Premier League facts for kids
Founded | 20 February 1992 |
---|---|
Country | England |
Confederation | UEFA |
Number of teams | 20 (since 1995–96) |
Level on pyramid | 1 |
Relegation to | EFL Championship |
Domestic cup(s) | |
League cup(s) | EFL Cup |
International cup(s) | |
Current champions | Manchester City (8th title) (2023–24) |
Most championships | Manchester United (13 titles) |
Most appearances | Gareth Barry (653) |
Top goalscorer | Alan Shearer (260) |
TV partners |
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The Premier League is the highest level of the English football league system. Contested by 20 clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the English Football League (EFL). Seasons usually run from August to May, with each team playing 38 matches: two against each other, one home and one away. Most games are played on Saturday and Sunday afternoons, with occasional weekday evening fixtures.
The competition was founded as the FA Premier League on 20 February 1992, following the decision of First Division (the top-tier league from 1888 until 1992) clubs to break away from the English Football League. However, teams may still be relegated to and promoted from the EFL Championship. The Premier League takes advantage of a £5 billion television rights deal, with Sky and BT Group securing the domestic rights to broadcast 128 and 32 games, respectively. This deal will rise to £6.7 billion for the four seasons from 2025 to 2029. The league is projected to earn $7.2 billion in overseas TV rights from 2022 to 2025. The Premier League is a corporation managed by a chief executive, with member clubs acting as shareholders. Clubs were apportioned central payment revenues of £2.4 billion in 2016–17, with a further £343 million in solidarity payments to EFL clubs.
The Premier League is the most-watched sports league in the world, broadcast in 212 territories to 643 million homes, with a potential TV audience of 4.7 billion people. For the 2018–19 season, the average Premier League match attendance was 38,181, second to the German Bundesliga's 43,500, while aggregated attendance across all matches was the highest of any association football league at 14,508,981, and most stadium occupancies are near capacity. As of 2023[update], the Premier League is ranked first in the UEFA coefficient rankings based on performances in European competitions over the past five seasons, ahead of Spain's La Liga. The English top-flight has produced the second-highest number of European Cup / UEFA Champions League titles, with a record six English clubs having won fifteen European championships in total.
Fifty-one clubs have competed in the Premier League since its inception in 1992: 49 from England and two from Wales. Seven of them have won the title: Manchester United (13), Manchester City (8), Chelsea (5), Arsenal (3), Blackburn Rovers (1), Leicester City (1) and Liverpool (1). Manchester United have won the most titles, with thirteen, while Manchester City hold the distinction of having won the most successive titles, with four. Only six clubs have played in every season to date: Arsenal, Chelsea, Everton, Liverpool, Manchester United, and Tottenham Hotspur.
Contents
History
Origins
Despite significant European success in the 1970s and early 1980s, the late 1980s marked a low point for English football. Stadiums were deteriorating, supporters endured poor facilities, hooliganism was rife, and English clubs had been banned from European competition for five years following the Heysel Stadium disaster in 1985. The Football League First Division, the top level of English football since 1888, was behind leagues such as Italy's Serie A and Spain's La Liga in attendance and revenues, and several top English players had moved abroad.
By the turn of the 1990s, the downward trend was starting to reverse. At the 1990 FIFA World Cup, England reached the semi-finals; UEFA, European football's governing body, lifted the five-year ban on English clubs playing in European competitions in 1990, resulting in Manchester United lifting the Cup Winners' Cup in 1991. The Taylor Report on stadium safety standards, which proposed expensive upgrades to create all-seater stadiums in the aftermath of the Hillsborough disaster, was published in January 1990.
During the 1980s, major English clubs began to transform into business ventures, applying commercial principles to club administration to maximize revenue. Martin Edwards of Manchester United, Irving Scholar of Tottenham Hotspur, and David Dein of Arsenal were among the leaders in this transformation. The commercial imperative led to the top clubs seeking to increase their power and revenue: the clubs in Division One threatened to break away from the Football League, and in doing so, they managed to increase their voting power and gain a more favorable financial arrangement, taking a 50% share of all television and sponsorship income in 1986. They demanded that television companies should pay more for their coverage of football matches, and revenue from television grew in importance. The Football League received £6.3 million for a two-year agreement in 1986, but by 1988, in a deal agreed with ITV, the price rose to £44 million over four years, with the leading clubs taking 75% of the cash. According to Scholar, who was involved in the negotiations of television deals, each of the First Division clubs received only around £25,000 per year from television rights before 1986, this increased to around £50,000 in the 1986 negotiation, then to £600,000 in 1988. The 1988 negotiations were conducted under the threat of ten clubs leaving to form a "super league," but they were eventually persuaded to stay, with the top clubs taking the lion's share of the deal. The negotiations also convinced the bigger clubs that, in order to receive enough votes, they needed to take the whole of the First Division with them instead of a smaller "super league". By the beginning of the 1990s, the big clubs again considered breaking away, especially now that they had to fund the cost of stadium upgrades as proposed by the Taylor Report.
In 1990, the managing director of London Weekend Television (LWT), Greg Dyke, met with the representatives of the "big five" football clubs in England (Manchester United, Liverpool, Tottenham Hotspur, Everton, and Arsenal) over a dinner. The meeting was to pave the way for a breakaway from The Football League. Dyke believed that it would be more lucrative for LWT if only the larger clubs in the country were featured on national television and wanted to establish whether the clubs would be interested in a larger share of television rights money. The five clubs agreed with the suggestion and decided to press ahead with it; however, the league would have no credibility without the backing of The Football Association, and so David Dein of Arsenal held talks to see whether the FA were receptive to the idea. The FA did not have an amicable relationship with the Football League at the time and considered it a way to weaken the Football League's position. The FA released a report in June 1991, Blueprint for the Future of Football, that supported the plan for the Premier League, with the FA as the ultimate authority that would oversee the breakaway league.
Foundation (1990s)
Season | Champions | Runners-up |
---|---|---|
1992–93 | Manchester United | Aston Villa |
1993–94 | Manchester United | Blackburn Rovers |
1994–95 | Blackburn Rovers | Manchester United |
1995–96 | Manchester United | Newcastle United |
1996–97 | Manchester United | Newcastle United |
1997–98 | Arsenal | Manchester United |
1998–99 | Manchester United | Arsenal |
1999–2000 | Manchester United | Arsenal |
Double winners Treble winners |
At the close of the 1990–1991 season, a proposal was tabled for the establishment of a new league that would bring more money into the game overall. The Founder Members Agreement, signed on 17 July 1991, by the game's top-flight clubs, established the basic principles for setting up the FA Premier League. The newly formed top division was to have commercial independence from the Football Association and the Football League, giving the FA Premier League license to negotiate its own broadcast and sponsorship agreements. The argument given at the time was that the extra income would allow English clubs to compete with teams across Europe. Although Dyke played a significant role in the creation of the Premier League, he and ITV (of which LWT was part) lost out in the bidding for broadcast rights: BSkyB won with a bid of £304 million over five years, with the BBC awarded the highlights package broadcast on Match of the Day.
