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Football League Championship (2004–2016) EFL Championship (2016–present) Country: England: Founded: 1892 Number of teams: 24 (2022–23 season) Current champions: Leicester City (2023–24) Most successful club: Leicester City (8 championships)
Season Champions Runners-up Play-off winners Relegated to League One Relegated from Premier League Promoted from League One Top goal scorers Club Pts Club Pts Club Player Goals 1992–93: Newcastle United: 96 West Ham United: 88 Swindon Town: Brentford Cambridge United Bristol Rovers: Crystal Palace Middlesbrough Nottingham Forest: Stoke City ...
At the end of the season, the top two teams and the winner of the Championship play-offs are promoted to the Premier League and the bottom three teams are relegated to EFL League One. The Football League Championship play-offs is a knock-out competition for the teams finishing the season in third to sixth place with the winner being promoted to ...
The English football champions are the winners of the top-level league in English men's football, which since the 1992–93 season has been called the Premier League. 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 ...
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; List of winners of English Football League Championship and predecessors
EFL League Two (2016–present) Country: England: Founded: 1958 Number of teams: 24 (2023–24 season) Current champions: Stockport County (2023–24) Most successful club: Chesterfield (4 championships)
EFL Championship play-offs From 1990, the format of the final changed to a single match played at a neutral venue, initially the original Wembley Stadium . The first winners of the inaugural one-off final were Swindon Town who defeated Sunderland 1–0 in the final in front of 72,873 spectators. [ 15 ]
The winner of the final receives the eponymous EFL Cup. The EFL Cup is a knockout cup competition in English football organised by and named after the English Football League (EFL). [1] The competition was established in 1960 and is considered to be the second-most important domestic cup competition for English football clubs, after the FA Cup. [2]