6 April 1927

Newcastle United 6 Arsenal 1

Regular fans at Highbury1926/7 must have started as a season as stupendous promise.   Having never won a single thing of consequence (not the second division, not the first division, not the FA cup) Arsenal had hired the man who had delivered unto Huddersfield Town two league titles.   The repayment of Norris’ belief in the man who had once been banned from football for life was the highest ever position of Arsenal – second in the first division achieved in his first season.  It was even more notable because the previous season Arsenal had been very close to being relegated.

Surely 1926/27 would be Arsenal’s year.  Huddersfield didn’t have Chapman, Arsenal did.  Arsenal had clearly sorted out the new offside rule, with the second best defence in the league.  Most importantly they had moved from one place from relegation to one place for the championship in one season.  Was this man a genius or what?

Well, what?

Mr Chapman, having taken us to second in the league used the same players as were available to him at the end of the last season.  He had created his team, and he was happy with it, that must be the general view.

And yet in league terms the season did not deliver.  After two initial victories Arsenal won only two out of the next 14, and the season, in terms of building on that wonderful second place was gone.

Arsenal did recover in the league, and ended 11th, thanks not least to a run of five consecutive wins in April.  But it was in the cup that matters progressed:

  • Round 3 Sheffield United
  • Round 4 Port Vale (division 2) (after a 2-2 draw)
  • Round 5: Liverpool
  • Round 6: Wolverhampton (division 2)
  • SF: Southampton (division 2)
  • Final: Cardiff

Arsenal’s progress was helped by having to play three out of the eighth matches against lower league teams and never having to play a top seven club from the first division.  But we lost the final 0-1, and so the first trophy was not to be.

In the league if we look at our goal scoring it was 77 for, 86 against.

77 goals that season was an average figure.  Derby a place below us got 86, but Huddersfield in second place in the league got 76.  But 86 against was poor, the fifth worse in the league.  Leeds and West Bromwich were relegated with 88 and 86 goals against.  Arsenal avoided relegation by 13 points, which shows how important the six wins in the last seven games were.  Without that run we would have been in real trouble.

But it is worth noting just some of those defeats:

March 7th: West Ham United 7 Arsenal 0

April 6th: Newcastle United 6 Arsenal 1

April 9th: Sunderland 5 Arsenal 1

These three results were part of a series of six consecutive defeats, starting with the West Ham match and ending in the Sunderland game.  So what caused the problem.

What, I wonder, would the blogger of the 1920s have made of all this?   Certainly there would have been cries for the removal of Mr Chapman, and demands for new blood.  Two seasons, and one new regular player – and he at the very end of his career.  No trophies, and a defence that was among the worst in the league.  Yes a cup final, but an easy run to the final by any standard and only one of the cup run games was won by more than one goal (2-0 against Liverpool).

Really, he had to deliver next season, or else surely Mr Norris would put up with no more.  The crowds were right down (only 22,000 for the last home game), and they would fall further if something were not done.  If only there had been the fanatically anti-manager blogs then.  What a field day they would have had.  How much we would have learned!