2019–20 EFL Championship

The 2019–20 EFL Championship (referred to as the Sky Bet Championship for sponsorship reasons) is the 16th season of the Football League Championship under its current title and the 28th season under its current league division format.

EFL Championship
Season2019–20
Matches played312
Goals scored842 (2.7 per match)
Top goalscorerAleksandar Mitrović
Ollie Watkins
(23 each)
Biggest home winBrentford 7–0 Luton Town
(30 November 2019)
Biggest away winSheffield Wednesday 0–5 Blackburn Rovers
(18 January 2020)
Highest scoringBirmingham City 4–5 Leeds United
(29 December 2019)
Longest winning runLeeds United (7 matches)
Longest unbeaten runWest Bromwich Albion
(14 matches)
Longest winless runBarnsley
(17 matches)
Longest losing runHuddersfield Town
(6 matches)
Highest attendance36,514
Leeds United 2-0 Huddersfield Town
(7 March 2020)
Lowest attendance8,965
Wigan Athletic 1–3 Reading
(30 November 2019)[1]
Total attendance5,961,550[1]
Average attendance18,571[1]
All statistics correct as of 14 December 2019.

Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic

The season was halted, following a decision on 13 March 2020 to suspend the league after a number of players and other club staff became ill due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The initial suspension was until 4 April, which was then extended until 30 April.[2][3] On 13 May, following a meeting, the clubs decided to continue with the season with plans for players to return to training on 25 May.[4]

In May, 1014 tests were carried out across all of the English Football League and funded by the clubs. Two people from Hull City returned positive results.[5] Later in May, Elliott Bennett of Blackburn Rovers tested positive for the virus as did two unnamed players from Fulham.[6] In further tests, Jayden Stockley of Preston North End tested positive as did one unnamed person from both Cardiff City and Middlesbrough.[7] On 31 May, the EFL stated plans to restart the league on 20 June, with the play-off final being scheduled for around 30 July, subject to safety requirement and government approval being met.[8]

On 7 June, two Championship clubs reported one person each to have tested positive of coronavirus, during the latest round of testing. A total of 1,179 people were tested in the duration of four days and those tested positive were required to self-isolate, as per EFL guidelines.[9] On 8 June, the first round of fixtures was released. The first set of fixtures following the restart was scheduled for 20 June with the first fixture being Fulham against Brentford with a 12:30pm kick-off.[10] In a further round of testing on 8 June, Stoke City manager Michael O'Neill tested positive for the virus having tested negative in five previous rounds of testing. A practice game between Stoke and Manchester United was called off at short notice with the Stoke players already in United's Carrington training ground.[11]

Team changes

The following teams have changed division since the 2018–19 season.

Stadiums

Greater London Championship football clubs
Team[12] Location Stadium Capacity
BarnsleyBarnsley Oakwell23,287
Birmingham CityBirmingham St Andrew's29,409
Blackburn RoversBlackburn Ewood Park31,367
BrentfordLondon (Brentford) Griffin Park12,300
Bristol CityBristol Ashton Gate27,000
Cardiff City Cardiff Cardiff City Stadium33,316
Charlton AthleticLondon (Charlton)The Valley27,111
Derby CountyDerby Pride Park Stadium33,600
FulhamLondon (Fulham) Craven Cottage19,000
Huddersfield TownHuddersfield Kirklees Stadium24,500
Hull CityKingston upon Hull KCOM Stadium25,400
Leeds UnitedLeeds Elland Road37,890
Luton TownLuton Kenilworth Road10,336
MiddlesbroughMiddlesbrough Riverside Stadium34,000
MillwallLondon (South Bermondsey) The Den20,146
Nottingham ForestWest Bridgford City Ground30,445
Preston North EndPreston Deepdale23,408
Queens Park RangersLondon (White City) Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium18,439
ReadingReading Madejski Stadium24,161
Sheffield WednesdaySheffield Hillsborough Stadium39,752
Stoke CityStoke-on-Trent bet365 Stadium30,089
Swansea City Swansea Liberty Stadium21,088
West Bromwich AlbionWest Bromwich The Hawthorns26,850
Wigan AthleticWigan DW Stadium25,133
  • 1 The capacity of Craven Cottage will be reduced from 25,700 to 19,000 for the 2019–20 and 2020–21 seasons due to the redevelopment of the Riverside Stand which will increase the capacity to 30,000.[13]

