From 1892
until 1992, the Football League Second Division
was the second highest division overall in English
football.
This ended with the creation of the
FA
Premier League, prior to the start of the 1992-93 season, which
caused an administrative split between
The Football League and the teams making
up the new
Premiership, which had
previously been
Football
League Division One.
From 1992-93 to the
2003-04
season, it was the second highest division of
The Football League, but the third
highest division in the overall
English football league
system.
Complicating matters still further, The Second Division was
re-branded as
Football
League One for commercial reasons prior to the start
of the
2004-05 season.
However, it remains the third highest division overall in English
football.
Early History
In 1888,
William McGregor a gentleman from
Perthshire
was the main force between meetings held in
London
and Manchester
involving 12 football clubs, with an eye to a
league competition. These 12 clubs would later become the
Football League's 12 founder
members. The meetings were held in London on
22
March 1888. The main concern was that an early exit in the
knockout format of the FA cup could leave clubs with no matches for
almost a year: not only could they suffer heavy financial losses,
but fans didn't often stick around for that long without a game,
when other teams were playing. Matters were finalised on the
17 April in Manchester.
McGregor had voted against the name The Football League, as he was
concerned that it would be associated with the
Irish Land League. But this name still won
by a majority vote and was selected. The competition guaranteed
fixtures and members for all of its member clubs. The clubs were
split equally among North and Midlands teams and Southern teams,
who were still strictly amateur.
A rival English league called the
Football Alliance operated from 1889 to
1892. In 1892 it was decided to formally merge the two leagues, and
so the
Football League Second Division was formed,
consisting mostly of Football Alliance clubs. The existing League
clubs, plus three of the strongest Alliance clubs, comprised the
Football League First
Division.
Overview
The Second Division was formed in 1892 with 12 clubs, most of which
had previously played in the
Football
Alliance.
The original members were: Ardwick (now
Manchester City), Bootle, Burton
Swifts, Crewe
Alexandra
, Darwen, Grimsby
Town, Lincoln City, Northwich Victoria, Port Vale, Sheffield
United, Small Heath (now Birmingham
City), and Walsall.
Manchester City holds the record for most second tier championships
(7).
It expanded over the years to its final total of 24 clubs, as
follows:
- 1893 - 15 clubs
- 1894 - 16
- 1898 - 18
- 1905 - 20
- 1919 - 22
- 1987 - 23
- 1988 - 24
For the first few years, there was no automatic promotion to the
First Division. Instead, the top few teams in Division Two,
including the winners, contested a series of
test matches against the
bottom teams in Division One.
Small
Heath, Second Division champions in 1892-93, were denied
promotion after losing in test matches to
Newton Heath. However, runners-up
Sheffield United beat
Accrington to become the first team to win
promotion to the First Division. Test matches were abolished in
1898 after
Burnley and
Stoke conspired to deliberately draw their
test match 0-0, which resulted in Burnley being promoted and Stoke
being saved from relegation.
Relegation to the
Football League Third
Division was done in the season before the latter even started,
as Grimsby Town (last place in 1919-20) made way for
Cardiff City and formed the new Third Division
with southern clubs. For subsequent seasons, two clubs were
relegated into either the
Third
Division North or
Third
Division South depending on their geographical location. When
the Third Division was reunified in 1958-59, the relegation
arrangement was kept; a third club began being relegated in
1974.
Previous League champions
See
List of winners of English Football League Championship and
predecessors for winners from 1893 to 1992 and
List
of winners of English Football League One and predecessors for
winners from 1993 to 2004.
Playoff winners since 1987
See
Football
League Championship Play-Offs for winners from 1987 to 1992 and
Football League One
Play-Offs for winners from 1993 to 2004.
References