1897–98 Aston Villa F.C. season

Aston Villa
1897–98 season
ManagerGeorge Ramsay
GroundWellington Road
Football League6th
FA CupFirst round
Top goalscorerFred Wheldon (21)
First Division
ChampionsSheffield United (1st English title)
Top goalscorerFred Wheldon, 21 goals
Biggest home winEverton 6–1 West Brom
(27 November 1897)
Derby County 5–0 Notts Forest
(11 April 1898)
Wolves 5–0 The Wednesday
(16 April 1898)
Biggest away winLiverpool 0–4 Sheffield United
(5 February 1898)
Highest scoringThe Wednesday 3–6 Notts Forest
(1 January 1898)
Longest winning run7 matches, Sunderland
Longest unbeaten run14 matches, Sheffield United
Longest losing run5 matches, Stoke
Highest attendance50,000 (15 January 1898)
Aston Villa 1–2 Sheffield United
Lowest attendance1,000 (13 November 1897)
West Brom 2–1 Liverpool

The 1897–98 Football League season was Aston Villa's 10th season in the Football League. Villa, the reigning champions, played in the First Division, the top flight of English football. George Ramsay would continue in charge of the team picked by the Management Committee. The season fell in what was to be called Villa's golden era.[1]

First-class cricketer[2] and England football international, Jack Devey was Captain. Jimmy Crabtree also captained the team.[3] "Diamond" Freddie Wheldon was League top scorer with 21. Billy Garraty great-great grandfather of Jack Grealish, made his league debut for Aston Villa during the season but made just one other appearance that year.[4][5] Other debuts were James Fisher,[6] Jack Sharp,[7] Bert Sharp,[8] Billy George,[9] Howard Harvey,[10] Jimmy Suddick,[11] Tommy Bowman,[12] Edmund Strange,[13] George Johnson [14] and Charlie Aston.[15][16]

Aston Villa's Christmas fixture was away at Everton kicking off at 11:00am. Wheldon, kit man Joe Grierson & Jimmy and John Cowan were travelling to the station when their coach and horse overturned. Playing a crucial game short of players and without kit was not an option but missing a match would incur a fine of £250 (roughly £40,000 in 2026). By the time they arrived, their 8:50am train had departed leaving Vice-President C S Johnstone and the rest of the team on the platform. The only option was to take a train to Stafford where they told a special would take them onwards to Liverpool. However once at Stafford, they found there was no train arranged. Johnstone took control and was able to bribe their train's driver, stoker and guard with seats in the director's box, dinner and half a sovereign each if they would continue the train to Liverpool. The game kicked-off ten minutes late. Unfortunately Johnstone was unable to guarantee a victory.[17]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GAv Pts
4 Everton 30 13 9 8 48 39 1.231 35
5 The Wednesday 30 15 3 12 51 42 1.214 33
6 Aston Villa 30 14 5 11 61 51 1.196 33
7 West Bromwich Albion 30 11 10 9 44 45 0.978 32
8 Nottingham Forest 30 11 9 10 47 49 0.959 31
Source: World Football
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal average; 3) Goals scored

Matches

Date Opponent Venue Result Note Scorers
1 September 1897 Wednesday H 5–2 Jack Cowan, Fred Wheldon (3), Charlie Athersmith [18]
4 September 1897 Albion H 4–3 Fred Wheldon (3), James Fisher
11 September 1897 Notts County A 3–2 Jimmy Cowan (2), Jack Devey
18 September 1897 Bury H 3–1 James Fisher (2), Fred Wheldon
25 September 1897 Blackburn A 3–4 Jack Cowan, Fred Wheldon (2)
27 September 1897 Wednesday A 0–3
2 October 1897 Bolton H 3–2 Jack Sharp (2), Fred Wheldon
9 October 1897 Albion A 1–1 Jack Sharp
16 October 1897 Notts County H 4–2 Jack Devey, Jack Sharp (2), Fred Wheldon
23 October 1897 Sunderland A 0–0
30 October 1897 Liverpool H 3–1 Fred Wheldon, Charlie Athersmith, Jack Devey
6 November 1897 Preston A 1–3 Charlie Athersmith
13 November 1897 Everton H 3–0 Fred Wheldon (2), Jack Sharp
20 November 1897 Bolton A 0–2
27 November 1897 Sunderland H 4–3 Howard Harvey (2), Fred Wheldon (2)
11 December 1897 Blackburn H 5–1 Jimmy Crabtree, Fred Wheldon, Charlie Athersmith, Jimmy Cowan, Jack Cowan
18 December 1897 Stoke A 0–0
25 December 1897 Everton A 1–2 Fred Wheldon
27 December 1897 Wolves A 1–1 Charlie Athersmith
8 January 1898 Sheffield United A 0–1
15 January 1898 Sheffield United H 1–2 Fred Wheldon
22 January 1898 Derby A 1–3 Bert Sharp
5 February 1898 Preston H 4–0 Jimmy Suddick, Fred Wheldon, Charlie Athersmith, Jack Sharp
5 March 1898 Derby H 4–1 Steve Smith, James Fisher, Jack Sharp, —
12 March 1898 Bury A 2–1 Jack Sharp, Fred Wheldon
26 March 1898 Forest A 1–3 James Fisher
2 April 1898 Stoke H 1–1 Jack Sharp
11 April 1898 Wolves H 1–2 Fred Wheldon
16 April 1898 Liverpool A 0–4
30 April 1898 Forest H 2–0 Steve Smith, George Johnson [18]

Source: avfchistory.co.uk

FA Cup

Staffordshire Cup

Matches played by Aston Villa included a 6-1 victory over West Bromwich Albion.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Aston Villa Club History 1900 – 1939". AVFC.co.uk. Archived from the original on 24 August 2006. Retrieved 28 October 2007.
  2. ^ "Jack Devey". www.cricketarchive.com. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  3. ^ AVFC History: 1897–98 season
  4. ^ Kendrick, Mat (26 May 2015). "Aston Villa v Arsenal: This 1905 FA Cup winner is related to a current Villa star – find out who". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 15 August 2018.
  5. ^ "Player info: William Garraty". Englandstats.com. Davey Naylor. Retrieved 15 August 2018.
  6. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/james-fisher
  7. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/jack-sharp
  8. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/bert-sharp
  9. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/billy-george
  10. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/howard-harvey
  11. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/jimmy-suddick
  12. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/tommy-bowman
  13. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/edmund-strange
  14. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/george-johnson
  15. ^ https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/player/charlie-aston
  16. ^ "Aston Villa's Seasons". AVFC History.
  17. ^ From the Archives: Christmas transport chaos from 1897
  18. ^ a b https://www.avfchistory.co.uk/aston-villa/matches/league/1897-98
  19. ^ "Aston Villa". Sports Argus. 28 October 1899. p. 4.