2016–17 EFL League One

EFL League One
Season 2016–17
Champions Sheffield United (1st divisional title)
Promoted Sheffield United
Bolton Wanderers
Millwall
Relegated Chesterfield
Coventry City
Swindon Town
Port Vale
Matches played 552
Goals scored 1,417 (2.57 per match)
Top goalscorer Billy Sharp (30 goals)
Biggest home win Bristol Rovers 5–0 Northampton Town
Scunthorpe United 5–0 Gillingham
Biggest away win Bristol Rovers 1–5 Charlton Athletic
Longest winning run Sheffield United
(7 matches)
Longest unbeaten run Fleetwood Town
(18 matches)
Longest winless run Bury
(20 matches)
Longest losing run Bury
(13 matches)
Highest attendance 31,003
(Sheffield United 3-2 Chesterfield, 30 April 2017)
Lowest attendance 1,907
(Rochdale 4–0 Walsall)
Average attendance 7,576

The 2016–17 EFL League One (referred to as the Sky Bet League One for sponsorship reasons) was the 13th season of the Football League One under its current title and the 24th season under its current league division format. The fixtures were announced on 22 June 2016.[1]

Team changes

Bolton and Oxford competed in the third tier for the first time under the League One name. AFC Wimbledon made their debut in the third tier.

Teams

Greater London League One football clubs
Greater Manchester League One football clubs
Team Location Stadium Capacity[2]
AFC WimbledonLondon (Kingston upon Thames)Kingsmeadow4,850 (2,265 seated)
Bolton WanderersBoltonMacron Stadium28,723
Bradford CityBradfordValley Parade25,136
Bristol RoversBristolMemorial Stadium12,011
BuryBuryGigg Lane11,640
Charlton AthleticLondon (Charlton)The Valley27,111
ChesterfieldChesterfieldProact Stadium10,400
Coventry CityCoventryRicoh Arena32,500
Fleetwood TownFleetwoodHighbury Stadium5,311 (2,701 seated)
GillinghamGillinghamPriestfield Stadium11,582
MillwallLondon (South Bermondsey)The Den20,146
Milton Keynes DonsMilton KeynesStadium:mk30,500
Northampton TownNorthamptonSixfields Stadium7,798
Oldham AthleticOldhamBoundary Park13,512
Oxford UnitedOxfordKassam Stadium12,500
Peterborough UnitedPeterboroughABAX Stadium15,314
Port ValeStoke-on-TrentVale Park18,947
RochdaleRochdaleSpotland Stadium10,249
Scunthorpe UnitedScunthorpeGlanford Park9,088
Sheffield UnitedSheffieldBramall Lane32,702
Shrewsbury TownShrewsburyNew Meadow9,875
Southend UnitedSouthend-on-SeaRoots Hall12,392
Swindon TownSwindonCounty Ground15,728
WalsallWalsallBescot Stadium11,300

