwall. Meanwhile, Stewart Littlewood was also selected by the FA for a summer tour of Canada.

Cup competitions

In the FA Cup, Vale overcame amateur side Corinthians 3–1 in the Third Round but then found themselves eliminated by First Division Birmingham at St Andrew's in the Fourth Round. The 44,119 attendance raised £2,763 for the club.

League table

See main article: article and 1930–31 Football League.

Results

Port Vale's score comes first

Football League Second Division

Matches

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
30 August 1930 BarnsleyH5–29,853Pynegar (2), Jennings (2), Griffiths
3 September 1930 Bradford CityA1–216,000Jennings
6 September 1930 Bristol CityA1–113,206Jennings
8 September 1930 Bradford Park AvenueA1–510,296Anstiss
13 September 1930 Cardiff CityH2–09,693Griffiths, Baxter
20 September 1930 EvertonA3–227,142Baxter, Pynegar, Anstiss
22 September 1930 Bradford Park AvenueH8–28,621Jennings (4), Anstiss (2), Griffiths, o.g.
27 September 1930 BuryH0–112,906
4 October 1930 Plymouth ArgyleA1–220,243Griffiths
11 October 1930 Swansea TownH2–010,970Jennings, Griffiths
18 October 1930 ReadingA3–010,927Anstiss, Spencer, Jones
25 October 1930 Wolverhampton WanderersH0–19,578
1 November 1930 Oldham AthleticA3–311,625Fishwick, Marshall, Griffiths
8 November 1930 Nottingham ForestH3–29,753Jennings, Fishwick, Griffiths
15 November 1930 BurnleyA2–112,277Fishwick (2)
22 November 1930 Preston North EndH1–010,086Jennings
29 November 1930 Tottenham HotspurA0–523,609
6 December 1930 SouthamptonH1–08,828Jennings
13 December 1930 Stoke CityA0–126,609
20 December 1930 MillwallH3–28,448Roberts, Jennings, Round (pen)
25 December 1930 Charlton AthleticH1–115,827Roberts
26 December 1930 Charlton AthleticA1–34,768Anstiss
27 December 1930 BarnsleyA2–56,469Jennings, Roberts
3 January 1931 Bristol CityH1–07,411Griffiths
17 January 1931 Cardiff CityA1–210,455Roberts
26 January 1931 EvertonH1–39,028Roberts
31 January 1931 BuryA3–03,430Jennings, Roberts, Henshall
7 February 1931 Plymouth ArgyleH2–110,236Jennings, Roberts
14 February 1931 Swansea TownA1–28,602Henshall
21 February 1931 ReadingH2–18,474Roberts, Chell
7 March 1931 Oldham AthleticH2–07,720Marshall, Oakes
11 March 1931 Wolverhampton WanderersA0–34,243
14 March 1931 Nottingham ForestA0–19,281
21 March 1931 BurnleyH0–09,185
28 March 1931 Preston North EndA3–17,696Griffiths (2), Littlewood
3 April 1931 West Bromwich AlbionH1–018,043Littlewood
4 April 1931 Tottenham HotspurH3–014,290Griffiths (2), Round (pen)
6 April 1931 West Bromwich AlbionA1–423,879Griffiths
11 April 1931 SouthamptonA0–29,452
18 April 1931 Stoke CityH0–013,403
25 April 1931 MillwallA1–08,188Roberts
2 May 1931 Bradford CityH1–05,570Rowbotham

FA Cup

See main article: article and 1930–31 FA Cup.

!Round!!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Result!!Attendance!!Goalscorers
R110 January 1931 CorinthiansA3–112,832Roberts (2), Jennings
R224 January 1931 BirminghamA0–244,119

Player statistics

Appearances

Pos.NameFootball LeagueFA CupTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
GK Ben Davies28020300
GK Arthur Slater14000140
DF Jimmy Oakes39120411
DF Jack Maddock300030
DF Billy Wootton400040
DF George Shenton40020420
DF William Cope35020370
MF Bob Connelly100010
MF Roger Jones40120421
MF Jack Simms100010
MF Phil Griffiths3713203913
MF Bert Fishwick11410124
MF Tom Baxter15210162
MF Dennis Izon100010
MF Clarence Spencer11110121
MF Jack Round38220402
MF James Henshall18200182
MF George Whitcombe300030
MF Jack Sherlock700070
FW Harry Anstiss15620176
FW Albert Pynegar930093
FW Harry Marshall24200242
FW Sam Jennings3116113217
FW Harry Roberts249222611
FW Harry Rowbotham110011
FW Joseph Chell210021
FW Stewart Littlewood10200102

Top scorers

width=60Placewidth=60Positionwidth=180Nationwidth=150Namewidth=80Second Divisionwidth=80FA Cupwidth=80Total
1FWSam Jennings16117
2MFPhil Griffiths13013
3FWHarry Roberts9211
4FWHarry Anstiss606
5MFBert Fishwick404
6FWAlbert Pynegar303
7MFTom Baxter202
FWHarry Marshall202
MFJack Round202
FWStewart Littlewood202
MFJames Henshall202
12DFJimmy Oakes101
MFRoger Jones101
MFClarence Spencer101
FWHarry Rowbotham101
FWJoseph Chell101
Own goals101
TOTALS67370

Transfers

Transfers in

Date fromPositionNationalityNameFromFeeRef.
June 1930 FW £100 [3]
June 1930 GK Free transfer
March 1931 FW Undisclosed club record
April 1931 FW Cheddleton Mental Hospital Free transfer

Transfers out

Date fromPositionNationalityNameToFeeRef.
October 1930 FW £200 [4]
December 1930 MF 'Substantial'
March 1931 FW Undisclosed
April 1931 FW Undisclosed
April 1931 DF Free transfer
May 1931 FW Free transfer
May 1931 FW Free transfer
May 1931 MF £6,000
May 1931 MF Free transfer
July 1931 DF Free transfer
August 1931 FW Free transfer

References

Specific
General

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kent, Jeff. The Valiants' Years: The Story Of Port Vale. Witan Books. 1990. 124–150. From Glory to Despair (1929–1939). 0-9508981-4-7.
  2. News: Fielding . Rob . Photo Essay: Port Vale hit eight in 1930 with Sam Jennings scoring four . 7 June 2021 . onevalefan.co.uk . 2021-06-07.
  3. Book: Kent, Jeff. Port Vale Personalities. Witan Books. 1996. 0-9529152-0-0.
  4. Web site: Misc. Transfer fees from the Chesterfield FC minute books. . Google Docs . 13 February 2023.