Home  

Random  

Nearby  



Log in  



Settings  



Donate  



About Wikipedia  

Disclaimers  



Wikipedia





EFL League Two





Article  

Talk  



Language  

Watch  

Edit  


(Redirected from Football League Two)
 


The English Football League Two, simply known as League Two in England and for sponsorship purposes as Sky Bet League Two, is the third and lowest division of the English Football League (EFL) and fourth-highest tier overall in the English football league system.

EFL League Two
Founded2004; 20 years ago (2004)
  • 1992–2004 (as Division Three)
  • 1958–1992 (as Division Four)
  • CountryEngland
    Other club(s) fromWales
    Number of teams24
    Level on pyramid4
    PromotiontoEFL League One
    RelegationtoNational League
    Domestic cup(s)FA Cup
    League cup(s)
  • EFL Trophy
  • International cup(s)
  • UEFA Conference League (via EFL Cup)
  • Current championsStockport County (1st title; 2nd Fourth tier title)
    (2023–24)
    Most championshipsChesterfield (4 Fourth tier titles and 2 EFL League Two titles)
    Swindon Town (2 EFL League Two titles each)
    TV partnersList of broadcasters
    Websiteefl.com/league-two
    Current: 2024–25 EFL League Two

    Introduced for the 2004–05 English football seasonasFootball League Two, it is a rebrand of the former Football League Third Division,[1] which itself is a rebrand of the now-defunct Football League Fourth Division prior to the 1992 launch of the Premier League.

    As of the 2024–25 season, Newport County hold the longest tenure in this division following their promotion in the 2012–13 season. There are currently two former Premier League clubs competing in this division: Bradford City (1999–2001) and Swindon Town (1993–94).

    The current holders are Stockport County.

    Structure

    edit

    There are 24 clubs in this division. Each club plays each of the other clubs twice (once at home and once away) for a total of 46 matches per season and is awarded three points for a win, one for a draw and no points for a loss. From these points a league table is constructed.

    At the end of each season the top three teams, together with the winner of the play-offs between the teams which finished in the fourth to seventh positions, are promoted to EFL League One and are replaced by the four teams that finished at the bottom of that division.

    Similarly, the two teams that finished at the bottom of League Two are relegated to the National League and are replaced by the team that finished first and the team that won the second through seventh place play-off in that division. Technically a team can be reprieved from relegation if the team replacing them does not have a ground suitable for League football, but in practice this is a non-factor because every team currently in the National League has a ground that meets the League criteria (and even if they did not, a ground-sharing arrangement with another team could be made until their stadium was upgraded). The other way that a team can be spared relegation is if another team either resigns or is expelled from the EFL.

    Final league position is determined, in order, by points obtained, goal difference, goals scored, a mini-league of the results between two or more teams ranked using the previous three criteria, and finally a series of one or more play-off matches.

    There is a mandatory wage cap in this division that limits spending on players' wages to 55% of club turnover.

    Current members

    edit
     

    AFC Wimbledon

     

    Barrow

     

    Bradford City

     

    Bromley

     

    Carlisle United

     

    Cheltenham Town

     

    Chesterfield

     

    Colchester United

     

    Crewe Alexandra

     

    Doncaster Rovers

     

    Fleetwood Town

     

    Gillingham

     

    Grimsby Town

     

    Harrogate Town

     

    Milton Keynes
    Dons

     

    Morecambe

     

    Newport
    County

     

    Notts County

     

    Port Vale

     

    Salford City

     

    Swindon Town

     

    Tranmere Rovers

     