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of vacancy Position in table Incoming manager Date of appointment
Bolton Wanderers Northern Ireland Neil Lennon Sacked 15 March 2016[3] Pre-season England Phil Parkinson 10 June 2016[4]
Charlton Athletic Belgium Jose Riga Resigned 7 May 2016[5] England Russell Slade 6 June 2016
Sheffield United England Nigel Adkins Sacked 12 May 2016[6] England Chris Wilder 12 May 2016[6]
Northampton Town England Chris Wilder Signed by Sheffield United 12 May 2016[6] Wales Rob Page 19 May 2016[7]
Port Vale Wales Rob Page Signed by Northampton Town 19 May 2016[7] Portugal Bruno Ribeiro 20 June 2016[8]
Oldham Athletic Republic of Ireland John Sheridan Signed by Notts County 27 May 2016[9] Northern Ireland Steve Robinson 9 July 2016
Bradford City England Phil Parkinson Signed by Bolton Wanderers 10 June 2016[4] Scotland Stuart McCall 20 June 2016[10]
Fleetwood Town England Steven Pressley Resigned 26 July 2016[11] Germany Uwe Rösler 20 June 2016[12]
Coventry City England Tony Mowbray Resigned 29 September 2016[13] 24th England Russell Slade 21 December 2016
Shrewsbury Town Scotland Micky Mellon Signed by Tranmere Rovers 6 October 2016[14] 21st England Paul Hurst 24 October 2016[15]
Milton Keynes Dons England Karl Robinson Mutual consent 23 October 2016[16] 19th Scotland Robbie Neilson 3 December 2016[17]
Charlton Athletic England Russell Slade Sacked 14 November 2016[18] 15th England Karl Robinson 24 November 2016[19]
Bury England David Flitcroft Mutual consent 16 November 2016[20] 16th England Chris Brass 14 December 2016
Port Vale Portugal Bruno Ribeiro Resigned 26 December 2016[21] 17th England Michael Brown 26 December 2016[22]
Gillingham England Justin Edinburgh Sacked 3 January 2017 England Adrian Pennock 4 January 2017[23]
Chesterfield Northern Ireland Danny Wilson 8 January 2017 22nd Scotland Gary Caldwell 17 January 2017[24]
Northampton Town Wales Rob Page 9 January 2017 16th England Justin Edinburgh 13 January 2017[25]
Oldham Athletic Northern Ireland Steve Robinson 12 January 2017 [26] 24th Republic of Ireland John Sheridan 12 January 2017 [27]
Bury England Chris Brass 15 February 2017[28] 20th England Lee Clark 15 February 2017[29]
Coventry City England Russell Slade 5 March 2017[30] 24th England Mark Robins 6 March 2017[31]

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion, qualification or relegation
1 Sheffield United (C, P) 46 30 10 6 92 47 +45 100 Promotion to the EFL Championship
2 Bolton Wanderers (P) 46 25 11 10 68 36 +32 86
3 Scunthorpe United 46 24 10 12 80 54 +26 82 Qualification for the League One play-offs[lower-alpha 1]
4 Fleetwood Town 46 23 13 10 64 43 +21 82
5 Bradford City 46 20 19 7 62 43 +19 79
6 Millwall (O, P) 46 20 13 13 66 57 +9 73
7 Southend United 46 20 12 14 70 53 +17 72
8 Oxford United 46 20 9 17 65 52 +13 69
9 Rochdale 46 19 12 15 71 62 +9 69
10 Bristol Rovers 46 18 12 16 68 70 2 66
11 Peterborough United 46 17 11 18 62 62 0 62
12 Milton Keynes Dons 46 16 13 17 60 58 +2 61
13 Charlton Athletic 46 14 18 14 60 53 +7 60
14 Walsall 46 14 16 16 51 58 7 58
15 AFC Wimbledon 46 13 18 15 52 55 3 57
16 Northampton Town 46 14 11 21 60 73 13 53
17 Oldham Athletic 46 12 17 17 31 44 13 53
18 Shrewsbury Town 46 13 12 21 46 63 17 51
19 Bury 46 13 11 22 61 73 12 50
20 Gillingham 46 12 14 20 59 79 20 50
21 Port Vale (R) 46 12 13 21 45 70 25 49 Relegation to EFL League Two
22 Swindon Town (R) 46 11 11 24 44 66 22 44
23 Coventry City (R) 46 9 12 25 37 68 31 39
24 Chesterfield (R) 46 9 10 27 43 78 35 37
Source: BBC Sport
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored
(C) Champion; (O) Play-off winner; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated.
Notes:
  1. Four teams play for one spot and promotion to the EFL Championship.

Play-offs

  Semi-finals Final
                     
3 Scunthorpe United 0 2 2  
6 Millwall 0 3 3  
    6 Millwall 1
  5 Bradford City 0
4 Fleetwood Town 0 0 0
5 Bradford City 1 0 1  

