1940s
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By Paul Taylor and Martin Shaw for mansfieldtown.net |
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War and Peace (1939 - 1949) |
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I |
n spite of the very real threat of war the preparations for the 1939/40 season went ahead as usual. The Football League started on schedule on 26 August with the Stags losing 4-5 at home to
By October the Football League had organised regional competitions where clubs from all standards were grouped together. The rules regarding registration of players were relaxed so clubs in the proximity of bases for the forces relished this,
For the 1940/1 season the leagues were rearranged and Town were included in the South Regional League. As travelling was restricted all teams could not play every other and so the number of matches played by every team was not equal so league position was determined by goal average (goals for divided by goals against). Town finished in 17th place out of 34 with a goal difference of 1.132, having scored 77 and conceded 68 goals in their 29 matches. '
The following season the Stags joined 37 other clubs in the Football League North. In the first competition Town finished in a miserable 33rd place. In the secondary competition they were even worse, finishing in 50th place out of the 51 competing. Seven qualifying matches were played in the League Cup (a league competition, not a knockout), Town did not qualify for the later stages.
1942/3 was even more of a disaster with Town finishing bottom of the table in the first competition. There was no improvement at all in the second competition where another bottom place was secured. Once again they failed to qualify for the later stages of the cup competition finishing two off the bottom in the table. Somehow
There was some improvement in 1943/4, things could hardly have been worse, with a final placing in the first competition of 18th out of 50 entrants. This improvement turned out to be temporary as Town slumped to 47th out of 50 for the second competition. Once again there was no progress from the qualifying competition of the League Cup. In July 1944 the team manager, Jack Poole, announced his resignation to take up the position of trainer at
With Barke in charge Town ended the first competition in 38th place. It is interesting to note that
By the time the 1945/6 season got underway the war had been won. However with so many players still in the services league matches were still played on the regionalised basis. There were changes though, the old third divisions north and south were reformed from the 1939 standings. The Stags therefore played in the southern section, which was itself divided into north and south sections because of travelling restrictions. The first half of the season comprised the league matches, the Stags won only 3 out of the 20 and so became wooden spoonists. In the second competition, which was the qualifying competition for the Division 3 South Cup, Town finished 3rd but did not qualify for the semi finals as only the top two teams from each section went through. There was some semblance of the returning normality when the FA Cup was resumed. For this season only all ties up to the semi final stages were played on a home and away basis. In the first two rounds the Stags were paired with non league opposition, firstly Gainsborough Trinity were beaten 5-4 on aggregate (extra time was required in the second leg) and then Grantham lost 3-2 on aggregate in the second. In the Third Round Sheffield Wednesday drew a crowd of over 9,000 to the Mill for a 0-0 draw. Over 22,000 turned up at Hillsborough for the second leg to see the Owls triumph by five goals to nil.
So the war was over and for 1946/7 the Football League would restart with the Stags in the Southern Section of Division 3. The same fixture list was used as had been drawn up for the aborted 1939/40 season. The first three matches were far more fruitful than those of seven years before as Town won the first two versus
Back in what was traditionally thought to be the weaker of the two regional sections of the third division, the Stags faired particularly better than the previous term, finishing in a comfortable 8th place. There was also some excitement in the FA Cup as Town reached the Third Round, disposing of
There was no improvement in the 1948/9 campaign as Town managed a mid table position all season to finish in a no more than respectable 10th position. Once again the Third Round of the FA Cup was reached.
After the struggle of war, during which one Stag (Ivan Flowers) lost his life, the return to peace had seen Town return to some semblance of normality and with the crowds on the up the Club could look to the future with some optimism.














