2018–19 In English Football

The 2018–19 season was the 139th season of competitive association football in England.

Football in England
Season2018–19
Men's football
Premier LeagueManchester City
ChampionshipNorwich City
League OneLuton Town
League TwoLincoln City
National LeagueLeyton Orient
FA CupManchester City
EFL TrophyPortsmouth
EFL CupManchester City
Community ShieldManchester City
Women's football
WSLArsenal
ChampionshipManchester United
FA Women's CupManchester City
League CupManchester City
← 2017–18 England 2019–20 →

National teams

England national football team

Kits

2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
Home
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
Away
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
2018–19 In English Football 
Home alt.

Results and fixtures

Friendlies
v 2018–19 In English Football   Switzerland
11 September 2018 England 2018–19 In English Football  1–0 2018–19 In English Football   Switzerland Leicester, England
20:00 BST Rashford 2018–19 In English Football  54'
Henderson 2018–19 In English Football  88'
Report Lichtsteiner 2018–19 In English Football  27' Stadium: King Power Stadium
Attendance: 30,256
Referee: Clément Turpin (France)
v 2018–19 In English Football  United States
15 November 2018 England 2018–19 In English Football  3–0 2018–19 In English Football  United States London, England
20:00 GMT Lingard 2018–19 In English Football  25'
Alexander-Arnold 2018–19 In English Football  27'
Wilson 2018–19 In English Football  77'
Report Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 68,155
Referee: Jesús Gil Manzano (Spain)
2018–19 UEFA Nations League A
Group 4
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification 2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football 
1 2018–19 In English Football  England 4 2 1 1 6 5 +1 7 Qualification for Nations League Finals 1–2 2–1
2 2018–19 In English Football  Spain 4 2 0 2 12 7 +5 6 2–3 6–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Croatia 4 1 1 2 4 10 −6 4 0–0 3–2
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers
Notes:
v 2018–19 In English Football  Spain
8 September 2018 2018–19 UEFA Nations League A England 2018–19 In English Football  1–2 2018–19 In English Football  Spain London, England
19:45 UTC+1 Rashford 2018–19 In English Football  11'
Henderson 2018–19 In English Football  18'
Shaw 2018–19 In English Football  41'
Stones 2018–19 In English Football  66'
Rose 2018–19 In English Football  90+4'
Report Saúl 2018–19 In English Football  13'
Rodrigo 2018–19 In English Football  32'
Carvajal 2018–19 In English Football  83'
Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 81,392
Referee: Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
12 October 2018 2018–19 UEFA Nations League A Croatia 2018–19 In English Football  0–0 2018–19 In English Football  England Rijeka, Croatia
20:45 UTC+2 Kovačić 2018–19 In English Football  25'
Lovren 2018–19 In English Football  45'
Jedvaj 2018–19 In English Football  59'
Report Henderson 2018–19 In English Football  6'
Stones 2018–19 In English Football  52'
Sterling 2018–19 In English Football  72'
Stadium: Stadion Rujevica
Attendance: 0
Referee: Felix Brych (Germany)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
15 October 2018 2018–19 UEFA Nations League A Spain 2018–19 In English Football  2–3 2018–19 In English Football  England Seville, Spain
20:45 UTC+2 Alcácer 2018–19 In English Football  58'
Ramos 2018–19 In English Football  65' 2018–19 In English Football  90+8'
Castro 2018–19 In English Football  75'
Ceballos 2018–19 In English Football  87'
Morata 2018–19 In English Football  90+8'
Report Dier 2018–19 In English Football  12'
Sterling 2018–19 In English Football  16', 38'
Rashford 2018–19 In English Football  30'
Winks 2018–19 In English Football  65'
Maguire 2018–19 In English Football  71'
Stadium: Benito Villamarín
Attendance: 50,355
Referee: Szymon Marciniak (Poland)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Croatia
18 November 2018 2018–19 UEFA Nations League A England 2018–19 In English Football  2–1 2018–19 In English Football  Croatia London, England
14:00 UTC±0 Barkley 2018–19 In English Football  26'
Lingard 2018–19 In English Football  78'
Kane 2018–19 In English Football  85'
Report Kramarić 2018–19 In English Football  57'
Brozovic 2018–19 In English Football  67'
Jedvaj 2018–19 In English Football  67'
Lovren 2018–19 In English Football  89'
Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 78,221
Referee: Anastasios Sidiropoulos (Greece)
2019 UEFA Nations League Finals
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
6 June 2019 2019 UEFA Nations League SF Netherlands 2018–19 In English Football  3–1 (a.e.t.) 2018–19 In English Football  England Guimarães, Portugal
19:45 (UTC+1) De Ligt 2018–19 In English Football  30', 2018–19 In English Football  73'
Dumfries 2018–19 In English Football  45'
Walker 2018–19 In English Football  97' (o.g.)
Van de Beek 2018–19 In English Football  106'
Promes 2018–19 In English Football  114'
Report Rashford 2018–19 In English Football  32' (pen.)
Kane 2018–19 In English Football  70'
Stadium: Estádio D. Afonso Henriques
Attendance: 25,711
Referee: Clément Turpin (France)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
9 June 2019 2019 UEFA Nations League 3rd Switzerland 2018–19 In English Football  0–0 (a.e.t.)
(5–6 p)
2018–19 In English Football  England Guimarães, Portugal
14:00 (UTC+1) Xhaka 2018–19 In English Football  116' Report Rose 2018–19 In English Football  23'
Lingard 2018–19 In English Football  27'
Stadium: Estádio D. Afonso Henriques
Attendance: 15,742
Referee: Ovidiu Hațegan (Romania)
Penalties
UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying
Group A
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification 2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football 
1 2018–19 In English Football  England 8 7 0 1 37 6 +31 21 Qualify for final tournament 5–0 5–3 4–0 7–0
2 2018–19 In English Football  Czech Republic 8 5 0 3 13 11 +2 15 2–1 2–1 2–1 3–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Kosovo 8 3 2 3 13 16 −3 11 Advance to play-offs via Nations League 0–4 2–1 1–1 2–0
4 2018–19 In English Football  Bulgaria 8 1 3 4 6 17 −11 6 0–6 1–0 2–3 1–1
5 2018–19 In English Football  Montenegro 8 0 3 5 3 22 −19 3 1–5 0–3 1–1 0–0
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Qualification tiebreakers
v 2018–19 In English Football  Czech Republic
22 March 2019 (2019-03-22) England 2018–19 In English Football  5–0 2018–19 In English Football  Czech Republic London, England
20:45 (19:45 UTC±0) Sterling 2018–19 In English Football  24', 62', 68'
Kane 2018–19 In English Football  45+2' (pen.)
Kalas 2018–19 In English Football  84' (o.g.)
Report Kadeřábek 2018–19 In English Football  45+1'
Schick 2018–19 In English Football  53'
Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 82,575
Referee: Artur Soares Dias (Portugal)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
25 March 2019 (2019-03-25) Montenegro 2018–19 In English Football  1–5 2018–19 In English Football  England Podgorica, Montenegro
20:45 (19:45 UTC±0) Vešović 2018–19 In English Football  18'
Boljević 2018–19 In English Football  90+2'
Report Keane 2018–19 In English Football  30'
Barkley 2018–19 In English Football  39', 59', 2018–19 In English Football  52'
Kane 2018–19 In English Football  71'
Sterling 2018–19 In English Football  81'
Henderson 2018–19 In English Football  90+2'
Rose 2018–19 In English Football  90+3'
Stadium: Podgorica City Stadium
Attendance: 8,329
Referee: Aleksei Kulbakov (Belarus)

England U-21 national football team

2019 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification

Group 4
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification 2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football 
1 2018–19 In English Football  England 10 8 2 0 23 4 +19 26 Final tournament 0–0 2–1 3–1 3–0 7–0
2 2018–19 In English Football  Netherlands 10 5 3 2 21 6 +15 18 1–1 3–0 1–2 3–0 8–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Ukraine 10 5 2 3 18 12 +6 17 0–2 1–1 3–1 3–2 1–0
4 2018–19 In English Football  Scotland 10 4 2 4 13 13 0 14 0–2 2–0 0–2 1–1 3–0
5 2018–19 In English Football  Latvia 10 0 4 6 5 18 −13 4 1–2 0–3 1–1 0–2 0–0
6 2018–19 In English Football  Andorra 10 0 3 7 1 28 −27 3 0–1 0–1 0–6 1–1 0–0
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Qualification tiebreakers

2019 UEFA European Under-21 Championship

The final draw was held on 23 November 2018, 18:00 CET (UTC+1), in Bologna. The 12 teams are drawn into three groups of four teams. Hosts Italy are assigned to position A1 in the draw, while the other teams are seeded according to their coefficient ranking following the end of the qualifying stage, calculated based on the following:

England U-19 national football team

2018 UEFA European Under-19 Championship

Group B

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 2018–19 In English Football  Ukraine 3 2 1 0 4 2 +2 7 Knockout stage and
2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup
2 2018–19 In English Football  France 3 2 0 1 11 2 +9 6
3 2018–19 In English Football  England 3 1 1 1 4 8 −4 4 FIFA U-20 World Cup play-off
4 2018–19 In English Football  Turkey 3 0 0 3 2 9 −7 0
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
Knockout stage
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
26 July 2018 (2018-07-26) Norway 2018–19 In English Football  3–0 2018–19 In English Football  England Seinäjoki, Finland
13:00
Report Stadium: OmaSP Stadion
Referee: Bartosz Frankowski (Poland)

