Big Five (association football)

Group of European association football markets From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Big Five (association football)

The Big Five refers to the association football markets of England, Germany, Spain, Italy and France. As of 2025, they are the five European leaders in size and popularity of the main domestic football leagues – the Premier League, Bundesliga, La Liga, Serie A and Ligue 1 respectively in men's football, and the Women's Super League, Frauen-Bundesliga, Liga F, Serie A, and Première Ligue respectively in women's football.

Thumb
Map showing the 'Big Five' countries with their men's top-division leagues.
  England (Premier League)
  Spain (La Liga)
  Italy (Serie A)
  Germany (Bundesliga)
  France (Ligue 1)

Ace Advisory Zrt., a Hungarian private company in the field of data-driven sports and leisure business consultancy,[1] with services as the Football Benchmark data & analytics platform,[2] ranks Europe's 32 most prominent football clubs by their Enterprise Value (EV) since 2016. In these ranking for 2023, the number of clubs from the Big Five leagues hit a record high of 29, making up 97% of the top 32's total aggregate EV, which further highlights their financial strength.[3] The Premier League, often considered the most competitive and financially lucrative league, generates billions in revenue annually and boasts a worldwide audience.[3] Similarly, Germany's Bundesliga is celebrated for its high attendance rates and fan engagement.[4][5][6] La Liga in Spain is the home to global giants like FC Barcelona and Real Madrid, the most valuable and successful club worldwide, including domestic, European and international club competitions.[3][7] Italy's Serie A, known for its tactical sophistication, has a rich history of European and world champions.[8] France's Ligue 1, while often seen as the underdog comparing to the other Big Five leagues, regarding enterprise value and winning European and international titles, continues to produce world-class talent and is home to Paris Saint-Germain, a club with significant international influence.[3][9]

In women's football, these leagues have been pivotal in increasing the sport's visibility and professional standards. The Women's Super League in England and Frauen-Bundesliga in Germany are among the top destinations for elite female footballers, contributing significantly to the growth of the sport.[10] Spain's Liga F, Italy's Serie A, and France's Division 1 Feminine have made substantial strides in professionalizing women's football and drawing in larger audiences and sponsorships.[11]

Summary

Men's competitions

Women's competitions

More information Leagues, Country ...
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More information Cups, Country ...
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  1. Tournament abandoned due to the COVID-19 pandemic in France.
  2. Tournament abandoned due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy.

Market

Summarize
Perspective
More information #, Market Leaders ...
European football market size 2021/22[12]
(€29.5 billion market)
#Market LeadersRevenues (€ billion)Share
1'Big Five' top-leagues17.258.3%
2All non-'Big Five' leagues6.120.7%
3FIFA, UEFA and National Associations3.511.9%
4'Big Five' countries other leagues2.79.2%
  Revenue from the top national leagues in England, France, Germany, Italy and Spain
  Revenue from all professional leagues (except top division) in England, France, Germany, Italy and Spain
  Revenue from all national leagues in all other 50 UEFA associations outside the 'Big Five'
  FIFA's European revenues, UEFA's revenues (less payments to clubs and associations) and national associations' revenues (less payments to clubs) during the 2021/22 and 2022 seasons (depending on the respective financial year end)
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In men's football, the combined resources and revenues of the Big Five domestic leagues dominate world football; according to Statista, they have a combined revenue of 15.6 billion.[13] Within the Big Five, England's Premier League is considerably larger than the other four in terms of both popularity and wealth, with both factors influencing the other; league wealth is mostly derived from selling broadcasting rights to global markets based on the league's popularity worldwide, with competing bids. The German Bundesliga enjoys the highest average match attendance, while brand value is strongest in the main teams of Spain's La Liga, namely Real Madrid and Barcelona.[13]

The UEFA Financial Fair Play Regulations have significantly enhanced the financial performance of European football. These regulations eradicated overdue payables and converted an aggregate net loss of EUR 1.7 billion in 2010/11 into a net profit of EUR 579 million in 2016/17. Additionally, net equity positions, reflecting the balance sheet solvency or financial health of European first division clubs, have markedly improved over the past decade, as in the compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of net equity for the Big Five leagues, which has ranged from 7.5% in England to 17.9% in France.[3]