    Walsall

    Locations of the 2024–25 EFL League Two teams
    Note: Table lists in alphabetical order.
    Team Location Stadium Capacity
    Accrington Stanley Accrington Crown Ground 5,450
    AFC Wimbledon London (Wimbledon) Plough Lane 9,369
    Barrow Barrow-in-Furness Holker Street 6,500
    Bradford City Bradford Valley Parade 24,840
    Bromley London (Bromley) Hayes Lane 5,300
    Carlisle United Carlisle Brunton Park 17,949
    Cheltenham Town Cheltenham Whaddon Road 7,066
    Chesterfield Chesterfield SMH Group Stadium 10,504
    Colchester United Colchester Colchester Community Stadium 10,105
    Crewe Alexandra Crewe Gresty Road 10,153
    Doncaster Rovers Doncaster Eco-Power Stadium 15,231
    Fleetwood Town Fleetwood Highbury Stadium 5,327
    Gillingham Gillingham Priestfield Stadium 11,582
    Grimsby Town Cleethorpes Blundell Park 9,052
    Harrogate Town Harrogate Wetherby Road 5,000
    Milton Keynes Dons Milton Keynes Stadium MK 30,500
    Morecambe Morecambe Mazuma Mobile Stadium 6,476
    Newport County Newport Rodney Parade 7,850
    Notts County Nottingham Meadow Lane 19,841
    Port Vale Burslem Vale Park 15,036
    Salford City Salford Moor Lane 5,108
    Swindon Town Swindon County Ground 15,728
    Tranmere Rovers Birkenhead Prenton Park 16,789
    Walsall Walsall Bescot Stadium 11,300

    Teams promoted from League Two

    edit
    Season Winner Points Runner-up Points Third place Points Promoted via play-off League position Points
    2004–05 Yeovil Town 83 Scunthorpe United 80 Swansea City 80 Southend United 4th 78
    2005–06 Carlisle United 86 Northampton Town 83 Leyton Orient 81 Cheltenham Town 5th 72
    2006–07 Walsall 89 Hartlepool United 88 Swindon Town 85 Bristol Rovers 6th 72
    2007–08 Milton Keynes Dons 97 Peterborough United 92 Hereford United 88 Stockport County 4th 82
    2008–09 Brentford 85 Exeter City 79 Wycombe Wanderers 78 Gillingham 5th 75
    2009–10 Notts County 93 Bournemouth 83 Rochdale 82 Dagenham & Redbridge 7th 72
    2010–11 Chesterfield 86 Bury 81 Wycombe Wanderers 81 Stevenage 6th 69
    2011–12 Swindon Town 93 Shrewsbury Town 88 Crawley Town 84 Crewe Alexandra 7th 72
    2012–13 Gillingham 83 Rotherham United 79 Port Vale 78 Bradford City 7th 69
    2013–14 Chesterfield 84 Scunthorpe United 81 Rochdale 81 Fleetwood Town 4th 76
    2014–15 Burton Albion 94 Shrewsbury Town 89 Bury 85 Southend United 5th 84
    2015–16 Northampton Town 99 Oxford United 86 Bristol Rovers 85 AFC Wimbledon 7th 75
    2016–17 Portsmouth 87 Plymouth Argyle 87 Doncaster Rovers 85 Blackpool 7th 70
    2017–18 Accrington Stanley 93 Luton Town 88 Wycombe Wanderers 84 Coventry City 6th 75
    2018–19 Lincoln City 85 Bury 79 Milton Keynes Dons 79 Tranmere Rovers 6th 73
    2019–20[n 1] Swindon Town 88.32 Crewe Alexandra 85.56 Plymouth Argyle 84.64 Northampton Town 7th 72.22
    2020–21 Cheltenham Town 82 Cambridge United 80 Bolton Wanderers 79 Morecambe 4th 78
    2021–22 Forest Green Rovers 84 Exeter City 84 Bristol Rovers 80 Port Vale 5th 78
    2022–23 Leyton Orient 91 Stevenage 85 Northampton Town 83 Carlisle United 5th 76
    2023–24 Stockport County 92 Wrexham 88 Mansfield Town 86 Crawley Town 7th 70
    1. ^ The teams listed for this season were ranked using points per game following the curtailment of the season due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom.

