Brentford F.C.

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<tr><th>Nickname(s)</th><td>The Bees</td></tr> <tr><td class="toccolours" style="padding: 0; background: #ffffff; text-align: center;" colspan="2">
Brentford
Image:Brentford.gif
Full name Brentford Football Club
Founded 1889
Ground Griffin Park
Brentford, London
(Capacity 12,763)
Chairman Image:Flag of England.svg Greg Dyke
Manager Image:Flag of England.svg Andy Scott
League League Two
2006 – 07 League One, 24th
(relegated)
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Home colours
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Away colours
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Brentford Football Club are an English football club based in Brentford in the London Borough of Hounslow. They are currently playing in Football League Two. They were founded in 1889 and play their home games at Griffin Park, their home stadium since 1904. Brentford's most successful spell came during the 1930s, when they achieved consecutive top six finishes in the First Division. Since the War, they have spent most of their time in the third and fourth tiers of English football. Brentford have been FA Cup quarter-finalists on four occasions, and have twice been Football League Trophy runners-up.

Contents

History

Foundation to 1939

Founded in 1889 to serve as a winter pursuit for the Brentford Rowing Club, the club spent its early years in the lower divisions of the Football League and achieved little of note, save for a move to its present day home ground, Griffin Park, in 1904. In 1921, it was a founder member of the Third Division South. During the late 1920s and 1930s, the club began to make real progress. In the 1929-30 season, the side won all 21 of its home matches in the Third Division South (a record which still stands in English football), but still missed out on promotion. After several more near-misses, promotion to the Second Division was finally achieved in 1932-33. Two years later, Brentford reached the First Division and finished 5th in its debut season - which is still the club's highest ever league position - to complete a remarkable rise for the club. Brentford achieved more impressive placings in the league for the rest of the decade (6th in the following two seasons) before the Second World War interrupted. During the 1929-1930 season Brentford won all 21 of their home games this is a record which still stands today,no other team has won all of their home games since

1945-1989

During the war, Brentford competed in the London War Cup, losing in the 1941 final at Wembley Stadium to Reading and winning in the final against Portsmouth a year later. The club was relegated in the first season after the War, and a downward spiral set in, which culminated in relegation to the Third Division in 1953-54 and the Fourth Division in 1961-62. The survival of Brentford FC was threatened by a projected takeover by Queens Park Rangers in the late 1960s - a bid that was only narrowly averted with an emergency loan of £104,000 - while the club continued to yo-yo between the third and fourth divisions during the next three decades. The club won promotion in 1962-63, 1971-72 and 1977-78 but only on the final occasion was it able to consolidate its place in English football's third tier. Other bright spots in this period included reaching the final of the Freight Rover Trophy at Wembley in 1985, where it lost to Wigan, and a run to the FA Cup quarter-finals in 1989 which included wins over three higher-division sides and was only ended by the reigning league champions Liverpool.

1990 to present

After a 45-year absence, Brentford were promoted back to the Second Division (renamed the First Division with the advent of the Premier League in 1992) in the 1991-92 season as Third Division champions, though they were relegated again the following year.

There followed several seasons of the club narrowly missing out on promotion. Former Chelsea FA Cup hero David Webb was appointed manager in 1993 and twice led the side into the play-offs. In 1996-97 he led them to the play-off final at Wembley, but the side were beaten by Crewe Alexandra. The club were then relegated to the Third Division (by then the bottom division of the Football League) the following year. Brentford won promotion as champions again in 1998-99 under manager and chairman Ron Noades.

The club suffered more promotion agony in 2002 under manager Steve Coppell as they lost out to Stoke City in the play-off final having been just minutes away from automatic promotion on the final day of the season, and again under manager Martin Allen in 2004-05, on that occasion losing 3-1 on aggregate to Sheffield Wednesday in the semi-finals after finishing 4th in League One.

