1901–02 Stoke F.C. season

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Stoke
1901–02 season
ChairmanMr W Cowlishaw
ManagerHorace Austerberry
StadiumVictoria Ground
Football League First Division16th (31 Points)
FA CupThird Round
Top goalscorerLeague: Mart Watkins (15)
All: Mart Watkins (16)
Highest home attendance13,000 vs Bury (2 September 1901)
Lowest home attendance4,000 vs Newcastle United (11 January 1902)
Average home league attendance7,280

The 1901–02 season was Stoke's 13th season in the Football League.

Stoke failed to improve from last season's narrow escape and again required a final day survival, Stoke stayed up after a 2–2 draw with Manchester City one point more than Small Heath who could only draw 0–0 with Notts County and were relegated.[1]

Season review[]

League[]

Stoke now without William Maxwell struggled again in 1901–02.[1] With winger Freddie Johnson now skippering the side, Stoke again took 16th position in the First Division avoiding relegation by a single point thanks mainly to a four match unbeaten run at the end of the season.[1] The relegation battle came to a crescendo in April with literally 14 of the 18 teams in the division in danger of the drop, with 3rd placed Newcastle United only avoiding relegation by seven points.[1]

At the start of April the bottom of the table was tight with Stoke having one of the poorest goal-averages, and away trips to Notts County and Manchester City were favourites to go down.[1] But again, Stoke escaped after switching 5 ft 5 inch half-back Tom Holford to centre forward for the last four games which ended in a 1–1 draw at Notts County, home wins 4–0 and 2–0 over Bolton and Grimsby respectively and a last gasp 2–2 draw with Manchester City where Holford scored his third goal in succession.[1] Stoke could have gone down right at the death if Small Heath had beaten Notts County in their last match but they drew 0–0 and both the Birmingham club and Manchester City were relegated.[1] One of Stoke's most bizarre events in their history occurred in January 1902 when the team fell ill with food poisoning just before a league match away at Liverpool. The players had eaten fish at the Adelphi Hotel and were violently sick in the dressing room at Anfield. Soon into the match goalkeeper Leigh Richmond Roose had to leave the pitch and Stoke went on to lose 7–0.[2]

FA Cup[]

Stoke fared better in the FA Cup this season beating Aston Villa and Bristol Rovers before losing to Nottingham Forest in the third round.[1]

Final league table[]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GAv Pts Qualification or relegation
14 Wolverhampton Wanderers 34 13 6 15 46 57 0.807 32
15 Grimsby Town 34 13 6 15 44 60 0.733 32
16 Stoke 34 11 9 14 45 55 0.818 31
17 Small Heath 34 11 8 15 47 45 1.044 30 Relegated
18 Manchester City 34 11 6 17 42 58 0.724 28
Source:[citation needed]

Results[]

Stoke's score comes first

Legend[]

Win Draw Loss

Football League First Division[]