England U-17 national football team

2019 UEFA European Under-17 Championship

Group B

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 2018–19 In English Football  France 3 2 1 0 7 3 +4 7 Knockout stage
2 2018–19 In English Football  Netherlands 3 2 0 1 7 4 +3 6
3 2018–19 In English Football  England 3 1 1 1 6 7 −1 4
4 2018–19 In English Football  Sweden 3 0 0 3 3 9 −6 0
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
v 2018–19 In English Football  France
3 May 2019 (2019-05-03) England 2018–19 In English Football  1–1 2018–19 In English Football  France Longford, Republic of Ireland
19:30 Greenwood 2018–19 In English Football  34' (pen.) Report
Stadium: City Calling Stadium
Referee: Rade Obrenović (Slovenia)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
6 May 2019 (2019-05-06) Netherlands 2018–19 In English Football  5–2 2018–19 In English Football  England Dublin, Republic of Ireland
15:00
Report
Stadium: Tolka Park
Referee: Manfredas Lukjančukas (Lithuania)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
9 May 2019 (2019-05-09) Sweden 2018–19 In English Football  1–3 2018–19 In English Football  England Dublin, Republic of Ireland
16:30
Report
Stadium: Whitehall Stadium
Referee: Espen Eskås (Norway)

England women's national football team

Results and fixtures

Friendlies
v 2018–19 In English Football  Brazil
6 October 2018 England 2018–19 In English Football  1–0 2018–19 In English Football  Brazil Nottingham, England
12:30 BST
Report Stadium: Meadow Lane
Attendance: 7,864
Referee: Sandra Braz Bastos (Portugal)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Australia
9 October 2018 England 2018–19 In English Football  1–1 2018–19 In English Football  Australia London, England
19:00 BST Kirby 2018–19 In English Football  21' Report Polkinghorne 2018–19 In English Football  84' Stadium: Craven Cottage
Referee: Florence Guillemin (France)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
8 November 2018 Austria 2018–19 In English Football  0–3 2018–19 In English Football  England Maria Enzersdorf, Austria
19:00 CET Report
Stadium: BSFZ-Arena
v 2018–19 In English Football  Sweden
11 November 2018 England 2018–19 In English Football  0–2 2018–19 In English Football  Sweden Rotherham, England
13:30 GMT Report
Stadium: New York Stadium
Attendance: 9,561
Referee: Petra Pavlikova (Slovakia)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Canada
5 April 2019 England 2018–19 In English Football  0–1 2018–19 In English Football  Canada Manchester, England
19:00 BST Report
Stadium: Academy Stadium
Attendance: 5,682
Referee: Ivana Martincic (Croatia)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Spain
9 April 2019 England 2018–19 In English Football  2–1 2018–19 In English Football  Spain Swindon, England
19:00 BST
Report
Stadium: Energy Check County Ground
Attendance: 13,449
Referee: Stephanie Frappart (France)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Denmark
25 May 2019 England 2018–19 In English Football  2–0 2018–19 In English Football  Denmark Walsall, England
15:00 BST
Report Stadium: Bank's Stadium
Attendance: 8,273
Referee: Desiree Grundbacher (Switzerland)
v 2018–19 In English Football  New Zealand
1 June 2019 England 2018–19 In English Football  0–1 2018–19 In English Football  New Zealand Brighton and Hove, England
15:00 BST Report
Stadium: Amex Stadium
Attendance: 20,076
Referee: Monika Mularczyk (Poland)
2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA)
UEFA Group 1
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification 2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football  2018–19 In English Football 
1 2018–19 In English Football  England 8 7 1 0 29 1 +28 22 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup 0–0 6–0 4–0 5–0
2 2018–19 In English Football  Wales 8 5 2 1 7 3 +4 17 0–3 3–0 1–0 1–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Russia 8 4 1 3 16 13 +3 13 1–3 0–0 3–0 3–0
4 2018–19 In English Football  Bosnia and Herzegovina 8 1 0 7 3 19 −16 3 0–2 0–1 1–6 0–2
5 2018–19 In English Football  Kazakhstan 8 1 0 7 2 21 −19 3 0–6 0–1 0–3 0–2
Source: UEFA
Notes:
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
31 August 2018 WCQ-G1 Wales 2018–19 In English Football  0–3 2018–19 In English Football  England Newport, Wales
20:45 (19:45 BST) Report
Stadium: Rodney Parade
Attendance: 5,053
Referee: Katalin Kulcsár (Hungary)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
4 September 2018 WCQ-G1 Kazakhstan 2018–19 In English Football  0–6 2018–19 In English Football  England Pavlodar, Kazakhstan
17:00 (21:00 ALMT) Report
Stadium: Pavlodar Central Stadium
Attendance: 6,842
Referee: Hristiana Guteva (Bulgaria)
2019 SheBelieves Cup
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1 2018–19 In English Football  England (C) 3 2 1 0 7 3 +4 7
2 2018–19 In English Football  United States (H) 3 1 2 0 5 4 +1 5
3 2018–19 In English Football  Japan 3 1 1 1 5 6 −1 4
4 2018–19 In English Football  Brazil 3 0 0 3 2 6 −4 0
Source: USSoccer
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result; 5) FIFA ranking.
(C) Champions; (H) Hosts
v 2018–19 In English Football  Brazil
27 February 2019 England 2018–19 In English Football  2–1 2018–19 In English Football  Brazil Chester, Pennsylvania
16:00 ET
Report
Stadium: Talen Energy Stadium
Attendance: 5,954
Referee: Ekaterina Koroleva (United States)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
2 March 2019 United States 2018–19 In English Football  2–2 2018–19 In English Football  England Nashville, Tennessee
16:30 ET
Report
Stadium: Nissan Stadium
Attendance: 22,125
Referee: Marianela Araya (Costa Rica)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
5 March 2019 Japan 2018–19 In English Football  0–3 2018–19 In English Football  England Tampa, Florida
17:15 ET Report
Stadium: Raymond James Stadium
Attendance: 8,580
Referee: Christina Unkel (United States)
2019 FIFA Women's World Cup
Group D
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 2018–19 In English Football  England 3 3 0 0 5 1 +4 9 Advance to knockout stage
2 2018–19 In English Football  Japan 3 1 1 1 2 3 −1 4
3 2018–19 In English Football  Argentina 3 0 2 1 3 4 −1 2
4 2018–19 In English Football  Scotland 3 0 1 2 5 7 −2 1
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
v 2018–19 In English Football  Scotland
9 June 2019 Group D England 2018–19 In English Football  2–1 2018–19 In English Football  Scotland Nice, France
18:00
Report
Stadium: Allianz Riviera
Attendance: 13,188
Referee: Jana Adámková (Czech Republic)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Argentina
14 June 2019 Group D England 2018–19 In English Football  1–0 2018–19 In English Football  Argentina Le Havre, France
21:00
Report Stadium: Stade Océane
Attendance: 20,294
Referee: Qin Liang (China PR)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
19 June 2019 Group D Japan 2018–19 In English Football  0–2 2018–19 In English Football  England Nice, France
21:00 Report
Stadium: Allianz Riviera
Attendance: 14,319
Referee: Claudia Umpiérrez (Uruguay)
Knockout stage
v 2018–19 In English Football  Cameroon
23 June 2019 Round of 16 England 2018–19 In English Football  3–0 2018–19 In English Football  Cameroon Valenciennes, France
17:30
Report Stadium: Stade du Hainaut
Attendance: 20,148
Referee: Qin Liang (China PR)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
27 June 2019 Quarter-finals Norway 2018–19 In English Football  0–3 2018–19 In English Football  England Le Havre, France
21:00 Report
Stadium: Stade Océane
Attendance: 21,111
Referee: Lucila Venegas (Mexico)
v 2018–19 In English Football  United States
2 July 2019 Semi-finals England 2018–19 In English Football  1–2 2018–19 In English Football  United States Décines-Charpieu, France
21:00
Report
Stadium: Parc Olympique Lyonnais
Attendance: 53,512
Referee: Edina Alves Batista (Brazil)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Sweden
6 July 2019 3rd place England 2018–19 In English Football  1–2 2018–19 In English Football  Sweden Nice, France
17:00
Report
Stadium: Allianz Riviera
Attendance: 20,316
Referee: Anastasia Pustovoitova (Russia)