    Play-off results

    edit
    Season Semi-final (1st leg) Semi-final (2nd leg) Final
    2004–05 Lincoln City 1–0 Macclesfield Town
    Northampton Town 0–0 Southend United
    Macclesfield Town 1–1 Lincoln City
    Southend United 1–0 Northampton Town
    Lincoln City 0–2 Southend United
    2005–06 Lincoln City 0–1 Grimsby Town
    Wycombe Wanderers 1–2 Cheltenham Town
    Grimsby Town 2–1 Lincoln City
    Cheltenham Town 0–0 Wycombe Wanderers
    Grimsby Town 0–1 Cheltenham Town
    2006–07 Bristol Rovers 2–1 Lincoln City
    Shrewsbury Town 0–0 Milton Keynes Dons
    Lincoln City 3–5 Bristol Rovers
    Milton Keynes Dons 1–2 Shrewsbury Town
    Bristol Rovers 3–1 Shrewsbury Town
    2007–08 Darlington 2–1 Rochdale
    Wycombe Wanderers 1–1 Stockport County
    Rochdale 2–1 Darlington
    (Rochdale won 5–4 on penalties, a.e.t.)
    Stockport County 1–0 Wycombe Wanderers
    Rochdale 2–3 Stockport County
    2008–09 Shrewsbury Town 0–1 Bury
    Rochdale 0–0 Gillingham
    Bury 0–1 Shrewsbury Town
    (Shrewsbury won 4–3 on penalties, a.e.t.)
    Gillingham 2–1 Rochdale
    Gillingham 1–0 Shrewsbury Town
    2009–10 Dagenham & Redbridge 6–0 Morecambe
    Aldershot Town 0–1 Rotherham United
    Morecambe 2–1 Dagenham & Redbridge
    Rotherham United 2–0 Aldershot Town
    Dagenham & Redbridge 3–2 Rotherham United
    2010–11 Torquay United 2–0 Shrewsbury Town
    Stevenage 2–0 Accrington Stanley
    Shrewsbury Town 0–0 Torquay United
    Accrington Stanley 0–1 Stevenage
    Stevenage 1–0 Torquay United
    2011–12 Crewe Alexandra 1–0 Southend United
    Cheltenham Town 2–0 Torquay United
    Southend United 2–2 Crewe Alexandra
    Torquay United 1–2 Cheltenham Town
    Cheltenham Town 0–2 Crewe Alexandra
    2012–13 Bradford City 2–3 Burton Albion
    Northampton Town 1–0 Cheltenham Town
    Burton Albion 1–3 Bradford City
    Cheltenham Town 0–1 Northampton Town
    Bradford City 3–0 Northampton Town
    2013–14 Burton Albion 1–0 Southend United
    York City 0–1 Fleetwood Town
    Southend United 2–2 Burton Albion
    Fleetwood Town 0–0 York City
    Burton Albion 0–1 Fleetwood Town
    2014–15 Stevenage 1–1 Southend United
    Plymouth Argyle 2–3 Wycombe Wanderers
    Southend United 3–1 Stevenage
    (a.e.t.)
    Wycombe Wanderers 2–1 Plymouth Argyle
    Southend United 1–1 Wycombe Wanderers
    (Southend won 7–6 on penalties, a.e.t.)
    2015–16 Portsmouth 2–2 Plymouth Argyle
    AFC Wimbledon 1–0 Accrington Stanley
    Plymouth Argyle 1–0 Portsmouth
    Accrington Stanley 2–2 AFC Wimbledon
    (a.e.t.)
    AFC Wimbledon 2–0 Plymouth Argyle
    2016–17 Blackpool 3–2 Luton Town
    Carlisle United 3–3 Exeter City
    Luton Town 3–3 Blackpool
    Exeter City 3–2 Carlisle United
    Blackpool 2–1 Exeter City
    2017–18 Lincoln City 0–0 Exeter City
    Coventry City 1–1 Notts County
    Exeter City 3–1 Lincoln City
    Notts County 1–4 Coventry City
    Coventry City 3–1 Exeter City
    2018–19 Newport County 1–1 Mansfield Town
    Tranmere Rovers 1–0 Forest Green Rovers
    Mansfield Town 0–0 Newport County
    (Newport won 5–3 on penalties, a.e.t.)
    Forest Green Rovers 1–1 Tranmere Rovers
    Newport County 0–1 Tranmere Rovers
    (a.e.t.)
    2019–20 Colchester United 1–0 Exeter City
    Northampton Town 0–2 Cheltenham Town
    Exeter City 3–1 Colchester United
    Cheltenham Town 0–3 Northampton Town
    Exeter City 0–4 Northampton Town
    2020–21 Newport County 2–0 Forest Green Rovers
    Tranmere Rovers 1–2 Morecambe
    Forest Green Rovers 4–3 Newport County (a.e.t.)
    Morecambe 1–1 Tranmere Rovers
    Morecambe 1–0 Newport County
    2021–22 Mansfield Town 2–1 Northampton Town
    Swindon Town 2–1 Port Vale
    Northampton Town 0-1 Mansfield Town
    Port Vale 1–1 Swindon Town
    (Port Vale won 6–5 on penalties, a.e.t.)
    Mansfield Town 0–3 Port Vale
    2022–23 Salford City 1–0 Stockport County
    Bradford City 1–0 Carlisle United
    Stockport County 2–1 Salford City
    (Stockport County won 3–1 on penalties, a.e.t.)
    Carlisle United 3–1
    (a.e.t.) Bradford City
    Stockport County 1–1 Carlisle United
    (Carlisle won 5–4 on penalties, a.e.t.)
    2023–24 Crawley Town 3–0 Milton Keynes Dons
    Crewe Alexandra 0–2 Doncaster Rovers
    Milton Keynes Dons 1–5 Crawley Town
    Doncaster Rovers 0–2 Crewe Alexandra
    (Crewe Alexadra won 4-3 on penalties, a.e.t.)
    Crawley Town 2–0 Crewe Alexandra

