Championship

Championship noticias

England Training & Media Activity

Bellingham adquiere una participación en la franquicia Birmingham Phoenix de la liga de críquet «The Hundred»

La estrella del Real Madrid y de Inglaterra, Jude Bellingham, ha dado un paso inesperado hacia el ámbito empresarial del deporte al convertirse en accionista minoritario del Birmingham Phoenix, equipo de la liga de críquet «The Hundred». El centrocampista de 22 años, aún héroe en West Midlands tras sus años en el Birmingham City, se une al grupo de propietarios de cara a la temporada 2026.

Leicester City fall GFX

La caída del Leicester: de cuento de hadas a la tercera división

2 de mayo de 2026: debería ser un día de orgullo y celebración en Leicester, con homenajes a Jamie Vardy, Riyad Mahrez, N'Golo Kanté y al resto del equipo de Claudio Ranieri que ganó la Premier League. Sin embargo, el décimo aniversario de ese milagro se convertirá en un recordatorio, quizá demasiado oportuno, de cuánto han caído los Foxes en una década.

Kyogo Furuhashi Birmingham 2025-26

«Un auténtico desastre»: por qué Kyogo ha sido un fracaso de 10 millones de libras en el Birmingham

Kyogo Furuhashi llegó al Birmingham en 2025 como un fichaje prometedor, pero la exestrella del Celtic se ha convertido en un fracaso de 10 millones de libras (14 millones de dólares) para los Blues. Don Goodman explicó a GOAL por qué las dificultades del internacional japonés sorprenden, ya que su costoso regreso al fútbol británico le ha salido «terriblemente mal» al delantero, autor de tres goles.

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Ryan Reynolds Rob Mac Wrexham crest general

Por qué Reynolds y Mac son los «desvalidos» del Wrexham

El Wrexham mantiene su objetivo de llegar a la Premier League, aunque a Ryan Reynolds y Rob McElhenney se les ha recordado que los Red Dragons son considerados “outsiders” y “desvalidos” para lograrlo en 2026. Tras tres ascensos consecutivos, Don Goodman ha explicado a GOAL por qué el equipo galés puede estar satisfecho si el cuarto se les escapa por poco.

Preguntas frecuentes

Manchester United and Liverpool both have 20 top-flight league titles to their name, and are the most successful sides in English history for league wins. With Liverpool securing their second Premier League in the 2024-25 season, they've won two in the Premier League era and 18 prior to its creation. By contrast, Manchester United have won 13 Premier League titles and seven before the league's inception, last winning a Premier League title at the end of the 2012-13 campaign.

The Premier League in its current format has 20 teams. The first-ever season of the Premier League era in 1992-93 featured 22 teams, which was then reduced to 20 teams ahead of the 1995-96 season.

Garath Barry leads the way with 653 appearances for four different clubs: Aston Villa, Manchester City, Everton and West Bromwich Albion. James Milner is second with 637, winning PL titles with both Manchester City and Liverpool. He is still playing with Brighton, so could surpass Barry if he carries on. Third is Manchester United winger Ryan Giggs, with 632 appearances.

Jimmy Greaves, widely regarded as the most prolific English goalscorer ever, but Alan Shearer is the Premier League's top scorer of all time, with 260 goals across a famed career for both Blackburn Rovers and Newcastle United.

Manchester United icon Ryan Giggs holds the record for the most assists in Premier League history. Giggs spent his entire career at Old Trafford, making 672 appearances and registering 162 assists between 1991 and 2014.

Arsenal wonderkid Ethan Nwaneri is the youngest player to ever play in the Premier League. Nwaneri was just 15 days and 181 days old when he made his debut for the Gunners against Brentford in the 2022-23 season.

Stars such as Cristiano Ronaldo, Thierry Henry, David Beckham, Alan Shearer, Wayne Rooney, Eric Cantona, Steven Gerrard, Dennis Bergkamp, Didier Drogba and Mohamed Salah (still playing) have all featured in the Premier League era.

Jose Mourinho, Sir Alex Ferguson, Carlo Ancelotti, Pep Guardiola, Thomas Tuchel, Jurgen Klopp, and Arsene Wenger are among the most famous managers to have taken charge of a Premier League club.

Manchester United's Old Trafford is the biggest stadium in the league with a capacity of 74,310.