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List of English football champions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

List of English football champions
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The English football champions are the annual winners of the top-tier competition in the English football league system. Following the codification of professional football by the Football Association in 1885,[1] the Football League was established in 1888, after meetings initiated by Aston Villa director William McGregor.[2]

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The new league's inaugural season was 1888–89, and the first club to be crowned champions was Preston North End, whose team completed its fixtures unbeaten.[3] In its first four seasons, with only twelve to fourteen clubs involved, the league was a single entity in which all the teams were from the North or the Midlands. Professionalism had been embraced more readily in those areas than in the South of England.[4] The Football League expanded its membership in 1892 when it absorbed the rival Football Alliance. With 28 members, the league was split into two divisions. Most of the former Alliance clubs joined the new Second Division, while the original league became the First Division, with promotion and relegation between the two.[5]

Rules stipulating a maximum wage for players were abolished in 1961. This resulted in a shift of power towards bigger clubs with more financial means.[6] Financial considerations became an even bigger influence from 1992, when the clubs then in the First Division defected to form the FA Premier League, which became the new top tier.[7] A series of progressively larger television contracts has put unprecedented wealth into the hands of top flight clubs.[8]

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List of champions by season

Winning team won the Double (League title and FA Cup)
Winning team also won the European Cup/UEFA Champions League that season
§ Winning team won the Domestic Treble (League title, FA Cup and League Cup)
# Winning team won the Continental Treble (League title, FA Cup and European Cup/Champions League)
  • (In bracket, title count):
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List of champion clubs by titles won

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Clubs that are tied in titles are sorted by the latest date that they won their last title.

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Titles won by club (%)
  1. Liverpool – 20 (15.9%)
  2. Manchester United – 20 (15.9%)
  3. Arsenal – 13 (10.3%)
  4. Manchester City – 10 (7.9%)
  5. Everton – 9 (7.1%)
  6. Aston Villa – 7 (5.6%)
  7. Sunderland – 6 (4.8%)
  8. Chelsea - 6 (4.8%)
  9. Sheffield Wednesday - 4 (3.2%)
  10. Newcastle United - 4 (3.2%)
  11. Blackburn Rovers - 3 (2.4%)
  12. Huddersfield Town - 3 (2.4%)
  13. Wolverhampton Wanderers - 3 (2.4%)
  14. Leeds United - 3 (2.4%)
  15. Preston North End - 2 (1.6%)
  16. Burnley- 2 (1.6%)
  17. Portsmouth - 2 (1.6%)
  18. Tottenham Hotspur - 2 (1.6%)
  19. Derby County - 2 (1.6%)
  20. Sheffield United - 1 (0.8%)
  21. West Bromwich Albion - 1 (0.8%)
  22. Ipswich Town - 1 (0.8%)
  23. Nottingham Forest- 1 (0.8%)
  24. Leicester City - 1 (0.8%)
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See also

Notes

  1. Completed the season unbeaten.
  2. Also won the FA Cup
  3. Sheffield Wednesday were known as The Wednesday until 1929.
  4. Also won the League Cup/EFL Cup.
  5. From the 1981–82 season onwards three points were awarded for a win. Prior to this a win was worth two points.
  6. Also won the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.
  7. Manchester United won a continental treble of the Premier League, FA Cup and UEFA Champions League in 1999.
  8. Also won the FIFA Club World Cup
  9. Manchester City won a domestic treble of the Premier League, FA Cup and EFL Cup in 2019.
  10. Manchester City won a continental treble of the Premier League, FA Cup and UEFA Champions League in 2023.
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References

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