    Relegated teams

    edit
    Season Clubs
    2004–05 Kidderminster Harriers, Cambridge United
    2005–06 Oxford United, Rushden & Diamonds
    2006–07 Boston United, Torquay United
    2007–08 Mansfield Town, Wrexham
    2008–09 Chester City, Luton Town[2]
    2009–10 Darlington, Grimsby Town
    2010–11 Lincoln City, Stockport County
    2011–12 Macclesfield Town, Hereford United
    2012–13 Aldershot Town, Barnet
    2013–14 Bristol Rovers, Torquay United
    2014–15 Cheltenham Town, Tranmere Rovers
    2015–16 York City, Dagenham & Redbridge
    2016–17 Hartlepool United, Leyton Orient
    2017–18 Barnet, Chesterfield
    2018–19 Notts County, Yeovil Town
    2019–20 Macclesfield Town[a]
    2020–21 Southend United, Grimsby Town
    2021–22 Oldham Athletic, Scunthorpe United
    2022–23 Hartlepool United, Rochdale
    2023–24 Sutton United, Forest Green Rovers
    1. ^ As a result of Bury's expulsion from League One, only one team was relegated to maintain League Two at 24 teams.[3]

    Top scorers

    edit
    Season Top scorer(s) Club(s) Goals
    2004–05   Phil Jevons Yeovil Town 27
    2005–06   Karl Hawley Carlisle United 22
    2006–07   Richie Barker Hartlepool United 21
      Izale McLeod Milton Keynes Dons
    2007–08   Aaron McLean Peterborough United 29
    2008–09   Grant Holt Shrewsbury Town 20
      Jack Lester Chesterfield
    2009–10   Lee Hughes Notts County 30
    2010–11   Clayton Donaldson Crewe Alexandra 28
    2011–12   Adebayo Akinfenwa Northampton Town 18
      Jack Midson AFC Wimbledon
      Izale McLeod Barnet
      Lewis Grabban Rotherham United
    2012–13   Tom Pope Port Vale 31
    2013–14   Sam Winnall Scunthorpe United 23
    2014–15   Matt Tubbs Portsmouth 21
    2015–16   Matty Taylor Bristol Rovers 27
    2016–17   John Akinde Barnet 26
      John Marquis Doncaster Rovers
    2017–18   Billy Kee Accrington Stanley 25
    2018–19   James Norwood Tranmere Rovers 29
    2019–20   Eoin Doyle Bradford City, Swindon Town 25
    2020–21   Paul Mullin Cambridge United 32
    2021–22   Dom Telford Newport County 25
    2022–23   Andy Cook Bradford City 28
    2023–24   Macaulay Langstaff Notts County 28

    Attendances

    edit
     

    League Two is the most watched fourth-tier domestic sports league in the world, and the 14th most watched football league in Europe of any tier.[4] The total number of spectators who watched a League Two game in the 2022–23 season was 3,191,719.

    Since the restructuring into League Two in 2004, the average attendance across all seasons is 4,602. The highest average attendance was 6,274 in the 2023–24 season. The highest average attendance for an individual club was achieved in the 2022–23; 17,967 for Bradford City. The lowest average attendance was 3,856 in the 2009–10 season.

    Season League average attendance Highest average
    Club Attendance
    2004–05 4,499 Swansea City 8,458[5]
    2005–06 4,194 Carlisle United 7,218[6]
    2006–07 4,130 Swindon Town 7,419[7]
    2007–08 4,346 Bradford City 13,659[8]
    2008–09 4,185 Bradford City 12,704[9]
    2009–10 3,856 Bradford City 11,423[10]
    2010–11 4,166 Bradford City 11,128[11]
    2011–12 4,407 Bradford City 10,170[12]
    2012–13 4,390 Bradford City 11,999[13]
    2013–14 4,352 Portsmouth 15,460[14]
    2014–15 4,676 Portsmouth 15,241[15]
    2015–16 4,881 Portsmouth 16,442[16]
    2016–17 4,751 Portsmouth 16,822[17]
    2017–18 4,491 Coventry City 11,218[18]
    2018–19 4,467 Lincoln City 9,005[19]
    2019–20 4,687 Bradford City 14,253[20]
    2020–21 No attendances due to COVID-19 pandemic
    2021–22 4,907 Bradford City 15,450[21]
    2022–23 5,786 Bradford City 17,967[22]
    2023–24 6,274 Bradford City 17,547[23]

    Historic performance

    edit

    Since the restructuring into League Two in 2004, 69 teams have spent at least one season in the division, including 2 of the 20 teams in the 2024–25 Premier League.

    Morecambe have spent the longest in League Two; 16 seasons in total, as well as having had the longest spell in the division, 13 consecutive seasons between 2005 and 2019. Newport County have the current longest tenure, with 12 consecutive seasons.

    Northampton Town and Bristol Rovers have each been promoted four times from League Two. There have been 18 different champions, with Swindon Town and Chesterfield champions on two occasions. 19 teams have been both promoted and relegated from League Two.