Luton Town, Notts County, and West Ham United were the three teams relegated from the old First Division at the end of the 1991–92 season, and did not take part in the inaugural Premier League season. They were replaced by Ipswich Town, Middlesbrough, and Blackburn Rovers, promoted from the old Second Division. The 22 First Division clubs resigned en masse from the Football League in 1992, and on May 27 that year, the FA Premier League was formed as a limited company, working out of an office at the Football Association's then headquarters in Lancaster Gate. The 22 inaugural members of the new Premier League were:
- Arsenal
- Aston Villa
- Blackburn Rovers
- Chelsea
- Coventry City
- Crystal Palace
- Everton
- Ipswich Town
- Leeds United
- Liverpool
- Manchester City
- Manchester United
- Middlesbrough
- Norwich City
- Nottingham Forest
- Oldham Athletic
- Queens Park Rangers
- Sheffield United
- Sheffield Wednesday
- Southampton
- Tottenham Hotspur
- Wimbledon
This meant a breakup of the 104-year-old Football League that had operated until then with four divisions; the Premier League would operate with a single division and the Football League with three. There was no change in competition format; the same number of teams competed in the top flight, and promotion and relegation between the Premier League and the new First Division remained the same as the old First and Second Divisions, with three teams relegated from the league and three promoted.
The league held its first season in 1992–93. It was composed of 22 clubs for that season (reduced to 20 in the 1995–96 season). The first Premier League goal was scored by Brian Deane of Sheffield United in a 2–1 win against Manchester United.
Manchester United won the inaugural edition of the new league, ending a twenty-six year wait to be crowned champions of England. Bolstered by this breakthrough, United immediately became the competition's dominant team, winning seven of the first nine trophies, two League and FA Cup 'doubles' and a European treble, initially under a team of hardened veterans such as Bryan Robson, Steve Bruce, Paul Ince, Mark Hughes, and Eric Cantona, before Cantona, Bruce, and Roy Keane led a young, dynamic new team filled with the Class of 92, a group of young players including David Beckham who came through the Manchester United Academy.
Between 1993 and 1997, Blackburn Rovers and Newcastle United came close to challenging Manchester United's early dominance; Blackburn won the 1994–95 FA Premier League and Newcastle led the title charge over United for much of the 1995–96 season. As the decade closed, Arsenal replicated Manchester United's dominance by winning the League and FA Cup double in 1997–98, and together the "Big 2" would form a duopoly over the league between 1997 and 2003.
"Big Four" dominance (2000–10)
Season | ARS | CHE | LIV | MUN |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000–01 | 2 | 6 | 3 | 1 |
2001–02 | 1 | 6 | 2 | 3 |
2002–03 | 2 | 4 | 5 | 1 |
2003–04 | 1 | 2 | 4 | 3 |
2004–05 | 2 | 1 | 5 | 3 |
2005–06 | 4 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
2006–07 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 1 |
2007–08 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 1 |
2008–09 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
2009–10 | 3 | 1 | 7 | 2 |
Top four | 10 | 8 | 7 | 10 |
out of 10 | ||||
League champions Champions League group stage Champions League third qualifying / play-off round Champions League first qualifying round UEFA Cup / Europa League |
The 2000s saw the rise of Liverpool alongside the "Big 2", followed by Chelsea finally breaking the Arsenal-Man United duopoly by winning the league in 2004–05. The dominance of the now so-called "Big Four" clubs – Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, and Manchester United – saw them finish at the top of the table for most of the decade, thereby guaranteeing qualification for the UEFA Champions League. Only three other clubs managed to qualify for the competition during this period: Newcastle United (2001–02 and 2002–03), Everton (2004–05), and Tottenham Hotspur (2009–10) – each occupying the final Champions League spot, with the exception of Newcastle in the 2002–03 season, who finished third.
Following the 2003–04 season, Arsenal acquired the nickname "The Invincibles" as it became the first and, to date, only club to complete a Premier League campaign without losing a single game.
In May 2008, Kevin Keegan stated that "Big Four" dominance threatened the division: "This league is in danger of becoming one of the most boring but great leagues in the world." Premier League chief executive Richard Scudamore said in defence: "There are a lot of different tussles that go on in the Premier League depending on whether you're at the top, in the middle, or at the bottom that make it interesting."
Between 2005 and 2012, there was a Premier League representative in seven of the eight Champions League finals, with only the "Big Four" clubs reaching that stage. Liverpool (2005), Manchester United (2008), and Chelsea (2012) won the competition during this period, with Arsenal (2006), Liverpool (2007), Chelsea (2008), and Manchester United (2009 and 2011) all losing Champions League finals. Leeds United were the only non-"Big Four" side to reach the semi-finals of the Champions League, in the 2000–01 season. There were three Premier League teams in the Champions League semi-finals in 2006–07, 2007–08, and 2008–09, a feat only ever achieved five times (along with Serie A in 2002–03 and La Liga in 1999–2000).
Additionally, between the 1999–2000 and 2009–10 seasons, four Premier League sides reached the UEFA Cup or Europa League finals, with only Liverpool managing to win the competition in 2001. Arsenal (2000), Middlesbrough (2006), and Fulham (2010) all lost their finals.
Although the group's dominance was reduced to a degree after this period with the emergence of Manchester City and Tottenham, in terms of all-time Premier League points won, they remain clear by some margin. As of the end of the 2021–22 season – the 27th season of the Premier League – Liverpool, in fourth place in the all-time points table, were over 300 points ahead of the next team, Tottenham Hotspur. They are also the only teams to maintain a winning average of over 50% throughout their entire Premier League tenures.
Emergence of the "Big Six" (2010s)
Season | ARS | CHE | LIV | MCI | MUN | TOT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 4 | 2 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
2011–12 | 3 | 6 | 8 | 1 | 2 | 4 |
2012–13 | 4 | 3 | 7 | 2 | 1 | 5 |
2013–14 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 7 | 6 |
2014–15 | 3 | 1 | 6 | 2 | 4 | 5 |
2015–16 | 2 | 10 | 8 | 4 | 5 | 3 |
2016–17 | 5 | 1 | 4 | 3 | 6 | 2 |
2017–18 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
2018–19 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 6 | 4 |
2019–20 | 8 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 6 |
Top four | 6 | 7 | 5 | 10 | 6 | 5 |
Top six | 9 | 9 | 7 | 10 | 9 | 10 |
out of 10 | ||||||
League champions Champions League group stage Champions League play-off round Europa League |
The years following 2009 marked a shift in the structure of the "Big Four" with Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester City both breaking into the top four places on a regular basis, turning the "Big Four" into the "Big Six". In the 2009–10 season, Tottenham finished fourth and became the first team to break into the top four since Everton five years prior. Criticism of the gap between an elite group of "super clubs" and the majority of the Premier League has continued, nevertheless, due to their increasing ability to spend more than the other Premier League clubs. Manchester City won the title in the 2011–12 season, becoming the first club outside the "Big Four" to win since Blackburn Rovers in the 1994–95 season. That season also saw two of the "Big Four" (Chelsea and Liverpool) finish outside the top four places for the first time since that season.