Personnel and sponsoring

Team Manager Captain Kit manufacturer Sponsor
Barnsley Gerhard Struber Mike-Steven Bähre[14] Puma C.K. Beckett[15]
Birmingham City Pep Clotet1 Harlee Dean[16] Adidas BoyleSports[17]
Blackburn Rovers Tony Mowbray Elliott Bennett Umbro 10Bet[18]
Brentford Thomas Frank Pontus Jansson Umbro EcoWorld
Bristol City Lee Johnson TBA2 Bristol Sport Dunder[19]
Cardiff City Neil Harris Sean Morrison Adidas Tourism Malaysia
Charlton Athletic Lee Bowyer Chris Solly Hummel Children with Cancer UK
Derby County Phillip Cocu Wayne Rooney3 Umbro[20] 32Red
Fulham Scott Parker Tom Cairney Adidas Dafabet
Huddersfield Town Danny Cowley Christopher Schindler Umbro Paddy Power (unbranded)[21]4
Hull City Grant McCann Eric Lichaj Umbro SportPesa
Leeds United Marcelo Bielsa Liam Cooper Kappa[22] 32Red[23]
Luton Town Nathan Jones Sonny Bradley Puma Indigo Residential (home), Star Platforms (away), Northern Gas & Power (third)
Middlesbrough Neil Warnock George Friend Hummel 32Red
Millwall Gary Rowett Alex Pearce Macron Huski Chocolate[24]
Nottingham Forest Sabri Lamouchi Michael Dawson Macron Football Index[25]
Preston North End Alex Neil Tom Clarke Nike 32Red
Queens Park Rangers Mark Warburton Grant Hall[26] Erreà Bet UK[27]5
Reading Mark Bowen Liam Moore Macron Casumo[28]
Sheffield Wednesday Garry Monk Tom Lees Elev8 Chansiri
Stoke City Michael O'Neill Ryan Shawcross Macron bet365
Swansea City Steve Cooper Matt Grimes[29] Joma[30] YOBET,[31] Swansea University (back-of-shirt & training kit sponsor)[32]
West Bromwich Albion Slaven Bilić Chris Brunt Puma[33] Ideal Boilers
Wigan Athletic Paul Cook Sam Morsy Puma KB88[34]
  1. ^ Clotet was initially appointed as caretaker manager before he was appointed on a permanent basis on 4 December 2019[35]
  2. ^ Their captain was Bailey Wright in the first half of the season, but he left on 21 January to join Sunderland on loan.[36] Vice-captain Josh Brownhill served in this position between 21 and 30 January when he left for Burnley, no replacement has been named as of 30 January
  3. ^ Their captain was Richard Keogh until his contract was terminated on 30 October 2019,[37] with Curtis Davies acting in this position from 30 October until 1 January 2020
  4. ^ Huddersfield Town's shirt does not display Paddy Power's logo as part of the bookmakers' "Save Our Shirt" campaign
  5. ^ Queens Park Rangers' shirt sponsor was Royal Panda until 29 January 2020 when they decided to leave the United Kingdom market