England women's national under-20 football team

2018 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup

Group B

The official draw was held on 8 March 2018 at the Rennes Opera House in Rennes.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 2018–19 In English Football  England 3 2 1 0 10 3 +7 7 Knockout stage
2 2018–19 In English Football  North Korea 3 2 0 1 5 5 0 6
3 2018–19 In English Football  Mexico 3 1 0 2 5 10 −5 3
4 2018–19 In English Football  Brazil 3 0 1 2 4 6 −2 1
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
5 August 2018 Group B North Korea 2018–19 In English Football  1–3 2018–19 In English Football  England Dinan-Léhon, France
16:30
  • Ja Un-Yong 2018–19 In English Football  71'
Report
Stadium: Stade du Clos Gastel
Attendance: 1,464
Referee: Stéphanie Frappart (France)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
8 August 2018 (2018-08-08) Group B Brazil 2018–19 In English Football  1–1 2018–19 In English Football  England Dinan-Léhon, France
13:30
Report
Stadium: Stade du Clos Gastel
Attendance: 1,981
Referee: Melissa Borjas (Honduras)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Mexico
12 August 2018 (2018-08-12) Group B England 2018–19 In English Football  6–1 2018–19 In English Football  Mexico Saint-Malo, France
13:30
Report
  • Ovalle 2018–19 In English Football  37'
Stadium: Stade Marville
Attendance: 1,362
Referee: Kate Jacewicz (Australia)
Knockout stage
v 2018–19 In English Football  Netherlands
17 August 2018 (2018-08-17) QF England 2018–19 In English Football  2–1 2018–19 In English Football  Netherlands Vannes, France
16:00
Report
Stadium: Stade de la Rabine
Attendance: 2,737
Referee: Ri Hyang-ok (North Korea)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Japan
20 August 2018 (2018-08-20) SF England 2018–19 In English Football  0–2 2018–19 In English Football  Japan Vannes, France
16:00 Report
Stadium: Stade de la Rabine
Attendance: 2,807
Referee: Claudia Umpiérrez (Uruguay)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
24 August 2018 (2018-08-24) 3rd France 2018–19 In English Football  1–1
(2–4 p)
2018–19 In English Football  England Vannes, France
16:00
Report
Stadium: Stade de la Rabine
Attendance: 4,706
Referee: Gladys Lengwe (Zambia)
Penalties

England women's national under-17 football team

2019 UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship qualification

Group 5

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 2018–19 In English Football  England 3 3 0 0 15 0 +15 9 Elite round
2 2018–19 In English Football  Iceland 3 2 0 1 7 2 +5 6
3 2018–19 In English Football  Azerbaijan 3 0 1 2 1 9 −8 1
4 2018–19 In English Football  Moldova (H) 3 0 1 2 1 13 −12 1
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Qualification tiebreakers
(H) Hosts
v 2018–19 In English Football  Moldova
19 September 2018 (2018-09-19) England 2018–19 In English Football  6–0 2018–19 In English Football  Moldova Chișinău, Moldova
14:00 (15:00 EEST)
Report Stadium: Zimbru Stadium
Referee: Merima Čelik (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
v 2018–19 In English Football  Azerbaijan
22 September 2018 (2018-09-22) England 2018–19 In English Football  7–0 2018–19 In English Football  Azerbaijan Vadul lui Vodă, Moldova
14:00 (15:00 EEST)
Report Stadium: Stadionul CPSM
Referee: Catarina Campos (Portugal)
v 2018–19 In English Football  England
25 September 2018 (2018-09-25) Iceland 2018–19 In English Football  0–2 2018–19 In English Football  England Orhei, Moldova
14:00 (15:00 EEST) Report
  • Filis 2018–19 In English Football  65'
  • Stables 2018–19 In English Football  87'
Stadium: CSR Orhei
Referee: Catarina Campos (Portugal)

UEFA competitions

UEFA Champions League

Group stage

Group B

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification BAR TOT INT PSV
1 2018–19 In English Football  Barcelona 6 4 2 0 14 5 +9 14 Advance to knockout phase 1–1 2–0 4–0
2 2018–19 In English Football  Tottenham Hotspur 6 2 2 2 9 10 −1 8 2–4 1–0 2–1
3 2018–19 In English Football  Inter Milan 6 2 2 2 6 7 −1 8 Transfer to Europa League 1–1 2–1 1–1
4 2018–19 In English Football  PSV Eindhoven 6 0 2 4 6 13 −7 2 1–2 2–2 1–2
Source: UEFA
Notes:
Group C

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification PAR LIV NAP ZVE
1 2018–19 In English Football  Paris Saint-Germain 6 3 2 1 17 9 +8 11 Advance to knockout phase 2–1 2–2 6–1
2 2018–19 In English Football  Liverpool 6 3 0 3 9 7 +2 9 3–2 1–0 4–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Napoli 6 2 3 1 7 5 +2 9 Transfer to Europa League 1–1 1–0 3–1
4 2018–19 In English Football  Red Star Belgrade 6 1 1 4 5 17 −12 4 1–4 2–0 0–0
Source: UEFA
Notes:
Group F

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification MC LYO SHK HOF
1 2018–19 In English Football  Manchester City 6 4 1 1 16 6 +10 13 Advance to knockout phase 1–2 6–0 2–1
2 2018–19 In English Football  Lyon 6 1 5 0 12 11 +1 8 2–2 2–2 2–2
3 2018–19 In English Football  Shakhtar Donetsk 6 1 3 2 8 16 −8 6 Transfer to Europa League 0–3 1–1 2–2
4 2018–19 In English Football  1899 Hoffenheim 6 0 3 3 11 14 −3 3 1–2 3–3 2–3
Source: UEFA
Group H

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification JUV MU VAL YB
1 2018–19 In English Football  Juventus 6 4 0 2 9 4 +5 12 Advance to knockout phase 1–2 1–0 3–0
2 2018–19 In English Football  Manchester United 6 3 1 2 7 4 +3 10 0–1 0–0 1–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Valencia 6 2 2 2 6 6 0 8 Transfer to Europa League 0–2 2–1 3–1
4 2018–19 In English Football  Young Boys 6 1 1 4 4 12 −8 4 2–1 0–3 1–1
Source: UEFA

Knockout phase

Round of 16
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Schalke 04 2018–19 In English Football  2–10 2018–19 In English Football  Manchester City 2–3 0–7
Manchester United 2018–19 In English Football  3–3 (a) 2018–19 In English Football  Paris Saint-Germain 0–2 3–1
Tottenham Hotspur 2018–19 In English Football  4–0 2018–19 In English Football  Borussia Dortmund 3–0 1–0
Liverpool 2018–19 In English Football  3–1 2018–19 In English Football  Bayern Munich 0–0 3–1
Quarter-finals
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Liverpool 2018–19 In English Football  6–1 2018–19 In English Football  Porto 2–0 4–1
Tottenham Hotspur 2018–19 In English Football  4–4 (a) 2018–19 In English Football  Manchester City 1–0 3–4
Manchester United 2018–19 In English Football  0–4 2018–19 In English Football  Barcelona 0–1 0–3

Notes

Semi-finals
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Tottenham Hotspur 2018–19 In English Football  3–3 (a) 2018–19 In English Football  Ajax 0–1 3–2
Barcelona 2018–19 In English Football  3–4 2018–19 In English Football  Liverpool 3–0 0–4
Final

The final was played on 1 June 2019 at the Wanda Metropolitano in Madrid. The "home" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws. It was the second all-English final in the competition's history and the first since 2008.

Tottenham Hotspur 2018–19 In English Football 0–22018–19 In English Football  Liverpool
Report
Metropolitano Stadium, Madrid
Attendance: 63,272
Referee: Damir Skomina (Slovenia)

UEFA Europa League

Qualifying phase and play-off round

Second qualifying round
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Aberdeen 2018–19 In English Football  2–4 2018–19 In English Football  Burnley 1–1 1–3 (a.e.t.)
Third qualifying round
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
İstanbul Başakşehir 2018–19 In English Football  0–1 2018–19 In English Football  Burnley 0–0 0–1
Play-off round
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Olympiacos 2018–19 In English Football  4–2 2018–19 In English Football  Burnley 3–1 1–1

Group stage

Group E

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification ARS SPO VOR QRB
1 2018–19 In English Football  Arsenal 6 5 1 0 12 2 +10 16 Advance to knockout phase 0–0 4–2 1–0
2 2018–19 In English Football  Sporting CP 6 4 1 1 13 3 +10 13 0–1 3–0 2–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Vorskla Poltava 6 1 0 5 4 13 −9 3 0–3 1–2 0–1
4 2018–19 In English Football  Qarabağ 6 1 0 5 2 13 −11 3 0–3 1–6 0–1
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
Notes:
Group L

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification CHL BATE VID PAOK
1 2018–19 In English Football  Chelsea 6 5 1 0 12 3 +9 16 Advance to knockout phase 3–1 1–0 4–0
2 2018–19 In English Football  BATE Borisov 6 3 0 3 9 9 0 9 0–1 2–0 1–4
3 2018–19 In English Football  Vidi 6 2 1 3 5 7 −2 7 2–2 0–2 1–0
4 2018–19 In English Football  PAOK 6 1 0 5 5 12 −7 3 0–1 1–3 0–2
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers

Knockout phase

Round of 32
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Malmö FF 2018–19 In English Football  1–5 2018–19 In English Football  Chelsea 1–2 0–3
BATE Borisov 2018–19 In English Football  1–3 2018–19 In English Football  Arsenal 1–0 0–3
Round of 16
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Chelsea 2018–19 In English Football  8–0 2018–19 In English Football  Dynamo Kyiv 3–0 5–0
Rennes 2018–19 In English Football  3–4 2018–19 In English Football  Arsenal 3–1 0–3
Quarter-finals
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Arsenal 2018–19 In English Football  3–0 2018–19 In English Football  Napoli 2–0 1–0
Slavia Prague 2018–19 In English Football  3–5 2018–19 In English Football  Chelsea 0–1 3–4

Notes

Semi-finals
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Arsenal 2018–19 In English Football  7–3 2018–19 In English Football  Valencia 3–1 4–2
Eintracht Frankfurt 2018–19 In English Football  2–2 (3–4 p) 2018–19 In English Football  Chelsea 1–1 1–1 (a.e.t.)
Final

The final was played on 29 May 2019 at the Olympic Stadium in Baku. The "home" team (for administrative purposes) was determined by an additional draw held after the quarter-final and semi-final draws. It was the second all-English final in the competition's history and the first since 1972, when it was first known as the UEFA Cup.

