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Football Alliance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Football league
Football Alliance
Founded1889
Folded1892
CountryEngland
Number of clubs12

TheFootball Alliance was anassociation football league in England which ran for three seasons, from1889–90 to1891–92.[1]

History

[edit]

In 1888, the same yearthe Football League was founded,The Combination was established by clubs who had been excluded from the Football League, initiated byCrewe Alexandra secretary J. G. Hall, and announced at the Royal Hotel inCrewe. However, while the Football League quickly proved a success, the Combination lacked central organisation, with poor planning and unfulfilled fixtures, and failed to complete its first season, finishing in April 1889 without a winner.[2][3]

Foundation

[edit]

Several of The Combination founders met after the final Combination board meeting to discuss a new combination; four of those who agreed in principle to form a new league,South Shore,Burslem Port Vale,Notts Rangers, andDerby Midland, did not in fact do so, whileGrimsby Town, originally considered too distant, was brought back into the fold.[4] The remaining clubs then established the Football Alliance, to begin in the1889–90 season. The Alliance covered a similar area to the League, stretching from theEnglish Midlands to theNorth West, but also further east inSheffield,Grimsby andSunderland. The president of the Football Alliance was John Holmes, also the president ofThe Wednesday who were the first champions winning fifteen games out of twenty-two.

The nine founder clubs (eightbolded in the table below) originally decided to form the Alliance, originally under the name of the Northern Counties League,[5] and considered applications from 6 clubs to fill the remaining three places.Crewe Alexandra,Nottingham Forest, andWalsall Town Swifts were elected in the ballot, withLong Eaton Rangers,Halliwell, andWitton missing out.[6] The clubs attended a meeting at the Midland Hotel in Derby in May 1889 to arrange fixtures, but, asSunderland did not attend, it was assumed Sunderland did not intend to play; and Witton, South Shore, Burslem Port Vale, Derby Midland, Halliwell, and Long Eaton Rangers applied to join in its place. After Long Eaton Rangers and Witton tied in the voting, the casting vote of the chairman (Harry Mitchell of Mitchell St George's) was in favour of the Rangers.[7]

Alliance seasons

[edit]

At the end of the Alliance's first season, in accordance with the rules agreed at the start of the season, the bottom four clubs - Walsall Town Swifts, Small Heath, Long Eaton Rangers, and Nottingham Forest - had to apply for re-election, and, unlike the rule in the Football League the previous season, they were not allowed to vote; seven clubs (Stoke, Witton,South Shore,Chester,Burslem Port Vale,Sheffield United, andLincoln City) applied for admission. Stoke, who had just failed re-election to the Football League, was admitted in place of Long Eaton Rangers, and the other bottom four clubs were re-elected.[8] The prizes awarded to the champions included a blue silk flag, with a white border, 12 feet by 6 feet, with the words "Alliance Champions" on it.[9]

The following year, Stoke andDarwen, another Alliance club, were accepted into the Football League, taking its membership to 14 clubs. Stoke's biggest challenge in winning the title was the threat of expulsion from the Alliance, as Stoke had arranged a friendly with League clubNotts County which clashed with an Alliance match at Nottingham Forest, and refused to pay the £10 fine imposed for so doing.[10]

At the end of the 1890-91 season, Sunderland Albion resigned in protest at having to pay half of the train fare of visiting clubs,[11] and the bottom four clubs were re-elected back into the Alliance. To fill the three vacancies, eight clubs applied;Ardwick,Bury,Burton Swifts,Gainsborough Trinity,Middlesbrough,[12]Northwich Victoria, Lincoln City, and Sheffield United. The successful clubs were Ardwick, Burton Swifts, and Lincoln City[13] - the last by one vote.

Merger into the Football League

[edit]

In 1892 it was decided to merge the two leagues, and so theFootball League Second Division was formed, consisting mostly of Football Alliance clubs; the only Alliance club not to apply to join the League was the insolvent Birmingham St George's.[14] The existing League clubs, plus three of the strongest Alliance clubs, comprised theFootball League First Division.

Member clubs

[edit]
ClubAdmittedResigned
Ardwick189118922
Birmingham St George's18891892
Bootle188918922
Burton Swifts189118922
Crewe Alexandra188918922
Darwen188918911
Grimsby Town188918922
Lincoln City189118922
Long Eaton Rangers18891890
Newton Heath188918921
Nottingham Forest188918921
Small Heath188918922
Stoke189018911
Sunderland Albion18891891
The Wednesday188918921
Walsall Town Swifts188918922
Notes

1 Elected toFootball League First Division
2 Elected toFootball League Second Division

Football Alliance champions

[edit]
SeasonWinners
1889–90The Wednesday
1890–91Stoke
1891–92Nottingham Forest

References

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  1. ^Blakeman, Mick; Brown, Tony; Warsop, Keith, eds. (2009).The Football Alliance Match by Match: 1889/90 to 1891/92. Nottingham: SoccerData. pp. 4–6.ISBN 978-1-905891-19-1.
  2. ^Whittle, Paul (4 April 2020)."The Football Alliance: Teams Who Didn't Make the League".THE 1888 LETTER: Football Then And Now. Retrieved30 November 2021.
  3. ^Shury, Alan; Brian Landamore (2005) [2002]. "History of Newton Heath F.C.".The Definitive Newton Heath F.C. 'Definitive' Club Histories. with Allen Kristensen and Tony Brown (2nd ed.). Nottingham: SoccerData. p. 11.ISBN 1-899468-16-1.
  4. ^"Football Notes".Birmingham Mail: 4. 8 April 1889.
  5. ^"A Rival Football League".Derby Daily Telegraph: 2. 10 May 1889.
  6. ^"A Rival Football League".Nottinghamshire Guardian: 3. 18 May 1889.
  7. ^"The Football Alliance".Sheffield Independent: 8. 29 May 1889.
  8. ^"Football Alliance".Sheffield Independent: 8. 12 May 1890.
  9. ^"Sports and Pastimes".Nottingham Evening Post: 4. 14 August 1890.
  10. ^"Threatened Expulsion of Stoke".Sheffield Independent: 7. 7 March 1891.
  11. ^"Football Alliance".Liverpool Mercury: 7. 11 May 1891.
  12. ^The Manchester Evening News uniquely suggests the applicant wasMiddlesbrough Ironopolis; in practice it may have been a joint application for both teams.
  13. ^"The Football Alliance".Birmingham Daily Post: 7. 11 May 1891.
  14. ^"The Football League".Sheffield Independent: 7. 14 May 1892.
Football League Second Division
Football League First Division
Football League Championship
See also
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