1968–69 Arsenal F.C. season explained

Club:Arsenal
Season:1968–69
Manager:Bertie Mee
Chairman:Denis Hill-Wood
League:First Division
League Result:4th
Cup1:FA Cup
Cup1 Result:Fifth Round
Cup2:League Cup
Cup2 Result:Finalists
League Topscorer:
John Radford (15)
Season Topscorer:
John Radford (19)
Highest Attendance:62,218 vs Manchester United (26 December 1968)
Lowest Attendance:23,891 vs Ipswich Town (19 February 1969)
Prevseason:1967–68
Nextseason:1969–70
Pattern La1:_redborder
Pattern Ra1:_redborder
Pattern B1:_whitecollar
Pattern So1:_2navyhoops
Leftarm1:FFFFFF
Body1:FF0000
Rightarm1:FFFFFF
Shorts1:FFFFFF
Socks1:FFFFFF
Pattern So2:_bluestripe
Leftarm2:FFFF00
Body2:FFFF00
Rightarm2:FFFF00
Shorts2:0000FF
Socks2:FFFF00

During the 1968–69 English football season, Arsenal Football Club competed in the Football League First Division. The team finished fourth in the league, an improvement on their ninth place finish the previous season.

Arsenal reached the final of the League Cup, losing 3-1 to Swindon Town in extra time. It was their second League Cup loss in two years. Arsenal went out in the fifth round of the FA Cup to West Brom.

John Radford was the top scorer in both the league and all competitions.[1] The previous season's top scorer, George Graham, began to feature in midfield. Frank McLintock served as captain.[2]

Season summary

Despite making several large bids, Arsenal did not bring in any major new players for the 1968-69 season. The team began the season with a victory at White Hart Lane, their first in eleven seasons. It kickstarted their best start to a season in twenty years, going eleven games unbeaten until a defeat at Elland Road.[3]

Much of the 1968-69 season was represented in player growth. Bob Wilson, a former schoolteacher, improved markedly between the sticks. Peter Simpson became a more complete central defender, and manager Bertie Mee began to experiment with playing George Graham in midfield as his lack of pace was affecting his ability to play as a forward.

In the League Cup, Arsenal once again reached the final. Arsenal had showed their mettle in the semifinals against Tottenham with Radford scoring a crucial goal in the last minutes of the encounter at Highbury. Arsenal were to face Third Division side Swindon Town in the final. Wembley was in poor condition due to the International Horse of the Year Show, compounded by heavy rainfall.[4] Upon match day, eight Arsenal players had just recovered from the flu while several Swindon players were recovering from injury. Arsenal, after a league record of letting in 18 goals in 30 games, conceded to Swindon in the 34th minute. The team recovered, playing against Swindon's second-half 9-1-0 formation, four minutes before time. Bobby Gould scored the equalizer.[5] The game went into extra time, the pitch laden with mud. Don Rogers scored twice for Swindon in extra time and Arsenal lost their second League Cup final in two years.

Arsenal finished the season in fourth place, buoyed by their strong defensive record. They showed the ability to put streaks of success together, putting together a string of 6 consecutive wins with only one goal conceded in the middle of the season. Arsenal was becoming a team that could focus and find success, proved in their two League Cup finals and to be followed up with tangible successes in the coming seasons.[6]

Final league table

See main article: 1968–69 Football League First Division.

Results

Arsenal's score comes first[7]