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of vacancy Position in table Incoming manager Date of appointment
Luton Town Mick Harford[38] End of caretaker spell 4 May 2019 Pre-season Graeme Jones[38] 7 May 2019
Queens Park Rangers John Eustace[39] 5 May 2019 Mark Warburton[40] 8 May 2019
West Bromwich Albion James Shan[41] 14 May 2019 Slaven Bilić[42] 13 June 2019
Middlesbrough Tony Pulis[43] End of contract 17 May 2019 Jonathan Woodgate[44] 14 June 2019
Swansea City Graham Potter[45] Signed by Brighton & Hove Albion 20 May 2019 Steve Cooper[46] 13 June 2019
Hull City Nigel Adkins[47] End of contract 8 June 2019 Grant McCann[48] 21 June 2019
Birmingham City Garry Monk[49] Sacked 18 June 2019 Pep Clotet[50] 4 December 2019
Nottingham Forest Martin O'Neill[51] 28 June 2019 Sabri Lamouchi[52] 28 June 2019
Derby County Frank Lampard[53] Signed by Chelsea 4 July 2019 Phillip Cocu[54] 5 July 2019
Sheffield Wednesday Steve Bruce[55] Resigned 15 July 2019 Garry Monk[56] 6 September 2019
Huddersfield Town Jan Siewert[57] Sacked 16 August 2019 20th Danny Cowley[58] 9 September 2019
Millwall Neil Harris[59] Resigned 3 October 2019 18th Gary Rowett[60] 21 October 2019
Barnsley Daniel Stendel[61] Sacked 8 October 2019 23rd Gerhard Struber[62] 20 November 2019
Reading José Gomes[63] 9 October 2019 22nd Mark Bowen[64] 14 October 2019
Stoke City Nathan Jones[65] 1 November 2019 24th Michael O'Neill[66] 8 November 2019
Cardiff City Neil Warnock[67] Mutual consent 11 November 2019 14th Neil Harris[68] 16 November 2019
Luton Town Graeme Jones[69] 24 April 2020 23rd Nathan Jones[70] 28 May 2020
Middlesbrough Jonathan Woodgate[71] Sacked 23 June 2020 21st Neil Warnock[71] 23 June 2020

    League table

    Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion, qualification or relegation
    1 Leeds United 39 22 8 9 59 32 +27 74 Promotion to the Premier League
    2 West Bromwich Albion 39 19 14 6 64 38 +26 71
    3 Brentford 39 19 9 11 67 33 +34 66 Qualification for Championship play-offs[lower-alpha 1]
    4 Nottingham Forest 39 17 13 9 52 40 +12 64
    5 Fulham 39 18 10 11 52 43 +9 64
    6 Cardiff City 39 15 15 9 57 51 +6 60
    7 Preston North End 39 16 9 14 52 49 +3 57
    8 Derby County 39 15 12 12 54 52 +2 57
    9 Blackburn Rovers 39 15 11 13 55 48 +7 56
    10 Swansea City 39 14 14 11 49 46 +3 56
    11 Millwall 39 13 16 10 46 43 +3 55
    12 Bristol City 39 15 10 14 53 58 5 55
    13 Sheffield Wednesday 39 14 10 15 49 51 2 52
    14 Queens Park Rangers 39 14 8 17 58 64 6 50
    15 Reading 39 13 10 16 48 45 +3 49
    16 Birmingham City 39 12 13 14 51 60 9 49
    17 Wigan Athletic 39 12 11 16 42 50 8 47
    18 Charlton Athletic 39 12 9 18 46 54 8 45
    19 Middlesbrough 39 10 14 15 39 50 11 44
    20 Stoke City 39 12 7 20 50 58 8 43
    21 Hull City 39 11 9 19 52 67 15 42
    22 Huddersfield Town 39 11 9 19 46 63 17 42 Relegation to EFL League One
    23 Luton Town 39 11 6 22 45 72 27 39
    24 Barnsley 39 9 11 19 43 62 19 38
    Updated to match(es) played on 28 June 2020. Source: EFL Official Website
    Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored; 4) Head-to-head results; 5) Wins; 6) Away goals; 7) Penalty points (sec 9.5); 8) 12-point sending off offences[72]
    Notes:
    1. Four teams play for one spot and promotion to the Premier League.

