During the 1968–69 English football season, Brentford competed in the Football League Fourth Division. Off the back of 18 months of extreme financial problems, the club finished in mid-table.
Season summary
After two tumultuous seasons off the pitch, a continued cash crisis meant that during the 1968 off-season, Brentford manager Jimmy Sirrel would not be provided with the funds to buy players who could guarantee a lasting run at promotion from the Fourth Division.[1] He was able to plug the gaps in his threadbare squad, bringing in full backDenis Hunt and journeymanforwardsPat Terry and Peter Deakin.[1] A need to balance the books led to Ian Lawther (one of the club's most consistent goalscorers since the 1964–65 season) being sold for a £3,000 fee a matter of days before the beginning of the season.[1]
Manager Sirrel's young team began the season in promising form, losing just two of the first 15 league matches to consolidate a position in the top six.[2] Brentford's position belied the club's personnel problems, with a growing catalogue of injuries, illness and suspensions.[1] £10,000 was spent on ArsenalwingerGordon Neilson in October 1968, an extravagant amount given Brentford's financial problems.[1] An inconsistent spell between November 1968 and April 1969 dropped the Bees as low as 19th, two places above the re-election zone, but six wins in the final seven matches of the season lifted the club to an 11th-place finish.[2]
^Croxford, Mark; Lane, David; Waterman, Greville (2011). The Big Brentford Book of the Seventies. Sunbury, Middlesex: Legends Publishing. pp. 357–358. ISBN978-1906796709.