1993–94_Gillingham_F.C._season

1993–94 Gillingham F.C. season

1993–94 Gillingham F.C. season

Gillingham 1993–94 football season


During the 1993–94 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 62nd season in which Gillingham competed in the Football League, and the 44th since the club was voted back into the league in 1950. Prior to the season, Glenn Roeder resigned as the club's manager and was replaced by Mike Flanagan. The team struggled in August and September, and did not win a Third Division match until the eighth league game of the season. A week later, Gillingham won away from home in the Football League for the first time in 18 months. Gillingham's form remained inconsistent and, although they climbed to 10th in the 22-team league table in October, the team spent most of the season in the bottom half and finished 16th.

Quick Facts –94 season, Chairman ...

Gillingham also competed in three knock-out competitions. The team reached the second round of the FA Cup but failed to progress beyond the earliest stage of the Football League Cup or Football League Trophy. The team played a total of 49 competitive matches, winning 14, drawing 17, and losing 18. Nicky Forster was the team's top goalscorer, with 18 goals, all scored in the Football League. He also made the most appearances, playing in 46 of the team's 49 competitive matches. The highest attendance recorded at the club's home ground, Priestfield Stadium, was 4,573, for a game against Northampton Town.

Background and pre-season

The 199394 season was Gillingham's 62nd season playing in the Football League and the 44th since the club was elected back into the League in 1950 after being voted out in 1938. It was the club's fifth consecutive season in the English football league system's fourth tier, which had been renamed from the Football League Fourth Division to the Third Division after the teams in the top division broke away from the Football League to form the new FA Premier League in 1992.[2] Gillingham had finished 21st in the 22-team division in the 199293 season, narrowly avoiding relegation into non-League football.[3]

Gillingham's manager, Glenn Roeder, resigned in July to manage Watford of the First Division, one of the clubs he had played for.[4][5] 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.[6] Mike Flanagan was promoted from reserves and youth coach to become Gillingham's new manager.[7][8] One of his first moves as manager was to sign veteran Neil Smillie from Brentford and appoint him to a player-coach role.[9] Gary Micklewhite, another highly experienced player, joined Gillingham from Derby County.[10][11]

A new kit was introduced designed to mark the club's centenary, adding panels of black and white stripes to the usual blue shirts, which were worn with white shorts and socks;[12] the club's original shirts when it was founded in 1893 had featured black and white stripes.[13] The away kit, to be worn in the event of a clash of colours with the home team, was all red with similar black and white panels on the shirts.[12] The team prepared for the new season with a number of friendly matches, including one against Charlton Athletic of the First Division. Alan Gough, a goalkeeper who had recently left Fulham, played on a trial basis against Charlton but Gillingham opted not to sign him to a contract.[14]

Third Division

August–December

Gillingham's win at Carlisle United's Brunton Park (pictured in 2007) was the club's first league victory away from home for more than 18 months.

Gillingham's first match of the season was at their home ground, Priestfield Stadium, against Chesterfield. Both Smillie and Micklewhite made their debuts in a game which finished 20 to Gillingham's opponents;[15][16] a week later the team again lost without scoring a goal, losing 30 away to Rochdale.[17] Gillingham's next five league games all ended in draws; Paul Baker scored the team's first league goal in the first of these games, a 22 draw at home to Scarborough.[17] Steve Banks, a 21-year old goalkeeper who had joined the club five months earlier, made his debut in the following game at home to Doncaster Rovers, replacing the previous season's regular goalkeeper, Scott Barrett.[18] After a late goal from Nicky Forster gave the team a third consecutive league draw against Wycombe Wanderers, Flanagan told the press that "the sign of a good side is that they can roll their sleeves up and battle back."[19]

