1977–78 Port Vale F.C. season

Port Vale
1977–78 season
Chairman Arthur McPherson
Manager Roy Sproson
(until October)
Bobby Smith
(October onwards)
Stadium Vale Park
Football League Third Division 21st (36 Points)
FA Cup Second Round
League Cup First Round
Player of the Year Ken Beamish
Top goalscorer League: Ken Beamish (13)
All: Ken Beamish (16)
Highest home attendance 7,051 vs. Walsall (19 December 1977)
Lowest home attendance 3,220 vs. Hereford United (22 March 1978)
Average home league attendance 3,947
Home colours

The 1977–78 season was Port Vale's sixty-sixth season of football in the Football League, and their eighth successive season (fourteenth overall) in the Third Division.[1] Finishing in 21st place, they were relegated to the Fourth Division. Roy Sproson was sacked in October after a poor start to the season, though things did not improve under his replacement Bobby Smith, despite Smith spending big money to bring in new players. Smith also left the club at the end of the season.

Overview

Third Division

The pre-season saw manager Roy Sproson attempt to re-sign Sammy Morgan for £12,000, however Morgan refused personal terms.[1] Former Player of the Year David Harris also refused terms and demanded a transfer, so Terry Alcock re-joined on a month's trial to take his place.[1] Three players arrived on free transfers: Jeff Hemmerman and Grahame McGifford from Hull City, and Bill Bentley from Blackpool.[1] On a 28 June meeting, Sproson was severely criticized for his poor judgement of players and his seeming to place greater priority on his newsagent business than the club.[1] Sproson did not attend the meeting, but was informed the board would review his position after fifteen games.[1] The Football Association also hit the club with a £500 fine for their continuing problem with player indiscipline, despite Sproson's argument that no Vale players had been sent off in the last two years.[1]

The season began poorly, though Harris returned to the first eleven and Alcock thus departed.[1] Keeper John Connaughton picked up a knee injury, whilst a reporter from The Sentinel was allegedly told "I'll kill you" by a club official after he criticized the team in the paper.[1] The reporter noted that "there is disenchantment in the air".[1] The situated was calmed on 27 September, when Vale beat high-flying Colchester United 3–2 at Layer Road, reserve keeper Trevor Dance making a double penalty save.[1] This was only a reprieve for Sproson however, as Vale would go the next fourteen league games without a victory, and the Vale Park faithful turned against the team.[1] This run was not too damaging however, as eleven of the games were draws.[1] Included in this was a club record streak of six home draws, lasting from 10 October to 27 December. Sproson complained of Mick Cullerton's attitude, and had to endure speculation of former Stoke City manager Tony Waddington taking his job.[1] Sproson was sacked in October, and he rejected the offer of an executive position at the club.[1] Colin Harper was made caretaker-manager.[1] The board tried and failed to attract Bill McGarry to the vacant managerial position, and so advertised the position with a significant salary increase to attract applicants.[1] On 17 November, Bobby Smith was sacked as Bury manager, and the next day walked into the Vale job.[1] He appointed Dennis Butler as his assistant, as Harper left the club.[1] Sproson also returned to Vale with an offer 'to help in any capacity'.[1] Victory finally came on New Year's Eve with a 3–0 win over Rotherham United.[1] Soon after this the 'Vale Lottery' was introduced, which proved to be a real money-spinner, and a five-a-side pitch was built for training.[1]

In January, veteran defender Graham Hawkins was signed as a player-coach from Blackburn Rovers for £6,000.[1] Forward Neville Chamberlain also joined the club as a professional, becoming the club's first black pro.[1] John Froggatt also joined the club, signing from Colchester United for £10,000.[1] Chairman Arthur McPherson celebrated this abandonment of frugality by declaring "we are going places".[1] Chris Harper slated the board for their decisions, calling them 'berserk'. Froggatt scored fifteen seconds into his debut in a 4–0 win over Exeter City.[1] However this would be as good as it got for both Froggatt and Vale that season. In February, Vale beat Fort Lauderdale Strikers in a friendly, but also started a five games sequence without a win.[1] Ged Stenson arrived the next month from Everton for a 'bargain' £3,000, and John Lumsdon joined on loan from Stoke City.[1] Vale improved, and were unbeaten in six of their seven March games, with Chamberlain scoring on his debut.[1] Yet on 28 March they started a club-record streak of twelve home games without a win that would continue into the following season. Encouragement came from the youth side, who reached the Quarter Finals of the FA Youth Cup.[1] With four games to go, Vale were point clear of the drop, however by losing all of their remaining games they doomed themselves to the Fourth Division.[1]

