1926–27 season | |||
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Chairman | Howard Cant | ||
Manager | Billy Beer until March 1927 Bill Harvey thereafter | ||
Ground | St Andrew's | ||
Football League First Division | 17th | ||
FA Cup | Fourth round (eliminated by Southampton) | ||
Top goalscorer |
League: Joe Bradford (22) All: Joe Bradford (23) |
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Highest home attendance | 48,104 vs Aston Villa, 30 October 1926 | ||
Lowest home attendance | 6,321 vs Bolton Wanderers, 4 April 1927 | ||
Average home league attendance | 22,030 | ||
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The 1926–27 Football League season was Birmingham Football Club's 31st in the Football League and their 14th in the First Division. They finished in 17th position in the 22-team division. They also competed in the 1926–27 FA Cup, entering at the third round proper and losing to Southampton in the fourth.
Twenty-seven players made at least one appearance in nationally organised competition, and there were ten different goalscorers. Half-back George Liddell and forward George Briggs played in 43 of the 44 matches over the season, and Joe Bradford was leading scorer for the sixth successive year, with 23 goals, of which 22 came in the league.
Off the field, the club was in some turmoil regarding transfer policy. In early March 1927, three members of the board of directors resigned. The Sports Argus' editorial suggested that one faction were "anxious to secure talent at almost any price" and the other "desirous with 'going slow' as its motto", and believed that "the former are now in the ascendancy and that they mean business". A few days later, Billy Beer resigned as manager. The Argus was disappointed:
Managers are in a peculiar position. They have many masters to serve and to please them all is impossible. Mr. Beer has discovered this, and ... has cleared out. I am sorry, because, frankly, I thought he would make a good job of his task if given the opportunity.
It was reported later that Beer had found it impossible to work with some members of the board, so had tendered his resignation, if that was thought to be in the best interests of the club, and was less than happy with the treatment he had received.