1913–14 season | |||
---|---|---|---|
Chairman | Howard Cant | ||
Manager | Bob McRoberts | ||
Ground | St Andrew's | ||
Football League Second Division | 14th | ||
FA Cup | Third round (eliminated by Queens Park Rangers) | ||
Top goalscorer |
League: Andy Smith (10) All: Andy Smith (10) |
||
Highest home attendance | 25,000 (four matches) | ||
Lowest home attendance | 7,000 vs Huddersfield Town, 28 September 1913 Blackpool (14 March 1914) | ||
Average home league attendance | 17,095 | ||
|
The 1913–14 Football League season was Birmingham Football Club's 22nd in the Football League and their 14th in the Second Division. They finished in 14th position in the 20-team division. They also took part in the 1913–14 FA Cup, entering at the first round proper and losing to Southern League club Queens Park Rangers in the third round (last 16).
No fewer than thirty-five players made at least one appearance in nationally organised first-team competition, and there were twenty different goalscorers. Full-back Frank Womack played in 39 of the 41 matches over the season; only three other players exceeded 20 appearances. Andy Smith was leading scorer with 10 goals, all of which came in the league.
In November 1913, Birmingham captain Womack was offered an inducement of £55 to fix the result of the match against Grimsby Town. A similar offer was made to West Bromwich Albion captain Jesse Pennington in relation to their match against Everton. Both men reported the matter to club officials and the police, an arrest was made, and the culprit, one Pascoe Bioletti, who was connected with a football betting service based in Switzerland, was convicted and sentenced to five months' imprisonment in relation to Pennington. After his release, the charge in relation to Womack was withdrawn, as "the Football Association did not want to be vindictive as Bioletti was 68 years old."