They finished in 21st place with 36 points, three short of Rotherham United and safety.[1] Their tally of 46 goals scored was the third-lowest in the division.[1] They had failed to keep a clean sheet on their travels all season, achieving just one away win.[1] Player of the Year Ken Beamish hit sixteen goals, far outscoring his rivals.[1]

Finances

On the financial side, a loss of £1,575 was made.[1] The massive transfer outlay was paid for by huge donations of £51,428 from the Sportsmen's Association and the Development Fund.[1] The lottery also brought in £600 a week.[1] Gate receipts had brought in £78,965, a downturn in attendance being outweighed by an increase in ticket prices.[1] Seven players were handed free transfers, five of which were: Mick Cullerton and Grahame McGifford (Northwich Victoria); Derek Brownbill (Cleveland Cobras); Alan Lamb (Dundee); and Kevin Kennerley (Stafford Rangers).[1] Manager Bobby Smith also departed, having taken the vacant position at Swindon Town – Vale received £10,500 in compensation.[1] Dennis Butler rejected the opportunity to leave with him, and instead was appointed as Smith's replacement at Vale.[1] Graham Hawkins became Butler's assistant.[1]

Cup competitions

In the FA Cup, Smith's first game in charge was a goalless draw at Midland Counties League side Arnold.[1] The replay in Burslem was won 5–2, the club's biggest win since January 1969.[1] In the Second Round, Vale drew 1–1 with Walsall at Fellows Park, before losing the replay 3–1 after Connaughton allowed a speculative shot from 25 yards out to trickle through his hands.[1] He later admitted "I deserve to be strung up!".[1]

In the League Cup, Vale beat Preston North End 2–1 in the home leg, though the fixture was unsettled by crowd violence.[1] Preston won the return leg at Deepdale, and also the replay at Edgeley Park, Stockport.[1]

Final league table

P WDLFAGDPts
1Wrexham46231587845+3361
2Cambridge United462312117251+2158
3Preston North End462016106338+2556
4Peterborough United462016104733+1456
5Chester46162285956+354
6Walsall461817116150+1153
7Gillingham461520116760+750
8Colchester United461518135544+1148
9Chesterfield461714155849+948
10Swindon Town461616146760+748
11Shrewsbury Town461615156357+647
12Tranmere Rovers461615155752+547
13Carlisle United461419135959+047
14Sheffield Wednesday461516155052-246
15Bury461319146256+645
16Lincoln City461515165361-845
17Exeter City461514174959-1044
18Oxford United461314196467-340
19Plymouth Argyle461117186168-739
20Rotherham United461313205168-1739
21Port Vale46820184667-2136
22Bradford City461210245686-3034
23Hereford United46914233460-2632
24Portsmouth46717224175-3431

P = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points

Results

Port Vale's score comes first

Legend

Win Draw Loss
Round12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546
GroundHAHAHHAAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHHAHAAHAAHHAHAHAHAAHHAHHA
Result L D W L W D L W L L D D D D D L D D D D L D W L W L L W L L D L D W D W D D L D D D L L L L
Position 20 19 17 20 12 15 20 17 21 23 22 22 21 21 21 22 21 21 21 20 21 21 18 18 17 18 20 18 19 19 19 19 19 19 18 18 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 20 20 21

Sourced from Statto.[2]