With only four UEFA Champions League qualifying places available in the league, greater competition for qualification now exists, albeit from a narrow base of six clubs. In the five seasons following the 2011–12 campaign, Manchester United and Liverpool both found themselves outside of the top four three times, while Chelsea finished 10th in the 2015–16 season. Arsenal finished 5th in 2016–17, ending their record run of 20 consecutive top-four finishes.
In the 2015–16 season, underdogs Leicester City won the Premier League. With 5000/1 odds of winning the league at the beginning of the season, Leicester became the first club outside the "Big Six" to win the Premier League since Blackburn Rovers in the 1994–95 season.
Off the pitch, the "Big Six" wield significant financial power and influence, with these clubs arguing that they should be entitled to a greater share of revenue due to the greater stature of their clubs globally and the attractive football they aim to play. Objectors argue that the egalitarian revenue structure in the Premier League helps to maintain a competitive league which is vital for its future success. The 2016–17 Deloitte Football Money League report showed the financial disparity between the "Big Six" and the rest of the division. All of the "Big Six" had revenues greater than €350 million, with Manchester United having the largest revenue in the league at €676.3 million. Leicester City was the closest club to the "Big Six" in terms of revenue, recording a figure of €271.1 million for that season – helped by participation in the Champions League. The eighth-largest revenue generator, West Ham – who did not play in European competition – had revenues of €213.3 million, less than half of those of the club with the fifth-largest revenue, Liverpool (€424.2 million). A substantial part of the clubs' revenue by then came from television broadcast deals, with the biggest clubs each taking from around £150 million to nearly £200 million in the 2016–17 season from such deals. In Deloitte's 2019 report, all the "Big Six" were in the top ten of the world's richest clubs.
Club | Top 6 finishes |
---|---|
Manchester City | 10 |
Tottenham Hotspur | 10 |
Arsenal | 9 |
Chelsea | 9 |
Manchester United | 9 |
Liverpool | 7 |
Everton | 2 |
Leicester City | 2 |
Newcastle United | 1 |
Southampton | 1 |
2020s
Season | ARS | CHE | LIV | MCI | MUN | TOT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020–21 | 8 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 7 |
2021–22 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 6 | 4 |
2022–23 | 2 | 12 | 5 | 1 | 3 | 8 |
2023–24 | 2 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 8 | 5 |
Top four | 2 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 1 |
Top six | 3 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 2 |
out of 4 | ||||||
League champions Champions League group stage Europa League Europa Conference League |
From the 2019–20 season, video assistant referees were used in the league.
Project Big Picture was announced in October 2020 that described a plan to reunite the top Premier League clubs with the English Football League, proposed by leading Premier League clubs Manchester United and Liverpool. It has been criticised by the Premier League leadership and the UK government's Department for Culture, Media and Sport.
On 26 April 2021, play was stopped during a match between Leicester City and Crystal Palace to allow players Wesley Fofana and Cheikhou Kouyaté to break Ramadan fast. It is believed to be the first time in Premier League history that a game was paused to allow Muslim players to eat and drink after the sun had set in accordance with the rules of the faith.
The 2022–23 season was the first to take a six-week break between November and December 2022 to allow for the first winter World Cup, with a return for the Boxing Day fixtures. The Premier League players decided to take the knee at selected "significant moments". They assured to "remain resolutely committed to eradicate racial prejudice". That season was notable for Newcastle United and Brighton & Hove Albion breaking the traditional "Big Six" as they finished fourth and sixth, respectively, while "Big Six" teams Tottenham and Chelsea finished eighth and twelfth. Meanwhile, 2015–16 champions Leicester City were relegated, becoming the second league-winning club to suffer relegation since 1992, after Blackburn Rovers in the 2011–12 season.
In the 2023–24 season, non-Big Six club Aston Villa finished 4th and qualified for the 2024–25 UEFA Champions League.
Club | Top 6 finishes |
---|---|
Liverpool | 4 |
Manchester City | 4 |
Manchester United | 3 |
Arsenal | 3 |
Chelsea | 3 |
Tottenham Hotspur | 2 |
Brighton & Hove Albion | 1 |
Leicester City | 1 |
Newcastle United | 1 |
West Ham United | 1 |
Aston Villa | 1 |
Corporate structure
The Football Association Premier League Ltd (FAPL) is operated as a corporation and is owned by the 20 member clubs. Each club is a shareholder, with one vote each on issues such as rule changes and contracts. The clubs select a chairman, chief executive, and board of directors to oversee the daily operations of the league. The Football Association is not directly involved in the day-to-day operations of the Premier League, but has veto power as a special shareholder during the election of the chairman and chief executive and when new rules are adopted by the league.
The current chief executive is Richard Masters, who was appointed in December 2019. The chair is currently Alison Brittain, who took over the role in early 2023.
The Premier League sends representatives to UEFA's European Club Association, the number of clubs and the clubs themselves chosen according to UEFA coefficients. For the 2023–24 season, the Premier League has 13 representatives in the Association: Arsenal, Aston Villa, Brighton & Hove Albion, Chelsea, Everton, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, Newcastle United, Nottingham Forest, Tottenham Hotspur, West Ham United, and Wolverhampton Wanderers. The European Club Association is responsible for electing three members to UEFA's Club Competitions Committee, which is involved in the operations of UEFA competitions such as the Champions League and UEFA Europa League.
Office holders | |||
---|---|---|---|
Office | No. | Name | Tenure |
Chief Executive | 1 | Rick Parry | 1991–1997 |
2 | Richard Scudamore | 1999–2018 | |
3 | Richard Masters | 2019– | |
Chair | 1 | Sir John Quinton | 1991–1999 |
2 | Dave Richards | 1999–2013 | |
3 | Anthony Fry | 2013–2014 | |
4 | Richard Scudamore | 2014–2018 | |
5 | Gary Hoffman | 2020–2022 | |
6 | Alison Brittain | 2023– |
Competition format
[The Premier League] is very tough and is different. If you compare this league to another league, it's like playing another sport.
In [The Premier League] you never really know what is going to happen, there is very little between the teams.
Competition
There are 20 clubs in the Premier League. During the course of a season (from August to May) each club plays the others twice (a double round-robin system), once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponents, for 38 games. Teams receive three points for a win and one point for a draw. No points are awarded for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, then goal difference, and then goals scored. If still equal, teams are deemed to occupy the same position. If there is a tie for the championship, for relegation, or for qualification to other competitions, the head-to-head record between the tied teams is taken into consideration (points scored in the matches between the teams, followed by away goals in those matches.) If two teams are still tied, a play-off match at a neutral venue decides rank.
Promotion and relegation
A system of promotion and relegation exists between the Premier League and the EFL Championship. The three lowest placed teams in the Premier League are relegated to the Championship, and the top two teams from the Championship promoted to the Premier League, with an additional team promoted after a series of play-offs involving the third, fourth, fifth and sixth placed clubs. The number of clubs was reduced from 22 to 20 in 1995, when four teams were relegated from the league and only two teams promoted. The top flight had only been expanded to 22 teams at the start of the 1991–92 season – the year prior to the formation of the Premier League.
