Football League Fourth Division

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The Football League Fourth Division or Division Four of The Football League was the fourth-highest division in the English football league system from the 1958-59 season until the creation of the FA Premier League prior to the 1992-93 season.

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[edit] Overview

The Fourth Division was created in 1958 so that Third Division North and Third Division South could be merged, with the 12 best teams of each league going into the Third Division and the rest being put into the Fourth.

Original members of Fourth Division were:

The Fourth Division was also known as Division Four, or informally as the "basement division" of English football.

Prior to the formation of the Premiership in 1992, the four best teams would be promoted to the Third Division and one team may have been relegated to the Football Conference. Automatic relegation to the Conference was not introduced until 1987.

[edit] Ins and outs

Automatic relegation between the Fourth Division and the Conference was introduced for the 1986-87 season, when Lincoln City F.C. were relegated and replaced by Conference champions Scarborough.

A year later, Lincoln regained their place at the expense of Newport County.

1989 saw Darlington drop into the Conference to be replaced by Maidstone United.

Darlington regained their Fourth Division place in 1990 and in the process they crossed paths with Colchester United.

Barnet were promoted to the Fourth Division in 1991 but bottom-placed Wrexham were not relegated because the Football League was expanding to 93 clubs.

There was no relegation from the Fourth Division in 1992, but the division was reduced from 23 clubs to 22 when Aldershot went out of business and resigned from the league on 25th March. Colchester United returned to the Football League to take the membership of the newly-named Division Three to 23 clubs for the 1992-93 season. But the number of Division Three clubs soon reverted to 22 when debt-ridden Maidstone United resigned from the league without starting the season.

[edit] Fourth Division members who went all the way

Northampton Town, founder members of the Fourth Division in 1958, were the first former members of the division to reach the First Division when they completed their five-year climb up the league in 1965. By 1969, they were back in the Fourth Division.

Carlisle, another former Fourth Division club, reached the top flight in 1974 and were top of the league 3 games into their first top flight season, but were back in the Fourth Division by 1987.

Watford won promotion from the Fourth Division in 1978 and five seasons later they were in the First Division. They stayed at this level for six years, and made headlines by finishing league runners-up in their first top flight season and reaching the FA Cup final a year later.

Swansea City completed a four-season rise from the Fourth Division to the First Division in 1981, and finished sixth in their first campaign at the highest level. But a rapid decline saw them fall back into the Fourth Division in 1986.

Wimbledon's rise from the Fourth Division was perhaps the most amazing. They finished top of the Fourth Division in 1983, reached the First Division in 1986, were the league's sixth-highest team in 1987 and were FA Cup winners in 1988 - just 11 years after being elected to the Fourth Division.

Wigan Athletic, which currently compete in the Premiership, have so far been the only club to break this trend. They were elected to the Fourth Division in 1978 to replace Southport, and were promoted to the Third Division in 1982. Despite being relegated from the now-renamed Second Division in 1993, they rebounded and were promoted back in 1997, then they were promoted to the Championship in 2003 and the Premiership came in 2005.

[edit] A graveyard for fallen giants

Northampton Town, Carlisle United and Swansea City all completed rapid rises from the Fourth Division to the First Division and back again, but a number of once-great clubs fell into the Fourth Division after a period of decline.

Preston North End, winners of the first two Football League championships in the late 19th century, fell into the Fourth Division in 1985. They had to apply for re-election in their first season at this level, having finished in the bottom four of the division, but were promoted the following year.

Cardiff City, which are the only Welsh club to reach runner-up position in the English system, also fell into the Fourth Division at the same time as Preston North End (Cardiff lost First Division status a year after Preston did), and as Burnley and Preston, it has never competed in the Premiership so far, despite recovering.

Sheffield United were relegated to the Fourth Division in May 1981 after losing their final game of the 80/81 season to Walsall. Six years earlier the Blades had finished 6th in Division One and missed a UEFA Cup spot on goal difference. Sheffield United's average attendance of 14892 is the highest recorded average in the Fourth Division. Indeeed, the Blades also attracted crowds of 20000+ for big matches against promotion rivals Wigan, Bradford and Peterborough. The Blades were Champions of Division Four in 1982.

Burnley, league champions as recently as 1960, fell into the Fourth Division at the same time as Preston North End, and two years later narrowly avoided automatic relegation to the Conference. But several seasons of steady progress followed and in 1992 they won the last-ever Fourth Division championship.

Wolverhampton Wanderers completed a relegation hat-trick in 1986 which had seen them fall from the First Division to the Fourth with successive relegations. They spent two seasons in the Fourth Division before going up as champions and becoming the first team to win the championship of all four divisions. Burnley equalled this feat in 1992, and in the renamed system, Preston did the same in 2000.

History of the de facto Fourth Divisions after the creation of the Premiership continues at Football League Third Division and Football League Two.

[edit] Previous League champions

See List of winners of English Football League Two and predecessors


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