Former BBC Director-General and Bees fan Greg Dyke was announced as chairman of Brentford on 20 January 2006 as part of the takeover by Bees United, the Brentford Supporters Trust. On 28 January 2006, Brentford beat Premier League strugglers Sunderland 2-1 in the 4th Round of the FA Cup, but lost 3-1 to another Premier League club Charlton Athletic in the 5th Round. Brentford finished 3rd in the league and lost to Swansea City in the play-off semi-final.

On 30 May 2006 Allen announced his resignation as manager of Brentford[1] and the club named Leroy Rosenior as his successor on 14 June 2006. On 18 November 2006, following a run of 16 matches without a win - leaving the side in the relegation zone - Rosenior was sacked as manager, after the team lost 4-0 at home to Crewe. Following Rosenior's departure, youth team coach Scott Fitzgerald was appointed manager on a full-time basis on 21 December 2006 with Alan Reeves acting as his assistant.[2] Fitzgerald was unable to turn around the club's fortunes, and Brentford were relegated to Football League Two in April 2007. Fitzgerald left the day following confirmation of Brentford's relegation, with youth team manager Barry Quin due to act as caretaker in the managerial role until the end of the season.[3]

On 18 April 2007, The Sun newspaper reported that Micky Adams was in line to return as manager, nine years after being sacked following relegation. Instead, former England captain Terry Butcher was appointed as manager on April 24. Butcher's assistant was former Brentford winger Andy Scott, who was appointed on May 9, 2007. Butcher's reign at Griffin Park was, however, not a successful one, and his contract was terminated by mutual consent on December 11 2007.[4] Butcher's assistant Andy Scott was appointed as manager on January 4 2008 following a successful caretaker spell.

Stadium

Griffin Park

Main article: Griffin Park

Brentford have played at Griffin Park since 1904. The ground is unique in British football in that there is a pub in each corner of Griffin Park, one of which is owned by the club.

In 2007 The Ealing Road end of the ground has had a roof installed after a grant by the Football Trust and makes all 4 stands of the ground covered. The Ealing Road remains a terrace but has been "given back" to home supporters and was re-opened for the first game of the season of the 2007/2008 season on Saturday 11th August 2007 against Mansfield Town (4,909 watched the game).

New Stadium

Brentford, with the aim of securing a more financially sustainable future, have been considering relocation since 2002. Plans were announced in October 2002 for a new 18,000-20,000-seat stadium at a state-of-the-art arena complex in Lionel Road, Brentford. It was announced on December 7 2007 that the club had secured an option to purchase the site - a major breakthrough in the club's plans to relocate.[5]

Current first-team squad

As of January 1 2008: Template:Fs start Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player Template:Fs player |} | width="1%" | |bgcolor="#FFFFFF" valign="top" width="48%"|

No. Position Player

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Players out on loan

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Managers

As of January 5, 2007. Only competitive matches are counted.