On 8 June 2006, FIFA requested that all major European leagues, including Italy's Serie A and Spain's La Liga, be reduced to 18 teams by the start of the 2007–08 season. The Premier League responded by announcing their intention to resist such a reduction. Ultimately, the 2007–08 season kicked off again with 20 teams.
Video Assistant Referee
Video assistant referee (VAR), was introduced to the Premier League at the beginning of the 2019–20 season. It uses technology and officials to assist the referee in making decisions on the pitch. However, its use has been met with mixed receptions from fans and pundits, with some praising its accuracy while others criticise its impact on the flow of the game and consistency of decision-making.
The on-field referee still makes the final decision, but VAR can assist the referee in the decision-making process. VAR can only be used for four types of decisions: goals, penalty decisions, direct red card incidents, and cases of mistaken identity. VAR officials review the video footage and communicate with the on-field referee via a headset. The VAR officials are located in a central control room, which is equipped with multiple camera angles and the ability to replay footage at various speeds.
A study evaluating fan reception of VAR in the Premier League was made by Otto Kolbinger and Melanie Knopp and was done by analysing Twitter data. The researchers used sentiment analysis to measure the overall positive or negative attitudes towards VAR, as well as topic modelling to identify specific issues that fans are discussing related to VAR. The study found that the reception of VAR on Twitter is largely negative, with fans expressing frustration and criticism of the technology's impact on the flow of the game and the inconsistency of decisions. The researchers also identified specific issues, such as handball and offside decisions, that fans are particularly critical of. The study concludes that VAR has not been well received by fans in the Premier League, and that efforts to improve the technology and increase transparency in decision-making are needed to address these concerns.
Clubs
Fifty-one clubs have played in the Premier League from its inception in 1992, up to and including the 2023–24 season.
Champions
Club | Winners | Runners-up | Winning seasons |
---|---|---|---|
Manchester United | 13 | 7 | 1992–93, 1993–94, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1998–99, 1999–2000, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2010–11, 2012–13 |
Manchester City | 8 | 3 | 2011–12, 2013–14, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2020–21, 2021–22, 2022–23, 2023–24 |
Chelsea | 5 | 4 | 2004–05, 2005–06, 2009–10, 2014–15, 2016–17 |
Arsenal | 3 | 8 | 1997–98, 2001–02, 2003–04 |
Liverpool | 1 | 5 | 2019–20 |
Blackburn Rovers | 1 | 1 | 1994–95 |
Leicester City | 1 | 0 | 2015–16 |
Italics indicate former champions that are currently outside the Premier League (Blackburn Rovers).
2023–24 season
Twenty clubs are competing in the 2023–24 season – top seventeen from the previous season and three promoted from the Championship.
2023–24 Club |
2022–23 Position |
First season in top division |
First season in Premier League |
Seasons in top division |
Seasons in Premier League |
First season of current spell in top division |
No. of seasons of current spell in Premier League |
Top division titles |
Most recent top division title |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arsenal | 2nd | 1904–05 | 1992–93 | 107 | 32 | 1919–20 (105 seasons) | 32 | 13 | 2003–04 |
Aston Villa | 7th | 1888–89 | 1992–93 | 110 | 29 | 2019–20 (5 seasons) | 5 | 7 | 1980–81 |
Bournemouth | 15th | 2015–16 | 2015–16 | 7 | 7 | 2022–23 (2 seasons) | 2 | 0 | – |
Brentford | 9th | 1935–36 | 2021–22 | 8 | 3 | 2021–22 (3 seasons) | 3 | 0 | – |
Brighton & Hove Albion | 6th | 1979–80 | 2017–18 | 11 | 7 | 2017–18 (7 seasons) | 7 | 0 | – |
Burnley | EFL) | 1st (1888–89 | 2009–10 | 60 | 8 | 2023–24 (1 season) | 1 | 2 | 1959–60 |
Chelsea | 12th | 1907–08 | 1992–93 | 89 | 32 | 1989–90 (35 seasons) | 32 | 6 | 2016–17 |
Crystal Palace | 11th | 1969–70 | 1992–93 | 24 | 15 | 2013–14 (11 seasons) | 11 | 0 | – |
Everton | 17th | 1888–89 | 1992–93 | 121 | 32 | 1954–55 (70 seasons) | 32 | 9 | 1986–87 |
Fulham | 10th | 1949–50 | 2001–02 | 29 | 17 | 2022–23 (2 seasons) | 2 | 0 | – |
Liverpool | 5th | 1894–95 | 1992–93 | 109 | 32 | 1962–63 (62 seasons) | 32 | 19 | 2019–20 |
Luton Town | EFL) | 3rd (1955–56 | 2023–24 | 17 | 1 | 2023–24 (1 season) | 1 | 0 | – |
Manchester City | 1st | 1899–1900 | 1992–93 | 95 | 27 | 2002–03 (22 seasons) | 22 | 10 | 2023–24 |
Manchester United | 3rd | 1892–93 | 1992–93 | 99 | 32 | 1975–76 (49 seasons) | 32 | 20 | 2012–13 |
Newcastle United | 4th | 1898–99 | 1993–94 | 92 | 29 | 2017–18 (7 seasons) | 7 | 4 | 1926–27 |
Nottingham Forest | 16th | 1892–93 | 1992–93 | 58 | 7 | 2022–23 (2 seasons) | 2 | 1 | 1977–78 |
Sheffield United | EFL) | 2nd (1893–94 | 1992–93 | 63 | 6 | 2023–24 (1 season) | 1 | 1 | 1897–98 |
Tottenham Hotspur | 8th | 1909–10 | 1992–93 | 89 | 32 | 1978–79 (46 seasons) | 32 | 2 | 1960–61 |
West Ham United | 14th | 1923–24 | 1993–94 | 66 | 28 | 2012–13 (12 seasons) | 12 | 0 | – |
Wolverhampton Wanderers | 13th | 1888–89 | 2003–04 | 69 | 10 | 2018–19 (6 seasons) | 6 | 3 | 1958–59 |
- Leicester City, Leeds United, and Southampton were relegated to the EFL Championship for the 2023–24 season, while Burnley, Sheffield United and Luton Town, as winners, runners-up and play-off final winners, respectively, were promoted from the 2022–23 season.
- Only three clubs have remained in the Premier League since their first promotion: Brentford, Brighton & Hove Albion and Luton Town, who have been in 3, 7 and 1 season(s) (out of 32), respectively.
Non-English clubs
In 2011, after Swansea City gained promotion, a Welsh club participated in the Premier League for the first time. The first Premier League match to be played outside England was Swansea City's home match at the Liberty Stadium against Wigan Athletic on 20 August 2011. The number of Welsh clubs in the Premier League increased to two in 2013–14, as Cardiff City gained promotion, but they were relegated after their maiden season. Cardiff were promoted again in 2017–18 but the number of Welsh clubs remained the same for the 2018–19 Premier League season, as Swansea City had been relegated from the Premier League in 2017–18. Following Cardiff City's relegation after the 2018–19 season, there are currently no Welsh clubs participating in the Premier League.
