1992–93_Gillingham_F.C._season

1992–93 Gillingham F.C. season

1992–93 Gillingham F.C. season

Gillingham 1992–93 football season


During the 1992–93 English football season, Gillingham F.C. competed in the Football League Third Division, the fourth tier of the English football league system. It was the 61st season in which Gillingham competed in the Football League, and the 43rd since the club was voted back into the league in 1950. By October, the team were close to the bottom of the Third Division and Damien Richardson was dismissed from his job as the club's manager. Glenn Roeder was appointed as his replacement in a player-manager capacity. The team's performances remained poor and, with two games remaining, Gillingham still faced the possibility of finishing bottom of the league table and being relegated out of the Football League. Victory over Halifax Town in the penultimate match of the season, however, ensured that Gillingham would compete in the Third Division again in the following season. Roeder resigned as manager following the conclusion of the season after less than nine months in charge.

Quick Facts –93 season, Chairman ...

Gillingham also competed in three knock-out competitions. The team reached the third round of the FA Cup and the second round of the Football League Cup but failed to progress beyond the initial group stage of the Football League Trophy. The team played a total of 53 competitive matches, winning 13, drawing 17, and losing 23. David Crown was the team's top goalscorer, with five goals in the Football League and a total of nine in all competitions, the lowest figure with which a player had finished a season as Gillingham's top scorer since the 1930s. Tony Butler made the most appearances, playing in 50 of the team's 53 competitive matches. The highest attendance recorded at the club's home ground, Priestfield Stadium, was 7,488, for a game against Southampton of the FA Premier League in the second round of the Football League Cup.

Background and pre-season

Peter Beadle (pictured in 2020) left the club before the start of the new season for a record transfer fee.

The 199293 season was Gillingham's 61st season playing in the Football League and the 43rd since the club was elected back into the League in 1950 after being voted out in 1938.[1] It was the club's fourth consecutive season in the fourth tier of the English football league system.[1] Following the 199192 season, the teams in the Football League First Division, the highest level of the sport in England, broke away to form the new FA Premier League. As a result, the Football League was reduced from four divisions to three, placing Gillingham in the new Third Division rather than the old Fourth Division.[2][3] Gillingham had finished 11th in the 22-team division in the 199192 season.[4]

At the start of the season, Damien Richardson was the club's manager, a post he had held since April 1989.[5] His assistant manager was Ron Hillyard, a fellow former Gillingham player.[6] Paul Clark served as the team's captain.[7] The management team signed five new players prior to the first game of the season. Gary Breen, a teenaged defender, and Liburd Henry, a forward, joined from Gillingham's Kent rivals, Maidstone United, also of the Third Division.[8] Maidstone were experiencing severe financial difficulties and almost all their players left after the 199192 season; after being unable to fulfil their first game of the new season, they resigned from the Football League.[9] Veteran forward Trevor Aylott joined Gillingham from Birmingham City and Scott Barrett, a goalkeeper, arrived from Colchester United.[10] Richard Green, who had spent part of the previous season on loan to Gillingham from Swindon Town, re-joined the club on a permanent contract.[11] Several players left the club, including previous captain Alan Walker. Forward Peter Beadle joined Tottenham Hotspur of the Premier League for a transfer fee of £300,000 (equivalent to £660,000 in 2021), a new record for the highest fee received by Gillingham for a player.[1][12][13]

The team prepared for the new season with a number of friendly matches, one of which was a testimonial match for Bill "Buster" Collins, who had been with the club in a variety of roles since the early 1960s, including a long spell as youth team manager.[14] Manchester United player Steve Bruce, who had started his professional career at Gillingham and credited Collins as a major influence,[15] brought a team from his club to play against Gillingham in a match which drew a crowd of over 8,000 spectators.[16] The club adopted a new kit design, adding white shoulder panels to the usual blue shirts; the away kit, to be worn in the event of a clash of colours with the home team, featured black and white stripes,[17] the first-choice colours worn when the club was formed in 1893.[18] Previewing the division, Keith Blackmore of The Times wrote that Gillingham were not among the bookmakers' favourites for promotion but nonetheless had a good chance, noting in particular the new signings from Maidstone and the fact that "no team containing [David] Crown and [Steve] Lovell is likely to go short of goals".[19]

Third Division

August–December

Ron Hillyard (pictured in 2001), who had been with the club since 1974 as a player and subsequently assistant manager, was dismissed in October along with manager Damien Richardson.

