1959–60 in English football explained

Country:England
Season:1959–60
Division1:First Division
Champions1:Burnley
Division2:Second Division
Champions2:Aston Villa
Division3:Third Division
Champions3:Southampton
Division4:Fourth Division
Champions4:Walsall
Domestic:FA Cup
Dchampions:Wolverhampton Wanderers
Domestic2:FA Amateur Cup
Supercup:Charity Shield
Schampions:Wolverhampton Wanderers
Prevseason:1958–59
Nextseason:1960–61
Flagicon:yes

The 1959–60 season was the 80th season of competitive football in England.

Diary of the season

17 November 1959: Phil Taylor resigns as manager of lowly Liverpool, languishing in the lower depths of the Second Division, after three years as manager, with all three of his seasons in charge ending with a narrow failure to win promotion to the First Division.

1 December 1959: Bill Shankly of Huddersfield Town accepts the offer to become Second Division club Liverpool's new manager.[1]

25 December 1959: The last Football League games to be played on Christmas Day are held – Blackburn defeated Blackpool 1–0 in the First Division and Coventry beat Wrexham 5–3 in the Third Division.

15 March 1960 Second Division Manchester City pay Huddersfield Town a club record £55,000 transfer fee for Denis Law.[2]

7 May 1960: Wolverhampton Wanderers defeat Blackburn Rovers 3–0 in the FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium, with two goals from Norman Deeley and an own goal from Mick McGrath.

Honours

CompetitionWinnerRunner-up
First DivisionBurnley (2)Wolverhampton Wanderers
Second DivisionAston VillaCardiff City
Third DivisionSouthamptonNorwich City
Fourth DivisionWalsallNotts County
FA CupWolverhampton Wanderers (4)Blackburn Rovers
Charity ShieldWolverhampton WanderersNottingham Forest
Home Championship, & shared

Notes = Number in parentheses is the times that club has won that honour. * indicates new record for competition

Awards

Football Writers' Association

Football League

See main article: 1959–60 Football League.

First Division

Burnley failed to top the First Division all season, but pipped Wolves to top spot on the final day of their season to clinch the title. Wolves finished their season on 30-April on 54 points. Burnley's last game of the season was on Monday, 2 May, which they won to move to 55 points. The runners-up Wolves, while missing out on a third successive league title and becoming the first team this century to win the elusive double, went on to win the FA Cup this season. Tottenham Hotspur, West Bromwich Albion and newly promoted Sheffield Wednesday completed the top five. Manchester United, last season's runners-up, dipped to seventh in the league this season despite 32 goals from forward Dennis Viollet and the mid-season signing of half-back Maurice Setters. Luton Town, last season's FA Cup finalists, went down in bottom place, and were joined in relegation by Leeds United.

Second Division

Aston Villa earned an immediate return to the First Division as Second Division champions, and were joined in promotion by runners-up Cardiff City. Liverpool's change of manager from Phil Taylor to Bill Shankly was not enough to earn them promotion, as they finished in third place, eight points adrift of promotion. Huddersfield Town could only finish sixth in the Second Division despite the goals of brilliant young forward Denis Law, who was sold to Manchester City towards the end of the season for a national record fee.

Hull City and Bristol City went down to the Third Division.

Third Division

The Third Division promotion race was very much a two-horse race for much of the season, ending with Southampton going up as champions and Norwich City as runners-up.

Accrington Stanley, Wrexham, York City and Mansfield Town went down to the Fourth Division.

Fourth Division

Walsall sealed the Fourth Division title and with it a place in the Third Division. They were joined in the higher division by Notts County, Torquay United and Watford.

Gateshead were voted out of the Football League and replaced by ambitious Southern League side Peterborough United, who boasted a 30,000-capacity stadium.

Top goalscorers

First Division

Second Division

Third Division

Fourth Division

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A timeline for Liverpool Football Club - LFChistory - Stats galore for Liverpool FC!.
  2. Web site: 15 March 1960 – Sometimes, You Have To Spend Money To Make Money. thisdayinfootballhistory.blogspot.com. 15 March 2013. 30 March 2013.
  3. Web site: English League Leading Goalscorers . . 2017-06-04.
  4. Web site: English League Leading Goalscorers . . 2017-06-04.