Following their run of five consecutive league draws, which set a new club record,[20] Gillingham were 18th in the 22-team league table.[21] The team won their first league game of the season at the eighth attempt, defeating Scunthorpe United 10 on 25 September with a goal from Smillie.[17] One week later, Gillingham gained their second league win of the season, defeating Carlisle United 21 with two goals from Forster despite Baker being sent off after less than 15 minutes; it was the first time the team had won away from home in the Football League since March 1992.[22][23] The team's run of seven league games without defeat ended when they lost 10 away to Walsall on 9 October; Barrett was recalled to the team for the next game, in which Gillingham beat Darlington 21 at Priestfield with goals from Andy Arnott and Neil Smith to rise to 14th in the table.[24] Gillingham's next game, away to Crewe Alexandra, resulted in a 10 defeat, but the team then won two consecutive home games, defeating Colchester United 30 and Hereford United 20.[17][25] The two victories took the team up to 10th place in the table.[26] Forster scored in both games, taking his total of league goals for the season to 7, more than any Gillingham player had achieved in the whole of the previous season.[17][27]

Banks resumed the position of goalkeeper in early November and would remain in the starting line-up until April.[28] Following the win over Hereford on 2 November, Gillingham lost four of the next five games and slipped to 17th in the division.[29] The run included consecutive defeats in the first three matches of December against Lincoln City, Rochdale, and Chesterfield;[17] against Rochdale Baker was sent off again.[30] Forster scored Gillingham's second goal against Chesterfield, meaning that he had scored in six of the last seven league games.[16] Gillingham ended their losing run in the final game of 1993 on 27 December, beating Northampton Town 10 at home with an own goal from Steve Terry; the attendance of 4,573 was the largest recorded at Priestfield during the season.[31] The start of the match was delayed by 40 minutes as an electricity board worker had to be called out to disengage a timer switch which prevented the floodlights being turned on on weekday afternoons.[32][33] Gillingham ended the year 17th in the table.[34]

January–May

Gillingham's first game of 1994 was a home win at Priestfield Stadium (pictured c. 1987) against Bury.

Gillingham began 1994 with a second consecutive 10 win at Priestfield, defeating Bury with a goal from Smillie on 1 January;[17] the result took the team back up to 14th in the table.[35] Two days later, Banks kept a third consecutive clean sheet as Gillingham drew 00 away to Doncaster; it was the first league game since October in which Gillingham failed to score a goal.[17] Having failed to score in four consecutive games, Forster was relegated to the substitutes' bench for the game at home to Walsall on 22 January and was replaced in the starting line-up by Baker, who made his first appearance since before Christmas and scored in a 11 draw.[28] Seven days later, Forster came off the bench to score the winning goal away to Colchester in the final minute of the game.[16][36]

Forster once again came on as a substitute and scored in Gillingham's first match of February, a 31 defeat at home to Crewe.[16] It was the first in a run of five league games in which Gillingham achieved no wins and scored only two goals.[17] Forster returned to the starting line-up for the game away to Preston North End on 12 February but failed to score and the game finished goalless.[16] The last game of February and the first of March both resulted in 10 defeats, at home to Wycombe and away to Chester City.[17] Gillingham ended their winless run with a 10 win away to Torquay United on 5 March, but lost again seven days later away to Shrewsbury Town.[17] The team had now not won at home in more than two months and had slipped to 15th in the table.[37] In the final game of March, Forster scored for the first time in eight games as Gillingham defeated Carlisle 20 at Priestfield.[16]

Gillingham began the month of April with a second consecutive victory, winning 21 away to Northampton, and followed this with two consecutive 22 draws at Priestfield, against Chester and Preston.[17] Forster scored both goals against Preston, the second time that he had scored twice in a game; no other Gillingham player scored more than a single goal in a game during the season.[17] Gillingham failed to score in the next two games; in the first of these games Gillingham's Tony Butler was sent off and Chris Pike scored two penalty kicks to give Hereford a 20 victory.[38] Gillingham ended their winless run of four games when Forster scored the only goal of the game against Mansfield Town on 23 April.[17] The final match of the season was a 11 draw at home to Lincoln; Richard Carpenter's goal was one of only two scored by Gillingham in the final five games of the season.[17] Veteran former club captain Paul Clark was recalled to the team for the first time since January,[28] and made what turned out to be his final appearance for the club.[39] The result left Gillingham 16th in the final league table with 51 points, 13 points below the play-offs for potential promotion to the Second Division and 13 points above 22nd-placed Northampton, who were relegated from the Football League.[40] Gillingham had the 12th best home record in the division but their overall position suffered from the fact that only two Third Division teams had a worse season away from home.[41][42]

