QPR Through The Ages - A Brief History Of Queens Park Rangers
Twenty-two years in the third tier of English football without promotion. Third place in 1947–48. Fourth in 1951–52. Third again, years later. Always close enough to sting, never close enough to matter. This episode covers QPR's long postwar wait — the decade of competent mediocrity, the arrival of Alec Stock who finally changed the club's direction, and the slow accumulation of quality that made the rocket years possible. It also explores what it meant to be a QPR supporter during these years: the habit, the belonging, the stubborn west London loyalty that sustained a club which gave its fans very little back except itself. The wait that made everything that followed feel earned. Resources From the production notes already written into the Episode 3 script: Gordon Macey, 'Queens Park Rangers: The Complete Record' (Breedon Books, 2004) The definitive statistical history of the club. All season records, league positions, and attendance data for the postwar period are drawn from Macey's record. Dave Thomas, QPR historical writing Various sources covering the Alec Stock era and the club's postwar development. Alec Stock His managerial record and methods are discussed in Dave Thomas's QPR histories and in broader histories of the Football League in the 1950s and 1960s. Stock is a significantly underrated figure in English football management. QPR fanzine and supporter history archives Particularly the oral history material collected by QPR supporters' organisations in the 1980s and 1990s, which provides the first-person testimony that underpins the Fan's Eye View section. Football League reorganisation 1958 The creation of the national Third and Fourth Divisions is documented in the Football League's official history and in multiple club histories from this period. Third Division South statistical records Complete via the Football Club History Database at fchd.info — confirming near-miss seasons and finishing positions throughout this period. Dave Russell, 'Football and the English: A Social History of Association Football in England, 1863–1995' Background on football crowds, supporter culture, and the social function of the game in the postwar era. Arthur Hopcraft, 'The Football Man' (1968) Published at the very end of this episode's period, this classic of football writing captures the atmosphere of English football in the 1950s and 1960s with unparalleled precision. Essential reading for the tone of this episode.
3 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de QPR Through The Ages - A Brief History Of Queens Park Rangers!