It’s probably the biggest argument among football fans today; who is bigger than who? Rival clubs across the country will claim to be a greater presence in the game than their mortal enemies but who really stands above the rest? Southampton or Portsmouth? Newcastle or Sunderland? Liverpool or Manchester United?
The rankings below are determined by points allocated based on historical success and support – the two main contributors to a club’s stature.
Point system
- Seasons – 4 points for top flight season, 3 points for 2nd tier season, 1 point for 3rd tier season, 0 points for 4th tier or lower, 4 additional points for Champion’s League season and 3 additional points for Europa League season.
- Trophies – 10 points for top flight championship, 6 points for FA Cup win, 4 points for League Cup win, 12 points for Champion’s League win, 7 points for Europa League win, 4 points for 2nd tier title, 1 point for lower league title.
- “Nearlies” – 4 points for FA Cup final appearance, 2 points for FA Cup semi-final appearance, 2 points for League Cup final appearance, 1 point for League Cup semi-final appearance, 7 points for Champion’s League second place.
- Fanbase- Average home attendances had been taken for every club since their inception. A combined attendance has been found to which each club’s record has been converted to a percentage. However, several people have complained that past attendances are now irrelevant and the only accurate measure of fanbase is current home attendance. As such the same method has been used but with average home attendances from the 2014–15 season. To ensure that history and support were measured equally; each club was allocated their percentage of 23,574 points (the total number of success points of all clubs).
Non-league clubs are not included in the ranking.
Rankings
*all data correct as of 20th June 2016
Rank | Change from 2015 | Club | Pts |
1 | – | Manchester United | 2506 |
2 | – | Arsenal | 2057 |
3 | – | Liverpool | 1950 |
4 | +1 | Manchester City | 1669 |
5 | +1 | Newcastle United | 1551 |
6 | -2 | Chelsea | 1492 |
7 | – | Everton | 1466 |
8 | – | Aston Villa | 1436 |
9 | +1 | Sunderland | 1370 |
10 | -1 | Tottenham Hotspur | 1308 |
11 | +1 | Leicester City | 1074 |
12 | +1 | Derby County | 1066 |
13 | -2 | West Bromwich Albion | 1043 |
14 | – | West Ham United | 1038 |
15 | – | Wolverhampton Wand. | 957 |
16 | +1 | Sheffield Wednesday | 951 |
17 | +1 | Leeds United | 912 |
18 | -2 | Nottingham Forest | 910 |
19 | – | Stoke City | 906 |
20 | – | Southampton | 902 |
21 | +4 | Middlesbrough | 865 |
22 | -1 | Blackburn Rovers | 849 |
23 | -1 | Sheffield United | 834 |
24 | +2 | Birmingham City | 786 |
25 | -2 | Bolton Wanderers | 778 |
26 | +1 | Norwich City | 765 |
27 | -3 | Burnley | 753 |
28 | – | Preston North End | 697 |
29 | – | Crystal Palace | 685 |
30 | – | Ipswich Town | 641 |
31 | +3 | Portsmouth | 632 |
32 | – | Fulham | 627 |
33 | +2 | Brighton & Hove Alb. | 612 |
34 | +2 | Huddersfield Town | 573 |
35 | +6 | Watford | 569 |
36 | +1 | Charlton Athletic | 564 |
37 | +2 | Swansea City | 560 |
38 | -5 | Cardiff City | 554 |
39 | -8 | Hull City | 540 |
40 | -2 | Queens Park Rangers | 539 |
41 | +1 | Bristol City | 524 |
42 | +4 | Bradford City | 518 |
43 | +2 | Coventry City | 493 |
44 | -1 | Reading | 462 |
45 | -5 | Blackpool | 445 |
46 | -2 | Barnsley | 439 |
47 | – | Luton Town | 401 |
48 | – | Notts County | 391 |
49 | – | Millwall | 350 |
50 | – | Bury | 330 |
51 | n/a | Grimsby Town | 326 |
52 | -1 | Rotherham United | 324 |
53 | +2 | Plymouth Argyle | 323 |
54 | -2 | Brentford | 309 |
55 | -1 | Oldham Athletic | 298 |
56 | +1 | AFC Bournemouth | 297 |
57 | -1 | Swindon Town | 273 |
58 | +1 | Leyton Orient | 267 |
59 | +2 | Bristol Rovers | 266 |
60 | -2 | Port Vale | 262 |