Chelsea 2018–19 In English Football 4–12018–19 In English Football  Arsenal
Report
Olympic Stadium, Baku
Attendance: 51,370
Referee: Gianluca Rocchi (Italy)

UEFA Youth League

UEFA Champions League Path

Group B
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification BAR TOT INT PSV
1 2018–19 In English Football  Barcelona 6 3 2 1 8 6 +2 11 Round of 16 0–2 2–1 2–1
2 2018–19 In English Football  Tottenham Hotspur 6 2 3 1 10 8 +2 9 Play-offs 1–1 2–4 2–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Internazionale 6 2 1 3 10 9 +1 7 0–2 1–1 3–0
4 2018–19 In English Football  PSV Eindhoven 6 1 2 3 6 11 −5 5 1–1 2–2 2–1
Source: UEFA
Group C
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification LIV PAR NAP ZVE
1 2018–19 In English Football  Liverpool 6 4 1 1 17 7 +10 13 Round of 16 5–2 5–0 2–1
2 2018–19 In English Football  Paris Saint-Germain 6 4 1 1 13 10 +3 13 Play-offs 3–2 0–0 2–1
3 2018–19 In English Football  Napoli 6 1 3 2 9 15 −6 6 1–1 2–5 5–3
4 2018–19 In English Football  Red Star Belgrade 6 0 1 5 6 13 −7 1 0–2 0–1 1–1
Source: UEFA
Group F
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification HOF LYO MCI SHK
1 2018–19 In English Football  1899 Hoffenheim 6 3 2 1 15 10 +5 11 Round of 16 3–1 5–2 1–1
2 2018–19 In English Football  Lyon 6 3 2 1 13 8 +5 11 Play-offs 3–3 2–0 2–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Manchester City 6 2 1 3 10 14 −4 7 2–1 1–4 4–1
4 2018–19 In English Football  Shakhtar Donetsk 6 0 3 3 5 11 −6 3 1–2 1–1 1–1
Source: UEFA
Group H
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification MUN JUV YBO VAL
1 2018–19 In English Football  Manchester United 6 5 1 0 20 7 +13 16 Round of 16 4–1 6–2 4–0
2 2018–19 In English Football  Juventus 6 3 1 2 11 11 0 10 Play-offs 2–2 2–1 3–0
3 2018–19 In English Football  Young Boys 6 2 1 3 12 15 −3 7 1–2 4–2 3–3
4 2018–19 In English Football  Valencia 6 0 1 5 4 14 −10 1 1–2 0–1 0–1
Source: UEFA

Domestic Champions Path

First round
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Chelsea 2018–19 In English Football  14–1 2018–19 In English Football  Molde 10–1 4–0
Second round
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Elfsborg 2018–19 In English Football  0–9 2018–19 In English Football  Chelsea 0–3 0–6

Play-offs

Team 1  Score  Team 2
PAOK 2018–19 In English Football  0–1 2018–19 In English Football  Tottenham Hotspur
Chelsea 2018–19 In English Football  3–1 2018–19 In English Football  Monaco

Knockout phase

Round of 16
Team 1  Score  Team 2
Chelsea 2018–19 In English Football  2–1 2018–19 In English Football  Montpellier
Midtjylland 2018–19 In English Football  3–1 2018–19 In English Football  Manchester United
Dinamo Zagreb 2018–19 In English Football  2–1 (4–3 p) 2018–19 In English Football  Liverpool
Porto 2018–19 In English Football  2–0 2018–19 In English Football  Tottenham Hotspur
Quarter-finals
Team 1  Score  Team 2
Chelsea 2018–19 In English Football  2–2 (4–2 p) 2018–19 In English Football  Dinamo Zagreb
Semi-finals
Team 1  Score  Team 2
Barcelona 2018–19 In English Football  2–2 (4–5 p) 2018–19 In English Football  Chelsea
Final

The final was played on 29 April 2019 at Colovray Stadium, Nyon.

Porto 2018–19 In English Football 3–12018–19 In English Football  Chelsea
Report

UEFA Women's Champions League

Knockout phase

Round of 32
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
SFK 2000 2018–19 In English Football  0–11 2018–19 In English Football  Chelsea 0–5 0–6
Atlético Madrid 2018–19 In English Football  3–1 2018–19 In English Football  Manchester City 1–1 2–0
Round of 16
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Chelsea 2018–19 In English Football  7–0 2018–19 In English Football  Fiorentina 1–0 6–0
Quarter-finals
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Chelsea 2018–19 In English Football  3–2 2018–19 In English Football  Paris Saint-Germain 2–0 1–2
Semi-finals
Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Lyon 2018–19 In English Football  3–2 2018–19 In English Football  Chelsea 2–1 1–1

Men's football

League Promoted to league Relegated from league
Premier League
Championship
League One
League Two
National League

Premier League

In one of the closest title races since the formation of the Premier League, with a new points total set for finishing second, Manchester City became the first top-flight team in a decade to retain their title in part thanks to a late run that saw them win their last 14 games – despite falling short in the Champions League, the Sky Blues became the first team in English football to complete a domestic treble, by once again retaining the League Cup and securing their first FA Cup since 2011. Liverpool finished second, missing out on ending their wait for a league title once again, despite pushing City all the way to the final day and once again finishing their league campaign unbeaten at Anfield as well as having been top at Christmas; however, it was in Europe that the Reds enjoyed more success as they made it to a second successive Champions League final against the odds, including a stunning 4–0 victory at home to Barcelona - and ultimately made amends for the previous season's loss, winning their sixth European title and their first under manager Jurgen Klopp.

The battle for the top four also proved to be a close-run battle, with each of Tottenham Hotspur, Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester United fighting for the last two Champions League spots – in the end, securing the spots for Europe's elite competition were Chelsea, who also reached the final of the League Cup and won the Europa League to at least ensure a trophy but endured another disappointing league campaign that saw talk of a potential third title in five seasons rapidly fade away in the New Year, and Tottenham Hotspur, who also saw talk of a potential title win diminish owing in part to a poor run of league form from March onwards; however, the North London side more than made up for this by also reaching their first ever Champions League final in a European run that saw them narrowly edge past both Manchester City and Dutch front-runners Ajax, ultimately falling to fellow English side Liverpool in a tight final. Arsenal and Manchester United were forced to settle for fifth and sixth respectively, the Gunners missing out on Champions League qualification once again on two different fronts, falling to Chelsea in the Europa League final to mark a disappointing end to Unai Emery's first season in charge, whilst the Red Devils endured a problematic season across all tournaments with even the sacking of manager José Mourinho and then the temporary appointment of United legend Ole Gunnar Solskjær (an act later made permanent) failing to provide much spark to the Manchester side.

Wolverhampton Wanderers enjoyed the best top-flight season for a newly promoted side since Ipswich Town in 2001, finishing 7th; this represented their best finish in the English pyramid since finishing 6th in 1980. 7th was also enough for the Europa League qualifying rounds, and this, added to a run to the semi-finals of the FA Cup - their longest such run in 21 years - earned Portuguese manager Nuno Espírito Santo and his team plenty of praise. Leicester City endured a troubling season both on and off the pitch, first suffering tragedy with the death of club owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha in a helicopter crash shortly after a 1–1 home draw with West Ham United – with the Foxes then enduring a run of poor results against lesser sides in 2019, including a third-round FA Cup exit at the hands of League Two side Newport County, resulting in the dismissal of manager Claude Puel; however, the appointment of former Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers helped push the club back up the table and to a top-ten finish.

Watford finished not far behind the Foxes, also enjoying their greatest top-flight season since finishing 2nd in 1984, the Hornets breaking the 50 point barrier and narrowly missing out on the top ten on top of reaching the final of the FA Cup for the first time in over 30 years, ultimately failing at the hands of Manchester City. Having successfully qualified for the qualifying rounds of the Europa League the previous season, Burnley endured a troublesome first half of the campaign that saw them first narrowly miss out on a Europa League group stage spot and then find themselves firmly in the relegation zone at Christmas; however, the return of influential goalkeeper Tom Heaton after Boxing Day saw the Clarets fight their way out of the bottom three with games to spare. A very poor start to the season saw Southampton stuck in a relegation battle for the second season running, resulting in the dismissal of Mark Hughes in early December – despite the threat of the drop hanging over them until the closing months, a resurgence under former RB Leipzig manager and Austrian Ralph Hasenhüttl saw the Saints climb away from the bottom three and towards safety with games to spare.

