Jump to bottom

The 1888-1889 season was the 18th season of competitive football in England.

Overview

A new competition, The Football League, started this season. The Football League was open to clubs all over the United Kingdom[citation needed], but the first twelve entrants (Accrington, Aston Villa, Blackburn Rovers, Bolton Wanderers, Burnley, Derby County, Everton, Notts County, Preston North End, Stoke (now Stoke City), West Bromwich Albion and Wolverhampton Wanderers) were all from the Midlands or North of England (in later years the competition became the de facto English league, though some clubs from outside England still compete in it). Each club in the League played each other twice (once at home and once away) and would be awarded two points for a win, one for a draw and none for a loss. From these points, a league table was drawn up. Preston North End were in first place at the end of the season and thus became the first ever Football League champions. They did not lose a match all season and also won the FA Cup.

The Football League is still going today and now has 72 clubs in three divisions (down from an all-time high of 92 clubs in four divisions). Since the 1992-93 season, it has become only the second-most important league competition, behind the FA Premier League in the English football league system.

Events

National team

England finished second in the 1889 British Home Championship, which was won by Scotland.

John Yates, of Burnley, scored 3 goals against Ireland in his only appearance for England.

Date Venue Opponents Score* Comp England scorers
23 February 1889 Victoria Ground, Stoke-on-Trent (H)  Wales 4-1 BHC Billy Bassett (West Bromwich Albion) , John Goodall (Preston North End), Jack Southworth (Blackburn Rovers) & Fred Dewhurst (Preston North End)
2 March 1889 Anfield, Liverpool (H)  Ireland 6-1 BHC Alf Shelton (Notts County), John Yates (Burnley) (3), Joe Lofthouse (Accrington) & John Brodie (Wolverhampton Wanderers)
13 April 1889 Kennington Oval, London (H)  Scotland 2-3 BHC Billy Bassett (West Bromwich Albion) (15 & 17 mins)

* England score given first

Key

Honours

Competition Winner
The Football League Preston North End (1)
FA Cup Preston North End (1)

Notes = Number in parentheses is the times that club has won that honour. * indicates new record for competition

League table

The Football League

P W D L F A GA Pts
1 Preston North End 22 18 4 0 74 15 4.933 40
2 Aston Villa 22 12 5 5 61 43 1.419 29
3 Wolverhampton Wanderers 22 12 4 6 50 37 1.351 28
4 Blackburn Rovers 22 10 6 6 66 45 1.467 26
5 Bolton Wanderers 22 10 2 10 63 59 1.068 22
6 West Bromwich Albion 22 10 2 10 40 46 0.870 22
7 Accrington 22 6 8 8 48 48 1.000 20
8 Everton 22 9 2 11 35 46 0.761 20
9 Burnley[1] 22 7 3 12 42 62 0.677 17
10 Derby County[1] 22 7 2 13 41 61 0.672 16
11 Notts County[1] 22 5 2 15 40 73 0.548 12
12 Stoke[1] 22 4 4 14 26 51 0.510 12

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

References

Question book-new.svg
This article needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2008)
  1. ^ a b c d Burnley, Derby County, Notts County and Stoke all re-elected to the Football League.

External links

Seasons in English football

1883–84 | 1884–85 | 1885–86 | 1886–87 | 1887–88 | 1888–89 | 1889–90 | 1890–91 | 1891–92 | 1892–93 | 1893–94


Football in England
The Football Association
National teams
England · B · C · U-21 · U-20 · U-19 · U-18 · U-17 · U-16

League system
Premier League · The Football League (Championship • League One • League Two) · Football Conference (National • North • South) · Northern Premier (Premier Division • Division One North • Division One South) · Southern League (Premier Division • Division One Midlands • Division One South & West) · Isthmian League (Premier Division • Division One North • Division One South)

Domestic cups
FA Cup · Football League Cup · FA Community Shield · Football League Trophy · FA Trophy · Conference League Cup · FA Vase · FA NLS Cup

List of clubs · Venues (Listed by capacity) · Competitions · Trophies and Awards · Records