Bleacher Report noted that the Big Five all benefit from having "developed their own 'brand' of how football should be played."[14] The website suggested that the Netherlands' top league Eredivisie was considered similarly to the Big Five in footballing terms, but did not reach the same popularity or funding levels because it is overlooked by international fans in favour of the Five.[14]

Quality

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Perspective

The Big Five are seen as the collective leagues where the best players in the world go to develop and shine,[14] and it is accepted that the Big Five "represent the pinnacle of European football". However, football fans, particularly in different regions, often debate the quality of each league compared to the others.[15] As of 2024, the Big Five lead the UEFA coefficient for both men's and women's domestic leagues in Europe.[16][17] The coefficient ranks on performance of domestic teams in European competitions; football analytics website Breaking the Lines suggested that the continued dominance of the Big Five in the coefficient for men's football relies on teams from other nations – which may be as good or better than Big Five teams when fielding their best XI – thinking there is more security in aiming for domestic titles rather than European ones, and Big Five teams having the resources available to perform in both.[15] The dominance of recent times is particularly evident in the most prestigious club competition in European football in the UEFA Champions League, in which only teams from the Big Five have participated in the finals since the 2004 final, where Porto has been the last club outside the Big Five competing in a final.[18] In terms of national teams, they are also the only five European nations that have won the FIFA World Cup.[19]

Women's football has been less consistently centralised and, in Europe, has also been strong in Scandinavia;[20][21] as it became more popular, the largest (men's) football markets invested more, leading to a shift towards teams from the Big Five.[22] Sweden held a spot in the UEFA coefficient instead of Italy through 2022.[17]

In 2021, several men's teams from the Big Five leagues in England, Italy, and Spain attempted to create a European Super League, but received pushback.[13] Teams from Germany and France were reportedly invited to join the project, but declined.

Records and statistics

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Perspective

Clubs

Performance in current UEFA top-tier competitions

More information Competition, Spain ...
Men's football
Competition Spain Spain England England Italy Italy Germany Germany France France Note
European Cup /
Champions League
Winners20151281 56 of 69 European Cup / UEFA Champions League seasons (81%) has been won by a club from the Big Five
Finalists312629197 112 of 138 European Cup / UEFA Champions League finalists (81%) has been clubs from the Big Five
UEFA Cup /
Europa League
Winners149107 40 of 53 UEFA Cup / Europa League seasons (75%) has been won by a club from the Big Five
Finalists191718165 75 of 106 UEFA Cup / Europa League finalists (71%) has been clubs from the Big Five
UEFA Europa Conference League Winners11 2 of 3 UEFA Europa Conference League seasons (67%) has been won by a club from the Big Five
Finalists13 4 of 6 UEFA Europa Conference League finalists (67%) has been clubs from the Big Five
Grand total Winners342523151 98 of 125 current UEFA top-tier competitions (78%) has been won by a club from the Big Five
Finalists5044503512 192 of 250 current UEFA top-tier competition finalists (77%) has been clubs from the Big Five
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More information Competition, Germany ...
Women's football
Competition Germany Germany France France Spain Spain England England Italy Italy Note
UEFA Women's Champions League Winners9831 21 of 23 UEFA Women's Champions League seasons (91%) has been won by a club from the Big Five
Finalists171352 37 of 46 UEFA Women's Champions League finalists (80%) has been clubs from the Big Five
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Performance in defunct UEFA top-tier competitions

In contrast to the current UEFA competitions, the Cup Winners Cup also showed a dominance of the Big Five, but this was significantly lower in terms of title success (over 69%) and final participation (over 62%). This should be explained by the fact that only one participant from the respective leagues could take part in this tournament as a national cup winner or national cup finalist, if the cup winner qualified for the European Cup / UEFA Champions League. Therefore only one participant from the respective leagues (unless the defending champions did not qualify for any other UEFA competition, then it were two) took part in this competition.

