Promotion has been secured and Watford can now win the highest ranking trophy in the club’s history. But there are a number of other landmarks the Hornets have already achieved and can still record if they round off this triumphant season with three more points against Sheffield Wednesday on Saturday.

The promotion-clinching 2-0 win at Brighton & Hove Albion was Watford’s 13th on the road this season – a club record for the Premier and Football League – and it saw them finish on 43 away goals, one short of the club’s highest league tally on their travels set in 2012/13. However, Troy Deeney and Matej Vydra’ strikes ensured the Hornets netted two or more goals in nine consecutive away league games for the first time in their history.

The victory at the Amex Stadium also took Watford onto 88 points, equalling their highest total for a season since three points for a win were introduced in 1981/82. Another win on Saturday will see Slavisa Jokanovic’s men pull level with the total achieved by Ken Furphy’s Division Three title-winning side of 1968/69, based on three points for a win, making it the club’s joint second highest post-war points total. The only season more would have been recorded if three points for a win were in operation was 1977/78 when Graham Taylor's Division Four championship-winning side would have reached 101.

Watford have netted three or more goals on 14 occasions in the current campaign and if they can do it again against the Owls they will set a new club scoring record for a season. Jokanvic’s side have struck 90 so far; the record is 92 set in 1959/60.

However, the Hornets only need one more goal to score their 250th in regular season league matches since the Pozzo takeover in the summer of 2012. Two of Watford’s seven highest scoring campaigns in the Premier or Football League have happened since the ownership of the club changed hands.

Watford had already set a new club record for the most number of wins in the second tier of English football and victory on Saturday will make it 28 for the season, their second highest in all four divisions behind the 30 recorded in 1977/78.

A win on Saturday will also mean the Hornets have taken 53 points out of a possible 69 in the second half of the season, a points per game average of 2.3.

This article was compiled using some figures published by Jon Sinclair on the Watford Mailing List.