61 | -8 | Wigan Athletic | 258 |
62 | -2 | Chesterfield | 254 |
63 | +4 | MK Dons | 248 |
64 | -1 | Oxford United | 226 |
65 | -1 | Walsall | 217 |
66 | -4 | Doncaster Rovers | 211 |
67 | -2 | Southend United | 208 |
68 | -2 | Gillingham | 190 |
69 | -1 | Carlisle United | 181 |
70 | – | Shrewsbury Town | 168 |
71 | – | AFC Wimbledon | 163 |
72 | -3 | Crewe Alexandra | 162 |
73 | – | Northampton Town | 159 |
74 | -2 | Peterborough United | 138 |
75 | -1 | Cambridge United | 129 |
76 | – | Scunthorpe United | 122 |
77 | -2 | Exeter City | 120 |
78 | -1 | Colchester United | 118 |
79 | – | Hartlepool United | 113 |
80 | +2 | Mansfield Town | 108 |
81 | -1 | Rochdale | 102 |
82 | -1 | Newport County | 94 |
83 | +1 | Wycombe Wanderers | 87 |
84 | -1 | Yeovil Town | 83 |
85 | +3 | Burton Albion | 78 |
86 | – | Accrington Stanley | 65 |
87 | – | Stevenage | 63 |
88 | -3 | Fleetwood Town | 62 |
89 | n/a | Cheltenham Town | 58 |
90 | -1 | Crawley Town | 46 |
91 | – | Barnet | 43 |
92 | -1 | Morecambe | 28 |
Statistics
- Liverpool just pip Manchester United to the title of ‘most successful club’ in English football, accumulating 1165 points, five more than United.
- The least successful club in the Football League is Morecambe who didn’t tally a single success point.
- Everton have spent more time in the top flight than any other club – 111 seasons.
- Eight clubs have never fallen out of the top two tiers of English football; Arsenal, Chelsea, Everton, Liverpool, Manchester United, Newcastle United, Tottenham Hotspur and West Ham United.
- The biggest club to have never won the top flight was Leicester City but is now West Ham United.
- The biggest club to have dropped as low as the third tier is Aston Villa.
- The biggest club to have never won the FA Cup is Leicester City.
- The best supported club in England based on average attendance is Manchester United.
- Rotherham United are the biggest club to have never graced the top flight.
- Whereas, Exeter City are the biggest club to not have played in either of the top two divisions.
- The biggest clubs in each of the top four divisions are Manchester United, Newcastle United, Sheffield United and Portsmouth.
- The smallest are Bournemouth, Burton Albion, Fleetwood Town and Morecambe respectively.
- The biggest English club to have never won the Champion’s League or European cup is Arsenal. The smallest club to do so is Nottingham Forest.
- The biggest underachievers in the Football League currently are Portsmouth who are two divisions below their ‘natural level’.
- The biggest overachievers are Burton Albion and Bournemouth who are competing two divisions above their ‘natural level’.
Great work!
That’s really interesting. I know Sheffield Wednesday are on a slump at the moment but i’d have been sure they’d feature higher. I wonder what the league table would look like if it took into account administrations, points deductions, etc? Like Fantasy Football with negative points.
You’d then have to factor in those who escaped in the ‘pre-deduction’ days – and then how could you decide what deduction would be arbitrated. The Football league seems to have made it up as they go along with -10 (multiple!), -15, -17 (x2) and -30 points all issued within the space of 5 seasons. Leeds United for example, still achieved 5th place starting from -15 points back in 2009, at one point, even topping the table!!
Might be interesting to see this weighted based on timing, so for example all points gained last year are worth full value, and any others would be 1% less per year since they were earned. This would obviously benefit teams like Wigan whereas Preston and Huddersfield would go the opposite way. Anyway, interesting piece
Great job, would be nice to see the same for last say 10 years.