Gillingham's first match of the season was at their home ground, Priestfield Stadium, against Northampton Town; Lawrence Osborne gave Gillingham the lead in his only appearance of the season and indeed his final appearance for the club,[20] but they ultimately lost 32.[21] The team also lost the next game, away to Bury; goalkeeper Barrett was sent off, the first of three occasions during the season when he would be dismissed.[22] Gillingham recorded their first league win of the season at the fourth attempt, beating Wrexham 41 on 1 September. Lovell scored the team's only hat-trick of the season in the win, which would prove to be Gillingham's only victory in the first thirteen Third Division games of the season.[21] The team drew their next three games, leaving them 14th in the 22-team league table, but then lost six consecutive league matches.[21]

Defeat at home to Crewe Alexandra on 3 October left Gillingham 21st in the table, one place off the bottom of the entire Football League.[21][23] Five days later, both Richardson and Hillyard were dismissed from their jobs by the club's board of directors.[24] It meant the end of an 18-year association with the club for Hillyard, who had joined Gillingham as a player in 1974 before becoming assistant manager in 1989.[6] Richardson attributed the team's poor performance to a combination of players' inexperience and the tactics he had employed, saying "I've lost my job on a matter of principle teaching kids to play attractive football [...] I had to sell all the best players to get money in as the board wanted the kids to be pushed".[25] Paul Clark, the captain, served as caretaker manager until 26 October, when Glenn Roeder was appointed as the club's new player-manager. The former Queens Park Rangers and Newcastle United defender had left third-tier Leyton Orient earlier in the year and was playing non-League football for Purfleet at the time of his appointment.[26][27][28] His first game in charge resulted in a defeat at home to Torquay United.[21] That game was the final Gillingham appearance for veteran forward Lovell, who had been with the club since 1987; as he did not feature in Roeder's plans he was sent out on loan to AFC Bournemouth for a short spell before leaving Gillingham altogether in December.[29]

Gillingham won a league game for the first time in more than two months on 3 November, defeating Hereford United, and two games later beat Darlington by the same score,[21] but had by then fallen to the bottom of the table.[30] The team's first two Third Division matches of December resulted in defeats to Shrewsbury Town and Colchester United; the latter game took place only two days after Gillingham had defeated the same opponents in the FA Cup.[31] Gillingham had originally been scheduled to play Maidstone on Boxing Day, but due to the latter team's withdrawal from the League, Gillingham instead re-arranged a game against Bury which had previously been scheduled for late January.[32] Gillingham lost 41 in a match in which their opponents wore Gillingham's second-choice kit in the second half after the referee decided that the two teams' colours were too similar.[33] The team's final game of 1992 was away to Scunthorpe United and ended in a 22 draw; Roeder selected himself in the starting line-up for the first time and, having turned 37 two weeks earlier, became the oldest player to make his debut for Gillingham.[21][34] The year ended with Gillingham bottom of the Third Division.[35]

January–May

Gillingham's first league game of 1993 was at home to Rochdale and resulted in a 42 victory for the home team, lifting them off the bottom of the table.[21][36] Forward Paul Baker, signed from Motherwell days earlier, scored on his debut; he would start every game for the remainder of the season.[37][38] After that victory, however, Gillingham won only one of the next ten league games.[21] Scottish forward Paul Ritchie, signed on loan from Dundee, made his debut on 6 February against Northampton and scored Gillingham's first goal in a 22 draw; seven days later he scored twice as the team defeated Scarborough, only their second victory of 1993. Fellow forward Crown, who had played intermittently in the first half of the season but not made any appearances since mid-December,[21] came on as a substitute against Doncaster Rovers in the last game of February and scored an equalising goal in the final minute. Gillingham ended the month one point off the bottom of the league table.[39]

Gillingham lost the last game of the season at Plainmoor (pictured in 1981), home of Torquay United, to complete an entire league season without an away victory.