At the bottom of the table, both Huddersfield Town and Fulham endured early relegations – the two clubs never really looking like escaping the drop; whilst the Terriers (who arguably found themselves suffering from second season syndrome) saved some face by narrowly avoiding breaking the records for the most defeats and most goals conceded in a 38-game season, the London side fell back into the Championship at the first time of asking in almost similar fashion to their previous top-flight season by having three different managers throughout the campaign and conceding more goals than anyone else. The fight to avoid the final spot proved to be much closer, with Cardiff City once again falling back into the second tier after just one season – a consequence of a poor start to the season and several defeats from winnable games, though the Bluebirds at least went down fighting in a season also marked with off-field tragedy, with the death of club record signing Emiliano Sala on his way to joining the team for the first time; in addition, as a result of Cardiff's relegation and Swansea's failure to mount a real promotion charge, it meant that the Premier League would not have a Welsh presence for the first time in nine seasons.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Manchester City (C) 38 32 2 4 95 23 +72 98 Qualification to Champions League group stage
2 Liverpool 38 30 7 1 89 22 +67 97
3 Chelsea 38 21 9 8 63 39 +24 72
4 Tottenham Hotspur 38 23 2 13 67 39 +28 71
5 Arsenal 38 21 7 10 73 51 +22 70 Qualification to Europa League group stage
6 Manchester United 38 19 9 10 65 54 +11 66
7 Wolverhampton Wanderers 38 16 9 13 47 46 +1 57 Qualification to Europa League second qualifying round
8 Everton 38 15 9 14 54 46 +8 54
9 Leicester City 38 15 7 16 51 48 +3 52
10 West Ham United 38 15 7 16 52 55 −3 52
11 Watford 38 14 8 16 52 59 −7 50
12 Crystal Palace 38 14 7 17 51 53 −2 49
13 Newcastle United 38 12 9 17 42 48 −6 45
14 Bournemouth 38 13 6 19 56 70 −14 45
15 Burnley 38 11 7 20 45 68 −23 40
16 Southampton 38 9 12 17 45 65 −20 39
17 Brighton & Hove Albion 38 9 9 20 35 60 −25 36
18 Cardiff City (R) 38 10 4 24 34 69 −35 34 Relegation to EFL Championship
19 Fulham (R) 38 7 5 26 34 81 −47 26
20 Huddersfield Town (R) 38 3 7 28 22 76 −54 16
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Play-offs (only if needed to decide champion, teams for relegation or teams for UEFA competitions).
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:

Championship

Despite making a slow start to the season on top of losing star player James Maddison to Leicester City in the summer, Norwich City secured their third promotion to the Premier League in eight seasons – whilst a late run of draws in April threatened to derail the Canaries' hopes, the Norfolk side never looked like falling out of the top two and secured promotion in German head coach Daniel Farke's second season in charge. The battle for second place went down to the wire between Yorkshire sides Leeds United and Sheffield United – but it was ultimately the Blades who won the fight, securing their second promotion in three seasons and returning to the top-flight for the first time since 2007, earning manager Chris Wilder his first taste of the top-flight; as with the previous few seasons, a horrendous late-season run ultimately proved costly to Leeds, to the point where they only even managed to finish as high as third due to West Bromwich Albion failing to win their own final game of the season; both teams were subsequently knocked out in the play-off semi-finals. Instead taking the final promotion spot were Aston Villa in what proved to be a roller coaster campaign, the Villans making amends for their play-off final loss the previous season and ending a three-year absence from the top-flight in Dean Smith's first season as manager - at the expense of Derby County, who none-the-less enjoyed a fantastic season under new manager Frank Lampard.

Swansea City's first season in the Championship since 2011 saw them stuck mostly in mid-table – with growing fan protests off-field towards the running of the club that had seen them relegated resulting in the resignation of the Swans' long-time chairman Huw Jenkins in early 2019. Likewise, having been widely tipped to win promotion back to the top-flight at the first attempt, Stoke City endured a largely mediocre league season that saw them fight more to avoid relegation rather than win promotion, draw a staggering 22 times and change managers twice. Having made a strong start to their league season, a collapse in form nearly saw Wigan Athletic relegated from the second tier for the third time in five seasons; however, the Manchester-based club recovered enough in the second half of the season to escape the drop and ensure a second successive season on the second level of league football.

After 17 consecutive seasons in the second tier and a succession of mid-table finishes, Ipswich Town's luck finally gave out and they endured relegation to the third tier for the first time in 62 years, the Tractor Boys never really looking like escaping the drop after falling to the foot of the table in early October and with only five wins all season. Bolton Wanderers finished just above them, falling back into League One on Good Friday after two seasons and in a campaign full of struggle both on and off the pitch, amid severe financial problems on top of nearly having their last run of home games cancelled altogether (and then actually having their last home game against Brentford cancelled); to make matters worse, the Trotters were then forced into administration after the season ended, becoming the first club to have the increased 12-point deduction imposed on them for the following season. Taking the final spot were Rotherham United, who gave themselves a decent chance of escaping the drop, but eventually fell back into the third tier for the second time in three seasons, the Yorkshire club ultimately being let down once again by their atrocious away record - just one win on the road, and one win in their last 48 second tier away games - and a failure to turn any one of their 16 draws into wins or take advantage of their relegation rivals slipping up.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion, qualification or relegation
1 Norwich City (C, P) 46 27 13 6 93 57 +36 94 Promotion to the Premier League
2 Sheffield United (P) 46 26 11 9 78 41 +37 89
3 Leeds United 46 25 8 13 73 50 +23 83 Qualification for Championship play-offs
4 West Bromwich Albion 46 23 11 12 87 62 +25 80
5 Aston Villa (O, P) 46 20 16 10 82 61 +21 76
6 Derby County 46 20 14 12 69 54 +15 74
7 Middlesbrough 46 20 13 13 49 41 +8 73
8 Bristol City 46 19 13 14 59 53 +6 70
9 Nottingham Forest 46 17 15 14 61 54 +7 66
10 Swansea City 46 18 11 17 65 62 +3 65
11 Brentford 46 17 13 16 73 59 +14 64
12 Sheffield Wednesday 46 16 16 14 60 62 −2 64
13 Hull City 46 17 11 18 66 68 −2 62
14 Preston North End 46 16 13 17 67 67 0 61
15 Blackburn Rovers 46 16 12 18 64 69 −5 60
16 Stoke City 46 11 22 13 45 52 −7 55
17 Birmingham City 46 14 19 13 64 58 +6 52
18 Wigan Athletic 46 13 13 20 51 64 −13 52
19 Queens Park Rangers 46 14 9 23 53 71 −18 51
20 Reading 46 10 17 19 49 66 −17 47
21 Millwall 46 10 14 22 48 64 −16 44
22 Rotherham United (R) 46 8 16 22 52 83 −31 40 Relegation to EFL League One
23 Bolton Wanderers (R) 46 8 8 30 29 78 −49 32
24 Ipswich Town (R) 46 5 16 25 36 77 −41 31
Source: EFL Official Website
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored; 4) Head-to-head results
(C) Champions; (O) Play-off winners; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated
Notes:

League One

In one of the most remarkable campaigns of the season and in spite of losing influential manager Nathan Jones to Stoke City in January, Luton Town defied their critics and stormed their way to promotion for the second season running, returning to the Championship for the first time since 2007 and going up as champions – whilst remaining unbeaten at their home ground in the league for the entire season. The fight for the second spot went all the way to the penultimate game with Barnsley, Football League Trophy winners Portsmouth and Sunderland fighting it out; the spot ultimately went to Barnsley, who secured an immediate return to the second-tier in German head coach Daniel Stendel's first season in charge, also impressing with an unbeaten league home record as well. Taking the final promotion place were Charlton Athletic, who dramatically scored in the last minute of normal time against Sunderland in the playoff final to end a 3-year exile from the Championship and consign the Black Cats to another season in League One.

Despite being widely tipped for a top-six finish, Burton Albion endured a largely mixed season that saw them in the bottom half of the table more often than the top, failing to really challenge for an immediate return to the second tier. Blackpool's league season proved to be mediocre, with the Lancashire club failing to mount a real promotion challenge but also not being remotely threatened with relegation – however, it was off the pitch that proved to be more important for the Seasiders, with the removal of Owen Oyston after over 30 years as owner and after years of fan protests and legal battles with former chairman Valērijs Belokoņs, an act widely celebrated by Blackpool fans. Despite making a reasonable start to their first ever season in the third tier, Accrington Stanley endured a sharp drop in form after the new year, with only a run of late wins pushing the side away from the threat of relegation – still a remarkable effort for the Lancashire side.