Match details

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Partial league table

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Cup matches

FA Cup

As a Third Division team, Gillingham entered the 1993–94 FA Cup in the first round and were drawn to play away to Yeading of the Isthmian League Premier Division, two levels lower in the English football league system, who had progressed through four qualifying rounds to reach this stage of the competition for the first time.[43][44] The game was played at Church Road, home of Yeading's local rivals Hayes, as the police deemed the crowd segregation facilities at Yeading's ground, The Warren, to be inadequate.[45] Gillingham were held to a 00 draw by their semi-professional opponents, necessitating a replay at Priestfield.[46][47] In the second match, Gillingham scored three goals in the first half and ultimately won 31.[48] In the second round, Gillingham played away to Plymouth Argyle of the Second Division; Richard Green missed a penalty for Gillingham, who lost 20.[30][49][50]

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a. ^ The match was played at Hayes's Church Road ground, but remained officially a home game for Yeading rather than being considered to have taken place at a neutral venue.[52]

Football League Cup

As a Third Division team, Gillingham entered the 1993–94 Football League Cup in the first round and were paired with Brighton & Hove Albion of the Second Division. The first leg of the two-legged tie took place at Priestfield and Gillingham defeated their higher-level opponents 10 with a goal from Robbie Reinelt.[53] Eight days later, however, Brighton won the second leg at the Goldstone Ground 20 and eliminated Gillingham from the competition by an aggregate score of 21.[54]

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Football League Trophy

The 1993–94 Football League Trophy, a tournament exclusively for Second and Third Division teams, began with a round in which the teams were drawn into groups of three, contested on a round-robin basis. Gillingham were grouped with fellow Third Division team Colchester United and Cambridge United of the Second Division. Gillingham's first group match was at home to Colchester in late September and resulted in a 00 draw;[56] the attendance of 1,091 was the lowest recorded at Priestfield during the season.[31] Five weeks later, Gillingham played their second group game away to Cambridge and lost 20.[57] With only one point from the two games, Gillingham finished third in the group and failed to qualify for the second round, ending their participation in the competition.[58]

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Player details

During the course of the season, 24 players played for Gillingham in competitive matches. Forster made the most appearances, playing in 46 of the team's 49 games; he missed only one Third Division match and both of the team's two League Trophy games. Mark Dempsey made the fewest appearances, playing only one game.[31]

Eleven players scored at least one goal for the team. Forster was the highest scorer with 18 goals, all scored in Third Division matches. No other player reached double figures; Baker came closest with 9 goals but no other player scored more than 4.[31]

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

Aftermath

Eight days after the last game of the season, the club staged a gala centenary match at Priestfield featuring two teams of past and present Gillingham players managed by former Gillingham player Ernie Morgan and former manager Keith Peacock.[60] Gillingham offered top scorer Forster a new contract, but he turned it down and instead signed for Brentford of the Second Division.[61] Flanagan remained as manager for the next season, during which the team again struggled. In January 1995, after several seasons spent near the bottom of the Football League coupled with nearly a decade of financial difficulties, the club was declared insolvent and placed in receivership.[62][63] Flanagan was made redundant by the administrators and replaced by Smillie for the remainder of the season.[64][65] Gillingham finished the season 19th in the Third Division, but the club's continued existence remained in doubt.[66][67] In June 1995, however, the club was saved from going out of business when it was purchased by businessman Paul Scally.[68][69]