Gillingham began March with two defeats, including a 20 loss away to Barnet in which both goals were own goals scored by Gillingham players.[40] Gillingham defeated Carlisle United on 13 March, their first win for seven games; the victory took them up to 19th in the table. Two games later, the team achieved another victory, beating Lincoln City; Nicky Forster scored twice in a 31 win. Having not started a match since before Christmas, Forster had returned to the team in the win over Carlisle and would remain Baker's forward partner for the rest of the season.[38] The first game of April resulted in a 41 defeat at home to York City, only the second time the team had conceded four goals in a game during the season,[21] but Gillingham then beat Shrewsbury Town, who were sixth in the table and challenging for a place in the play-offs for promotion.[41][42]

A 30 defeat to Colchester on 16 April meant that with two games remaining, Gillingham were 20th in the Third Division and could still finish bottom, which would result in them being relegated out of the Football League.[43] The remaining games were against Halifax Town and Torquay, the two teams below Gillingham in the table.[21][44] On 1 May, Gillingham defeated Halifax 20 at Priestfield with goals from Tony Eeles and Baker; the result meant that Gillingham could no longer finish below their opponents and were therefore safe from relegation.[45][46] The game drew a crowd of 7,151, the largest attendance of the season for a league match at Priestfield by a margin of more than 3,000.[21] After the match, Roeder commented to the press that it had been the most important game in Gillingham's history, saying "All the emotion you can imagine. It was a Cup tie, wasn't it?"[47] Gillingham lost to Torquay in the final match of the season and finished 21st, one place above Halifax, who lost their place in the Football League.[48][49] The defeat meant that, for the first time in the club's history, Gillingham had gone through an entire season without winning a league game away from home.[50] Reviewing the season for the magazine When Saturday Comes ten years later, Chris Lynham characterised the team as poor in all areas, picking out Aylott's unsatisfactory performance as a replacement for Beadle up front and the regularity with which the defence conceded goals in injury time.[51] Contrary to Blackmore's prediction prior to the season, only four teams in the Third Division scored fewer goals than Gillingham.[41]

Match details

Key
Results[21]
More information Date, Opponents ...

Partial league table

More information Pos, Team ...

Cup matches

FA Cup

As a Third Division team, Gillingham entered the 1992–93 FA Cup in the first round and were paired with Kettering Town of the Football Conference, the fifth tier of English football, who had entered the competition in the fourth and final qualifying round.[52] Kettering took the lead in the first half before Gillingham scored twice. Despite being forced to substitute their goalkeeper due to an injury before half-time, with former Gillingham midfielder Ian Docker taking over in goal, the Conference team levelled the scores in the second half and nearly held on for a draw. Forster scored a winner in the 85th minute, however, meaning that Gillingham progressed past the first round of the FA Cup for the first time in five seasons.[53][54] In the second round their opponents were fellow Third Division team Colchester United. The initial match, at Priestfield, resulted in a 11 draw, necessitating a replay at Layer Road in Colchester.[55] Gillingham won the replay 32 with goals from Forster, Andy Arnott and Henry.[56] The Premier League and First Division teams entered the competition in the third round, but Gillingham were paired with Huddersfield Town of the Second Division. The initial match at Priestfield ended in a goalless draw, meaning another replay.[57] Gillingham lost 21 in the replay at Leeds Road and were eliminated from the competition.[58]

Match details

Key
Results[59]
More information Date, Round ...

Football League Cup

As a Third Division team, Gillingham entered the 1992–93 Football League Cup in the first round and were paired with Northampton Town; the first leg of the two-legged tie took place only three days after Gillingham had played Northampton in the first league match of the season. Gillingham won both legs, 20 at home and 21 away, and thus won the tie 41 on aggregate.[60] In the second round, they played Southampton of the Premier League. The first leg took place at Priestfield and drew a crowd of 7,488, the largest attendance recorded at the stadium during the season. Despite playing a team from three levels higher, Gillingham achieved a 00 draw.[61] In the second leg at The Dell, however, the Premier League team won 30 to eliminate Gillingham from the competition.[62]

Match details

Key
Results[63]
More information Date, Round ...

Football League Trophy

The 1992–93 Football League Trophy, a tournament exclusively for Second and Third Division teams, began with a first round in which the teams were drawn into groups of three, contested on a round-robin basis. Gillingham were grouped with Leyton Orient and Fulham, both of the Second Division. The first group game took place on 1 December and resulted in Orient defeating Gillingham 41. A week later, Gillingham played at home to Fulham and drew 33 in front of a crowd of 1,085, the lowest of the season at Priestfield. Fulham and Orient drew 22 in the final group game on 15 December, meaning that Gillingham finished bottom of the three-team group and were eliminated from the competition.[64]

Match details

Key
Results[64]
More information Date, Round ...

Players

Mark O'Connor (pictured in 2013) made 32 appearances.

