1951–52 Stoke City F.C. season explained

Season:1951–52
Chairman:Mr T. Preece
League Result:20th (31 Points)
Cup1 Result:Fourth Round
League Topscorer:Sammy Smyth
(12)
Season Topscorer:Sammy Smyth
(14)
Highest Attendance:43,205 vs Wolverhampton Wanderers
(20 October 1951)
Lowest Attendance:10,993 vs Middlesbrough
(3 May 1952)
Average Attendance:25,791
Nextseason:1952–53
Pattern La1:_red_stripes
Pattern B1:_red_stripes
Pattern Ra1:_red_stripes
Pattern So1:_hoops_red
Shorts1:FFFFFF
Socks1:FFFFFF

The 1951–52 season was Stoke City's 45th season in the Football League and the 31st in the First Division.

Stoke made a truly awful start to the 1951–52 season claiming just a single point from the first eleven matches. Results slowly started to improve and back-to-back home wins in the final two matches saw Stoke survive relegation.[1]

Season review

League

In the summer of 1951 there was a major change at boardroom level at Stoke as chairman Mr H. Booth stepped down after 15 years and Mr T. Preece took over in temporary charge.[1] Stoke suffered an opening day mauling at Newcastle United losing 6–0 and it set the tone for a woeful start to the season as they took just two points from the first 22 on offer, finding themselves firmly bedded at the foot of the division.[1] McGrory went out and spent £45,000 on three new players to arrest the decline, he exchanged Albert Mullard plus £10,000 for Alan Martin another £10,000 for Billy McIntosh and again smashed the club's transfer record with the purchase of Northern Irish striker Sammy Smyth for a fee of £25,000.[1] Smyth certainly had the desired impact scoring 12 goals becoming top scorer for the season.[1]

After these arrivals Stoke's form improved and with five straight wins Stoke caught up with the rest of the division however four defeats later they found themselves unable to pull away from a relegation fight.[1] A cruel 5–4 defeat at home to Newcastle did not help, but Stoke somehow managed to take the fight to the final two matches of the season.[1] Stoke had the worst goal average in the division but with both Fulham and Huddersfield Town in terrible form Stoke knew that two more wins would see them safe and that's what they managed leaving them three points clear of Huddersfield.[1]

One interesting scoreline this season came in the League match at Villa Park on 16 February 1952. Aston Villa were on the fringe of forcing themselves in the title race but they came unstuck against a determined Stoke side and lost 3–2.[1] On the scoresheet for the "Potters" was their goalkeeper Dennis Herod who had broken his arm earlier during the match and so swapped positions with left winger Sammy Smyth and went on to score the winning goal five minutes after half time.[1]

FA Cup

After a good win over Sunderland in the third round Stoke were humbled by Third Division South side Swindon Town in a replay.[1]

Results

Stoke's score comes first

Legend

WinDrawLoss

Football League First Division

See main article: 1951–52 Football League.

MatchDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
118 August 1951 Newcastle UnitedA0–640,127
220 August 1951 West Bromwich AlbionH1–122,696Oscroft
325 August 1951 Bolton WanderersH1–222,442Malkin
429 August 1951 West Bromwich AlbionA0–118,903
51 September 1951 Derby CountyA2–420,243Oscroft, Mullard
63 September 1951 FulhamH1–121,000Malkin
78 September 1951 Manchester UnitedA0–443,660
812 September 1951 FulhamA0–516,500
915 September 1951 Tottenham HotspurH1–627,000Oscroft
1017 September 1951 Charlton AthleticH1–217,500McIntosh
1122 September 1951 Preston North EndA0–229,980
1229 September 1951 BurnleyH2–128,577Siddall, Martin
136 October 1951 Aston VillaH4–132,455Smyth, Oscroft (2), Moss (o.g.)
1413 October 1951 SunderlandA1–041,826Smyth
1520 October 1951 Wolverhampton WanderersH1–043,205Oscroft
1627 October 1951 Huddersfield TownA2–019,495Smyth (2)
173 November 1951 ChelseaH1–230,000Smyth
1810 November 1951 PortsmouthA1–430,223Oscroft
1917 November 1951 LiverpoolH1–224,000Smyth
2024 November 1951 BlackpoolA2–419,892McIntosh (2)
211 December 1951 ArsenalH2–130,000Sellars (2) (1 Pen)
228 December 1951 Manchester CityA1–020,397Smyth
2315 December 1951 Newcastle UnitedH4–525,393Smyth (2), Oscroft, Siddall
2422 December 1951 Bolton WanderersA1–120,088Smyth
2526 December 1951 MiddlesbroughA0–327,055
2629 December 1951 Derby CountyH3–127,000Malkin, Oscroft, Smyth
275 January 1952 Manchester UnitedH0–036,389
2819 January 1952 Tottenham HotspurA0–245,176
2926 January 1952 Preston North EndH0–025,000
309 February 1952 BurnleyA0–429,971
3116 February 1952 Aston VillaA3–240,000Sellars, Oscroft, Herod
321 March 1952 SunderlandH1–124,208Sellars
338 March 1952 Wolverhampton WanderersA0–333,000
3415 March 1952 Huddersfield TownH0–019,000
3522 March 1952 ChelseaA0–130,000
3629 March 1952 PortsmouthH2–011,375Martin, McIntosh
375 April 1952 LiverpoolA1–230,000McIntosh
3812 April 1952 BlackpoolH2–330,000Martin, Siddall
3914 April 1952 Charlton AthleticA0–420,000
4019 April 1952 ArsenalA1–447,962Mountford (pen)
4126 April 1952 Manchester CityH3–125,000Siddall, Smyth, Bowyer
423 May 1952 MiddlesbroughH3–210,993Brown (2), McCue

FA Cup

See main article: 1951–52 FA Cup.

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
R312 January 1952 SunderlandA0–045,099
R3 Replay14 January 1952 SunderlandH3–131,841Smyth, McIntosh, Malkin
R42 February 1952 Swindon TownA1–128,140Smyth
R4 Replay4 February 1952 Swindon TownH0–129,332

Squad statistics

Pos.NameLeagueFA CupTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
GK Ray Evans000000
GK Dennis Herod29140331
GK Norman Wilkinson13000130
DF Roy Beckett300030
DF Eric Hampson500050
DF John McCue42140461
DF Billy Mould23040270
DF Cyril Watkin11000110
MF Roy Brown15200152
MF Jock Kirton41040450
MF Frank Mountford28130311
MF John Sellars23440274
FW Stan Bevans200020
FW Frank Bowyer15140191
FW Leslie Johnston900090
FW John Malkin28441325
FW Alan Martin34240382
FW Billy McIntosh24511256
FW George Mountford21000210
FW Albert Mullard710071
FW Alexander Ormston200020
FW Harry Oscroft4010404410
FW Brian Siddall20400204
FW Sammy Smyth2612423014
FW Donald Whiston100010
Own goals101

Notes and References

  1. Book: Matthews, Tony. The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City. 1994. Lion Press. 0-9524151-0-0.