1892–93 season | |||
---|---|---|---|
Chairman | Walter W. Hart | ||
Secretary | Alfred Jones | ||
Ground | Coventry Road | ||
Football League Second Division | 1st | ||
FA Cup | First round proper (eliminated by Burnley) | ||
Birmingham Senior Cup | Semi-final (eliminated by Aston Villa) | ||
Birmingham Charity Cup | Runners-up (eliminated by Aston Villa) | ||
Top goalscorer |
League: Fred Wheldon (25) All: Fred Wheldon (26) |
||
Highest home attendance | 3,000 vs Burton Swifts (12 November 1892) | ||
Lowest home attendance | 1,000 vs Ardwick (1 April 1893) | ||
|
The 1892–93 season was the twelfth season of competitive association football played by Small Heath F.C., an English football club based in Birmingham. After finishing in third position in the Football Alliance in 1891–92, Small Heath was one of 12 clubs elected to the newly formed Second Division for the 1892–93 Football League season.
During the season, the team scored 90 goals at an average of four goals per game, beat Walsall Town Swifts 12–0 to set a club record League victory which, as of 2012[update], still stands, remained undefeated on their own ground throughout the season, and won the last nine matches of the League season to take the Second Division title at their first attempt. Promotion to the First Division was not automatic, even for the champions, but depended on the results of test matches between the top three Second Division and bottom three First Division teams. Small Heath lost to Newton Heath, the 16th-placed First Division team, after a replay, so were not promoted, although the teams placed second and third were.
Small Heath entered the 1892–93 FA Cup at the first round proper, and lost in that round to First Division club Burnley. In local competitions, they were eliminated by Aston Villa in the semi-final of the Birmingham Senior Cup and the final of the Mayor of Birmingham's Charity Cup. Small Heath also played several friendly matches during the season, including benefit matches for players Harry Morris, Caesar Jenkyns and Fred Speller.