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1 Derby County (C) 42 21 11 10 67 49 1.367 53 Qualification for the European Cup first round: 2 Liverpool: 42 20 11 11 60 39 1.538 51 Qualification for the UEFA Cup first round: 3 Ipswich Town: 42 23 5 14 66 44 1.500 51 4 Everton: 42 16 18 8 56 42 1.333 50 5 Stoke City: 42 17 15 10 64 48 1.333 49 6 Sheffield United: 42 18 13 11 58 51 1.137 49 7 ...
1 Liverpool (C) 42 23 14 5 66 31 2.129 60 Qualification for the European Cup first round: 2 Queens Park Rangers: 42 24 11 7 67 33 2.030 59 Qualification for the UEFA Cup first round: 3 Manchester United: 42 23 10 9 68 42 1.619 56 4 Derby County: 42 21 11 10 75 58 1.293 53 5 Leeds United: 42 21 9 12 65 46 1.413 51 6 Ipswich Town: 42 16 14 12 54 ...
[1] 30 September 1975: Two London clubs, Queens Park Rangers and West Ham United, lead the First Division table at the end of September, a point ahead of Manchester United. Sheffield United are bottom with just three points from ten matches. [1] 30 October 1975: England lose 2–1 to Czechoslovakia in Bratislava in a European Championship ...
From 1992 to 2004, the name Division 1 was given to what had previously been called the Second Division. After the 2003–04 season, the division was renamed the Football League Championship (now EFL Championship). The First Division contained between 12 and 24 clubs, playing each other home and away in a double round robin.
European Cup 1975: Won by FC Bayern München after defeating Leeds United 1–0. Copa Libertadores 1975: Won by Independiente after defeating Unión Española on an aggregate score of 2–0. England: 1975 FA Cup Final: West Ham United 2, Fulham 0. (Alan Taylor 2)
First hat-trick of the season: Luis Ramírez Zapata for Aguila against UES (May 11, 1975) First own goal of the season: Norberto Zafanella for UES (April 9, 1975) Most goals in a match: 9 goals. FAS 5–4 Municipal Limeno (May 1, 1975) Most goals by one team in a match: 7 goals. Aguila 7-1 Sonsonate (April 6, 1975) Most goals in one half by one ...
The 1974–75 FA Cup was the 94th season of the world's oldest football cup competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup, commonly known as the FA Cup. West Ham United won the competition, beating Second Division side Fulham 2–0 in the final at Wembley, London.
Southern League First Division: 42 16 9 17 50 58 41 14 of 22 QR5 — — — G. Reid 17 G. Reid 19 — 1910–11: Southern League First Division: 38 14 9 15 41 42 37 12 of 20 R1 — — Ealing Hospital Cup G. Reid 21 G. Reid 21 — 1911–12: Southern League First Division: 38 12 9 17 60 65 33 14 of 20 R1 — — — Rippon: 17 Rippon 20 ...