Re. Arsenal, when Sunderland were relegated in 1957 it was the 1st time they had been outside the 1st division.
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There’s an interesting article today on one of the football stats groups I subscribe to listing the ten current Premier League or EFL teams who have spent the longest time away from the English second tier (the EFL clubs who have never played at that level were obviously excluded).
The list is as follows:
1915 - Arsenal
1947 - Newport County
1951 - Chesterfield
1954 - Everton
1961 - Lincoln City
1962 - Liverpool
1967 - Northampton Town
1975 - Manchester United
1978 - Mansfield Town
1978 - Tottenham Hotspur
Arsenal finished fifth in the Second Division in 1914/15, but were controversially promoted to an expanded First Division when the Football League resumed in 1919 following the end of the First World War. They’ve been in the top flight ever since.
Newport County were champions of the Third Division (South) in 1938/39, but got to play just three games in the Second Division before the outbreak of World War II. When football resumed in 1946/47, County finished rock bottom of the Second Division and were relegated in what was their only full season at that level. They were replaced by Cardiff City, who were the new Third Division (South) Champions.
In 1977/78, Mansfield Town drew both of their games against Tottenham Hotspur. The teams drew 3-3 at Field Mill and 1-1 at White Hart Lane. Spurs were promoted at the end of the season and Mansfield were relegated. Neither club has played in the second tier since.
The name on the list that surprised me was Northampton Town. For some reason, I thought they’d played in the Second Division for a couple of seasons during my fifty years as a football fan, but apparently that’s cobblers (boom boom!).
Re. Arsenal, when Sunderland were relegated in 1957 it was the 1st time they had been outside the 1st division.
Almost correct - it was 1958 when Sunderland were first relegated. They finished third from bottom in 1957 and just about stayed up. The team that finished second from bottom and went down was - Cardiff City!
When Sunderland did go down in 1957/58 it was due to their inferior goal average. The teams that finished on the same number of points (32) but had better goal averages were Portsmouth and Newcastle United.
Youd think a place the size of Newport could sustain a higher level than they have managed over the years.
it's about a 160k population, wuth a 325k metro area (usual caveat on town/city sizes methodologies)
that's comparable to plenty of the Lancashire teams who are often in that division at least, might not be amongst the bigger places but not the smallest either.
There are currently just two Lancashire clubs in the Championship. Both of them famous old clubs and among the founders of the Fottball League. Preston and Blackburn. I should imagine that traditionally, many citizens of Newport and its surrounding area would have follwed Cardiff with Newport as a second club. Plenty of City fans had second clubs back in the '80s.
I can see both sides here. Bear in mind the clubs that have had at least one season in the second tier during the last 20 years alone include Burton, Colchester, Crewe, Scunny, Wycombe and Yeovil. They're not big clubs by anyone's standards. But Newport has just never had the feel of a club that should be anything other than a fourth-tier club during my lifetime. Even when they did have a few seasons in the third tier during the Eighties they seemed out of place.
This is a good thread.I always thought that Newport was actually more of a rugby town and this AI chat confirms what I initially suspected , the Rugby has attracted fairly large crowds.
Overview
Newport RFC : 1950/51 Season Summary – NEWPORT RFC
Newport RFC has a rich history of high attendances, with notable matches including a club record 27,000 for a game against Cardiff in 1951 and a capacity crowd of nearly 11,000 for a Heineken Cup match against Bath in 2000. The club was once Wales' best-supported and the British Rugby's fourth-best, with an average of 8,302 supporters in the 2002–03 season, though attendances have declined since the regionalisation of Welsh rugby and the 2017 sale of the club's ground, Rodney Parade, to the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU).
What a bleak existence for Northampton fans. At least Mansfield, Lincoln, Newport and Chesterfield have had the thrill of mini revivals. Particularly the first 3 of those 4.
On Easter Monday 1983, City were beaten 1-0 at Somerton Park, Newport in front of a crowd of 16,000 and it seemed inevitable that County were on their way to the Second Division. It was County’s seventh straight win and, although their seven remaining fixtures included games against the other two sides that went up with us, there was no reason to believe they would fall apart like they did. County won one, drew one and lost five of them to miss out on promotion.in the wake of County’s collapse, a kind of conspiracy theory emerged claiming that the word had gone out from the Board after the win over City that County could not afford promotion because of the sort of work that needed to be done on their ground and the money that would need to be spent on their team.
Whether you believe that or not, County went into a decline so steep that when they arrived at Ninian Park on Easter Monday five years later, it was with a team full of local players recruited from non league football with their relegation from the Football League an inevitability and, within months, they’d gone bust.
Back in 82/83, County’s next home game, against eventual Champions Portsmouth, drew a crowd of 10;000, but, typically, they attracted gates of 3/4 thousand that year. Historically, a crowd of 4 thousand was a good one for County, but it seems to me that things have changed slightly for what I’ll call their second coming because i feel that they can now rely on a “base” of support of about 3,000 whereas with the pre Newport County Exiles days,it was about 2,000. The crowds are still small for a place of Newport’s size, but they”re up by about 50 per cent.
Finally, looking at the current League table, Shrewsbury Town were tipped by some to go down this season and the table suggests that they may be right, yet around the time us and County were promotion rivals over forty years ago, they were an established second tier team who I can’t once remember beating Leeds 5-1 in a league game and nobody really batting an eyelid because it wasn’t that big a shock.
Easter Monday 1983. Somerton park. My first ever away game as a 14 year old. What an eye opener! Couldn’t see a thing