Brentford was formed in 1889 to provide members of Brentford Rowing Club something to do in the winter months. Initially it was going to be called The Brentford Rowing and Football Club. There was then another meeting to decide whether they preferred to play Association or Rugby Football. The proper game won out by eight votes to five, and they went with the simple Brentford FC. The most obvious connection to their origins was the use of the Rowing Club colours - an iffy sounding salmon, claret and light blue - as their strip in the early years. The club launched itself into the West London Alliance, then moved into the Southern League in 1898. They spent twelve years in the Southern League First Division, making very little impact, before getting relegated to the Second Division in 1912. It was during this period that they found a permanent home, moving into Griffin Park in 1904.
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| The Brook Road Stand - our home for the afternoon. A mixture of seating (upper) and terrace (lower). Photo © 2005 Ciderspace |
Towards the end of that decade the club was on its knees. An attempted takeover by Queens Park Rangers was fought tooth and nail, and the club withdrew from all competitions except the Football League and Cup and F.A. Cup and operated on a total staff of fourteen players to pare its costs to the bone. They survived - just.
For the next twenty years Brentford bounced about between the Fourth and Third divisions, though mostly in the latter. In 1991-92 Brentford showed their best form for many years and were Champions of Division Three. This took them back to the Second Division in the season the Premier League began - so it was called the First Division. They only lasted the one campaign.
The David Webb years, which still have Bees fans spitting blood, followed until Ron Noades bought the club in 1998 and made himself manager. Despite some initial derision from the football world Noades taking the managerial role was not the expected disaster and they won the Division Three title. They remained at Division Two / League One level, with a couple of unsuccessful play-offs and a couple of successful battles against relegation to keep the interest going, until 2006-07, at the end of which season they were relegated in 24th place.
Noades had gradually withdrawn from the club, first as manager, then as chairman and owner. However as he departed (slowly) it gradually emerged that Brentford was, as in the late Sixties, in a horrendous financial mess. Things were going pretty well on the pitch under Martin Allen, but off it things went from bad to worse as each supposed club-saving deal foundered on new revelations as to the state of the books.
Eventually Bees United, a Supporters Trust with 1,200 members, became the majority shareholder in January 2006. Football supporters are attracted by the romance of owning their club, but the reality can be rather different and dissent, grievance and faction lurked in the background, with seemingly regular resignations and back biting the order of the day. The team went on to reach the play-offs but lost out at the semi-final stage to Swansea City. Martin Allen is a very emotional manager and couldn't hide his huge disappointment in the days that followed this defeat. Possibly combined with a belief that the club couldn't take the next step forward, within a few weeks he had resigned. For a club that didn't give the appearance of being financially very sound the appointment of Leroy Rosenior seemed a shrewd one, as a manager used to working on a shoestring at Torquay United. However it didn't work out and his tenure was short, sacked by November after five months. Youth Team Manager Scott Fitzgerald took over for the second half of the season but couldn't keep the Bees up. Already relegated, he was sacked with four matches to go and Barry Quin kept things ticking over as caretaker whilst the club negotiated to bring in ex-England captain Terry Butcher as the new man at the helm for the following campaign. Butcher lasted about as long as Rosenior before he too was sacked, and Assistant Manager Andy Scott stepped forward. After getting through four managers in eighteen months some sanity returned and the club recognised that 14th in League Two was at least some form of stabilty and Scott was retained into the 2008-09 season.
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| Braemar Road Stand Photo © 2005 Ciderspace |
The 2010-11 season saw them also reach a Football League Trophy final, but despite that achievement, a fairly bad run of form in the middle of that campaign saw Andy Scott relieved of his duties. Striker Nicky Forster did a lengthy caretaker slot, including their trip to Wembley, but he made way over the summer of 2011 for former Manchester City player Uwe Rösler. The German managed a 9th placed slot in his first full season, which sort of shows the Bees problem as it stands over the last three years - top half of the table but each time falling just that tiny little bit short of getting into the play-offs. That's no disgrace mind, given some of the clubs that have been above them in the table.
We have some cup history against Brentford, as well as the meetings in the League, having played them three times in the F.A. Cup when we were a Non-league club, with one victory - in 1970 when goals by Chris Weller and ex-Brentford Cliff Myers secured a 2-1 win at Huish. We also met in the Football League Trophy - going out on penalties on that occasion, whilst Brentford were briefly a League Two side during the 2008-09 season.
(http://www.ciderspace.co.uk/asp/oppo.../brentford.asp)
Editor's Note: Ah, screw it. This is my last one, I promise. I wanted a real goal, and Sunderland wasn't giving me that. I deliberated before posting this, I've played some games, the squad is shaping up sweet. I feel it's a great challenge... let's do this.
Half Length: 10 minutes
Pace: Slow
CPU: Professional
Financial Status: Strict (60%)




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