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1932–33 in English football
58th season of competitive football in England
58th season of competitive football in England
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| country | England |
| season | 1932–33 |
| division1 | Football League |
| champions1 | Arsenal |
| division2 | Football League Second Division |
| champions2 | Stoke |
| domestic | FA Cup |
| dchampions | Everton |
| prevseason | 1931–32 |
| nextseason | 1933–34 |
| flagicon | yes |
The 1932–33 season was the 58th season of competitive football in England. For the second time in three seasons, Arsenal were crowned league champions, building on a start of just one defeat in the first fourteen games. They clinched the crown with a 3–1 win at Chelsea in April 1933. {{cite book
Events
5 November 1932 - Gillespie Road station on the London Underground - the station local to Arsenal Stadium - is renamed to Arsenal (Highbury Hill), on the suggestion of Arsenal manager Herbert Chapman. By 1960, the station would become Arsenal tube station. It is the only Tube station named directly after a football club.Several tube stations, including and , share their names with football clubs, but only Arsenal was named directly after a club rather than the associated area.
Honours
| Competition | Winner | Runner-up |
|---|---|---|
| First Division | Arsenal (2) | Aston Villa |
| Second Division | Stoke City | Tottenham Hotspur |
| Third Division North | Hull City | Wrexham |
| Third Division South | Brentford | Exeter City |
| FA Cup | Everton (2) | Manchester City |
| Charity Shield | Everton | Newcastle United |
| Home Championship |
Notes = Number in parentheses is the times that club has won that honour. * indicates new record for competition
Football League
Main article: 1932–33 Football League
First Division
Second Division
Third Division North
Third Division South
Top goalscorers
First Division
- Jack Bowers (Derby County) – 35 goals
Second Division
- Ted Harper (Preston North End) – 37 goals
Third Division North
- Bill McNaughton (Hull City) – 39 goals
Third Division South
- Clarrie Bourton (Coventry City) – 40 goals
Notes
References
References
- "Local tube station changes to 'Arsenal'". Arsenal F.C..
- "English League Leading Goalscorers".
- "English League Leading Goalscorers".
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