Legend

WinDrawLoss

Football League First Division

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
10 August 1968 Tottenham HotspurA2–156,280
13 August 1968Leicester CityH3–032,164
17 August 1968 LiverpoolH1–143,535
21 August 1968 Wolverhampton WanderersA0–036,006
24 August 1968 Ipswich TownA2–125,825
27 August 1968 Manchester CityH4–140,776
31 August 1968 Queen's Park RangersH2–144,407
7 September 1968 SouthamptonA2–125,126
14 September 1968 Stoke CityH1–028,275
21 September 1968 Leeds UnitedA0–239,946
28 September 1968 SunderlandH0–035,277
5 October 1968 Manchester UnitedA0–061,843
9 October 1968 Manchester CityA1–133,830
12 October 1968 Coventry CityH2–135,240
19 October 1968 West Bromwich AlbionA0–135,624
26 October 1968 West Ham UnitedH0–059,533
9 November 1968 Newcastle UnitedH0–034,168
16 November 1968 Nottingham ForestA2–024,550
23 November 1968 ChelseaH0–145,588
30 November 1968 BurnleyA1–016,264
7 December 1968 EvertonH3–140,108
14 December 1968 Coventry CityA1–027,332
21 December 1968 West Bromwich AlbionH2–030,785
26 December 1968 Manchester UnitedH3–062,300
11 January 1969 Sheffield WednesdayH2–039,008
18 January 1969 Newcastle UnitedA1–234,227
1 February 1969 Nottingham ForestH1–135,585
15 February 1969 BurnleyH2–027,614
18 February 1969 Ipswich TownH0–223,891
1 March 1969 Sheffield WednesdayA5–021,436
22 March 1969 Queen's Park RangersA1–023,076
24 March 1969 Tottenham HotspurH1–043,972
29 March 1969 SouthamptonH0–028,740
31 March 1969 LiverpoolA1–144,843
5 April 1969 SunderlandA0–023,214
7 April 1969 Wolverhampton WanderersH3–131,011
8 April 1969 Leicester CityA0–035,573
12 April 1969 Leeds UnitedH1–244,715
14 April 1969 ChelseaA1–238,905
19 April 1969 Stoke CityA3–114,996
21 April 1969 West Ham UnitedA2–134,941
29 April 1969 EvertonA0–139,689

FA Cup

See main article: 1968–69 FA Cup.

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
R34 January 1969 Cardiff CityA0–055,316
R3 R7 January 1969 Cardiff CityH2–052,681
R425 January 1969 Charlton AthleticH2–055,760
R512 February 1969 West Bromwich AlbionA0–150,354

League Cup

See main article: 1968–69 Football League Cup.

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
R24 September 1968 SunderlandH1–028,460Neill 46'
R325 September 1968 Scunthorpe UnitedA6–117,450
R415 October 1968 LiverpoolH2–139,299
R529 October 1968 BlackpoolH5–132,321
SF L120 November 1968 Tottenham HotspurH1–055,237Radford
SF L24 December 1968 Tottenham HotspurA1–156,923
F15 March 1969 Swindon TownN1–398,189Gould

Squad

http://www.11v11.com/teams/arsenal/tab/players/season/1972

Notes and References

  1. Book: Arsenal Official Handbook 1970-71. . Arsenal . 1969 . London . 38 . en.
  2. Web site: Kelly . Andy . 17 November 2014 . Arsenal’s captains from day one . https://web.archive.org/web/20230810232605/http://www.thearsenalhistory.com/?p=8955 . 10 August 2023 . 14 November 2023 . The Arsenal History.
  3. Book: Soar, Phil . Arsenal: Official History . Tyler . Martin . Hamlyn . 1995 . 0600588262 . London . 131-133 . en.
  4. Web site: Buckley . Will . 23 September 2009 . The Forgotten Story Of ... Swindon's 1969 League Cup triumph . https://web.archive.org/web/20220125071104/https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2009/sep/23/swindon-town-league-cup-1969 . 25 January 2022 . 15 November 2023 . The Guardian.
  5. Web site: Murray . Scott . Smyth . Rob . 27 February 2009 . The Joy of Six: League Cup final memories . https://web.archive.org/web/20230616045146/https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2009/feb/27/league-cup-finals-carling-football . 16 June 2023 . 15 November 2023 . The Guardian.
  6. Web site: Atwood . Tony . 11 January 2014 . The curious story of 1968/9; the first run of six wins in 13 years. . https://web.archive.org/web/20220703002017/https://blog.woolwicharsenal.co.uk/archives/9149 . 3 July 2022 . 15 November 2023 . The History of Arsenal.
  7. Web site: Arsenal 1970-1971 Results – statto.com . 20 September 2017 . 24 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110524133524/http://www.statto.com/football/teams/arsenal/1970-1971/results . dead .