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1952–53 in English football

73rd season of competitive football in England


73rd season of competitive football in England

FieldValue
countryEngland
season1952–53
division1First Division
champions1Arsenal
division2Second Division
champions2Sheffield United
domesticFA Cup
dchampionsBlackpool
prevseason1951–52
nextseason1953–54
flagiconyes

The 1952–53 season was the 73rd season of competitive football in England.

Overview

This was the closest championship win in English league history at the time, with Arsenal claiming the title with a goal average superior to Preston's by just 0.099. Both Arsenal and Preston had identical records aside from their goal averages.

Had goal difference been the deciding factor as it was from 1977 onwards, Arsenal would still have won with +33 to Preston's +25, unlike in 1989 when they would have finished second on goal average. Preston had last been champions in 1890, the second season of the Football League.

The FA Cup was won by Blackpool, beating Bolton Wanderers 4–3 in what became known as the 'Matthews Final', due to the masterly contribution of 38-year-old winger Stanley Matthews, who helped his side win after going 3–1 down, although three of Blackpool's goals were scored by prolific forward Stan Mortensen.

Honours

CompetitionWinnerRunner-up
First DivisionArsenal (7*)Preston North End
Second DivisionSheffield UnitedHuddersfield Town
Third Division NorthOldham AthleticPort Vale
Third Division SouthBristol RoversMillwall
FA CupBlackpool (1)Bolton Wanderers
Charity ShieldManchester UnitedNewcastle United
Home ChampionshipShared by and

Notes = Number in parentheses is the times that club has won that honour. * indicates new record for competition

Football League

Main article: 1952–53 Football League

First Division

Second Division

Third Division North

Third Division South

Top goalscorers

First Division

  • Charlie Wayman (Preston North End) – 23 goals

Second Division

  • Arthur Rowley (Leicester City) – 39 goals

Third Division North

  • Jimmy Whitehouse (Carlisle United) – 29 goals

Third Division South

  • Geoff Bradford (Bristol Rovers) – 33 goals

National team

The England national football team were joint winners in the 1953 British Home Championship with Scotland. In the May following the conclusion of the season the England team embarked on their first tour of the Americas, following the experience in Brazil of the 1950 FIFA World Cup.

American tour

date = 17 May 1953 | team1 = | score = 0–0 | team2 = | goals1 = | goals2 = | stadium = Estadio Monumental Antonio Vespucio Liberti, Buenos Aires}} Abandoned after 21 minutes due to torrential rain

date = 24 May 1953 | team1 = | score = 1–2 | team2 = | goals1 = Guillermo Diaz | goals2 = Tommy Taylor, Nat Lofthouse | stadium = Estadio Nacional de Chile, Santiago}}

date = 31 May 1953 | team1 = | score = 2–1 | team2 = | goals1 = Oscar Míguez , Julio Abbadie | goals2 = Tommy Taylor | stadium = Centenario Stadium, Montevideo}}

date = 13 June 1953 | team1 = | score = 3–6 | team2 = | goals1 = Otto Decker , George Atheneos | goals2 = Nat Lofthouse, Tom Finney, Redfern Froggatt, Ivor Broadis | stadium = Yankee Stadium, New York}}

References

References

  1. "English League Leading Goalscorers".
  2. "English League Leading Goalscorers".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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