Because they are members of the Football Association of Wales (FAW), the question of whether clubs like Swansea should represent England or Wales in European competitions has caused long-running discussions in UEFA. Swansea took one of England's three available places in the Europa League in 2013–14 by winning the League Cup in 2012–13. The right of Welsh clubs to take up such English places was in doubt until UEFA clarified the matter in March 2012, allowing them to participate.
Participation in the Premier League by some Scottish or Irish clubs has sometimes been discussed, but without result. The idea came closest to reality in 1998, when Wimbledon received Premier League approval to relocate to Dublin, Ireland, but the move was blocked by the Football Association of Ireland. Additionally, the media occasionally discusses the idea that Scotland's two biggest teams, Celtic and Rangers, should or will take part in the Premier League, but nothing has come of these discussions.
International competitions
Qualification for European competitions
Qualification criteria for 2024–25
The top four teams in the Premier League qualify automatically for the subsequent season's UEFA Champions League league stage. The champions of the Champions League and UEFA Europa League may earn an additional qualification for the subsequent season's Champions League league stage if did not finish in the top four. If this means six Premier League teams qualify, then the fourth-placed team in the Premier League is instead entered in the Europa League, as any single nation is limited to a maximum of five teams in the Champions League. However, starting from 2024–25 UEFA Champions League there's additional berth for two best associations in the previous season's ranking, which may result in a maximum of 6 teams from one assiociation in the Champions League.
The fifth-placed team in the Premier League, as well as the winners of the FA Cup, qualify for the subsequent season's Europa League group stage, but if the winner of the FA Cup also finished in the top five places in the Premier League or has won one of UEFA's major tournaments, then this place reverts to the team that finished sixth. The winner of the EFL Cup qualifies for the subsequent season's UEFA Europa Conference League, but if the winner had already qualified for a UEFA competition via their performance in another competition, then this place reverts to the team that finished sixth in the Premier League, or seventh if the FA Cup result had already caused the sixth-placed team to qualify.
The number of places allocated to English clubs in UEFA competitions is dependent upon the position the country holds in the UEFA coefficient rankings, which are calculated based on the performance of teams in UEFA competitions over the previous five years. Currently, England is ranked first, ahead of Spain.
As of 14 December 2023, the coefficients for are as follows (only top five European leagues are shown):
Ranking | Member association (L: League, C: Cup, LC: League Cup) |
Coefficient | Teams | Places in 2024–25 season | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | 2023 | Mvmt | 2019–20 | 2020–21 | 2021–22 | 2022–23 | 2023–24 | Total | UCL | UEL | UECL | Total | ||
1 | 1 | – | England (L, C, LC) | 18.571 | 24.357 | 21.000 | 23.000 | 13.625 | 110.553 | 6/8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 7 |
2 | 2 | – | Spain (L, C) | 18.928 | 19.500 | 18.428 | 16.571 | 12.687 | 86.114 | 6/8 | ||||
3 | 4 | +1 | Italy (L, C) | 14.928 | 16.285 | 15.714 | 22.357 | 14.000 | 83.284 | 7/7 | ||||
4 | 3 | –1 | Germany (L, C) | 18.714 | 15.214 | 16.214 | 17.125 | 13.642 | 80.909 | 6/7 | ||||
5 | 5 | – | France (L, C) | 11.666 | 7.916 | 18.416 | 12.583 | 11.583 | 62.164 | 6/6 |
Previous seasons
An exception to the usual European qualification system happened in 2005, after Liverpool won the Champions League the season before, but did not finish in a Champions League qualification place in the Premier League. UEFA gave special dispensation for Liverpool to enter the Champions League, giving England five qualifiers. The governing body subsequently ruled that the defending champions qualify for the competition the following year regardless of their domestic league placing. However, for those leagues with four entrants in the Champions League, this meant that if the Champions League winners finished outside the top four in its domestic league, it would qualify at the expense of the fourth-placed team. At that time, no association could have more than four entrants in the Champions League. This occurred in 2012, when Chelsea – who had won the Champions League that summer, but finished sixth in the league – qualified for the 2012–13 Champions League in place of Tottenham Hotspur, who went into the Europa League.
From 2015–16, the Europa League champions qualify for the Champions League, increasing the maximum number of participants per country to five. This took effect in England in 2016–17, when Manchester United finished sixth in the Premier League and won the Europa League, giving England five Champions League entrants for 2017–18. In these instances, any Europa League berth vacated is not handed down to the next-best Premier League finisher outside of a qualifying place. If both Champions League and Europa League winners are of the same association and both finish outside the top four, then the fourth-placed team is transferred to the Europa League.
Performance in international competition
With 48 continental trophies won, English clubs are the third-most successful in European football, behind Italy (49) and Spain (65). In the top-tier UEFA Champions League, a record six English clubs have won a total of 15 titles and lost a further 11 finals, behind Spanish clubs with 19 and 11, respectively. In the second-tier UEFA Europa League, English clubs are also second, with nine victories and eight losses in the finals. In the former second-tier UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, English teams won a record eight titles and had a further five finalists. In the non-UEFA organized Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, English clubs provided four winners and four runners-up, the second-most behind Spain with six and three, respectively. In the newly created third-tier UEFA Europa Conference League, English clubs have won a joint-record one title so far. In the former fourth-tier UEFA Intertoto Cup, England won four titles and had a further final appearance, placing it fifth in the rankings, although English clubs were notorious for treating the tournament with disdain, either sending "B" squads or withdrawing from it altogether. In the one-off UEFA Super Cup, England has ten winners and ten runners-up, the second-most behind Spain with 16 and 15, respectively. Similarly to the Intertoto Cup, English teams did not take the former Intercontinental Cup seriously enough, despite its international status of the Club World Championship. They a made a total of six appearances in the one-off competition, winning only one of them, and withdrew a further three times. English clubs have won the FIFA-organized Club World Cup four times, tied for the second-most with Brazil, and behind only Spain, with eight.
Sponsorship
After an inaugural season with no sponsorship, the Premier League was sponsored by Carling from 1993 until 2001, during which time it was known as the FA Carling Premiership. In 2001, a new sponsorship deal with Barclaycard saw the league rebranded the FA Barclaycard Premiership, which was changed to the FA Barclays Premiership in time for the 2004–05 season.
For the 2007–08 season, the league was rebranded the Barclays Premier League.
Period | Sponsor | Brand |
---|---|---|
1992–1993 | No sponsor | FA Premier League |
1993–2001 | Carling | FA Carling Premiership |
2001–2004 | Barclaycard | FA Barclaycard Premiership |
2004–2007 | Barclays | FA Barclays Premiership |
2007–2016 | Barclays Premier League | |
2016–present | No sponsor | Premier League |
Barclays' deal with the Premier League expired at the end of the 2015–16 season. The FA announced on 4 June 2015 that it would not pursue any further title sponsorship deals for the Premier League, arguing that they wanted to build a "clean" brand for the competition more in line with those of major U.S. sports leagues.
