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1948–49 Port Vale F.C. season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| club | Port Vale |
| season | 1948–49 |
| manager | Gordon Hodgson |
| chairman | William Holdcroft |
| stadium | Old Recreation Ground |
| league | Football League Third Division South |
| league result | 13th (39 Points) |
| cup1 | FA Cup |
| cup1 result | First Round |
| (knocked out by Notts County) | |
| league topscorer | Walter Aveyard (13) |
| season topscorer | Walter Aveyard (13) |
| highest attendance | 18,497 vs. Aldershot, 28 August 1948 |
| lowest attendance | 7,738 vs. Millwall, 18 December 1948 |
| average attendance | 12,069 |
| largest win | 3–0 (three games) |
| largest loss | 1–4 (twice) |
| pattern_b1 | _collar_buttons_2 |
| pattern_so1 | _hoops_white |
| leftarm1 | ffffff |
| body1 | ffffff |
| rightarm1 | ffffff |
| shorts1 | 000000 |
| socks1 | 000000 |
| prevseason | 1947–48 |
| nextseason | 1949–50 |
(knocked out by Notts County) The 1948–49 season was Port Vale's 37th season of football in the English Football League and their fourth full season in the Third Division South. Under manager Gordon Hodgson and chairman William Holdcroft. After promising early form, Vale's promotion hopes fizzled out into a mid-table 13th‑place finish, accumulating 39 points from 42 league matches (14 wins, 11 draws, 17 losses).
In the FA Cup, Vale were eliminated in the First Round, ending hopes of a cup run early in the season. Walter Aveyard emerged as both league and season top scorer, netting 13 goals. The average home attendance stood at 12,069, with the lowest turnout recorded at 7,738 for the Millwall match on 18 December 1948. Vale's largest victories were 3–0 wins on three separate occasions, while their heaviest defeats came by 4–1 scorelines twice.
Overall, the season proved steady but unspectacular, as early promotion ambitions gave way to the realities of inconsistent form and the club's decision to sell Bill Pointon for a then‑club record fee in search of financial and on‑field balance.
Overview
Third Division South
The pre-season saw the club attempt to sign Huddersfield Town's star forward Peter Doherty when this failed Gordon Hodgson instead signed Liverpool left-wing duo Stan Palk and Mick Hulligan for £10,000. Striker Walter Aveyard was also signed from Birmingham City, despite his belief that a leg injury had finished him. Fans were convinced promotion to the Second Division was possible, as was chairman William Holdcroft. So, there was a surge in season ticket sales.
The season started with seven points from the opening four games, leaving the club top of the table. The season-high 18,497 fans that turned up for a 3–0 win over Aldershot were impressed by the skill of the three new signings. This followed on from a 3–0 win over Reading the previous week. They did lose by a goal to nil at Brighton & Hove Albion on 4 September, though Aveyard played most of the game as a passenger after sustaining an injury. Two days later, Vale beat league leaders Swindon Town by two clear goals. The club's good form continued to the end of September, despite the sale of Walter Keeley to Accrington Stanley for £1,500 – who had found himself relegated to the sidelines by Hulligan's good performances. After this Hulligan broke his ankle, whilst other injuries also hit the squad. Six weeks of six defeats in seven games followed, leaving Vale sixth from bottom. During this spell, Joe Dale was offloaded to Witton Albion as Hodgson attempted to fill the gaps in the first-team with young reserves. Winning three games on the trot, the Vale ended this bad spell and kept three clean sheets after Tommy Cheadle was moved to the forward lines to add weight to the attack.
Over the Christmas period, talk was dominated by 'The Wembley of the North', which had been projected as an 80,000-capacity stadium, but now it was planned as a 40,000-capacity ground with room for future expansion. Finding just fifty members for the '100 club', the financing was helped by a £8,000 grant from The Football Association. In January, the club initiated a fire-sale of players: Bill Pointon went to Queens Park Rangers for a then-club record five-figure fee, whilst Harry Hubbick was sold to Rochdale for around £1,000. Meanwhile, the club transfer listed Palk, Aveyard, and Eric Eastwood (who all lived outside north Staffordshire); whilst Hulligan returned from injury. A two-month run without a win followed, in which Hodgson again experimented with the first XI. This run finally ended with a 1–0 win over sixth-placed Notts County on 9 April. Nine days later at Ashton Gate, goalkeeper Harry Prince was given a chance in place of injured regular George Heppell, who embarrassed himself by attempting to punch a 40 yd punt from Stone, only to miss the ball entirely and thereby concede the equaliser. Later in the month, Hodgson signed George King from Hull City for a four-figure fee. King scored twice in his debut against Torquay United. The match was marred by a Plainmoor spectator hitting the referee on the head with a stone after he disallowed a penalty.