More information Competition, England ...
Men's football
Competition England England Spain Spain Italy Italy Germany Germany France France Note
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (defunct) Winners87741 27 of 39 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup seasons (69%) were won by a club from the Big Five
Finalists13141183 49 of 78 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup finalists (63%) were clubs from the Big Five
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excluding clubs from East Germany

List of Champions in the Big Five

The table below shows the winning teams in all men's Big Five leagues by season.

  • Single-year seasons (mostly referring to the championship tournaments in early years) have been converted into currently-used season format.
More information Season, England ...
Season England England Germany Germany Spain Spain Italy Italy France France
1888–89Preston North End------------
1889–90Preston North End------------
1890–91 Everton --- --- --- ---
1891–92 Sunderland --- --- --- ---
1892–93 Sunderland --- --- --- ---
1893–94 Aston Villa --- --- --- Standard Athletic Club
1894–95 Sunderland --- --- --- Standard Athletic Club
1895–96 Aston Villa --- --- --- Club Français
1896–97 Aston Villa --- --- --- Standard Athletic Club
1897–98 Sheffield United --- --- Genoa Standard Athletic Club
1898–99 Aston Villa --- --- Genoa Le Havre
1899–1900 Aston Villa --- --- Genoa Le Havre
1900–01 Liverpool --- --- Milan Standard Athletic Club
1901–02 Sunderland --- --- Genoa Roubaix
1902–03 The Wednesday VfB Leipzig --- Genoa Roubaix
1903–04 The Wednesday No champions --- Genoa Roubaix
1904–05 Newcastle United Union 92 Berlin --- Juventus Gallia Club Paris
1905–06 Liverpool VfB Leipzig --- Milan Roubaix
1906–07 Newcastle United Freiburger FC --- Milan RC Paris
1907–08 Manchester United Viktoria Berlin --- Pro Vercelli Roubaix
1908–09 Newcastle United Phönix Karlsruhe --- Pro Vercelli Stade Helvétique
1909–10 Aston Villa Karlsruher FV --- Inter Milan US Tourcoing
1910–11 Manchester United Viktoria Berlin --- Pro Vercelli Stade Helvétique
1911–12 Blackburn Rovers Holstein Kiel --- Pro Vercelli Saint-Raphaël
1912–13 Sunderland VfB Leipzig --- Pro Vercelli Stade Helvétique
1913–14 Blackburn Rovers SpVgg Fürth --- Casale Olympique Lillois
1914–15 Everton --- --- Genoa ---
1915–16 --- --- --- --- ---
1916–17 --- --- --- --- ---
1917–18 --- --- --- --- ---
1918–19 --- --- --- --- Le Havre
1919–20 West Bromwich Albion 1. FC Nürnberg --- Inter Milan ---
1920–21 Burnley 1. FC Nürnberg --- Pro Vercelli ---
1921–22 Liverpool No champions --- Novese ---
1922–23 Liverpool Hamburger SV --- Genoa ---
1923–24 Huddersfield Town 1. FC Nürnberg --- Genoa ---
1924–25 Huddersfield Town 1. FC Nürnberg --- Bologna ---
1925–26 Huddersfield Town SpVgg Fürth --- Juventus ---
1926–27 Newcastle United 1. FC Nürnberg --- --- CA Paris
1927–28 Everton Hamburger SV --- Torino Stade Français
1928–29 The Wednesday SpVgg Fürth Barcelona Bologna Marseille
1929–30 Sheffield Wednesday Hertha BSC Athletic Bilbao Inter Milan ---
1930–31 Arsenal Hertha BSC Athletic Bilbao Juventus ---
