Clyde

Clyde Standings

League Cup crestLeague Cup

Key:
  1. Qualification to next stage
  2. Possible Qualification to next stage
PosTeamPWDLFA+/-PTSForm
1Motherwell crestMotherwell431083511
W
W
W
W
2Greenock Morton crestGreenock Morton430110559
W
L
W
W
3Clyde crestClyde412168-26
L
W
W
L
4Stenhousemuir crestStenhousemuir411236-34
W
L
L
L
5Peterhead crestPeterhead400449-50
L
L
L
L

League Two crestLeague Two

Key:
  1. Promotion
  2. Promotion Playoff
  3. Relegation Playoff
PosTeamPWDLFA+/-PTSForm
1East Kilbride crestEast Kilbride36216977463169
W
W
W
L
W
2Spartans crestSpartans361810860392164
D
D
W
L
W
3Clyde crestClyde361414858411756
L
W
W
W
W
4Forfar crestForfar361311125147450
D
W
W
W
W
5Stranraer crestStranraer361211134646047
W
D
L
W
D
6Elgin crestElgin361111145155-444
L
D
D
L
L
7Annan Athletic crestAnnan Athletic361011154758-1141
D
L
L
W
L
8Stirling Albion crestStirling Albion36911164663-1738
D
D
D
L
L
9Dumbarton crestDumbarton361010164761-1435
L
L
L
W
D
10Edinburgh City crestEdinburgh City36109174572-2724
W
L
L
L
L

Frequently asked questions

Brentford were founded in October 1889, in West London’s Hounslow area. Initially, the local sportsmen formed the club to provide a permanent football or rugby team for the town. As fate would have it, 13 votes split 8-5 in favour of association football gave birth to the Brentford Football Club.

Matthew Benham, a British businessman and lifelong supporter of Brentford, is the owner of the club.

Brentford’s home ground is the Gtech Community Stadium, located in Brentford, West London. It was completed and opened in September 2020, replacing the club’s old Griffin Park ground. The stadium is a multi-purpose venue, hosting both football and rugby matches.

The Gtech Community Stadium has a capacity of 17,250 seats.

Brentford are yet to win any major honours as a top-flight side.

Brentford haven't lifted an English top-flight title so far, with their best campaign being a fifth-place finish in the 1935-36 season.

Brentford legend Ken Coote is the club's all-time leading appearance maker with 559 appearances to his name, which came between 1949 and 1963.

With 163 goals in 282 games in all competitions, Jim Towers is Brentford's all-time top goalscorer. Towers spent seven seasons at the club between 1954 and 1961.

David Raya, Christian Eriksen, Ivan Toney, Ollie Watkins, Tony Craig, and Ken Coote are among the biggest names to have played for Brentford.

Steve Perryman, Thomas Frank, and Harry Curtis are some of the most famous managers to have been in charge of Brentford.

Their nickname was a happy accident. When a group of Borough Road College students cheered for Brentford players with the chant "Buck up, Bs," a journalist misheard it as "bees." This mistake eventually became the team's iconic nickname, The Bees.