Football League Third Division

DateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceScorers
20 August 1977 ChesterfieldH1–34,091Hemmerman (pen)
27 August 1977 WrexhamA1–15,797Brownbill
3 September 1977 Lincoln CityH2–13,520Hemmerman (2 [1 pen])
10 September 1977 Exeter CityA1–45,026Cullerton
12 September 1977 Bradford CityH1–03,814Lamb
17 September 1977 Sheffield WednesdayH0–05,136
24 September 1977 WalsallA0–24,897
27 September 1977 Colchester UnitedA3–24,820Beamish (2), Beech
1 October 1977 BuryH1–23,672Cullerton
8 October 1977 Shrewsbury TownA0–33,553
10 October 1977 GillinghamH2–23,418Bailey, Brownbill
15 October 1977 Swindon TownA1–16,327Sutcliffe
22 October 1977 Peterborough UnitedH0–03,502
29 October 1977 Hereford UnitedA1–15,393Sutcliffe
5 November 1977 Preston North EndH0–04,208
12 November 1977 ChesterA1–23,321Brownbill
15 November 1977 PortsmouthA1–17,071Hemmerman
19 November 1977 Tranmere RoversH1–13,576Hemmerman (pen)
3 December 1977 Carlisle UnitedA1–14,323Bailey (pen)
9 December 1977 Plymouth ArgyleH3–33,650Beamish, Harris, Lamb
26 December 1977 Cambridge UnitedA0–26,124
27 December 1977 Oxford UnitedH1–13,997Harris
31 December 1977 Rotherham UnitedH3–03,861Beamish (2), Sutcliffe
2 January 1978 Preston North EndA0–210,940
7 January 1978 PortsmouthH2–03,481Beamish (2)
14 January 1978 ChesterfieldA0–24,619
28 January 1978 Lincoln CityA0–33,205
8 February 1978 Exeter CityH4–03,333Froggatt, Sutcliffe, Beamish, (pen)
11 February 1978 Sheffield WednesdayA1–39,659Griffiths (pen)
25 February 1978 BuryA0–34,475
28 February 1978 WalsallH2–24,682Beamish, Lamb
4 March 1978 Shrewsbury TownH1–23,499Griffiths (pen)
8 March 1978 Bradford CityA1–16,205Bailey
11 March 1978 Swindon TownH1–03,723Chamberlain
17 March 1978 Peterborough UnitedA1–14,277Chamberlain
22 March 1978 Hereford UnitedH1–03,220Froggatt
25 March 1978 Oxford UnitedA1–14,120Beamish
28 March 1978 Cambridge UnitedH1–14,240Griffiths (pen)
1 April 1978 Rotherham UnitedA0–23,707
4 April 1978 GillinghamA1–17,627Beamish
8 April 1978 ChesterH0–03,615
11 April 1978 WrexhamH1–16,912Hawkins
14 April 1978 Tranmere RoversA1–22,460Beamish
22 April 1978 Carlisle UnitedH0–13,942
24 April 1978 Colchester UnitedH0–33,684
29 April 1978 Plymouth ArgyleA2–39,474Beamish, Froggatt

FA Cup

Main article: 1977–78 FA Cup
RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R126 November 1977 ArnoldA0–03,600
R1 Replay28 November 1977 ArnoldH5–25,205Sutcliffe (2), Bailey, Beamish, Ridley
R217 December 1977 WalsallA1–15,978Beamish
R2 Replay19 December 1977 WalsallH1–37,051Beamish

League Cup

RoundDateOpponentVenueResultAttendanceGoalscorers
R1 1st Leg13 August 1977 Preston North EndH2–14,630Beech, Alcock
R1 2nd Leg16 August 1977 Preston North EndA1–25,816Hemmerman (pen)
R1 Replay23 August 1977 Preston North EndN1–22,201Alcock

Player statistics

Appearances

Pos. Name Football League FA Cup League Cup Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
GKEngland John Connaughton 3804030450
GKEngland Trevor Dance 80000080
DFEngland Neil Griffiths 3344030404
DFEngland David Harris 4124000452
DFEngland Garry Dulson 2002000220
DFEngland Terry Alcock 30003262
DFEngland Phil Sproson 20000020
DFEngland Colin Harper 40000040
DFEngland Graham Hawkins 1610000161
DFEngland John Lumsdon 50000050
DFEngland Grahame McGifford 2004030270
DFEngland Bill Bentley 3202030370
DFEngland Brian Bithell 20000020
MFEngland John Ridley 4004130471
MFEngland Terry Bailey 3934110444
MFEngland Kenny Beech 2611031302
MFScotland Alan Lamb 4034030473
MFEngland Peter Sutcliffe 3044200346
MFEngland Kevin Kennerley 10000010
MFEngland Mick Moore 1300000130
MFEngland Russell Bromage 60000060
FWEngland Derek Brownbill 2134030283
FWEngland Mick Cullerton 1720000172
FWEngland Ken Beamish 421343304916
FWEngland John Froggatt 1230000123
FWEngland Jeff Hemmerman 1552031206
FWEngland Neville Chamberlain 1020000102

Scorers

All competitions

Scorer Goals
England Ken Beamish 16
England Jeff Hemmerman 6
England Peter Sutcliffe 4
England Neil Griffiths
England Terry Bailey
Scotland Alan Lamb 3
England Derek Brownbill
England John Froggatt
England Neville Chamberlain 2
England Mick Cullerton
England Kenny Beech
England David Harris
England Terry Alcock
England Graham Hawkins 1
England John Ridley

League

Scorer Goals
England Ken Beamish 13
England Jeff Hemmerman 5
England Peter Sutcliffe 4
England Neil Griffiths
England Terry Bailey 3
Scotland Alan Lamb
England Derek Brownbill
England John Froggatt
England Neville Chamberlain 2
England Mick Cullerton
England David Harris
England Kenny Beech 1
England Graham Hawkins

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 Kent, Jeff (1990). "Surviving on a Shoestring (1969–1979)". The Valiants' Years: The Story Of Port Vale. Witan Books. pp. 227–257. ISBN 0-9508981-4-7.
  2. Port Vale 1977–1978 : Results & Fixtures. Statto Organisation. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
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