1931–32 Everton Bayern Munich Madrid FC[a] Juventus ---
1932–33 Arsenal Fortuna Düsseldorf Madrid FC[a] Juventus Olympique Lillois
1933–34 Arsenal Schalke 04 Athletic Bilbao Juventus Sète
1934–35 Arsenal Schalke 04 Real Betis Juventus Sochaux
1935–36 Sunderland 1. FC Nürnberg Athletic Bilbao Bologna RC Paris
1936–37 Manchester City Schalke 04 --- Bologna Marseille
1937–38 Arsenal Hannover 96 --- Inter Milan Sochaux
1938–39 Everton Schalke 04 --- Bologna Sète
1939–40 --- Schalke 04 Atlético Aviación[b] Inter Milan ---
1940–41 --- Rapid Wien Atlético Aviación[b] Bologna ---
1941–42 --- Schalke 04 Valencia Roma ---
1942–43 --- Dresdner SC Athletic Bilbao Torino ---
1943–44 --- Dresdner SC Valencia --- ---
1944–45 --- --- Barcelona --- ---
1945–46 --- --- Sevilla Torino Lille
1946–47 Liverpool --- Valencia Torino Roubaix-Tourcoing
1947–48 Arsenal 1. FC Nürnberg Barcelona Torino Marseille
1948–49 Portsmouth VfR Mannheim Barcelona Torino Reims
1949–50 Portsmouth VfB Stuttgart Atlético Madrid Juventus Bordeaux
1950–51 Tottenham Hotspur 1. FC Kaiserslautern Atlético Madrid Milan Nice
1951–52 Manchester United VfB Stuttgart Barcelona Juventus Nice
1952–53 Arsenal 1. FC Kaiserslautern Barcelona Inter Milan Reims
1953–54 Wolverhampton Wanderers Hannover 96 Real Madrid Inter Milan Lille
1954–55 Chelsea Rot-Weiss Essen Real Madrid Milan Reims
1955–56 Manchester United Borussia Dortmund Athletic Bilbao Fiorentina Nice
1956–57 Manchester United Borussia Dortmund Real Madrid Milan Saint-Étienne
1957–58 Wolverhampton Wanderers Schalke 04 Real Madrid Juventus Reims
1958–59 Wolverhampton Wanderers Eintracht Frankfurt Barcelona Milan Nice
1959–60 Burnley Hamburger SV Barcelona Juventus Reims
1960–61 Tottenham Hotspur 1. FC Nürnberg Real Madrid Juventus Monaco
1961–62 Ipswich Town 1. FC Köln Real Madrid Milan Reims
1962–63 Everton Borussia Dortmund Real Madrid Inter Milan Monaco
1963–64 Liverpool 1. FC Köln Real Madrid Bologna Saint-Étienne
1964–65 Manchester United Werder Bremen Real Madrid Inter Milan Nantes
1965–66 Liverpool 1860 Munich Atlético Madrid Inter Milan Nantes
1966–67 Manchester United Eintracht Braunschweig Real Madrid Juventus Saint-Étienne
1967–68 Manchester City 1. FC Nürnberg Real Madrid Milan Saint-Étienne
1968–69 Leeds United Bayern Munich Real Madrid Fiorentina Saint-Étienne
1969–70 Everton Borussia Mönchengladbach Atlético Madrid Cagliari Saint-Étienne
1970–71 Arsenal Borussia Mönchengladbach Valencia Inter Milan Marseille
1971–72 Derby County Bayern Munich Real Madrid Juventus Marseille
1972–73 Liverpool Bayern Munich Atlético Madrid Juventus Nantes
1973–74 Leeds United Bayern Munich Barcelona Lazio Saint-Étienne
1974–75 Derby County Borussia Mönchengladbach Real Madrid Juventus Saint-Étienne
1975–76 Liverpool Borussia Mönchengladbach Real Madrid Torino Saint-Étienne
1976–77 Liverpool Borussia Mönchengladbach Atlético Madrid Juventus Nantes
1977–78 Nottingham Forest 1. FC Köln Real Madrid Juventus Monaco
1978–79 Liverpool Hamburger SV Real Madrid Milan Strasbourg
1979–80 Liverpool Bayern Munich Real Madrid Inter Milan Nantes
1980–81 Aston Villa Bayern Munich Real Sociedad Juventus Saint-Étienne