    Results

    Home \ Away BAR BIR BLB BRE BRI CAR CHA DER FUL HUD HUL LEE LUT MID MIL NOT PNE QPR REA SHW STO SWA WBA WIG
    Barnsley 0–1 1–3 2–2 0–2 2–2 2–2 1–0 2–1 3–1 0–2 1–3 1–0 0–0 0–3 5–3 1–1 1–1 2–4 1–1 1–1
    Birmingham City 2–0 1–0 1–1 1–1 1–1 0–1 3–3 4–5 2–1 2–1 1–1 2–1 0–1 0–2 1–3 3–3 2–1 2–3 2–3
    Blackburn Rovers 3–2 1–1 1–0 3–1 0–0 1–2 1–0 0–1 2–2 3–0 1–2 1–0 2–0 1–1 1–1 2–1 2–1 0–0 2–2 0–0
    Brentford 0–1 2–2 1–1 2–1 3–0 1–0 0–1 1–1 1–1 7–0 3–2 3–2 0–1 3–1 1–0 5–0 0–0 3–1 1–0
    Bristol City 1–0 1–3 0–2 0–4 a 2–1 3–2 1–1 5–2 1–3 3–0 2–2 1–2 0–0 2–0 1–0 1–2 0–0 0–3 2–2
    Cardiff City 3–2 4–2 2–2 0–1 1–1 2–1 2–0 2–1 1–0 1–1 0–1 0–0 3–0 1–1 1–1 1–0 0–0 2–1 2–2
    Charlton Athletic 2–1 0–1 0–2 1–0 3–2 2–2 3–0 0–0 0–1 2–2 1–0 3–1 0–1 a 1–1 0–1 1–0 1–3 3–1 1–2 2–2
    Derby County 2–1 3–2 3–0 1–2 1–1 2–1 1–1 1–1 1–0 2–0 2–0 0–1 a 1–0 1–1 2–1 1–1 4–0 0–0 1–1 1–0
    Fulham 0–3 2–0 0–2 1–2 2–2 3–0 3–2 0–3 2–1 3–2 1–0 4–0 1–2 2–0 2–1 1–2 1–0 1–0 1–1 2–0
    Huddersfield Town 2–1 1–1 2–1 0–0 2–1 0–3 4–0 1–2 1–2 3–0 0–2 0–0 1–1 2–1 2–0 0–2 0–2 2–5 1–1 0–2
    Hull City 0–1 3–0 0–1 1–5 1–3 2–2 0–1 2–0 0–1 1–2 0–4 0–2 4–0 2–3 2–1 1–0 2–1 4–4 0–1 2–2
    Leeds United 1–0 2–1 1–0 1–0 3–3 1–1 3–0 2–0 2–0 4–0 3–2 1–1 1–1 2–0 1–0 0–2 0–1 1–0 0–1
    Luton Town 1–2 2–1 3–0 0–1 2–1 3–2 3–3 2–1 0–3 1–2 3–3 1–1 1–2 1–1 1–0 1–1 0–1 1–2 2–1
    Middlesbrough 1–0 1–1 1–1 0–1 1–0 2–2 0–0 1–0 2–2 0–1 0–1 1–1 2–2 1–1 1–0 1–4 2–1 0–3 0–1 1–0
    Millwall 1–2 0–0 1–0 1–1 2–2 2–1 2–3 1–1 1–1 2–1 3–1 2–2 1–0 1–2 2–0 1–0 2–0 0–2 2–2
    Nottingham Forest 1–0 3–0 3–2 1–0 0–1 0–1 1–0 3–1 1–2 2–0 3–1 1–1 0–3 1–1 0–0 1–1 0–4 1–2 1–0
    Preston North End 5–1 3–2 2–0 3–3 1–3 2–1 2–1 3–1 2–1 1–1 2–1 0–2 0–1 1–3 0–2 2–1 3–1 1–1 0–1 3–0
    Queens Park Rangers 0–1 2–2 4–2 1–3 0–1 6–1 2–2 2–1 a 1–1 1–2 1–0 3–2 2–2 0–4 2–0 2–2 4–2 1–3 0–2 3–1
    Reading 2–0 2–3 1–2 0–1 3–0 0–2 3–0 1–4 1–1 0–1 3–0 2–1 1–1 1–0 1–0 1–3 1–1 1–2 0–3
    Sheffield Wednesday 2–0 1–1 0–5 2–1 1–0 1–2 1–0 1–3 1–1 0–1 0–0 1–0 0–0 1–1 1–2 0–3 1–0 2–2 1–0
    Stoke City 1–2 1–2 2–0 3–1 2–2 2–0 0–1 5–1 0–3 3–0 0–2 0–0 2–3 0–2 1–2 0–0 3–2 2–0 0–2 2–1
    Swansea City 0–0 3–0 1–1 0–3 1–0 1–0 2–3 1–2 3–1 2–1 0–1 3–1 0–1 0–1 3–2 0–0 1–1 1–2 0–0 2–1
    West Bromwich Albion 2–2 0–0 3–2 1–1 4–1 4–2 2–2 4–2 1–1 2–0 0–2 1–1 2–2 2–0 1–1 2–1 0–1 5–1 0–1
    Wigan Athletic 0–0 1–0 2–0 0–3 0–2 3–2 2–0 1–1 1–1 0–2 0–0 2–2 1–0 1–0 1–2 1–3 2–1 1–2 1–1
    Updated to match(es) played on 28 June 2020. Source: EFL Official Website
    Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
    For upcoming matches, an "a" indicates there is an article about the rivalry between the two participants.

