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League Two Table

  PGDPts
1Stockport46+4892
2Wrexham46+3788
3Mansfield46+4386

4MK Dons46+1578
5Doncaster46+571
6Crewe46+471
7Crawley Town46+670

8Barrow46+669
9Bradford46+269
10AFC Wimbledon46+1365
11Walsall46-465
12Gillingham46-1164
13Harrogate Town46-963
14Notts County46+361
15Morecambe46-1458
16Tranmere46-357
17Accrington Stanley46-857
18Newport County46-1455
19Swindon46-654
20Salford46-1651
21Grimsby46-1749
22Colchester46-2145

23Sutton Utd46-2542
24Forest Green46-3442

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Long Ago
Long Ago

The 'Three Divisions Theory'

By: Andrew Hill
Date: 28/02/2024

I write as a 75-year-old who first went to Blundell Park in 1958. I have witnessed many ups and downs but the club always survives and I have no doubt it will come through its present difficulties—ever the optimist.

Optimism, though, has to be tempered with realism. So rather than complain about the present situation I will introduce you to my ‘Three Divisions Theory’. Perhaps three "Leagues" is more in keeping with modern terminology.

1921 saw the creation of the Third Division (South to be precise). Town were original members of it having just been relegated from Division Two only the season before: So, instead of losing our League status we managed to maintain it: maybe we’ll do so again if the National League becomes League 3.

From 1921 until the outbreak of WWII Town were up and down between the three levels: Division One in good times and Division Three (North), to be precise in the bad times. In 1948 (the year of my birth) Town fell out of Division One never to return.

Move on 10 years. By 1958 when I first saw Town play it would be fair to say that a return to Division One was looking ever more unlikely. The following season, 1958/59, Division 4 came into being. Town first went down to that level in the late 1960s. Since then, Division 2 has been the highest level we have been realistically able to achieve, with Division Four being the lowest we would likely fall to. So the "Three Divisions" slipped a notch from levels 1,2,3 to 2,3,4. That remained the situation for most of my adult life.

In 1979 Level 5 came into being. Town kept out of it until the early part of this century. When I look at the average attendance in Level 2 and the sheer cost of running a Championship side, it looks to me that the three divisions have dropped down a further notch from Levels 2,3,4, to 3,4,5.

The thought that League 1 is the highest level of football most Town fans will ever see at BP is dispiriting, to put it mildly, but I fear it is the case. Town are a small-ish club with few resources (euphemism for little money) so what can we expect?

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