During the 1983–84 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Third Division. A season of transition ended with a narrow escape from relegation.
Season summary
After two seasons in which, were it not for bad mid-season form, strong run-ins may have yielded a promotion challenge, Brentford manager Fred Callaghan kept his squad together.[1] Save for the retirement of key midfielderStan Bowles, Bowles' replacement Terry Bullivant was the only significant piece of transfer activity at Griffin Park during the 1983 off-season.[1] Goalkeeper Trevor Swinburne arrived to provide competition for Paddy Roche.[2] With forward Tony Mahoney still not fully fit after recovering from a broken leg, Bill Garner was brought in from non-League football on non-contract terms.[2]
Brentford showed poor form between the beginning of the season and Christmas Eve 1983 (as of June 2024, the 4–3 defeat to Wimbledon was the final Football League match played on that date).[3][4] Two wins and 10 defeats from the opening 19 Third Division matches left the club just above the foot of the table.[3] In the midst of the barren run in the league, a two-legged tie with then-First Division champions Liverpool in the second round of the League Cup failed to produce much cheer, with the Bees suffering an 8–1 aggregate defeat.[3] A reduction in size of Griffin Park in the intervening years meant that the 17,858 crowd which attended the first leg was not bettered prior to the club's final first team match at the ground in July 2020.[5][6]
Player/assistant manager Ron Harris was replaced with former Brentford manager Frank Blunstone in October 1983 and Harris later remarked that it had been an acrimonious parting.[2] An ever-increasing list of injuries and suspensions led manager Fred Callaghan to make a number of signings during the final two months of 1983, including new captain Ian Bolton for £2,000 and previously on-loan defender Paul Roberts from Millwall for a £10,000 fee.[2] Stan Bowles came out of retirement to assist the team on a non-contract basis.[2] The signings had an effect, with the Bees going four matches undefeated in late December 1983 and early January 1984 to rise out of the relegation places.[3] Defeats in the following two matches led chairman Martin Lange to act and sack manager Fred Callaghan on 2 February.[2] Lange paid tribute to Callaghan by stating that Callaghan could "leave the club proud in the knowledge that he leaves the club far better equipped than when he arrived".[2]
Assistant Frank Blunstone took caretaker charge of the team for one match before the appointment of former Leicester City manager Frank McLintock on 9 February.[2] McLintock installed former Brentford player John Docherty as his assistant.[2] McLintock took over a club in 21st position with 20 matches to play and conducted an overhaul of the playing staff, selling central defender Alan Whitehead and bringing in right back Bobby Fisher and midfielder Tommy Finney from Cambridge United, plus Nigel Gray and Bill Roffey on loan.[2] Attacker Bob Booker was recalled to the starting lineup, Ian Bolton and Tony Mahoney were dropped,[1] Terry Bullivant and Graham Wilkins departed on loan and Stan Bowles retired for a second time.[2]
A slight upturn in form meant that Brentford went into their final match of the season versus Walsall perched atop the relegation zone in 20th place and needing a victory, but a 1–1 draw was all that could be mustered.[1] Circumstances transpired that 21st-place Scunthorpe United's 1–1 draw on the same day, in their penultimate match of the season, meant that the Iron needed to win their final match by a margin of seven goals to secure their safety.[1] Brentford's Third Division status was retained when Scunthorpe United lost in their season finale on the following Tuesday night.[1]
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalCroxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 112-119.
^ abcd"Brentford results for the 1983–1984 season". Statto.com. Archived from the original on 3 April 2016. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
^Smyth, Rob (24 December 2023). "Santa stops play: how Brentford's Christmas plan proved cold turkey". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 25 December 2023.
^ abCroxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 98-111.
^Dean, Sam (29 July 2020). "Brentford sting Swansea in Griffin Park farewell to claim place in Championship play-off final". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
^White, Eric, ed. (1989). 100 Years Of Brentford. Brentford FC. p. 397. ISBN 0951526200.
^Croxford, Mark; Lane, David; Waterman, Greville (2011). The Big Brentford Book of the Eighties. Sunbury, Middlesex: Legends Publishing. ISBN 978-1906796716.
^Haynes, Graham; Coumbe, Frank (2006). Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006. Yore Publications. ISBN 978-0955294914.
^ abCroxford, Lane & Waterman, p. 425.
^"Transfer Out". www.millwall-history.org.uk. Retrieved 25 June 2022.