As well as sponsorship for the league itself, the Premier League has a number of official partners and suppliers. The official ball supplier for the league is Nike who have had the contract since the 2000–01 season when they took over from Mitre. Under its Merlin brand, Topps held the licence to produce collectables for the Premier League between 1994 and 2019 including stickers (for their sticker album) and trading cards. Launched in the 2007–08 season, Topps' Match Attax, the official Premier League trading card game, is the best selling boys collectable in the UK, and is also the biggest selling sports trading card game in the world. In October 2018, Panini were awarded the licence to produce collectables from the 2019–20 season. The chocolate company Cadbury has been the official snack partner of the Premier League since 2017, and sponsored the Golden Boot, Golden Glove and Playmaker of the Season awards from the 2017–18 season to 2019–20 season. The Coca-Cola Company (under its Coca-Cola Zero Sugar product line) sponsored these awards during the 2020–21 season with Castrol being the current sponsor as of the 2021–22 season.
Finances
The Premier League has the highest revenue of any association football league in the world, with total club revenues of €2.48 billion in 2009–10. In 2013–14, due to improved television revenues and cost controls, the Premier League clubs collectively made a net profit in excess of £78 million, exceeding all other football leagues. In 2010 the Premier League was awarded the Queen's Award for Enterprise in the International Trade category for its outstanding contribution to international trade and the value it brings to English football and the United Kingdom's broadcasting industry.
The Premier League includes some of the richest football clubs in the world. Deloitte's "Football Money League" listed seven Premier League clubs in the top 20 for the 2009–10 season, and all 20 clubs were in the top 40 globally by the end of the 2013–14 season, largely as a result of increased broadcasting revenue. In 2019, the league generated around £3.1 billion per year in domestic and international television rights.
Premier League clubs agreed in principle in December 2012, to radical new cost controls. The two proposals consist of a break-even rule and a cap on the amount clubs can increase their wage bill by each season. With the new television deals on the horizon, momentum has been growing to find ways of preventing the majority of the cash going straight to players and agents.
Central payments for the 2016–17 season amounted to £2,398,515,773 across the 20 clubs, with each team receiving a flat participation fee of £35,301,989 and additional payments for TV broadcasts (£1,016,690 for general UK rights to match highlights, £1,136,083 for each live UK broadcast of their games and £39,090,596 for all overseas rights), commercial rights (a flat fee of £4,759,404) and a notional measure of "merit" which was based upon final league position. The merit component was a nominal sum of £1,941,609 multiplied by each finishing place, counted from the foot of the table (e.g., Burnley finished 16th in May 2017, five places counting upwards, and received 5 × £1,941,609 = £9,708,045 merit payment).
Relegation
Since its split with the Football League, established clubs in the Premier League have a funding disparity from counterparts in lower leagues. Revenue from television rights between the leagues has played a part in this.
Promoted teams have found it difficult to avoid relegation in their first Premier League season. One Premier League newcomer has been relegated back to the Football League every season, save the 2001–02, 2011–12, 2017–18 & 2022–23 seasons. In the 1997–98 season, all three promoted clubs were relegated by the season's end.
The Premier League distributes a portion of its television revenue as "parachute payments" to relegated clubs for adjustment to television revenue loss. The average Premier League team receives £41 million while the average Championship club receives £2 million. Starting with the 2013–14 season, these payments are in excess of £60 million over four seasons. Critics maintain that the payments widen the gap between teams that have reached the Premier League and those that have not, leading to the common occurrence of teams "bouncing back" soon after their relegation.
Clubs which have failed to win immediate promotion back to the Premier League have seen financial problems, in some cases administration or liquidation. Further relegations down the footballing ladder have occurred for multiple clubs unable to cope with the gap.
Stadiums
As of the 2023–24 season, Premier League football has been played in 61 stadiums since the formation of the division. The Hillsborough disaster in 1989 and the subsequent Taylor Report saw a recommendation that standing terraces should be abolished. As a result, all stadiums in the Premier League are all-seater. Since the formation of the Premier League, football grounds in England have seen constant improvements to capacity and facilities, with some clubs moving to new-build stadiums. Eleven stadiums that have seen Premier League football have now been demolished. The stadiums for the 2023–24 season show a large disparity in capacity. For example, Old Trafford, the home of Manchester United, has a capacity of 74,031 while Dean Court, the home of Bournemouth, has a capacity of 11,307. The combined total capacity of the Premier League in the 2023–24 season is 787,002 with an average capacity of 39,350.
Stadium attendances are a significant source of regular income for Premier League clubs. For the 2022–23 season, average attendances across the league clubs were 40,235 for Premier League matches with an aggregate attendance of 15,289,340. This represents an increase of 19,109 from the average attendance of 21,126 recorded in the Premier League's first season (1992–93). However, during the 1992–93 season, the capacities of most stadiums were reduced as clubs replaced terraces with seats in order to meet the Taylor Report's 1994–95 deadline for all-seater stadiums. The 2022–23 season also set a competition record for total attendance with more than 15 million spectators, with average attendance also reaching record levels, surpassing the previous record of 39,989 set in the 2021–22 season, which in turn broke over 70 years old record set in 1948–49 season.
Managers
I have never known this level before. Of course, there are managers in Germany, Italy, and Spain, but in the Premier League, these are the best managers, the elite managers. The quality, the preparation. The level is so high.
Managers in the Premier League are involved in the day-to-day running of the team, including the training, team selection and player acquisition. Their influence varies from club-to-club and is related to the ownership of the club and the relationship of the manager with fans. Managers are required to have a UEFA Pro Licence which is the final coaching qualification available, and follows the completion of the UEFA 'B' and 'A' Licences. The UEFA Pro Licence is required by every person who wishes to manage a club in the Premier League on a permanent basis (i.e., more than 12 weeks, the amount of time an unqualified caretaker manager is allowed to take control). Caretaker appointments are managers that fill the gap between a managerial departure and a new appointment. Several caretaker managers have gone on to secure a permanent managerial post after performing well as a caretaker, including Paul Hart at Portsmouth, David Pleat at Tottenham Hotspur and Ole Gunnar Solskjær at Manchester United.
Arsène Wenger is the longest-serving manager, having been in charge of Arsenal in the Premier League from 1996 to his departure at the conclusion of the 2017–18 season, and holds the record for most matches managed in the Premier League with 828, all with Arsenal. He broke the record set by Alex Ferguson, who had managed 810 matches with Manchester United from the Premier League's inception to his retirement at the end of the 2012–13 season. Ferguson was in charge of Manchester United from November 1986 until his retirement at the end of the 2012–13 season, meaning he was manager for the last five years of the old Football League First Division and all of the first 21 seasons of the Premier League.
Notably, since its creation the Premier League has never been won by an English manager.
