- Gillingham F.C. season 1920-21
Infobox Football club season
club = Gillingham
season = 1920–21
manager = John McMillan
chairman = E.N. Crawley
league =Football League Third Division
league result = 22nd
cup1 = FA Cup
cup1 result = Sixth Qualifying Round
league topscorer =
Tommy Hall (9)
season topscorer =
Tommy Hall (11)
highest attendance = approx 12,000 vs Southampton (28 August 1920 ) and vs Millwall (30 October 1920 )
lowest attendance = approx 5,000 vs Portsmouth (15 September 1920 )The 1920–21 season was the first season in which football club Gillingham F.C. competed inthe Football League . Gillingham had previously played in Division One of theSouthern Football League , but in 1920 the Football League decided to add a third division to its existing set-up and did so by absorbing the entire Southern League Division One to form the newFootball League Third Division .Gillingham had finished bottom of the Southern League Division One the previous season and fared no better in the Football League, finishing bottom of the table after registering only eight wins in 42 matches.
Football League
Gillingham had played in the
Southern Football League since its formation in 1894, apart from when the league was suspended due to theFirst World War , but had achieved minimal success and had finished bottom of Division One in the 1919–20 season. The club escaped relegation, however, as the clubs in the Southern League's top division were admitted en masse tothe Football League to form the new Third Division. In preparation for the new season the club signed a number of new players, includingWally Battiste from Grimsby Town, Tommy Hall from Newcastle United, Tom Thompson from Sunderland andTom Gilbey from Darlington. Only five players who had represented the club innon-league football went on to make appearances in the Football League:Jock Robertson ,Jack Branfield ,Joseph Griffiths , Donald McCormick and Arthur WoodThe club's first ever Football League match was against Southampton at
Priestfield Stadium in front of a new club record crowd of approximately 12,000 fans, and ended in a 1–1 draw, with Tom Gilbey scoring the Gillingham goal. Four days later the team defeated Reading 2–1 away from home to register their first victory, and a week later repeated the feat at home, beating theBerkshire club 1–0 to give the club a record of two wins, one draw and one defeat from its first four matches. This was followed, however, by a run of six matches without a win, including a heavy 6–1 defeat against Merthyr Town.After beating Exeter City in mid-October, Gillingham then played 12 consecutive matches without a win, including an emphatic 5–2 defeat at home to Northampton Town on Christmas Day. The winless streak came to an end when a
George Needham goal gave the team a 1–0 win over Bristol Rovers on29 January , but there then followed a sequence of five games in which the team could only manage a goalless draw and four defeats. The team staged a late rally in April, winning three of their last six matches, but it was not enough to avoid finishing the season bottom of the table.quad statistics
Gillingham used a total of 26 players over the course of the season. No player was ever-present, but captain
Jock Robertson , goalkeeperJack Branfield and top goalscorer Tommy Hall each missed only one match.ee also
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Gillingham F.C. seasons References
*cite book
last = Brown
first = Tony
coauthors =
title = The Definitive Gillingham F.C.: A Complete Record
publisher = Soccerdata
year = 2003
isbn = 1-8994-6820-X
pages =
*cite book
last = Triggs
first = Roger
coauthors =
title = Gillingham Football Club: A Chronology 1893–1984
publisher = Kent County Libraries
year = 1984
isbn =
*cite book | first=Roger|last= Triggs | title=The Men Who Made Gillingham Football Club| publisher=Tempus Publishing Ltd | year=2001| id=ISBN 0-7524-2243-X
*cite book
last = Bradley
first = Andy
coauthors = Roger Triggs
title = Home of the Shouting Men: Complete History of Gillingham Football Club 1893–1993
publisher = Gillingham F.C.
year = 1994
isbn = 0-9523-3610-3
pages =
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