1981–82 Liverpool Hamburger SV Real Sociedad Juventus Monaco
1982–83 Liverpool Hamburger SV Athletic Bilbao Roma Nantes
1983–84 Liverpool VfB Stuttgart Athletic Bilbao Juventus Bordeaux
1984–85 Everton Bayern Munich Barcelona Hellas Verona Bordeaux
1985–86 Liverpool Bayern Munich Real Madrid Juventus Paris Saint-Germain
1986–87 Everton Bayern Munich Real Madrid Napoli Bordeaux
1987–88 Liverpool Werder Bremen Real Madrid Milan Monaco
1988–89 Arsenal Bayern Munich Real Madrid Inter Milan Marseille
1989–90 Liverpool Bayern Munich Real Madrid Napoli Marseille
1990–91 Arsenal 1. FC Kaiserslautern Barcelona Sampdoria Marseille
1991–92 Leeds United VfB Stuttgart Barcelona Milan Marseille
1992–93 Manchester United Werder Bremen Barcelona Milan ---
1993–94 Manchester United Bayern Munich Barcelona Milan Paris Saint-Germain
1994–95 Blackburn Rovers Borussia Dortmund Real Madrid Juventus Nantes
1995–96 Manchester United Borussia Dortmund Atlético Madrid Milan Auxerre
1996–97 Manchester United Bayern Munich Real Madrid Juventus Monaco
1997–98 Arsenal 1. FC Kaiserslautern Barcelona Juventus Lens
1998–99 Manchester United Bayern Munich Barcelona Milan Bordeaux
1999–2000 Manchester United Bayern Munich Deportivo La Coruña Lazio Monaco
2000–01 Manchester United Bayern Munich Real Madrid Roma Nantes
2001–02 Arsenal Borussia Dortmund Valencia Juventus Lyon
2002–03 Manchester United Bayern Munich Real Madrid Juventus Lyon
2003–04 Arsenal Werder Bremen Valencia Milan Lyon
2004–05 Chelsea Bayern Munich Barcelona --- Lyon
2005–06 Chelsea Bayern Munich Barcelona Inter Milan Lyon
2006–07 Manchester United VfB Stuttgart Real Madrid Inter Milan Lyon
2007–08 Manchester United Bayern Munich Real Madrid Inter Milan Lyon
2008–09 Manchester United VfL Wolfsburg Barcelona Inter Milan Bordeaux
2009–10 Chelsea Bayern Munich Barcelona Inter Milan Marseille
2010–11 Manchester United Borussia Dortmund Barcelona Milan Lille
2011–12 Manchester City Borussia Dortmund Real Madrid Juventus Montpellier
2012–13 Manchester United Bayern Munich Barcelona Juventus Paris Saint-Germain
2013–14 Manchester City Bayern Munich Atlético Madrid Juventus Paris Saint-Germain
2014–15 Chelsea Bayern Munich Barcelona Juventus Paris Saint-Germain
2015–16 Leicester City Bayern Munich Barcelona Juventus Paris Saint-Germain
2016–17 Chelsea Bayern Munich Real Madrid Juventus Monaco
2017–18 Manchester City Bayern Munich Barcelona Juventus Paris Saint-Germain
2018–19 Manchester City Bayern Munich Barcelona Juventus Paris Saint-Germain
2019–20 Liverpool Bayern Munich Real Madrid Juventus Paris Saint-Germain
2020–21 Manchester City Bayern Munich Atlético Madrid Inter Milan Lille
2021–22 Manchester City Bayern Munich Real Madrid Milan Paris Saint-Germain
2022–23 Manchester City Bayern Munich Barcelona Napoli Paris Saint-Germain
2023–24 Manchester City Bayer Leverkusen Real Madrid Inter Milan Paris Saint-Germain
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Sources: English football champions,[23] German football champions,[24] Spanish football champions,[25] Italian football champions,[26] French football champions[27]