    Season statistics

    Top scorers

    As of 28 June 2020
    Rank Player Club Goals[73]
    1 Aleksandar Mitrović Fulham 23
    Ollie Watkins Brentford
    3 Lewis Grabban Nottingham Forest 19
    4 Karlan Grant Huddersfield Town 17
    5 Jarrod Bowen1 Hull City 16
    Nahki Wells Queens Park Rangers / Bristol City
    7 Patrick Bamford Leeds United 14
    Bryan Mbeumo Brentford
    Cauley Woodrow Barnsley
    10 André Ayew Swansea City 13
    Steven Fletcher Sheffield Wednesday
    Lukas Jutkiewicz Birmingham City
    • 1 Jarrod Bowen left Hull City and the EFL Championship on 31 January 2020, to sign for Premier League club West Ham United; all of his 16 league goals were scored before this date.[74]

    Hat-tricks

    Player For Against Result Date Ref
    Ollie Watkins Brentford Barnsley 3–1 (A) 29 September 2019 [75]
    Aleksandar Mitrović Fulham Luton Town 3–2 (H) 23 October 2019 [76]
    Joe Ralls Cardiff City Birmingham City 4–2 (H) 2 November 2019 [77]
    Josh Dasilva Brentford Luton Town 7–0 (H) 30 November 2019 [78]
    George Pușcaș Reading Wigan Athletic 3–1 (A) 30 November 2019 [79]
    Conor Chaplin Barnsley Queens Park Rangers 5–3 (H) 14 December 2019 [80]
    Jordan Rhodes Sheffield Wednesday Nottingham Forest 4–0 (A) 14 December 2019 [81]
    Nahki Wells Queens Park Rangers Cardiff City 6–1 (H) 1 January 2020 [82]
    Saïd Benrahma Brentford Hull City 5–1 (A) 1 February 2020 [83]
    Matt Smith Millwall Nottingham Forest 3–0 (A) 6 March 2020 [84]
    Louie Sibley Derby County Millwall 3–2 (A) 20 June 2020 [85]

    Monthly awards

    Month Manager of the Month Player of the Month Reference
    Manager Club Player Club
    August Steve Cooper Swansea City Daniel Johnson Preston North End [86]
    September Sabri Lamouchi Nottingham Forest Chey Dunkley Wigan Athletic [87]
    October Danny Cowley Huddersfield Town Aleksandar Mitrović Fulham [88]
    November Marcelo Bielsa Leeds United Jarrod Bowen Hull City [89][90]
    December Jonathan Woodgate Middlesbrough Conor Chaplin Barnsley [91]
    January Sabri Lamouchi Nottingham Forest Nahki Wells Queens Park Rangers [92]
    February Slaven Bilić West Bromwich Albion Scott Hogan Birmingham City [93]

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