    Key

    edit


    Club Total Seasons Number of Spells Longest Spell (Seasons) Highest Position Lowest Position Season
    2004–05
    2005–06
    2006–07
    2007–08
    2008–09
    2009–10
    2010–11
    2011–12
    2012–13
    2013–14
    2014–15
    2015–16
    2016–17
    2017–18
    2018–19
    2019–20
    2020–21
    2021–22
    2022–23
    2023–24
    2024–25
    Accrington Stanley 14 2 12 1 20 20 17 16 15 5 14 18 15 17 4 13 1 17
    AFC Bournemouth 2 1 2 2 21 21 2
    AFC Wimbledon 8 2 5 7 21 16 20 20 15 7 21 10
    Aldershot Town 5 1 5 6 24 15 6 14 11 24
    Barnet 11 2 8 12 23 18 14 12 17 21 22 22 23 15 15 23
    Barrow 5 1 5 8 22 21 22 9 8
    Blackpool 1 1 1 7 7 7
    Bolton Wanderers 1 1 1 3 3 3
    Boston United 3 1 3 11 23 16 11 23
    Bradford City 12 2 6 6 18 10 9 14 18 18 7 9 15 14 6 9
    Brentford 2 1 2 1 14 14 1
    Bristol Rovers 8 4 3 3 23 12 12 6 13 14 23 3 3
    Bromley 1 1 1
    Burton Albion 6 1 6 1 19 13 19 17 4 6 1
    Bury 10 3 7 2 21 17 19 21 13 4 9 2 12 3 2
    Cambridge United 8 2 7 2 24 24 19 9 11 12 21 16 2
    Carlisle United 11 3 9 1 20 1 20 10 6 10 11 18 10 20 5
    Cheltenham Town 14 4 6 1 23 14 5 22 17 6 5 17 23 21 17 16 4 1
    Chester City 5 1 5 15 23 20 15 18 22 23
    Chesterfield 8 4 4 1 24 8 10 8 1 8 1 24
    Colchester United 9 1 8 6 22 8 13 8 6 20 15 20 22
    Coventry City 1 1 1 6 6 6
    Crawley Town 10 2 9 3 22 3 20 19 14 19 13 12 12 22 7
    Crewe Alexandra 10 3 4 2 17 18 10 7 17 15 12 2 13 6
    Dagenham & Redbridge 8 2 5 7 23 20 8 7 19 22 9 14 23
    Darlington 6 1 6 6 24 8 8 11 6 12 24
    Doncaster Rovers 4 2 3 3 18 3 18 5
    Exeter City 11 2 10 2 16 2 10 16 10 14 5 4 9 5 9 2
    Fleetwood Town 3 2 2 4 13 13 4
    Forest Green Rovers 6 2 5 1 24 21 5 10 6 1 24
    Gillingham 7 3 3 1 17 5 8 8 1 17 12
    Grimsby Town 14 3 6 4 24 18 4 15 16 22 23 14 18 17 15 24 11 21