There have been several studies into the reasoning behind, and effects of, managerial sackings. Most famously, Professor Sue Bridgewater of the University of Liverpool and Dr. Bas ter Weel of the University of Amsterdam, performed two separate studies which helped to explain the statistics behind managerial sackings. Bridgewater's study found clubs generally sack their managers upon dropping below an average of one point per match.
Manager | Nationality | Club | Appointed | Time as manager |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jürgen Klopp | Germany | Liverpool | 8 October 2015 | 9 years, 77 days |
Pep Guardiola | Spain | Manchester City | 1 July 2016 | 8 years, 176 days |
Thomas Frank | Denmark | Brentford | 16 October 2018 | 6 years, 69 days |
Mikel Arteta | Spain | Arsenal | 20 December 2019 | 5 years, 4 days |
David Moyes | Scotland | West Ham United | 29 December 2019 | 4 years, 361 days |
Marco Silva | Portugal | Fulham | 1 July 2021 | 3 years, 176 days |
Eddie Howe | England | Newcastle United | 8 November 2021 | 3 years, 46 days |
Erik ten Hag | Netherlands | Manchester United | 23 May 2022 | 2 years, 215 days |
Vincent Kompany | Belgium | Burnley | 14 June 2022 | 2 years, 193 days |
Roberto De Zerbi | Italy | Brighton & Hove Albion | 18 September 2022 | 2 years, 97 days |
Unai Emery | Spain | Aston Villa | 1 November 2022 | 2 years, 53 days |
Rob Edwards | Wales | Luton Town | 17 November 2022 | 2 years, 37 days |
Sean Dyche | England | Everton | 30 January 2023 | 1 year, 329 days |
Mauricio Pochettino | Argentina | Chelsea | 28 May 2023 | 1 year, 210 days |
Ange Postecoglou | Australia | Tottenham Hotspur | 6 June 2023 | 1 year, 201 days |
Andoni Iraola | Spain | Bournemouth | 19 June 2023 | 1 year, 188 days |
Gary O'Neil | England | Wolverhampton Wanderers | 9 August 2023 | 1 year, 137 days |
Chris Wilder | England | Sheffield United | 5 December 2023 | 1 year, 19 days |
Nuno Espírito Santo | Portugal | Nottingham Forest | 20 December 2023 | 1 year, 4 days |
Oliver Glasner | Austria | Crystal Palace | 19 February 2024 | 309 days |
Players
Appearances
Rank | Player | Apps |
---|---|---|
1 | Gareth Barry (ENG) | 653 |
2 | James Milner (ENG) | 634 |
3 | Ryan Giggs (WAL) | 632 |
4 | Frank Lampard (ENG) | 609 |
5 | David James (ENG) | 572 |
6 | Gary Speed (WAL) | 535 |
7 | Emile Heskey (ENG) | 516 |
8 | Mark Schwarzer (AUS) | 514 |
9 | Jamie Carragher (ENG) | 508 |
10 | Phil Neville (ENG) | 505 |
Italicised players still playing professional football. Bolded players still playing in Premier League. |
Transfer regulations and foreign players
Player transfers may only take place within transfer windows set by the Football Association. The two transfer windows run from the last day of the season to 31 August and from 31 December to 31 January. Player registrations cannot be exchanged outside these windows except under specific licence from the FA, usually on an emergency basis. As of the 2010–11 season, the Premier League introduced new rules mandating that each club must register a maximum 25-man squad of players aged over 21, with the squad list only allowed to be changed in transfer windows or in exceptional circumstances. This was to enable the "home grown" rule to be enacted, whereby the Premier League would also from 2010 require at least eight members of the named 25-man squad to be "home-grown players".
At the inception of the Premier League in 1992–93, just 11 players named in the starting line-ups for the first round of matches hailed from outside of the United Kingdom or Ireland. By 2000–01, the number of foreign players participating in the Premier League was 36% of the total. In the 2004–05 season, the figure had increased to 45%. On 26 December 1999, Chelsea became the first Premier League side to field an entirely foreign starting line-up, and on 14 February 2005, Arsenal were the first to name a completely foreign 16-man squad for a match. By 2009, under 40% of the players in the Premier League were English. By February 2020, 117 different nationalities had played in the Premier League, and 101 nationalities had scored in the competition.
In 1999, in response to concerns that clubs were increasingly passing over young English players in favor of foreign players, the Home Office tightened its rules for granting work permits to players from countries outside of the European Union. A non-EU player applying for the permit must have played for his country in at least 75 per cent of its competitive 'A' team matches for which he was available for selection during the previous two years, and his country must have averaged at least 70th place in the official FIFA world rankings over the previous two years. If a player does not meet those criteria, the club wishing to sign him may appeal.
Following the implementation of Brexit in January 2021, new regulations were introduced which require all foreign players to obtain a Governing Body Endorsement (GBE) in order to play football in the United Kingdom, regardless of EU status.
Top scorers
Rank | Player | Years | Goals | Apps | Ratio |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Alan Shearer | 1992–2006 | 260 | 441 | 0.59 |
2 | Harry Kane | 2012–2023 | 213 | 320 | 0.67 |
3 | Wayne Rooney | 2002–2018 | 208 | 491 | 0.42 |
4 | Andy Cole | 1992–2008 | 187 | 414 | 0.45 |
5 | Sergio Agüero | 2011–2021 | 184 | 275 | 0.67 |
6 | Frank Lampard | 1995–2015 | 177 | 609 | 0.29 |
7 | Thierry Henry | 1999–2007 2012 |
175 | 258 | 0.68 |
8 | Robbie Fowler | 1993–2007 2008 |
163 | 379 | 0.43 |
9 | Jermain Defoe | 2001–2003 2004–2014 2015–2019 |
162 | 496 | 0.33 |
10 | Mohamed Salah | 2014–2016 2017– |
155 | 255 | 0.61 |
Italics denotes players still playing professional football,
Bold denotes players still playing in the Premier League.
The Premier League Golden Boot is awarded each season to the top scorer in the division. Former Blackburn Rovers and Newcastle United striker Alan Shearer holds the record for most Premier League goals with 260. Thirty-three players have reached the 100-goal mark. Since the first Premier League season in 1992–93, 23 players from 11 clubs have won or shared the top scorer title. Thierry Henry won his fourth overall scoring title by scoring 27 goals in the 2005–06 season. Erling Haaland holds the record for most goals in a Premier League season (38 matches) with 36 goals as of 15 May 2023. Ryan Giggs of Manchester United holds the record for scoring goals in consecutive seasons, having scored in the first 21 seasons of the league. Giggs also holds the record for the most Premier League assists, with 162.
Wages
There is no team or individual salary cap in the Premier League. As a result of the increasingly lucrative television deals, player wages rose sharply following the formation of the Premier League, when the average player wage was £75,000 per year. In the 2018–19 season the average annual salary stood at £2.99 million.