Results

Home \ Away[1] WIM BOL BRABRRBuryCHACHFCOVFLEGILMILMKDNOROLDOXFPETPTVROCSCUSHUSHRSTDSWIWAL
AFC Wimbledon 12 23 01 51 11 21 11 22 20 22 20 01 00 21 00 40 31 12 23 11 02 00 10
Bolton Wanderers 11 00 11 00 12 00 10 21 40 20 11 21 20 02 30 31 10 21 10 21 11 12 41
Bradford City 30 22 11 11 00 20 31 21 22 11 22 10 11 10 10 00 40 00 33 20 11 21 10
Bristol Rovers 20 12 11 42 15 21 41 21 21 34 00 50 10 21 12 21 22 11 00 20 20 10 11
Bury 12 02 02 30 20 21 21 00 12 23 00 30 01 23 51 41 01 12 13 21 14 10 33
Charlton Athletic 12 11 11 41 01 10 30 11 30 00 02 11 11 01 02 20 01 21 11 30 21 30 11
Chesterfield 00 10 01 32 12 12 10 01 33 13 00 31 01 04 33 10 13 03 14 11 04 31 20
Coventry City 22 22 02 10 00 11 20 01 21 02 12 11 00 21 10 21 20 01 12 00 02 13 10
Fleetwood Town 00 24 21 31 00 22 21 20 21 10 14 30 10 20 20 00 00 22 11 30 11 01 21
Gillingham 22 04 11 31 21 11 11 21 23 11 10 21 12 01 01 11 30 32 12 11 21 11 11
Millwall 00 02 11 40 00 31 00 11 21 21 21 30 30 03 10 20 23 31 21 01 10 20 00
Milton Keynes Dons 10 11 12 33 13 01 23 10 01 32 22 53 10 00 02 01 22 01 03 21 03 32 11
Northampton Town 00 01 12 23 32 21 31 30 11 00 13 32 12 00 01 21 23 12 12 11 40 21 20
Oldham Athletic 00 10 12 02 00 10 00 32 20 10 00 02 00 21 20 00 11 20 11 23 02 02 00
Oxford United 13 24 10 02 51 11 11 41 13 10 12 10 01 11 21 20 10 21 23 20 02 20 00
Peterborough United 01 10 01 42 31 20 52 11 12 11 51 04 30 11 12 22 31 02 01 21 14 22 11
Port Vale 20 02 12 11 22 11 10 02 21 21 31 00 23 22 22 03 10 31 03 21 20 32 01
Rochdale 11 10 11 00 20 33 30 20 21 41 33 01 11 10 04 23 30 32 33 21 30 40 40
Scunthorpe United 12 10 32 31 32 00 31 31 02 50 30 21 11 10 11 11 32 21 22 01 40 41 00
Sheffield United 40 20 30 10 10 21 32 20 02 22 20 21 10 20 21 10 40 11 11 21 03 40 01
Shrewsbury Town 21 02 10 20 21 43 21 00 01 23 12 01 24 10 20 11 00 10 01 03 10 11 11
Southend United 30 01 30 11 10 11 10 31 02 13 31 12 22 30 21 11 11 21 31 24 11 11 32
Swindon Town 00 01 10 12 12 30 01 10 11 31 10 11 13 00 12 01 10 30 12 24 11 00 02
Walsall 31 10 11 31 33 12 10 11 01 12 21 14 21 20 11 20 01 02 14 41 32 00 10

Updated to games played on 30 April 2017.
Source: BBC Sport
1 ^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top scorers

As of 22 April 2017[32]
Rank Player Club Goals
1 England Billy Sharp Sheffield United 30
2 England James Vaughan Bury 24
3 England Josh Morris Scunthorpe United 19
4 Republic of Ireland Simon Cox Southend United 16
England Matty Taylor Bristol Rovers
6 England Lee Gregory Millwall 15
England Ian Henderson Rochdale
8 England David Ball Fleetwood Town 14
England Erhun Oztumer Walsall
10 England Alex Jones Bradford City/Port Vale 13
England Chris Maguire Oxford United
Republic of Ireland Aiden O'Brien Millwall
England Josh Wright Gillingham

Monthly Awards

Month Manager of the Month Player of the Month Reference
Manager Club Player Club
August England Phil Parkinson Bolton Wanderers England Josh Morris Scunthorpe United
September England David Flitcroft Bury England Josh Morris Scunthorpe United
October England Phil Parkinson Bolton Wanderers England Zach Clough Bolton Wanderers
November Scotland Graham Alexander Scunthorpe United Republic of Ireland Jay O'Shea Chesterfield
December England Keith Hill Rochdale England Matty Lund Rochdale
January Germany Uwe Rösler Fleetwood Town England James Vaughan Bury
February England Neil Harris Millwall England Billy Sharp Sheffield United
March England Phil Parkinson Bolton Wanderers Portugal Filipe Morais Bolton Wanderers