    Harrogate Town 5 1 5 13 19 17 19 19 13
    Hartlepool United 7 3 4 2 23 2 19 22 16 23 17 23
    Hereford United 5 2 3 3 23 16 3 16 21 23
    Kidderminster Harriers 1 1 1 23 23 23
    Leyton Orient 8 3 4 1 24 11 3 8 24 17 11 13 1
    Lincoln City 9 2 7 1 23 6 7 5 15 13 20 23 7 1
    Luton Town 5 2 4 2 24 24 8 11 4 2
    Macclesfield Town 10 2 8 5 24 5 17 22 19 20 19 15 24 22 24
    Mansfield Town 15 2 11 3 23 13 16 17 23 11 21 12 12 8 4 21 16 7 8 3
    Milton Keynes Dons 5 3 2 1 4 4 1 3 4
    Morecambe 16 2 14 4 22 11 11 4 20 15 16 18 11 21 18 22 18 22 4 15
    Newport County 12 1 12 5 22 14 9 22 22 11 7 14 5 11 15 18
    Northampton Town 13 4 7 1 21 7 2 11 16 20 6 21 12 1 15 7 4 3
    Notts County 12 3 6 1 23 19 21 13 21 19 1 17 16 5 23 14
    Oldham Athletic 4 1 4 14 23 14 19 18 23
    Oxford United 8 2 6 2 23 15 23 12 9 9 8 13 2
    Peterborough United 3 1 3 2 10 9 10 2
    Plymouth Argyle 7 2 6 2 21 21 21 10 7 5 2 3
    Port Vale 11 3 5 3 20 18 10 11 12 3 20 20 8 13 5
    Portsmouth 4 1 4 1 16 13 16 6 1
    Rochdale 10 3 6 3 24 9 14 9 5 6 3 12 3 18 24
    Rotherham United 6 1 6 2 14 9 14 5 9 10 2
    Rushden & Diamonds 2 1 2 22 24 22 24
    Salford City 6 1 6 7 20 11 8 10 7 20
    Scunthorpe United 5 3 3 2 24 2 2 20 22 24
    Shrewsbury Town 9 2 8 2 21 21 10 7 18 7 12 4 2 2
    Southend United 7 3 5 4 23 4 13 4 11 5 5 23
    Stevenage 10 2 9 2 23 6 6 18 10 16 10 23 14 21 2
    Stockport County 6 3 3 1 24 22 8 4 24 4 1
    Sutton United 3 1 3 8 23 8 14 23
    Swansea City 1 1 1 3 3 3
    Swindon Town 9 4 4 1 19 3 1 9 13 1 6 10 19
    Torquay United 7 2 5 5 24 20 24 17 7 5 19 24
    Tranmere Rovers 7 3 5 6 24 24 6 7 9 12 16
    Walsall 7 2 6 1 19 1 12 19 16 16 11
    Wrexham 4 2 3 2 24 13 19 24 2
    Wycombe Wanderers 12 3 6 3 22 10 6 12 7 3 3 15 22 4 13 9 3
    Yeovil Town 5 2 4 1 24 1 19 20 19 24
    York City 4 1 4 7 24 17 7 18 24

