Historical Ranking of English football clubs

Historical Ranking: ENGLAND

[Last updated: end of 2006-07 season]

Rank Club Points
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Liverpool
Manchester United
Arsenal
Aston Villa
Everton
Tottenham Hotspur
Newcastle United
Sunderland
Manchester City
Chelsea
Blackburn Rovers
Shefield Wednesday
Nottingham Forest
Wolverhampton Wanderers
West Bromwich Albion
Derby County
Bolton Wanderers
Leeds United
Sheffield United
Preston North End
557
479
418
357
345
276
272
269
262
258
243
239
233
232
226
207
198
198
196
177
Rank Second Tier Clubs Points
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
Burnley
Leicester City
Birmingham City
Middlesbrough
West Ham United
Stoke City
Huddersfield Town
Portsmouth
Notts County
Ipswich Town
Southampton
Blackpool
Coventry City
Charlton Athletic
Bury
Fulham
Norwich City
Grimsby Town
Barnsley
Luton Town
Cardiff City
Queens Park Rangers
Bristol City
Oldham Athletic
175
175
170
168
165
155
133
130
116
114
114
106
103
102
100
94
89
86
77
75
74
69
65
65
Rank Third Tier Clubs Points
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
Bradford City
Crystal Palace
Hull City
Millwall
Leyton Orient
Port Vale
Plymouth Argyle
MK Dons
Swansea City
Watford
Lincoln City
Rotherham United
Brighton and Hove Albion
Stockport County
Brentford
Swindon Town
Chesterfield
Reading
Bristol Rovers
Carlisle United
Doncaster Rovers
Walsall
Crewe Alexandra
Shrewsbury Town
64
64
55
46
45
44
42
41
41
40
38
33
30
29
27
25
24
24
20
20
20
17
12
12
Rank Fourth Tier Clubs Points
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
Tranmere Rovers
Southend United
Scunthorpe United
Wigan Athletic
Northampton Town
Gillingham
Wrexham
Bournemouth
Darlington
Peterborough United
Mansfield Town
Hereford
Colchester United
Rushden and Diamonds
Yeovil Town
Accrington Stanley
Cheltenham Town
Chester City
Dagenham and Redbridge
Hartlepool United
Macclesfield Town
Morecambe
Rochdale
Wycombe Wanderers
12
9
8
8
7
6
5
4
4
4
3
2
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Rank Non-league & Defunct Clubs with a Score Points
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Oxford United
The Wanderers
Bradford Park Avenue
Burton United
Glossop North End
Gainsborough Trinity
Old Etonians
Accrington
Cambridge United
Darwen
Leeds City
Blackburn Olympic
Clapham Rovers
Old Carthusians
Oxford University
Royal Engineers
Loughborough
New Brighton Tower
York City
Nelson
Newport County
Bootle
Exeter City
Middlesbrough Ironopolis
Southport
32
30
29
18
18
16
12
10
10
10
10
6
6
6
6
6
5
3
3
2
2
1
1
1
1

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The About a Ball ranking is a progressive points scoring system devised our statisticians to grade each league club according to their historical achievements since the beginning of organised football in this country. We felt the need for such a ranking after hearing numerous lower division chairmen claiming that their club is one of the biggest in the country and should rightfully be in the top division. However, there are only 20 places in the Premiership and therefore only 20 clubs deserve to occupy them, so we decided to find out which clubs really are sleeping giants and which are currently flying well above their historical status.

How it works

Points awarded as follows:

Champions Cup Win +15
Other European Trophy Win +10
League Championship +10
FA Cup Win +6
League Cup Win +3
Second Level Division Win +3
Lower Division Win +1
Season in top division +2
Season in 2nd division +1
Bonuses: Super Cup; Club Cup; Double +3

Notes: The scores include any points scored by a club under a former name. In cases where clubs have merged or re-formed, the new club has been awarded the points accumulated by its previous incarnations wherever there is a continuation or substantial link between the old and new clubs.

Criticisms and Improvements

There is no account taken of when the points were scored, so a team (e.g. Sunderland) could have scored a large portion of their points a long time ago in a very different era. The teams did not all join the league at the same time so founder members such as Burnley have scored their points over a much longer period of time than "new" clubs such as Wimbledon/MK Dons. The system takes account only of on the pitch successes and not off the pitch factors such as attendance and annual budget which could indicate a big club. The About a Ball ranking could be improved (and also complicated) by including points for average attendances and annual budget/profit, dividing points totals by the number of years clubs have been in the league, or by giving less weight to points scored a long time ago. However, we are satisfied that our ranking shows the relative playing merits of the 92 league clubs based on historical success and identifies clubs currently under or over achieving.

Conclusions

It is clear that Liverpool are by far the most successful English football club ever, which was the expected result. The top three is also quite clearly defined with considerable gaps to Manchester United in second place and then to Arsenal in third, who themselves have a comfortable margin over Aston Villa. Of the 20 clubs contesting the 2007-08 Premier League, 13 are historically among the top 20 English teams and only seven are playing above their traditional level.

Wigan Athletic are currently the most over-achieving club in the country, having reached the dizzy heights of three whole divisions above their historical level. High-flying Reading are also exceeding expectations at two divisions above their level according to the rankings. Other clubs currently competing two divisions higher than their ranking are Colchester United and Scunthorpe United.

When we turn to underachievement, Leeds United and Nottingham Forest supporters have the most to be concerned about. They should both be comfortably inside the country's top twenty but unfortunately they've hit hard times and find themselves two divisions lower down. Notts County, Bury and Grimsby Town are also all two divisions below their historical status.

All the other 25 clubs that have ever scored points under this system have been included in the study in case they ever return to league football. Of course, there's no chance of that ever happening for many of them because they have been dissolved or disbanded over the years. Oxford United, however, will be hopeful of making it back in the not too distant future. Their score would put them in the third tier of English football. It's interesting to note that teams such as The Wanderers and Bradford Park Avenue are still statistically among the top sixty achievers in the country.

It is strictly forbidden to copy or reproduce these tables without permission. Any breach of copyright may lead to prosecution. The tables will be updated annually and any feedback on the results/corrections to data is welcome.

aboutaball.com 2007

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