During the 1927–28 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division South. A season of transition saw the Bees finish in mid-table and score 76 goals, which was at that time the club's best goalscoring tally since joining the Football League in 1920.
Three defeats in the opening 10 matches of the season put the Bees as high as second place,[2] with off-season signing Jack Phillips scoring 9 goals, Herbert Lawson five and Ernie Watkins four.[3] By mid-October 1927, the goals had dried up and the club dropped to mid-table.[2] During this period, Brentford suffered a club record 7–1 FA Cup defeat to Manchester United.[4][5] A 3–2 victory over Walsall at Griffin Park on 5 December (one of just two wins in the midst of the bad run) was witnessed by 2,024, the club record lowest for a home Football League match.[6] The Bees' form picked up again late January 1928 and the team secured a 12th-place finish.[2] Jack Phillips finished the season as he began it, with 9 goals in 10 matches, to finish as top-scorer with 18 goals.[3] Brentford's 76 goals was the highest since joining the Football League in 1920 and the club finished the season £171 in profit (equivalent to £10,400 in 2021).[7][8]
^"BRENTFORD MAKE A SMALL PROFIT. TRANSFER FEES BALANCE BIG LOSS IN GATE RECEIPTS. SEVEN NEW PLAYERS. DIRECTORS LOOK FORWARD WITH CONFIDENCE TO THE COMING SEASON". The Brentford & Chiswick Times. 6 July 1928.
^Haynes, Graham; Coumbe, Frank (2006). Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006. Yore Publications. ISBN978-0955294914.
^Joyce, Michael (2012). Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939. Nottingham: Tony Brown. ISBN190589161X.
^"BRENTFORD'S BRIGHT PROSPECTS. A BIG BID FOR PROMOTION IN THE COMING SEASON. FULL LIST OF PLAYERS. ILLNESS OF MARSHALL: COMPETITION FOR FORWARD POSITIONS". The Brentford & Chiswick Times. 12 August 1927.
^"Of last season's players known to have fixed up elsewhere, Wiggins and Cairns have gone to Leicester City, Dempsey to Queens Park Rangers". The Athletic News. 6 August 1928.