1905–06 season | |||
Chairman | Robert Audley | ||
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Manager | Tommy Clare | ||
Stadium | Athletic Ground | ||
Football League Second Division | 17th (28 Points) | ||
FA Cup | First Round | ||
Birmingham Senior Cup | Semi-final | ||
Staffordshire Senior Cup | Semi-final | ||
Top goalscorer |
League: Harry Mountford (15) All: Harry Mountford (15) |
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Highest home attendance | 6,000 vs Chelsea (30 October 1905) | ||
Lowest home attendance | 1,000 vs Chesterfield Town (9 September 1905) | ||
Average home league attendance | 3,200 | ||
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The 1905–06 season was Burslem Port Vale's eighth consecutive season (12th overall) of football in the Football League. It was another season spent struggling at the lower end of the league.
On the pitch the team allowed goals and narrowly avoided the re-election zone. A poor season on the pitch was more than matched by a hopeless financial season off the pitch, with low attendance figures suggesting that the club could not sustain league football for much longer.
An expanded league saw an extra four new clubs added to the division, in addition to the replacement for Doncaster Rovers, who failed to gain re-election the previous season. This put the Vale up against Chelsea, Hull City, Leeds City, and Clapton Orient for the first time.
The first five games of the season saw a tally of just three points collected, with fourteen goals conceded. This was followed by four wins in five as the club surged up the league, this run included a 3–2 win over high-flying Chelsea, where an impressive 6,000 fans turned up. Another barren spell followed, with just one point gained in the following nine games – in six of these the "Valeites" failed to score. A rare win came on 30 December, with Harry Mountford scoring a hat-trick past Lincoln City – the first hat-trick a Vale player had scored in close to three years. However the side then proceeded to lose all their matches in January. The last three months saw a revival, and the club managed to win six of their last fifteen games.
The Vale finished just outside the re-election zone on goal average, if the ranking was based on goal difference then they would have finished below Chesterfield. Vale lost seventeen of their nineteen away games, never drawing a match away from home, and conceded more on their travels than any other side in the league. Overall the defence was the leakiest in the division, conceding 82 goals in 38 games.
Harry Mountford was the club's top scorer with 15 goals, with Robert Carter, Philip Smith, George Price also contributing significantly to the scoring tally. Carter and Arthur Box missed just three matches; Mountford, Price, James Hamilton, and William Cope also hardly missed a game.