They finished a disappointing 13th, boasting just 39 points. They had scored twelve fewer goals than in the previous campaign. However, their defensive record was identical. Harry Prince's move to Stafford Rangers was the only significant departure of the summer.
Finances
On the financial side, a large transfer credit helped the club record a gross profit of £7,120. Gate receipts had declined to £25,831, whilst wages had risen to £16,095. The Burslem Supporters Club put forward a donation of £600, and the club issued 22,000 new five shilling shares to help with the New Ground Fund.
FA Cup
In the FA Cup, Vale were knocked out in the first round by Notts County at Meadow Lane in front of 36,514 spectators.
Results
Football League Third Division South
Main article: 1948–49 Football League
League table
Results by matchday
Matches
FA Cup
Main article: 1948–49 FA Cup
Player statistics
Appearances and goals
:Key to positions: GK – Goalkeeper; FB – Full back; HB – Half back; FW – Forward
|}
Top scorers
| Place | Position | Nation | Name | Third Division South | FA Cup | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | FW | England | Walter Aveyard | 13 | 0 | 13 |
| 2 | FW | England | Ronnie Allen | 10 | 0 | 10 |
| 3 | HB | England | Alan Martin | 6 | 1 | 7 |
| 4 | FW | England | Bill Pointon | 5 | 0 | 5 |
| – | FW | England | Mick Hulligan | 5 | 0 | 5 |
| 6 | FW | England | Stan Palk | 4 | 0 | 4 |
| 7 | FW | England | George King | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| – | HB | England | Tommy Cheadle | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| 9 | FW | England | Harry Hubbick | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| – | HB | England | Bill McGarry | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| – | FW | England | Joe Dale | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| – | – | – | Own goals | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| TOTALS | 51 | 1 | 52 |
Transfers
Transfers in
| Date from | Position | Nationality | Name | From | Fee | Ref. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 1948 | GK | ENG | Ray Hancock | Bury | Free transfer | last=Kent | first=Jeff | title=Port Vale Personalities | publisher=Witan Books | year=1996 | isbn=0-9529152-0-0}} |
| June 1948 | FW | ENG | Walter Aveyard | Birmingham City | Free transfer | ||||||
| July 1948 | FW | ENG | Mick Hulligan | Liverpool | £10,000 | ||||||
| July 1948 | FW | ENG | Stan Palk | Liverpool | £10,000 | ||||||
| October 1948 | FW | ENG | Bernard Jones | Longport | Free transfer | ||||||
| November 1948 | FW | ENG | George O'Neill | Ellesmere Port Town | Free transfer | ||||||
| November 1948 | FW | ENG | Pat Raftery | Ravensdale | Free transfer | ||||||
| April 1949 | FW | ENG | George King | Hull City | 'four-figure fee' |
Transfers out
| Date from | Position | Nationality | Name | To | Fee | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| September 1948 | FW | ENG | Walter Keeley | Accrington Stanley | £1,500 | |
| October 1948 | FW | ENG | Joe Dale | Witton Albion | 'Cheshire League record fee' | |
| January 1949 | FB | ENG | Harry Hubbick | Rochdale | £1,000 | |
| January 1949 | FW | ENG | Bill Pointon | Queens Park Rangers | 'club record five-figure fee' | |
| May 1949 | GK | ENG | Harry Prince | Stafford Rangers | Released | |
| July 1949 | FB | SCO | Bob Pursell | Winsford United | Free transfer | |
| July 1949 | FW | ENG | Lewis White | Winsford United | Free transfer | |
| Summer 1949 | FW | ENG | George O'Neill | Released | ||
| Summer 1949 | FW | ENG | John Sherratt | Released |
References
;Specific
;General
References
- Kent, Jeff. (1990). "The Valiants' Years: The Story Of Port Vale". Witan Books.
- [http://www.statto.com/football/teams/port-vale/1948-1949/results Port Vale 1948–1949 : Results & Fixtures] {{Webarchive. link. (4 March 2016 . Statto Organisation. Retrieved 28 April 2012.)
- Kent, Jeff. (1996). "Port Vale Personalities". Witan Books.
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