Wing halfMatt Crowe transferred to Brentford for a £5,000 fee in July 1962.[1]
Brentford was at one of the lowest points in its history after suffering relegation for the Fourth Division at the end of the 1961–62 season.[2] The relegation completed a 15-year fall from the First Division to the bottom tier and the average attendance at Griffin Park had fallen by 18,000 in that time.[2] Chairman Jack Dunnett pledged that he and his directors would invest money in the first team squad, which had been ravaged by a mass clearout over the previous year in a bid to cut costs amidst the abolishment of the maximum wage.[2] Club legend George Francis was sold to Gillingham for a £4,000 fee, ending a six-year Brentford career in which he scored 136 goals in 280 matches.[3] Funds were made available to manager Malky MacDonald he spent £5,000 on Norwich Citywing halfMatt Crowe and £10,000 on Leeds United's former Northern Irelandcentre forwardBilly McAdams.[2]Tommy Cavanagh was appointed as trainer to replace the departed Fred Monk.[2]
Three wins and four defeats from the opening seven matches led to the chequebook opening again, with the £17,500 purchase of West Ham United's experienced inside leftJohn Dick breaking Brentford's incoming transfer record.[2] The transfer meant the Fourth Division Bees could field an ex-international forward line – Dick (Scotland), McAdams (Northern Ireland) and Brooks (England).[2] The team showed excellent form between September 1962 and the end of the year, rising from mid-table to 2nd place.[4] John Dick had as yet failed to live up to his status, but Billy McAdams ended the year on 15 goals and Johnny Brooks on 12.[2] The football calendar was frozen out between late December 1962 and February 1963 due to poor weather, but as league play got back underway, Brentford solidified their position in the promotion places,[4] especially after another £18,500 was spent on new signings John Fielding and Mel Scott in March.[2] John Dick came into form in mid-March and supported by McAdams and Brooks,[5] his 15 goals in the final 17 matches helped fire Brentford to the Fourth Division title.[2] The title win made Brentford the first club to win each of the Second, Third and Fourth Division championships.[2]
A handful of records were set or equalled during the season:
Most points in a league season: 62 (two points for a win)[6]
^Haynes, Graham; Coumbe, Frank (2006). Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006. Yore Publications. ISBN978-0955294914.
^Croxford, Mark; Lane, David; Waterman, Greville (2011). The Big Brentford Book of the Seventies. Sunbury, Middlesex: Legends Publishing. pp. 254–255. ISBN978-1906796709.