The second half of the season saw one of the tightest relegation battles in the history of the third tier, with 12 teams remaining in the mix from January onwards – but ultimately, it was Bradford City, Scunthorpe United, Walsall and Plymouth Argyle who fell into League Two; whilst Bradford's relegation came just two years after narrowly missing out on promotion to the Championship and in a season where they had three different managers and Scunthorpe United fell back into the fourth tier after five years in League One, Walsall had actually spent the first couple of weeks challenging for promotion before results rapidly declined and Plymouth Argyle again looked like masterminding an unlikely escape from the drop like they had done the previous campaign, only for results to go against them in the final games of the season. Having been in bottom position for nearly the entire season and 10 points from avoiding relegation after 31 games, a late run of 7 wins and 27 points in their last 15 games ensured that AFC Wimbledon would remain in League One for a fourth consecutive campaign, narrowly surviving on goal difference.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion, qualification or relegation
1 Luton Town (C, P) 46 27 13 6 90 42 +48 94 Promotion to the EFL Championship
2 Barnsley (P) 46 26 13 7 80 39 +41 91
3 Charlton Athletic (O, P) 46 26 10 10 73 40 +33 88 Qualification for League One play-offs
4 Portsmouth 46 25 13 8 83 51 +32 88
5 Sunderland 46 22 19 5 80 47 +33 85
6 Doncaster Rovers 46 20 13 13 76 58 +18 73
7 Peterborough United 46 20 12 14 71 62 +9 72
8 Coventry City 46 18 11 17 54 54 0 65
9 Burton Albion 46 17 12 17 66 57 +9 63
10 Blackpool 46 15 17 14 50 52 −2 62
11 Fleetwood Town 46 16 13 17 58 52 +6 61
12 Oxford United 46 15 15 16 58 64 −6 60
13 Gillingham 46 15 10 21 61 72 −11 55
14 Accrington Stanley 46 14 13 19 51 67 −16 55
15 Bristol Rovers 46 13 15 18 47 50 −3 54
16 Rochdale 46 15 9 22 54 87 −33 54
17 Wycombe Wanderers 46 14 11 21 55 67 −12 53
18 Shrewsbury Town 46 12 16 18 51 59 −8 52
19 Southend United 46 14 8 24 55 68 −13 50
20 AFC Wimbledon 46 13 11 22 42 63 −21 50
21 Plymouth Argyle (R) 46 13 11 22 56 80 −24 50 Relegation to EFL League Two
22 Walsall (R) 46 12 11 23 49 71 −22 47
23 Scunthorpe United (R) 46 12 10 24 53 83 −30 46
24 Bradford City (R) 46 11 8 27 49 77 −28 41
Source: EFL Official Website
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored; 4) Head-to-head results
(C) Champions; (O) Play-off winners; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated
Notes:

League Two

Just two seasons after returning to the Football League as fifth tier champions and only one year after victory in the Football League Trophy, Lincoln City ended their season with another success to their name with promotion to League One and earning their first promotion to the third tier in over 20 years – despite the closeness of the promotion race, the Lincolnshire side remained in the top two for practically the entire season and mathematically secured first place on Easter Monday. The race for the remaining automatic promotions was a close-ran battle between Mansfield Town, Bury and Milton Keynes Dons; Bury were the second team to ensure promotion, returning to League One at the first attempt, whilst Milton Keynes Dons took the final spot in the last game of the campaign in a winner-takes-all match against Mansfield Town, also securing an immediate return to the third tier and finally giving new manager Paul Tisdale promotion after two unsuccessful play-off final attempts with Exeter City. Taking the final spot through the play-offs were Tranmere Rovers, whose return to the Football League saw the North West club successfully challenge for a second consecutive promotion, winning out against Newport County in the final at Wembley in the dying seconds of extra-time.

Despite narrowly missing out on ending a 32-year exile from the third tier, Newport County enjoyed what proved to be a great season; having looking like missing out on the play-offs altogether, the Welsh side made a late rally and edged their way into the top seven in their final game, a big achievement in a season where they also enjoyed an impressive FA Cup run that saw them make it to the fifth round – beating top-flight Leicester City and second-tier promotion-chasers Middlesbrough – before ultimately falling to Manchester City at Rodney Parade. Oldham Athletic made a strong start to their season before results rapidly fell aware and they fell into mid-table, with not even the appointment of former player Paul Scholes as manager (who then promptly resigned after 7 games) having much impact on the Latics.

In spite of having made a very poor start on their return to the Football League and then only narrowly avoiding breaking the record for the longest winless run, Macclesfield Town defied their critics and scraped their way to safety, in parts thanks to the surprise appointment of former England defender Sol Campbell as manager. Suffering relegation instead were Yeovil Town and Notts County – the Glovers falling out of the Football League just six years after winning promotion to the Championship and sixteen years after entering the fourth tier for the first time, a strong start to the season rapidly falling away in stunning fashion and the Magpies becoming the oldest club in English football to fall into non-league football, having been a member of the Football League since its inception 131 years previously and having never fallen out of the fourth tier before. This also made them the first of the Football League's founder members to suffer automatic relegation from the league, albeit with several of the others having lost (and later regained) their places under the previous election system.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion, qualification or relegation
1 Lincoln City (C, P) 46 23 16 7 73 43 +30 85 Promotion to EFL League One
2 Bury (P) 46 22 13 11 82 56 +26 79
3 Milton Keynes Dons (P) 46 23 10 13 71 49 +22 79
4 Mansfield Town 46 20 16 10 69 41 +28 76 Qualification for League Two play-offs
5 Forest Green Rovers 46 20 14 12 68 47 +21 74
6 Tranmere Rovers (O, P) 46 20 13 13 63 50 +13 73
7 Newport County 46 20 11 15 59 59 0 71
8 Colchester United 46 20 10 16 65 53 +12 70
9 Exeter City 46 19 13 14 60 49 +11 70
10 Stevenage 46 20 10 16 59 55 +4 70
11 Carlisle United 46 20 8 18 67 62 +5 68
12 Crewe Alexandra 46 19 8 19 60 59 +1 65
13 Swindon Town 46 16 16 14 59 56 +3 64
14 Oldham Athletic 46 16 14 16 67 60 +7 62
15 Northampton Town 46 14 19 13 64 63 +1 61
16 Cheltenham Town 46 15 12 19 57 68 −11 57
17 Grimsby Town 46 16 8 22 45 56 −11 56
18 Morecambe 46 14 12 20 54 70 −16 54
19 Crawley Town 46 15 8 23 51 68 −17 53
20 Port Vale 46 12 13 21 39 55 −16 49
21 Cambridge United 46 12 11 23 40 66 −26 47
22 Macclesfield Town 46 10 14 22 48 74 −26 44
23 Notts County (R) 46 9 14 23 48 84 −36 41 Relegation to the National League
24 Yeovil Town (R) 46 9 13 24 41 66 −25 40
Source: EFL Official Website
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored; 4) Head-to-head results
(C) Champions; (O) Play-off winners; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated
Notes:

National League Top Division

In one of the tightest promotion races in the history of the fifth tier and just two seasons after their spectacular fall into non-league football, Leyton Orient finally returned to the Football League, never looking like falling out of the promotion race and narrowly edging the automatic promotion spot in manager Justin Edinburgh's first full season as manager; the season ended in tragedy, however, following Edinburgh's death from cardiac arrest the following month. In their first season in the fifth tier, Salford City narrowly missed out on automatic promotion - but made up for it by winning the play-offs, earning promotion to League Two and the Football League for the first time in their 79-year history.

Despite languishing near the bottom of the table for most of the season, a late surge in results saved Dover Athletic, while Chesterfield almost suffered a third consecutive relegation after a long winless run in the league stretching from August to December, before the appointment of veteran manager John Sheridan in the new year helped the club find form and move away from the bottom.

At the bottom of the table, all four relegated teams were confirmed with at least three games to go – Aldershot Town, Braintree Town, Havant and Waterlooville and Maidstone United. While both Braintree and Havant suffered immediate relegation back to the National League South, the second time in three seasons for the former, Aldershot Town's relegation came only six seasons after they had dropped out of League Two. Maidstone United had played at the highest level of the National League for three years. However, Aldershot were granted a reprieve from relegation when Gateshead were demoted two divisions (later reduced to one on appeal) for breaching the league's financial regulations.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion, qualification or relegation
1 Leyton Orient (C, P) 46 25 14 7 73 35 +38 89 Promoted to League Two
2 Solihull Moors 46 25 11 10 73 43 +30 86 Qualified for the National League play-off semi-finals
3 Salford City (O, P) 46 25 10 11 77 45 +32 85
4 Wrexham 46 25 9 12 58 39 +19 84 Qualified for the National League play-off quarter-finals
5 AFC Fylde 46 22 15 9 72 41 +31 81
6 Harrogate Town 46 21 11 14 78 57 +21 74
7 Eastleigh 46 22 8 16 62 63 −1 74
8 Ebbsfleet United 46 18 13 15 64 50 +14 67
9 Sutton United 46 17 14 15 55 60 −5 65
10 Barrow 46 17 13 16 52 51 +1 64
11 Bromley 46 16 12 18 68 69 −1 60
12 Barnet 46 16 12 18 45 50 −5 60
13 Dover Athletic 46 16 12 18 58 64 −6 60
14 Chesterfield 46 14 17 15 55 53 +2 59
15 FC Halifax Town 46 13 20 13 44 43 +1 59
16 Hartlepool United 46 15 14 17 56 62 −6 59
17 Gateshead (R) 46 19 9 18 52 48 +4 57 Relegated to National League North
18 Dagenham & Redbridge 46 15 11 20 50 56 −6 56
19 Maidenhead United 46 16 6 24 45 70 −25 54
20 Boreham Wood 46 12 16 18 53 65 −12 52
21 Aldershot Town 46 11 11 24 38 67 −29 44
22 Havant & Waterlooville (R) 46 9 13 24 62 84 −22 40 Relegated to National League South
23 Braintree Town (R) 46 11 8 27 48 78 −30 38
24 Maidstone United (R) 46 9 7 30 37 82 −45 34
Source: National League official site
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored; 4) Number of matches won; 5) Head-to-head results
(C) Champions; (O) Play-off winners; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated
Notes:


League play-offs

Football League play-offs

EFL Championship
Final
Aston Villa2–1Derby County
El Ghazi 2018–19 In English Football  44'
McGinn 2018–19 In English Football  59'
Report Marriott 2018–19 In English Football  81'
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 85,826
Referee: Paul Tierney


EFL League One
Final
Charlton Athletic2–1Sunderland
Report Sarr 2018–19 In English Football  5' (o.g.)
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 76,155
Referee: Andrew Madley
EFL League Two
Final
Newport County0–1 (a.e.t.)Tranmere Rovers
Jennings 2018–19 In English Football  119'
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 25,217
Referee: Ross Joyce

National League play-offs

National League
Final
AFC Fylde0–3Salford City
Report
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 8,049
Referee: James Oldham
National League North
Final
Chorley1–1Spennymoor Town
Penalties
4–3
National League South
Final
Woking1–0Welling United

Cup competitions

FA Cup

Final
Manchester City6–0Watford
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 85,854
Referee: Kevin Friend (Leicestershire)

EFL Cup

Final
Chelsea0–0 (a.e.t.)Manchester City
Report
Penalties
3–4
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 81,775
Referee: Jon Moss (West Yorkshire)

Community Shield

Chelsea0–2Manchester City
Report Agüero 2018–19 In English Football  13', 58'
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 72,724
Referee: Jon Moss (West Yorkshire)

EFL Trophy

Final
Portsmouth2–2 (a.e.t.)Sunderland
Thompson 2018–19 In English Football  82'
Lowe 2018–19 In English Football  114'
Report McGeady 2018–19 In English Football  38', 119'
Penalties
Evans 2018–19 In English Football 
Pitman 2018–19 In English Football 
Brown 2018–19 In English Football 
Lowe 2018–19 In English Football 
Hawkins 2018–19 In English Football 
5–4 2018–19 In English Football  McGeady
2018–19 In English Football  Cattermole
2018–19 In English Football  Gooch
2018–19 In English Football  Power
2018–19 In English Football  O'Nien
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 85,021
Referee: Dean Whitestone

FA Trophy

Final
AFC Fylde1–0Leyton Orient
Rowe 2018–19 In English Football  60' Report
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 42,962
Referee: Andrew Madley

Women's football

League season

Women's Super League

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Arsenal (C) 20 18 0 2 70 13 +57 54 Qualification for the Champions League
2 Manchester City 20 14 5 1 53 17 +36 47
3 Chelsea 20 12 6 2 46 14 +32 42
4 Birmingham City 20 13 1 6 29 17 +12 40
5 Reading 20 8 3 9 33 30 +3 27
6 Bristol City 20 7 4 9 17 34 −17 25
7 West Ham United 20 7 2 11 25 37 −12 23
8 Liverpool 20 7 1 12 21 38 −17 22
9 Brighton & Hove Albion 20 4 4 12 16 38 −22 16
10 Everton 20 3 3 14 15 38 −23 12
11 Yeovil Town (R) 20 2 1 17 11 60 −49 −3 Relegation to the Championship
Source: FA WSL
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:

Women's Championship

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Manchester United (C, P) 20 18 1 1 98 7 +91 55 Promotion to the WSL
2 Tottenham Hotspur (P) 20 15 1 4 44 27 +17 46
3 Charlton Athletic 20 13 2 5 49 21 +28 41
4 Durham 20 11 6 3 37 16 +21 39
5 Sheffield United 20 11 1 8 35 31 +4 34
6 Aston Villa 20 6 8 6 30 39 −9 26
7 Leicester City 20 6 3 11 27 44 −17 21
8 London Bees 20 7 0 13 23 48 −25 21
9 Lewes 20 5 2 13 23 47 −24 17
10 Crystal Palace 20 3 2 15 14 44 −30 11
11 Millwall Lionesses 20 1 2 17 14 70 −56 5
Source: FA WSL
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Number of goals scored
(C) Champions; (P) Promoted
Notes:

Cup competitions

FA Women's Cup

Final
Manchester City3–0West Ham United
Report
Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 43,264
Referee: Abigail Byrne (Suffolk)

FA Women's League Cup

Final
Arsenal0–0 (a.e.t.)Manchester City
Report
Penalties
Little 2018–19 In English Football 
Williamson 2018–19 In English Football 
van de Donk 2018–19 In English Football 
Bloodworth 2018–19 In English Football 
2–4 2018–19 In English Football  Stanway
2018–19 In English Football  Hemp
2018–19 In English Football  Emslie
2018–19 In English Football  Houghton
2018–19 In English Football  Beckie
Bramall Lane, Sheffield
Attendance: 2,424
Referee: Lucy Oliver

Managerial changes

This is a list of changes of managers within English league football:

Team Outgoing manager Manner of departure Date of departure Position in table Incoming manager Date of appointment
Ipswich Town Bryan Klug End of caretaker spell 30 May 2018 Pre-season Paul Hurst 30 May 2018
Shrewsbury Town Paul Hurst Signed by Ipswich Town 30 May 2018 John Askey 1 June 2018
Macclesfield Town John Askey Signed by Shrewsbury Town 1 June 2018 Mark Yates 19 June 2018
Exeter City Paul Tisdale End of contract 1 June 2018 Matt Taylor 1 June 2018
Leeds United Paul Heckingbottom Sacked 1 June 2018 Marcelo Bielsa 15 June 2018
Doncaster Rovers Darren Ferguson Resigned 4 June 2018 Grant McCann 27 June 2018
Oldham Athletic Richie Wellens Sacked 8 June 2018 Frankie Bunn 13 June 2018
Chelsea Antonio Conte 13 July 2018 Maurizio Sarri 14 July 2018
Blackpool Gary Bowyer Resigned 6 August 2018 12th Terry McPhillips 10 September 2018
Cheltenham Town Gary Johnson Sacked 21 August 2018 Michael Duff 10 September 2018
Scunthorpe United Nick Daws 22 August 2018 18th Stuart McCall 27 September 2018
Notts County Kevin Nolan 26 August 2018 12th Harry Kewell 31 August 2018
Crawley Town Harry Kewell Signed by Notts County 31 August 2018 14th Gabriele Cioffi 7 September 2018
Bradford City Michael Collins Sacked 3 September 2018 17th David Hopkin 4 September 2018
Northampton Town Dean Austin 30 September 2018 20th Keith Curle 1 October 2018
Aston Villa Steve Bruce 3 October 2018 12th Dean Smith 10 October 2018
Macclesfield Town Mark Yates 8 October 2018 24th Sol Campbell 27 November 2018
Brentford Dean Smith Signed by Aston Villa 10 October 2018 24th Thomas Frank 16 October 2018
Ipswich Town Paul Hurst Sacked 25 October 2018 24th Paul Lambert 27 October 2018
Fulham Slaviša Jokanović 14 November 2018 20th Claudio Ranieri 14 November 2018
Southampton Mark Hughes 3 December 2018 18th Ralph Hasenhüttl 5 December 2018
Manchester United José Mourinho 18 December 2018 6th Ole Gunnar Solskjær (caretaker) 19 December 2018
Birmingham City W.F.C. Marc Skinner Signed by Orlando Pride 14 January 2019 4th Marta Tejedor 21 January 2019
Huddersfield Town David Wagner Mutual consent 14 January 2019 20th Mark Hudson (caretaker) 14 January 2019
Leicester City Claude Puel Sacked 24 January 2019 12th Brendan Rodgers 26 February 2019
Fulham Claudio Ranieri 28 January 2019 19th Scott Parker (caretaker) 28 February 2019

Diary of the season

3 August 2018: The first match of the Football League season pits Frank Lampard's Derby County against Reading. Jon Dadi Bodvarsson scores the first goal of the new season, but goals from Chelsea loanee Mason Mount and an injury-time winner from Tom Lawrence gives the Rams a 2–1 win.

4 August 2018: The first Saturday of the Football League season sees newly relegated West Brom lose 2–1 to a Bolton Wanderers side who were nearly relegated themselves last year. Among other Championship action, newly-promoted Wigan defeat Sheffield Wednesday 3–2, and Graham Potter makes a winning start as Swansea manager by beating Sheffield United 2–1 away. In League One, Sunderland come from behind to defeat Charlton 2–1 in their first game at this level in 30 years, and in League Two, Swindon Town stun newly-promoted Macclesfield 3–2 with two stoppage-time penalties.

6 August 2018: Blackpool manager Gary Bowyer becomes the first managerial casualty of the new season when handing in his resignation after just one game played. The Seasiders had travelled to Wycombe Wanderers for their season opener just a few days before and shared out a goalless draw in Buckinghamshire.

31 August 2018: The first month of the new season sees Liverpool leading the Premier League on goal difference; three games in, the Merseysiders, Tottenham Hotspur, Chelsea, and Watford all hold 100% records. Reigning champions Manchester City are in fifth, ahead of Bournemouth on goal difference, and Leicester City are seventh. West Ham United, the only Premier League team without a point, prop up the table. Newcastle United and Southampton are clear ahead of Burnley and Huddersfield Town in the relegation zone on goal difference. None of the teams relegated from the Premier League last season - Swansea City, West Bromwich Albion, and Stoke City - have managed to join the Championship promotion race yet and stand 10th, 11th, and 17th respectively. Leeds United and Middlesbrough take an early lead in the Championship and stand three points clear of third-placed Bolton Wanderers. Aston Villa, newly-promoted Blackburn Rovers, Derby County, and Sheffield United hold fourth to seventh place on 9 points each, with Derby only ahead of United because of alphabetical order. Reading (23rd) and Ipswich Town share joint bottom, while Birmingham City stand above Queens Park Rangers out of the relegation zone on goal difference.