Thirty-one players made at least one appearance for Gillingham during the season. Tony Butler made the most, playing in 50 of the team's 53 competitive matches. Four other players played over 40 times: Neil Smith (49), Green (48), Clark (44) and Barrett (42). Three players made only one appearance each: Kevin Hunt, Matt Joseph, and Osborne.[65] Player-manager Roeder only included himself in the starting line-up on seven occasions out of a possible thirty-five,[66] mainly due to injury.[46]

Seventeen players scored at least one goal for the team. Crown was the highest scorer, with 5 goals in the Football League, 2 in the FA Cup, and 2 in the League Cup. His total of 9 goals was the lowest with which a player had finished a season as Gillingham's top scorer since the 1930s.[67] Baker, Arnott and Forster were joint top scorers in Football League matches alone, each scoring 6 Third Division goals.[65]

More information Player, Position ...

FW = Forward, MF = Midfielder, GK = Goalkeeper, DF = Defender

Aftermath

Top goalscorer Crown left the club at the end of the season and joined Dagenham & Redbridge of the Conference.[68] Aylott, who had played only one game since Christmas, also moved on, as did midfielder Mark O'Connor.[69] In July, Roeder resigned as manager to take the equivalent role at Watford of the First Division, one of the clubs for which he had played.[70] Watford were later fined £10,000 (equivalent to £20,000 in 2021) by the Football Association, the governing body of the sport in England, for making an illegal approach to Roeder.[71] Mike Flanagan was promoted from reserves and youth coach to become Gillingham's new manager.[72] In the 1993–94 season, he led Gillingham to a 16th-place finish in the Third Division.[73]


References

  1. Rollin 1993, p. 231.
  2. Murray, Andrew (19 April 2021). "How the Premier League breakaway happened: The first season of 1992/93, as told by its heroes". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  3. Triggs 2001, p. 158.
  4. "Priestfield Profile: Paul Clark". Gillingham Vs Northampton Town Matchday Programme. 15 August 1992.
  5. Triggs 2001, pp. 65, 153.
  6. Triggs 2001, pp. 46, 53.
  7. Triggs 2001, p. 139.
  8. Triggs 2001, p. 326.
  9. Rollin 1993, p. 235.
  10. Blackmore, Keith (13 August 1992). "Clubs prepared for struggle to survive; Football". The Times. Retrieved 18 January 2022 via Gale.
  11. Triggs 2001, p. 240.
  12. Rollin 1993, p. 232.
  13. Hennessy, Bob (9 October 1992). "Richardson pays for his principles". Evening Herald. Retrieved 18 January 2022 via British Newspaper Archive.
  14. Triggs 2001, p. 278.
  15. "Soccer: Roeder lands Gillingham job". The Guardian. 27 October 1992. Retrieved 6 December 2021 via Gale.
  16. Triggs 2001, p. 204.
  17. Rollin 1993, pp. 232, 659.
  18. Rollin 1993, pp. 232–233.
  19. Rollin 1993, p. 589.
  20. Powell, David (1 May 1993). "Gillingham fear curse could bring demotion". The Times. Retrieved 6 December 2021 via Gale.
  21. Wright, Vince (2 May 1993). "Safety first for the Gills; Football". Sunday Times. Retrieved 6 December 2021 via Gale.
  22. Edworthy, Niall (8 May 1993). "Football: Halifax relegated". The Independent. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  23. Brown 2003, pp. 12–90, 115–116.
  24. Lynham, Chris (February 2003). "Gillingham 199293". When Saturday Comes. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
  25. Rollin 1993, p. 655.
  26. "Matchpoints". Gillingham Vs Colchester United Matchday Programme. 5 December 1992.
  27. Brown 2003, pp. 98–102.
  28. Rollin 1993, p. 658.
  29. Rollin 1993, p. 659.
  30. Rollin 1993, p. 660.
  31. Rollin 1993, p. 662.
  32. Rollin 1993, pp. 655–662.
  33. Rollin 1993, pp. 616, 620.
  34. Rollin 1993, p. 621.
  35. Rollin 1993, p. 624.
  36. Rollin 1993, pp. 616, 620, 621, 624.
  37. Rollin 1993, pp. 636–637.
  38. Rollin 1993, p. 233.
  39. Brown 2003, p. 102.
  40. Triggs 2001, p. 348.
  41. Triggs 2001, pp. 46, 237.
  42. "Roeder appointed Watford manager Football". The Times. 10 July 1993. Retrieved 12 December 2008 via NewsBank.
  43. Pike, Keith (13 July 1993). "Deane transfer causes split Football". The Times. Retrieved 12 December 2008 via NewsBank.

Works cited


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