Match Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers
1 2 September 1901 Bury H 1–2 13,000 Lockett
2 7 September 1901 Liverpool H 1–0 12,000 Higginson
3 14 September 1901 Newcastle United A 1–5 20,000 Lockett
4 21 September 1901 Aston Villa H 1–0 10,000 Watkins
5 28 September 1901 Sheffield United A 1–1 12,000 Higginson
6 5 October 1901 Nottingham Forest H 1–1 8,000 Johnson
7 12 October 1901 Bury A 2–4 8,000 Watkins (2)
8 19 October 1901 Blackburn Rovers H 2–2 10,000 Watkins, Lockett
9 26 October 1901 Grimsby Town A 2–1 6,000 Watkins, Whitehouse
10 2 November 1901 Everton A 0–1 16,000
11 9 November 1901 Sunderland H 3–0 10,000 Watkins (2), Doig (o.g.)
12 11 November 1901 Wolverhampton Wanderers H 3–0 8,000 Watkins, Johnson, Hales
13 23 November 1901 Derby County H 1–1 8,000 Harris
14 30 November 1901 The Wednesday A 1–3 7,500 Johnson
15 7 December 1901 Notts County H 3–0 7,000 Watkins, Hales, Lockett
16 14 December 1901 Bolton Wanderers A 1–2 6,000 Watkins
17 26 December 1901 Sheffield United H 3–2 12,000 Watkins (2), MacDonald
18 28 December 1901 Wolverhampton Wanderers A 1–4 7,000 Whitehouse
19 4 January 1902 Liverpool A 0–7 7,000
20 11 January 1902 Newcastle United H 0–0 4,000
21 13 January 1902 Manchester City H 3–0 5,000 Higginson, Watkins, Whitehouse
22 18 January 1902 Aston Villa A 0–0 25,000
23 1 February 1902 Nottingham Forest A 0–2 6,000
24 15 February 1902 Blackburn Rovers A 1–6 7,000 Watkins
25 17 February 1902 Small Heath A 1–1 5,000 MacDonald
26 1 March 1902 Everton H 1–2 10,000 MacDonald
27 8 March 1902 Sunderland A 0–2 8,000
28 15 March 1902 Small Heath H 1–0 6,000 Lockett
29 22 March 1902 Derby County A 0–1 8,000
30 29 March 1902 The Wednesday H 1–2 7,000 Higginson
31 5 April 1902 Notts County A 1–1 5,000 Harris
32 12 April 1902 Bolton Wanderers H 4–0 5,000 Harris, Holford, Higginson (2)
33 14 April 1902 Grimsby Town H 2–0 4,000 Watkins, Holford
34 19 April 1902 Manchester City A 2–2 7,000 Holford, Hillman (o.g.)

FA Cup[]

Round Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Scorers
R1 25 January 1902 Aston Villa H 2–2 20,000 Watkins, Hales
R1 Replay 29 January 1902 Aston Villa A 2–1 (aet) 22,000 Higginson, Hales
R2 8 February 1902 Bristol Rovers A 1–0 15,000 Dunn (o.g.)
R3 22 February 1902 Nottingham Forest A 0–2 29,000

Squad statistics[]

Pos. Name League FA Cup Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
GK England George Boote 1 0 0 0 1 0
GK England George Lawton 1 0 0 0 1 0
GK Wales Leigh Richmond Roose 24 0 4 0 28 0
GK England Tom Wilkes 8 0 0 0 8 0
FB England Harry Benson 1 0 0 0 1 0
FB England Charlie Burgess 3 0 1 0 4 0
FB England Bill Capewell 12 0 0 0 12 0
FB Scotland Andy Clark 34 0 3 0 37 0
FB Wales Sam Meredith 27 0 4 0 31 0
HB England Thomas Shufflebotham 0 0 0 0 0 0
HB England Samuel Ashworth 25 0 4 0 29 0
HB England George Baddeley 7 0 0 0 7 0
HB England James Bradley 23 0 2 0 25 0
HB England Tom Holford 29 3 4 0 33 3
HB England Vic Horrocks 0 0 0 0 0 0
HB England Billy Leech 13 0 2 0 15 0
FW England Ross Fielding 2 0 0 0 2 0
FW England Len Hales 15 2 4 2 19 4
FW England George Harris 15 3 0 0 15 3
FW England Sam Higginson 30 6 4 1 34 7
FW England Freddie Johnson 29 3 4 0 33 3
FW England Arthur Lockett 27 5 4 0 31 5
FW Scotland Billy MacDonald 9 3 0 0 9 3
FW England Bertram Wallace 1 0 0 0 1 0
FW Wales Mart Watkins 32 15 4 1 36 16
FW England Frank Whitehouse 6 3 0 0 6 3
Own goals 2 1 3

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Matthews, Tony (1994). The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City. Lion Press. ISBN 0-9524151-0-0.
  2. ^ "A fishy sickness bug? When Liverpool put Potters in their plaice". Stoke Sentinel. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
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