Name Nat From To Record
PWDLWin %
William Lewis Image:Flag of England.svg August 1900 May 1903
Dick Molyneux Image:Flag of England.svg August 1903 May 1906
W G Brown Image:Flag of England.svg August 1906 May 1908
Fred Halliday Image:Flag of England.svg August 1908 May 1912
Ephraim Rhodes Image:Flag of England.svg August 1912 May 1915
Fred Halliday Image:Flag of England.svg August 1915 August 1921
Archie Mitchell Image:Flag of England.svg August 1921 December 1922 6022132537
Fred Halliday Image:Flag of England.svg December 1924 May 1926 6822123432
Harry Curtis Image:Flag of England.svg May 1926 February 1949 70530515724343
Jackie Gibbons Image:Flag of England.svg February 1949 August 1952 15053405735
Jimmy Bain Image:Flag of England.svg August 1952 January 1953 23751130
Tommy Lawton Image:Flag of England.svg January 1953 September 1953 338101524
Bill Dodgin, Sr. Image:Flag of England.svg October 1953 May 1957 18265576036
Malcolm MacDonald Template:Country data Scotland May 1957 January 1965 3791609412542
Tommy Cavanagh Image:Flag of England.svg January 1965 March 1966 4616102035
Billy Gray Image:Flag of England.svg 1 August 1966 30 August 1967 4819131640
Jimmy Sirrel Image:Flag of England.svg 1 September 1967 30 November 1969 11145264041
Frank Blunstone Image:Flag of England.svg 1 December 1969 11 July 1973 16467356241
Mike Everitt Image:Flag of England.svg 1 September 1973 15 January 1975 7021222730
John Docherty Template:Country data Scotland 20 January 1975 7 September 1976 6923202633
Bill Dodgin, Jr. Image:Flag of England.svg 16 September 1976 1 March 1980 16671356043
Fred Callaghan Image:Flag of England.svg 1 March 1980 2 February 1984 17659526532
Frank Blunstone Image:Flag of England.svg 2 February 1984 9 February 1984 10010
Frank McLintock Template:Country data Scotland 9 February 1984 1 January 1987 15151435734
Steve Perryman Image:Flag of England.svg 1 January 1987 15 August 1990 18271486339
Phil Holder Image:Flag of England.svg 24 August 1990 11 May 1993 15866335941
David Webb Image:Flag of England.svg 17 May 1993 4 August 1997 21685656639
Eddie May Image:Flag of England.svg 5 August 1997 5 November 1997 20551025
Micky Adams Image:Flag of England.svg 5 November 1997 1 July 1998 337151121
Ron Noades Image:Flag of England.svg 1 July 1998 20 November 2000 13051334639
Ray Lewington Image:Flag of England.svg 20 November 2000 7 May 2001 3714111238
Steve Coppell Image:Flag of England.svg 8 May 2001 5 June 2002 5427121550
Wally Downes Image:Flag of England.svg 28 June 2002 14 March 2004 9729224630
Garry Thompson[6] Image:Flag of England.svg 14 March 2004 18 March 2004 10100
Martin Allen Image:Flag of England.svg 18 March 2004 30 May 2006 12454363444
Leroy Rosenior Image:Flag of England.svg 14 June 2006 18 November 2006 233101013
Scott Fitzgerald Image:Flag of Ireland.svg 18 November 2006 9 April 2007 24451517
Barry Quin[6] Image:Flag of England.svg 9 April 2007 7 May 2007 410325
Terry Butcher Image:Flag of England.svg 7 May 2007 11 December 2007 23551322
Andy Scott[7] Image:Flag of England.svg 11 December 2007 Present 641167

Notable players

See also:Category:Brentford F.C. players - a list of all Brentford F.C. players with a Wikipedia article.

Famous former players include: Template:Col-begin Template:Col-3

Canada
England

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Ghana
Iceland

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Jamaica
Malta
Nigeria
Republic of Ireland
Scotland
Senegal
Wales

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Honours

Mascot

Brentford FC's mascot is the ever-smiling Buzz Bee. Standing at 6 feet tall, he has black and yellow stripes and wears a Brentford FC club strip. He circles the ground before each game, and is a great hit with the kids who come to watch the matches.

Club Song

In 1993 the band One Touch To Go recorded the song Red On White for the team. The track can be found on the album Greatest Hiss 1983/1999. The song has been played at the ground till at least 2002. And more recently the fans have adopted "Hey Jude" by The Beatles as the club tune, also the name of one of the club fanzines. In 2001 Status Quo bassist John 'Rhino' Edwards recorded a track called Brentford's Big Day Out after the Bees reached the final of the LDV Trophy at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff.

Trivia

  • Rod Stewart was an apprentice at the club, before he focussed on his music career.
  • Comedian and actor, Bradley Walsh was a professional at the club in the late 1970's but never made the first team squad.

Club records

References

See also

External links

Template:BBC football info

  • [1] - brentfordfootballchat
  • [2] - The Swedish Supporters Club
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es:Brentford Football Club fr:Brentford Football Club lb:Brentford FC nl:Brentford FC ja:ブレントフォードFC no:Brentford FC pl:Brentford F.C. sv:Brentford FC zh:布伦特福德足球俱乐部

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