Record champions in the Big Five

More information England, Germany ...
Record champions (top 10) in all men's Big Five leagues
England England Germany Germany Spain Spain Italy Italy France France
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Sources: [23][24][25][26][27]

Players

Abbreviations
ENGFootball League First Division / Premier League (1888–1992 / 1992–)
FRAUSFSA Championship / Ligue 1 (1896–1932 / 1932–)
GERGerman Champions / Bundesliga (1903–1963 / 1963–)
ITASerie A (1898–)
ESPLa Liga (1929–)
  • Bold indicates player is still active at in the Big Five Leagues. Players in italics are still active outside the Big Five Leagues.

List of top scorers in the Big Five Leagues

  • Does not include goals scored in the lower divisions.[28]
  • As of 9 February 2025
More information Rank, Player ...
List of top scorers in the Big Five Leagues (250 or more goals)
Rank Player Nationality Goals Itemized Goals Period
1Lionel Messi Argentina496

(474) ESP (22) FRA

2004–2023
2Cristiano Ronaldo Portugal495

(103) ENG (311) ESP (81) ITA

2003–2023
3Robert Lewandowski Poland373

(312) GER (61) ESP

2010–
4Jimmy Greaves England366

(357) ENG (9) ITA

1957–1971
5Gerd Müller West Germany365

(365) GER

1965–1979
6Steve Bloomer England315

(315) ENG

1892–1914
7Dixie Dean England310

(310) ENG

1924–1938
8Zlatan Ibrahimovic Sweden302

(156) ITA (16) ESP (113) FRA (17) ENG

2004–2023
9Delio Onnis Argentina299

(299) FRA

1971–1986
10Silvio Piola Italy290

(290) ITA

1929–1954
11Gordon Hodgson England288

(288) ENG

1925–1939
12Alan Shearer England283

(283) ENG

1988–2006
13Karim Benzema France281

(43) FRA (238) ESP

2004–2023
14Harry Kane England270

(213) ENG (57) GER

2012–
15Edinson Cavani Uruguay267

(112) ITA (138) FRA (12) ENG (5) ESP

2007–2023
16Charlie Buchan England258

(258) ENG

1912–1928
17David Jack England257

(257) ENG

1920–1938
18Raúl Spain256

(228) ESP (28) GER

1994–2012
19Nat Lofthouse England255

(255) ENG

1946–1960
20Bernard Lacombe France255

(255) FRA

1969–1987
21Telmo Zarra Spain251

(251) ESP

1940–1955
22Francesco Totti Italy250

(250) ITA

1992–2017
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List of players with the most league titles

  • Does not include titles that the player transferred from the winning club at the beginning or middle of the season.[29]
  • The player must played at least one league game for a title to be listed.
More information Rank, Player ...
List of players with the most league titles (10 or more titles)
Rank Player Nationality Titles Itemized Titles Period
1Ryan Giggs Wales13

(13) ENG

1990–2014
2Paco Gento Spain12

(12) ESP

1952–1971
3Lionel Messi Argentina12

(10) ESP (2) FRA

2004–2023
4Thomas Müller Germany12

(12) GER

2008–
5David Alaba Austria12

(10) GER (2) ESP

2010–
6Paul Scholes England11

(11) ENG

1994–2013
7Gianluigi Buffon Italy11

(10) ITA (1) FRA

1995–2021
8Arjen Robben Netherlands11

(2) ENG (1) ESP (8) GER

2004–2019
9Thiago Alcântara Spain11

(4) ESP (7) GER

2008–2024
10Manuel Neuer Germany11

(11) GER

2006–
11Robert Lewandowski Poland11

(10) GER (1) ESP

2010–
12Kingsley Coman France11

(2) FRA (1) ITA (8) GER

2012–
13Pirri Spain10

(10) ESP

1964–1980
14Gary Neville England10

(10) ENG

1992–2011
15Zlatan Ibrahimović Sweden10

(5) ITA (1) ESP (4) FRA

2004–2023
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List of players to have played the Big Five Leagues

The table below show the players who have played in all Big Five Leagues.[30]

Managers

List of managers to have coached the Big Five Leagues

The table below show the managers who have coached in all Big Five Leagues.

More information Manager, England ...
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Carlo Ancelotti is the first and only manager to have won league titles in all Big Five leagues.[31]

See also

Notes

  1. Real Madrid were known as Madrid FC from 1931 until 1941.
  2. Atlético Madrid were known as Atlético Aviación from 1939 until 1947.

References

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