The total salary bill for the 20 Premier League clubs in the 2018–19 season was £1.62 billion; this compares to £1.05 billion in La Liga, £0.83 billion in Serie A, £0.72 billion in Bundesliga, and £0.54 billion in Ligue 1. The club with the highest average wage is Manchester United at £6.5 million. This is smaller than the club with the highest wage bill in Spain (Barcelona £10.5 million) and Italy (Juventus £6.7 million), but higher than in Germany (Bayern Munich £6.4 million) and France (Paris Saint-Germain £6.1 million). For the 2018–19 season, the ratio of the wages of the highest-paid team to lowest-paid in the Premier League is 6.82 to 1. This is much lower than in La Liga (19.1 to 1), Serie A (16 to 1), Bundesliga (20.5 to 1), and Ligue 1 (26.6 to 1). Because of the lower differential between team wage bills in the Premier League, it is often regarded as being more competitive than other top European leagues.
Player transfer fees
The record transfer fee for a Premier League player has risen steadily over the lifetime of the competition. Before the start of the first Premier League season, Alan Shearer became the first British player to command a transfer fee of more than £3 million. The record has increased steadily and Enzo Fernández is now the most expensive transfer fee paid by a Premier League club at £106.8 million, whilst Philippe Coutinho is the biggest transfer involving a Premier League club at £105 million.
Rank | Player | Fee (£ million) | Year | Transfer | Reference(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Enzo Fernández (ARG) | £106.8 | 2023 | Benfica | Chelsea | |
2 | Moisés Caicedo (ECU) | £100 | 2023 | Brighton & Hove Albion | Chelsea | |
Declan Rice (ENG) | £100 | 2023 | West Ham United | Arsenal | ||
Jack Grealish (ENG) | £100 | 2021 | Aston Villa | Manchester City | ||
5 | Romelu Lukaku (BEL) | £97.5 | 2021 | Inter Milan | Chelsea | |
6 | Paul Pogba (FRA) | £89 | 2016 | Juventus | Manchester United | |
7 | Antony (BRA) | £82 | 2022 | Ajax | Manchester United | |
8 | Harry Maguire (ENG) | £80 | 2019 | Leicester City | Manchester United | |
9 | Joško Gvardiol (CRO) | £77 | 2023 | RB Leipzig | Manchester City | |
10 | Romelu Lukaku (BEL) | £75 | 2017 | Everton | Manchester United |
Rank | Player | Fee (£ million) | Year | Transfer | Reference(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Philippe Coutinho (BRA) | £105 | 2018 | Liverpool | Barcelona | |
2 | Moisés Caicedo (ECU) | £100 | 2023 | Brighton & Hove Albion | Chelsea | |
Declan Rice (ENG) | £100 | 2023 | West Ham United | Arsenal | ||
Jack Grealish (ENG) | £100 | 2021 | Aston Villa | Manchester City | ||
5 | Eden Hazard (BEL) | £89 | 2019 | Chelsea | Real Madrid | |
6 | Harry Kane (ENG) | £86.4 | 2023 | Tottenham Hotspur | Bayern Munich | |
7 | Gareth Bale (WAL) | £86 | 2013 | Tottenham Hotspur | Real Madrid | |
8 | Cristiano Ronaldo (POR) | £80 | 2009 | Manchester United | Real Madrid | |
Harry Maguire (ENG) | £80 | 2019 | Leicester City | Manchester United | ||
10 | Romelu Lukaku (BEL) | £75 | 2017 | Everton | Manchester United | |
Virgil van Dijk (NED) | £75 | 2018 | Southampton | Liverpool |
Awards
Trophy
The Premier League maintains two trophies – the genuine trophy (held by the reigning champions) and a spare replica. Two trophies are held for the purpose of making the award within minutes of the title being secured, in the event that on the final day of the season two clubs are still within reach of winning the League. In the rare event that more than two clubs are vying for the title on the final day of the season, a replica won by a previous club is used.
The current Premier League trophy was created by Royal Jewellers Garrard & Co/Asprey of London and was designed in house at Garrard & Co by Trevor Brown and Paul Marsden. It consists of a trophy with a golden crown and a malachite plinth base. The plinth weighs 33 pounds (15 kg) and the trophy weighs 22 pounds (10.0 kg). The trophy and plinth are 76 cm (30 in) tall, 43 cm (17 in) wide and 25 cm (9.8 in) deep.
Its main body is solid sterling silver and silver gilt, while its plinth is made of malachite, a semi-precious stone. The plinth has a silver band around its circumference, upon which the names of the title-winning clubs are listed. The green of the malachite represents the green field of play. The design of the trophy is based on the heraldry of Three Lions that is associated with English football. Two of the lions are found above the handles on either side of the trophy – the third is symbolised by the captain of the title-winning team as he raises the trophy, and its gold crown, above his head at the end of the season. The ribbons that drape the handles are presented in the team colors of the league champions that year. In 2004, a special gold version of the trophy was commissioned to commemorate Arsenal winning the title without a single defeat.
Player and manager awards
In addition to the winner's trophy and the individual winner's medals awarded to players who win the title, the Premier League also issues other awards throughout the season.
A man-of-the-match award is awarded to the player who has the greatest impact in an individual match.
Monthly awards are also given for the Manager of the Month, Player of the Month and Goal of the Month. These are also issued annually for Manager of the Season, Player of the Season. and Goal of the Season. The Young Player of the Season award is given to the most outstanding U-23 player starting from the 2019–20 season.
The Golden Boot award is given to the top goalscorer of every season, the Playmaker of the Season award is given to the player who makes the most assists of every season, and the Golden Glove award is given to the goalkeeper with the most clean sheets at the end of the season.
From the 2017–18 season, players receive a milestone award for 100 appearances and every century there after and also players who score 50 goals and multiples thereof. Each player to reach these milestones is to receive a presentation box from the Premier League containing a special medallion and a plaque commemorating their achievement.
20 Seasons Awards
In 2012, the Premier League celebrated its second decade by holding the 20 Seasons Awards:
- Fantasy Team of the 20 Seasons
- Panel Choice: Peter Schmeichel, Gary Neville, Tony Adams, Rio Ferdinand, Ashley Cole, Cristiano Ronaldo, Roy Keane, Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs, Thierry Henry, Alan Shearer
- Public Vote: Peter Schmeichel, Gary Neville, Tony Adams, Nemanja Vidić, Ashley Cole, Cristiano Ronaldo, Steven Gerrard, Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs, Thierry Henry, Alan Shearer
- Best Manager: Sir Alex Ferguson
- Best Player: Ryan Giggs
- Most Appearances: Gareth Barry (652)
- Top Goalscorer: Alan Shearer (260)
- Most Clean Sheets: David James (173)
- 500 Club: Steven Gerrard, Jamie Carragher, Gareth Barry, Ryan Giggs, David James, Gary Speed, Frank Lampard, Emile Heskey and Sol Campbell
- Best Goal: Wayne Rooney, 12 February 2011, Manchester United vs Manchester City
- Best Save: Craig Gordon, 18 December 2010, Sunderland vs Bolton Wanderers
- Best Team: Arsenal 2003–04
See also
In Spanish: Premier League para niños
- List of English football champions
- List of English Football League managers
- FA Women's Super League (highest league of women's football in England)
- Football records and statistics in England
- List of professional sports teams in the United Kingdom