1964–65 season | |||
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Chairman | Bill Allen | ||
Manager | Neil Franklin | ||
Stadium | Layer Road | ||
Third Division | 23rd (relegated) | ||
FA Cup | 2nd round (eliminated by Torquay United) |
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League Cup | 1st round (eliminated by Torquay United) |
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Top goalscorer |
League: Billy Stark (13) All: Billy Stark (14) |
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Highest home attendance | 6,074 v Peterborough United, 16 April 1965 |
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Lowest home attendance | 2,218 v Torquay United, 2 September 1964 |
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Average home league attendance | 3,634 | ||
Biggest win | 4–1 v Barnsley, 9 January 1965 |
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Biggest defeat | 0–5 v Queens Park Rangers, 26 February 1965 |
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The 1964–65 season was Colchester United's 23rd season in their history and their third successive season in the Third Division, the third tier of English football. Alongside competing in the Third Division, the club also participated in the FA Cup and the League Cup.
Neil Franklin's first full season in charge saw an influx of new players, with 14 new arrivals at Layer Road replacing a host of experienced players, including former apprentice Peter Wright and experienced wing half Roy McCrohan. As such, Colchester's form suffered and the club battled against relegation for much of the season. They were eventually relegated after finishing in 23rd-position.
Colchester's fortunes in the cup competitions were no better than the league. They experienced early exits in each cup, twice being eliminated by Torquay United.
With manager Neil Franklin looking to make his mark on the Colchester first-team, Roy McCrohan, Keith Rutter and Peter Wright all left the club, and 14 new players arrived across the season. The biggest surprise to United fans was when Wright was not named on the retained list for the season. The former apprentice who had spent his entire career as a part-time professional with Colchester had scored 99 goals in 453 league and cup matches.
Having already sold one half of the previously prolific strike force of Bobby Hunt and Martyn King when Hunt left for Northampton Town earlier in 1964, Franklin sold King to Wrexham in October of the same year, and without their goals, a season of struggle ensued. Colchester could only manage 50 league goals across the season.