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. Rollin 1993, p. 589.
  4. "Roeder appointed Watford manager Football". The Times. 10 July 1993. Retrieved 12 December 2008 via NewsBank.
  5. Rollin 1994, p. 235.
  6. Pike, Keith (13 July 1993). "Deane transfer causes split Football". The Times. Retrieved 12 December 2008 via NewsBank.
  7. Triggs 2001, p. 299.
  8. Triggs 2001, p. 220.
  9. Beet, Don (22 July 1993). "Peacock arrival opens door for Townsend: Soccer". The Guardian. ProQuest 293536774. Retrieved 14 March 2022 via ProQuest.
  10. "Gills Shop". Gillingham Vs Chesterfield Matchday Programme. 14 August 1993.
  11. "Matchpoints". Gillingham Vs Chesterfield Matchday Programme. 14 August 1993.
  12. Triggs 2001, pp. 220, 299.
  13. Rollin 1994, pp. 232–233.
  14. Rollin 1994, p. 232.
  15. Alexander, Jeremy (6 September 1993). "Soccer: Hard act to follow - Third Division: Wycombe 1, Gillingham 1". The Guardian. p. 12. Retrieved 6 March 2022 via Gale.
  16. Slot, Owen (31 October 1993). "Football: Preece makes Swansea pay". The Independent. ProQuest 313019595. Retrieved 14 March 2022 via ProQuest.
  17. Brown 2003, p. 102.
  18. Rollin 1994, p. 233.
  19. "Matchpoints". Gillingham Vs Bury Matchday Programme. 1 January 1994.
  20. Brown 2003, p. 103.
  21. Oliver, Brian (28 December 1993). "Soccer: Gillingham's glaring error". The Daily Telegraph. ProQuest 317294103. Retrieved 14 March 2022 via ProQuest.
  22. Bradfield, Stephen (30 January 1994). "Football League: Final Furlong decides fate of flagging Derby". The Guardian. ProQuest 293478234. Retrieved 15 March 2022 via ProQuest.
  23. Rollin 1994, p. 250.
  24. Rollin 1994, p. 589.
  25. Rollin 1994, pp. 653–654.
  26. Shaw, Phil (26 October 1993). "Football". The Independent. ProQuest 313004392. Retrieved 14 March 2022 via ProQuest.
  27. Alexander, Jeremy (11 November 1993). "Yeading take first step into Cup spotlight; Football". The Times. p. 46. Retrieved 6 March 2022 via Gale.
  28. Rollin 1994, p. 657.
  29. Rees, Jasper (15 November 1993). "Soccer: Yeading put some bite into their biggest day". The Daily Telegraph. ProQuest 317288176. Retrieved 14 March 2022 via ProQuest.
  30. Rollin 1994, p. 658.
  31. Rollin 1994, p. 659.
  32. Brown, Geoff (5 December 1993). "FA Cup round-up: Green's dream keeps Nuneaton on path". The Independent. ProQuest 313007424. Retrieved 14 March 2022 via ProQuest.
  33. Rollin 1994, pp. 657–659.
  34. Rollin 1995, p. 608.
  35. Rollin 1994, p. 616.
  36. Rollin 1994, p. 619.
  37. Rollin 1994, pp. 616, 619.
  38. Rollin 1994, p. 636.
  39. Rollin 1994, p. 638.
  40. Rollin 1994, p. 639.
  41. Rollin 1994, pp. 636, 638.
  42. Triggs 2001, p. 122.
  43. Moore, Glenn (27 March 1995). "Football Commentary : Little pity for the poor relations". The Independent. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  44. "Administrators make Flanagan redundant; Football". The Times. 1 March 1995. p. 40. Retrieved 20 December 2021 via Gale.
  45. Rollin 1995, p. 555.
  46. Kelso, Paul (15 February 2002). "Scally's rocky road to Highbury". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 26 January 2008. Retrieved 26 May 2011.

Works cited


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