Attendances[33]

Teams with an average home attendance of at least 10,000 in 2016-17 EFL League One season:

Team Home average
Sheffield United21,892
Bradford City18,180
Bolton Wanderers14,934
Charlton Athletic11,162
MK Dons10,307

References

  1. "#FIXTURERELEASEDAY: EFL SEASON 2016/17 FIXTURES ANNOUNCED!". www.efl.com. 22 June 2016. Retrieved 22 June 2016.
  2. "Football Ground Guide". Football Ground Guide. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  3. "Neil Lennon: Bolton Wanderers manager leaves by mutual consent".
  4. 1 2 "Phil Parkinson: Bolton Wanderers appoint Bradford City boss as new manager".
  5. "Jose Riga: Charlton Athletic head coach resigns following Burnley defeat". BBC Sport. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  6. 1 2 3 "Chris Wilder: Sheffield United appoint Northampton boss to replace Nigel Adkins". BBC Sport.
  7. 1 2 "Rob Page: Northampton Town appoint Port Vale manager to replace Chris Wilder".
  8. "Port Vale: Bruno Ribeiro appointed as new manager at League One club".
  9. "John Sheridan: Oldham Athletic boss joins Notts County on three-year deal". BBC Sport. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  10. "Stuart McCall: Bradford City appoint Scotland coach as manager for second time". BBC Sport.
  11. "Steven Pressley: Fleetwood Town manager resigns from League One club". BBC Sport.
  12. "Uwe Rosler: Fleetwood Town appoint ex-Leeds, Wigan and Brentford boss". BBC Sport.
  13. "Tony Mowbray: Coventry City manager resigns after 18 months in charge". BBC Sport.
  14. "Micky Mellon named Tranmere Rovers manager after Shrewsbury Town departure". BBC Sport.
  15. "Paul Hurst: Shrewsbury Town name Grimsby Town boss as new manager". BBC Sport.
  16. "Karl Robinson: MK Dons boss leaves 'by mutual consent' after six years in charge". BBC Sport.
  17. "Robbie Nielson: Neilson leaves Hearts for MK". MK Dons.
  18. "Russell Slade: Charlton Athletic part company with manager". BBC Sport.
  19. "Karl Robinson: Charlton Athletic name ex-MK Dons boss as new manager". BBC Sport.
  20. "David Flitcroft: Bury part company with manager after 11-game winless run". BBC Sport.
  21. "Bruno Ribeiro: Port Vale manager resigns after Walsall defeat". BBC Sport. 26 December 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  22. "Bruno Ribeiro: Port Vale manager resigns after Walsall defeat". BBC Sport. 26 December 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  23. "Ady Pennock: Gillingham appoint new head coach to replace Justin Edinburgh". BBC Sport. 4 January 2017. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  24. "Gary Caldwell: Chesterfield appoint former Wigan Athletic manager as new boss". BBC Sport. 17 January 2017. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  25. "Northampton Town: Justin Edinburgh named new manager of League One club". BBC Sport. 13 January 2017. Retrieved 13 January 2017.
  26. "Kevin Nolan: Notts County appoint new manager". BBC Sport. 12 January 2017. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  27. "Kevin Nolan: Notts County appoint new manager". BBC Sport. 12 January 2017. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
  28. "Lee Clark: Bury agree deal for Kilmarnock boss to join". BBC Sport. 15 February 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  29. "Lee Clark: Bury agree deal for Kilmarnock boss to join". BBC Sport. 15 February 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  30. "Russell Slade: Coventry City sack manager after 16 games in charge". BBC Sport. 5 March 2017. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  31. "Mark Robins: Ex-Coventry City boss returns as manager to replace sacked Russell Slade". BBC Sport. 6 March 2017. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  32. "League One Top Scorers". Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  33. http://www.worldfootball.net/attendance/eng-league-one-2016-2017/1/
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