    See also

    edit

    References

    edit
    1. ^ "The Football League - About Us - History - Timeline - TIMELINE". English Football League. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  • ^ Luton were deducted 30 points for financial irregularities
  • ^ "Bury FC: Membership of the League withdrawn". EFL. 27 August 2019.
  • ^ "Highest League attendances for 70 years as nearly 22 million attend EFL competitions". EFL. 9 June 2023. Retrieved 10 June 2023.
  • ^ "Coca Cola League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2004-2005". Football Web Pages. Archived from the original on 1 June 2023.
  • ^ "Coca Cola League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2005-2006". Football Web Pages. Archived from the original on 1 June 2023.
  • ^ "Coca Cola League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2006-2007". Football Web Pages. Archived from the original on 1 June 2023.
  • ^ "Coca Cola League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2007-2008 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Coca Cola League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2008-2009 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Coca Cola League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2009-2010 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "npower League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2010-2011 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "npower League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2011-2012 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "npower League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2012-2013 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2013-2014 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2014-2015 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2015-2016 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2016-2017 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2017-2018 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2018-2019 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2019-2020 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2021-2022 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home Matches | 2022-2023 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • ^ "Sky Bet League Two | Average Attendances | Home matches | 2023-2024 | Football Web Pages". www.footballwebpages.co.uk.
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=EFL_League_Two&oldid=1230528559"
     



    Last edited on 23 June 2024, at 07:24  





    Languages

     


    العربية
    Asturianu
    Беларуская (тарашкевіца)
    Български
    Bosanski
    Català
    Čeština
    Dansk
    Deutsch
    Eesti
    Ελληνικά
    Español
    فارسی
    Français

    Bahasa Indonesia
    Italiano
    עברית
    Latviešu
    Lëtzebuergesch
    Lietuvių
    Magyar
    Nederlands

    Norsk bokmål
    Polski
    Português
    Română
    Русский
    Scots
    Simple English
    Slovenčina
    Српски / srpski
    Suomi
    Svenska

    Türkçe
    Українська
    Tiếng Vit


     

    Wikipedia


    This page was last edited on 23 June 2024, at 07:24 (UTC).

    Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Terms of Use

    Desktop