Metropolitan–London League Explained

Metropolitan–London League
Founded:1971
First:1971–72
Folded:1975
Divisions:One (1974–1975)
Two (1971–1974)
Teams:Lowest: 20 (1974–1975)
Highest: 25 (1971–1972)
Domest Cup:FA Cup
Most Champs:Epping Town (2)

The Metropolitan–London League was a short-lived football league for clubs in and around London. It was formed in 1971 by a merger of the Greater London League and the Metropolitan League (which had lost several clubs to the Southern League).[1] It ran with two divisions until 1974, reduced to one in 1974–75 season, after which it merged with the Spartan League to form the London Spartan League, which was later renamed the Spartan League. It merged with the South Midlands League in 1997 to form the modern Spartan South Midlands League

List of champions

SeasonDivision OneDivision Two
1971–72Epping TownMuirhead Sports
1972–73SwanleyEast Thurrock United
1973–74Epping TownAlma Swanley
SeasonChampions
1974–75Cray Wanderers

Seasons

1971–72

Division One

The new Division One was composed of:

Division Two

All clubs in Division Two except Muirhead Sports had come from the Greater London League. Woolwich Polytechnic were renamed Thames Polytechnic, Northern Polytechnic became Polytechnic of North London and Vokins became 279 Chislehurst.

1972–73

Division One

Division One featured one new club, Penhill Standard, who had been promoted from Division Two the previous season.

Division Two

Division Two featured one new club, East Thurrock United.

1973–74

Division One

Division One featured two new clubs, East Thurrock United and Highfield, both promoted from Division Two the previous season.

Division Two

Division Two featured two new clubs:

1974–75

Member clubs

Member clubs during the league's existence included:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cray Wanderers in the Metropolitan League. https://web.archive.org/web/20110928221831/http://www.craywands.co.uk/craymetropolitan.pdf . 2011-09-28. Cray Wanderers FC.