Or even better – PRE Premiership….before money and Marketing took over football.
That would be MUCH more interesting!
QPR are bigger than Fulham… on only seven ocassions has a club other than Arsenal, Chelsea and Spurs finished as the highest placed London team in the league, QPR have achieved the feat six times, QPR has a major trophy and Fulham used to get 3,000 in the 80’s
Stats don’t lie. Sorry
But what about all the other years? That just means they were above them for 6 years, but if the other 100+ Fulham finished higher surely they’re the bigger club? I know that’s not the case but finishing the highest London club may just be a sign that the other teams had a bad year
and it look like the gap is about to widen
Misguided, misunderstood, bitter, bitter Haha. Ha ha ..
Admittedly QPR were a bigger club than Fulham but they’re not anymore. 12 years straight in the premiership, larger attendances for that length of time. Of course without Al Fayed’s money this would of never been possible, but it is what it is. QPR fans need to accept that times have changed and if Fulham keep running the club the way they have been in the last 10 years they’re only going to get bigger. Fulham’s academy is the best in the country, watch this space.
Umm, who exactly have Fulham brought through of note in the last few years? They’ve had a couple of average players but noone special. Winning academy matches doesn’t make for a good academy – turning youngsters into good professional players does that
I cannot believe you just said fulham have the best academy in the country.. I am genuinely wondering if you are joking..
I wonder if you remember making this stupid comment loooool
If you’re trying to say the smallest club to win a European cup is Forest then that is not correct…
Ipswich won the UEFA cup in 81 and I’m sure there may be a couple of others…. but other than that a good read
I wasn’t! I was trying to say that Forest are the smallest English club to have won the Champion’s League or it’s previous incarnation. Thanks very much!
Also – why points for FA and League Cup SEMI-final appearances – but not Champions League Semi-final?!?!?!?! And of the FA and League Cup Runners-up?
Also – which clubs have spent the LEAST seasons outside the top flight?
Finally – this BELOW expert made for interesting reading. No real surprises – has anything changed at all in the last 100 years or so?!?!?!?! It appears not!!
“Then there’s Arsenal. They were promoted from the old Second Division in 1919 and have never been away since. But, predictably, seeing as they hold the record for current top-flight longevity, the nature of their promotion that year is controversial, to say the least.
In 1919, the First Division was extended from 20 to 22 clubs. During previous expansions, the relegated clubs from the previous season were re-elected, while the top Second Division sides were promoted as usual.
So Derby and Preston, the two top Second Division sides in 1915 – there had been a break for the War – did indeed move on up. And Chelsea, who had finished 19th that season, were, as expected, re-elected.
But the reason for Chelsea’s escape were somewhat arbitrary. In 1915, Manchester United had, to avoid relegation, fixed their last game (against Liverpool of all people). They won 2-0 and sent Chelsea into the relegation places instead, but Liverpool chairman John McKenna must have felt some guilt, because at the League’s AGM in 1919 he gave a speech insisting on the continued presence in the top flight of the Stamford Bridge club.
For some reason however, he also suggested that lowly Arsenal, who had finished fifth in the Second, should be rewarded for their long service to the League. They should replace the team which came 20th in 1915, he argued.
And so it came to pass. The unfairly relegated club? Tottenham Hotspur.”
I think points for top 6 finishes should be put in place. How can narrowly missing out on a league title be worse than a domestic cup semi final? Something like 5 for 2nd place; 4 for 3rd; 3 for 4th; 2 for 5th and 1 for 6th.
Why no points for European Cup semi final when you have awarded points to FA cup and League cup semi final?! Derby would be higher.
Pompey above the Scum, happy with that. Always said they were in our shadow 🙂
Bonus points for us for being the only team to have scored 1000 goals in every division. I would interested to know who is closest to equalling this feat and what the likelihood of it happening! Thanks
How did Burton and Morecambe not tally a single point? They clearly did.
They didn’t tally a single ‘success point’. All of their points came from a share of attendance points.
Ahhh, gotcha!
great result for wolves, it would have only made it stronger if our uefa cup final appearance (1972) was rewarded with a few points? although, the fairest survey on the subject that i have seen to date!