1899–1900 season | |||
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Chairman | Robert Audley | ||
Manager | Sam Gleaves | ||
Stadium | Athletic Ground | ||
Football League Second Division | 11th (34 Points) | ||
FA Cup | Fifth Qualifying Round | ||
Birmingham Senior Cup | Runners-up | ||
Staffordshire Senior Cup | Runners-up | ||
Top goalscorer |
League: Howard Harvey (10) All: Howard Harvey (17) |
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Highest home attendance | 3,000 vs Newton Heath (7 April 1900) & vs Grimsby Town (9 September 1899) | ||
Lowest home attendance | 300 vs Lincoln City (21 April 1900) | ||
Average home league attendance | 1,518+ | ||
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The 1899–1900 season was Burslem Port Vale's second consecutive season (sixth overall) of football in the Football League. Another season of charging to the summit of the Second Division table, only to fall into mid-table obscurity, this time the club suffered from low support and subsequently poor finances. Once again the team maintained a decent defensive record, only to fail miserably in front of goal – the second lowest total in the league.
During the pre-season, the Athletic Ground had its capacity increased to 25,000. Last season's top scorers Dick Evans and James Peake departed for Reading and Millwall Athletic respectively; also star player Tommy Clare retired. Four new forwards were signed, namely Scots Billy Grassam (Maryhill) and James Reid (Hibernian), and local lads Charles Walters (Gainsborough Trinity) and Billy Leech (Tottenham Hotspur).
The season started with four defeats in the first six games in a dismal September. They turned their form around with a six game win streak that gave them a 100% win record in October and November. However one win in the next thirteen games followed, as the club slipped back down the league. Their decline was helped by the regular selling of key players in order to balance the books.
Attendance figures made grim reading, and left-half Ted McDonald had to be sold to Notts County in November in order to raise cash. Goalkeeper Herbert Birchenough was sold to Glossop in January, with top scorer Howard Harvey also sold to Manchester City that same month. Their second to last match saw a mere 300 supporters turn up to watch. At the end of the season there were drastic budget cuts, even so much as to stop paying players wages over the summer period – the only club in the league to do so. Cheaper, local talent was recruited to fill the void left by departing stars. The club lost £73 over the course of the campaign, despite having trimmed ten times that figure from the playing budget.