Football League One
From UK Football Wiki
| Football League One | |
| | |
| Country | |
|---|---|
| Founded | 2004 1992–2004 (as Division Two) 1958–1992 (as Division Three) 1921–1958 (as Division Three North/South) 1920–1921 (as Division Three) |
| Number of teams | 24 |
| Promotion to | Championship |
| Relegation to | League Two |
| Levels on pyramid | Level 3 |
| Domestic cup(s) | FA Cup League Cup League Trophy |
| Current champions | Leicester City (2008-09) |
| Website | Official Website |
Football League One (often referred to as League One for short or Coca-Cola Football League 1 for sponsorship reasons) is the second-highest division of The Football League and third-highest division overall in the English football league system.
Football League One was introduced for the 2004–2005 season. It was previously known as the Football League Second Division and prior to the advent of the Premier League, the Football League Third Division.
Contents |
[edit] Structure
There are 24 clubs in Football League One. Each club plays every other club twice (once at home & once away). Three points are awarded for a win, one for a draw and zero for a loss. At the end of the season a table of the final League standings is determined, based on the following criteria in this order: points obtained, goal difference, goals scored, an aggregate of the results between two or more clubs (ranked using the previous three criteria) and, finally, a series of one or more play-off matches.
At the end of each season the top two clubs, together with the winner of the play-offs between the clubs which finished in 3rd–6th position, are promoted to Football League Championship and are replaced by the three clubs that finished at the bottom of that division.
Similarly, the four clubs that finished at the bottom of Football League One are relegated to Football League Two and are replaced by the top three clubs and the club that won the 4th–7th place play-offs in that division.
[edit] Football League One clubs 2008-09
| Club | Finishing position last season |
|---|---|
| Brighton & Hove Albion | 7th |
| Bristol Rovers | 16th |
| Carlisle United | 4th |
| Cheltenham Town | 19th |
| Colchester United | 24th in the Championship |
| Crewe Alexandra | 20th |
| Hartlepool United | 15th |
| Hereford United | 3rd in League Two |
| Huddersfield Town | 10th |
| Leeds United | 5th |
| Leicester City | 22nd in the Championship |
| Leyton Orient | 14th |
| Millwall | 17th |
| MK Dons | 1st in League Two |
| Northampton Town | 9th |
| Oldham Athletic | 8th |
| Peterborough United | 2nd in League Two |
| Scunthorpe United | 23rd in the Championship |
| Southend United | 6th |
| Stockport County | 4th in League Two (play-off winner) |
| Swindon Town | 13th |
| Tranmere Rovers | 11th |
| Walsall | 12th |
| Yeovil Town | 18th |
[edit] Previous seasons
[edit] Winners of Football League One
| Season | Winner | Runner-Up | Promoted Play-Off Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2004–05 | Luton Town | Hull City | Sheffield Wednesday |
| 2005–06 | Southend United | Colchester United | Barnsley |
| 2006–07 | Scunthorpe United | Bristol City | Blackpool |
| 2007–08 | Swansea City | Nottingham Forest | Doncaster Rovers |
| 2008-09 | Leicester City | Peterborough United |
For past winners at this level before 2004, see List of winners of English Football League One and predecessors.
[edit] Play-off results
| Season | Semifinal (1st Leg) | Semifinal (2nd Leg) | Final |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2004-05 | Sheffield Wednesday 1–0 Brentford Hartlepool United 2–0 Tranmere Rovers | Brentford 1–2 Sheffield Wednesday Tranmere Rovers 2–0 Hartlepool United (Hartlepool won 6–5 on penalties, AET) | Sheffield Wednesday 4–2 Hartlepool United {{small|AET}] |
| 2005-06 | Barnsley 0–1 Huddersfield Town | Huddersfield Town 1–3 Barnsley Brentford 0–2 Swansea City | Barnsley 2–2 Swansea City (Barnsley won 4–3 on penalties, AET) |
| 2006-07 | Yeovil Town 0–2 Nottingham Forest Oldham Athletic 1–2 Blackpool | Nottingham Forest 2–5 Yeovil Town AET Blackpool 3–1 Oldham Athletic | Blackpool 2–0 Yeovil Town |
| 2007-08 | Southend United 0-0 Doncaster Rovers Leeds United 1-2 Carlisle United | Doncaster Rovers 5-1 Southend United Carlisle United 0-2 Leeds United | Leeds United 0-1 Doncaster Rovers |
[edit] Relegated teams
[edit] Top Scorers
[edit] Football League One stadia 2008–09
| Home Club | Stadium Name | Capacity |
|---|---|---|
| Leeds United | Elland Road | 40,242 |
| Leicester City | Walkers Stadium | 32,500 |
| Huddersfield Town | Galpharm Stadium | 24,554 |
| MK Dons | stadium:mk | 22,000 |
| Millwall | The New Den | 20,146 |
| Tranmere Rovers | Prenton Park | 16,789 |
| Carlisle United | Brunton Park1 | 16,651 |
| Swindon Town | County Ground | 15,728 |
| Peterborough United | London Road Stadium1 | 15,314 |
| Oldham Athletic | Boundary Park | 13,624 |
| Southend United | Roots Hall | 12,392 |
| Bristol Rovers | Memorial Stadium1 | 11,916 |
| Walsall | The Banks' Stadium | 11,300 |
| Stockport County | Edgeley Park | 10,651 |
| Crewe Alexandra | Alexandra Stadium | 10,118 |
| Colchester United | Colchester Community Stadium | 10,000 |
| Yeovil Town | Huish Park1 | 9,600 |
| Leyton Orient | Brisbane Road | 9,271 |
| Scunthorpe United | Glanford Park1 | 9,088 |
| Brighton & Hove Albion | Withdean Stadium2 | 8,850 |
| Hartlepool United | Victoria Park1 | 7,691 |
| Northampton Town | Sixfields Stadium | 7,653 |
| Hereford United | Edgar Street1 | 7,100 |
| Cheltenham Town | Abbey Business Stadium1 | 7,066 |
1This ground contains terracing
2Not a football-specific ground
[edit] Notes and references
[edit] See also
- 1920–21 (as Football League Division Three)
- 1921–22–1957–58 (as Football League Division Three North/South)
- 1958–59–1992–93 (as Football League Division Three)
- 1992–93–2003–04 (as Football League Division Two)