30 September 2018: September closes with Manchester City leading Liverpool at the top of the Premier League, with goal difference still the margin between the leaders. Chelsea are third, Spurs and Arsenal are contesting fourth, and Watford and Bournemouth complete the top seven. Newcastle, Cardiff, and Huddersfield (20th) stand in the relegation zone with 2 points each. Championship top scorers West Brom have seized the lead in the second division, and stand a point in front of Leeds, Middlesbrough, and Sheffield United. Norwich City are fifth, and Brentford hold sixth over Swansea, Wigan Athletic, and Derby on goal difference. Preston North End have fallen to the bottom of the table, a point behind Millwall and Ipswich.

27 October 2018: Following a draw with West Ham United, Leicester City chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha's helicopter crashed in a car park outside of King Power Stadium, Leicester City's home stadium. None of the five passengers survived, including Srivaddhanaprabha.

31 October 2018: As Halloween arrives, the top seven remains unchanged, save for Spurs and Arsenal exchanging places. Goal difference continues to be the difference between Manchester City and Liverpool. Cardiff have climbed out of the relegation zone, ahead of Fulham on goal difference, Newcastle have dropped to 19th, and Huddersfield remain bottom. Sheffield United have seized the lead of a congested Championship, with Leeds still second with two points less than their Yorkshire rivals. Middlesbrough and Norwich are behind Leeds only on goal difference, with West Brom and Derby two points behind them. However, six other teams are all within 3 points of the play-off places, including newly-promoted Blackburn and early strugglers QPR. Ipswich return to the foot of the table, 3 points behind Hull City (23rd) and Reading.

30 November 2018: Manchester City now hold a two-point lead over Liverpool, despite both teams remaining unbeaten. Spurs have climbed above Chelsea, who have only won 3 of their past 8 league games. Arsenal are fifth, 5 points clear of Everton, and it appears increasingly likely those 5 teams will be the contenders for Champions League qualification. Despite winning only once in November, Manchester United have climbed to 7th. Improved form has seen Newcastle and Huddersfield escape the bottom 3, and now Southampton (19th) and Fulham are joint bottom, with Burnley below Crystal Palace on goal difference to stand 18th. A competitive promotion race continues to gather pace in the Championship, with 3 points separating Norwich (1st), Leeds, Middlesbrough, West Brom, and Sheffield United (5th). Nottingham Forest have claimed 6th place ahead of arch-rivals Derby on goal difference. Despite appointing former Norwich boss Paul Lambert as manager, Ipswich remain bottom, 6 points adrift of safety. Reading (20th) and Millwall are out of the relegation zone ahead of Hull and Bolton on goal difference.

8 December 2018: Manchester City lose 2–0 at Chelsea, resulting their first defeat of the season. This also meant that Liverpool go top of the league after defeating Bournemouth 4–0 away.

18 December 2018: José Mourinho is sacked as manager of Manchester United after a poor start to the season left them in seventh place, nineteen points behind rivals Liverpool. Former Manchester United player Ole Gunnar Solskjær takes over as caretaker manager until the end of the season, on loan from Norwegian club Molde.

31 December 2018: 2018 ends with defending champions Manchester City dropping points and losing to Chelsea, Crystal Palace and Leicester City to give Liverpool a 7 point gap lead after winning every game in December. Tottenham Hotspur remains third despite losing to Arsenal and Wolverhampton Wanderers, and Chelsea drop to fourth, despite defeating Manchester City. Arsenal stays at fifth, and Ole Gunnar Solskjær's Manchester United rise to sixth in the table. In the Championship, Leeds United have a 3 point lead at the top above second-place Norwich City. West Bromwich Albion, Sheffield United, Middlesbrough and Derby County complete the promotion play off spots, with Middlesbrough ahead of Derby County only on goal difference. Ipswich Town remain bottom of the table, 5 points behind 23rd placed Reading and 7 points behind 22nd placed Rotherham United.

3 January 2019: The last undefeated team in England's top five divisions, Liverpool, lose 2–1 to Manchester City, preserving Arsenal's Invincibles record from the 2003–04 season.

11 January 2019: A spy was discovered at Derby County’s training ground before their game at Leeds. The whites won 2-0 later on the day.

21 January 2019: Cardiff City's record signing, Emiliano Sala was on board a Piper Malibu that disappeared near Alderney in the Channel Islands.

31 January 2019: The first month of 2019 concludes with Liverpool still top of the Premier League, though now only 5 points ahead of Manchester City. Spurs remain third, while Arsenal climb to fourth, with 2 points and a +4 goal difference the margin between them, Chelsea, and Manchester United. Wolves' return to the top flight continues to be a successful once as the Midlanders stand 7th, though only 4 points separate them from West Ham in 12th. Huddersfield are rooted to the foot of the table, 12 points adrift of 17th-placed Burnley, and look destined for a return to the Championship. Fulham (19th) and Cardiff are also some distance from safety. A tier below, Leeds still hold their 3-point buffer over Norwich. The top six in unchanged, except for Sheffield United climbing above West Brom. Meanwhile, Ipswich are still stuck at rock bottom, Reading are now in 22nd, a point behind Rotherham, and Bolton has dropped to 23rd.

22 February 2019: Chelsea are handed a transfer embargo by FIFA for the next two transfer windows for breaching rules in relation to youth players.

24 February 2019: Leicester City sack Claude Puel after losing 4–1 to Crystal Palace at home.

24 February 2019: Manchester City win the EFL Cup 4–3 on penalties against Chelsea. The final was overshadowed by Kepa Arrizabalaga refusing to be subbed out by Maurizio Sarri.

28 February 2019: Liverpool's lead has been cut to 1 point by Manchester City as February ends. Consecutive losses for Tottenham have thwarted their title ambitions and it now appears that they are in a race for Champions League qualification, with Arsenal, Manchester United and Chelsea all within 7 points of them. Wolves continue to hold the coveted 7th place, with Watford behind them only on goal difference. The bottom 3 remains unchanged, though Southampton and Brighton & Hove Albion are not far away. Norwich are now 2 points in front of the Championship title race, Leeds dropping to 3rd behind Sheffield United on goal difference. West Brom and Middlesbrough continue their play-off chase, but now they are joined by Bristol City in 6th, following a run of 7 wins in a row. Reading and Rotherham swap positions in an otherwise unchanged relegation zone.

3 March 2019: Liverpool’s 0–0 draw with Everton in the Merseyside derby, coupled with Manchester City’s win at Bournemouth a day earlier, means that The Reds are not top of the League for the first time since December.

9 March 2019: West Brom, 4th in the Championship, sack Darren Moore after drawing 1–1 with bottom-club Ipswich.

10 March 2019: Jack Grealish is punched by a Birmingham City supporter during the Second City derby. Grealish scores the winner later on as Aston Villa won 1–0.

17 March 2019: Liverpool win 2–1 at Fulham to go top again, but City now have a game in hand.

22 March 2019: Birmingham City were given a 9-point penalty deduction for breaching Financial rules.

30 March 2019: Huddersfield Town become the first side in the top four divisions of English football to be relegated this season, after losing 2–0 to Crystal Palace.

31 March: Liverpool’s late victory over Tottenham puts them top of the league again by 2 points, but Manchester City still have a game in hand.

31 March 2019: As April arises, Liverpool remain top of the Premier League, but now have played a game more than Manchester City, who have the Manchester derby as their game in hand. Spurs, now very vulnerable, and Manchester United, now appointed Ole Gunnar Solkjaer permanently, complete the top four. Leicester, now managed by Brendan Rodgers, are closer to 7th placed Wolves and are alongside Watford for the race for that place. Huddersfield have become the second ever side (first since Derby in 2008) to get relegated from the Premier League before the end of March, and Fulham look likely in joining them in the Championship. Only Cardiff City have a realistic chance of surviving, while Burnley, Southampton, and Brighton aren’t safe yet. In the Championship, Norwich remain top, but Leeds reclaim 2nd place from Sheffield United after the Blades lost 3–2 at home to Bristol City and Leeds beat Millwall 3–2. Managerless West Brom were not too far off for promotion, but would have to hope both Yorkshire sides drop points. Middlesbrough have had a rotten month after losing nearly all of their matches in March, resulting them being outside the top six for the first time in 7 months. Aston Villa, meanwhile, have had a perfect March as their 5 wins in a row saw them in the playoffs for the first time since August. Completing the top six were Derby. The bottom three were still unchanged, but Ipswich look likely to go out of the Championship. Millwall are also in real danger of being sucked into the relegation zone, while Reading are now above the dotted line.

2 April 2019: Fulham join Huddersfield into the Championship after a 4–1 loss to Watford.

3 April 2019: The new Tottenham Hotspur Stadium finally hosts a football match as Crystal Palace became the first visitors to Spurs’ new ground. Heung-Ming Son was the first goalscorer on the new stadium as Tottenham won 2–0.

13 April: With promotion rivals, Mansfield and MK Dons dropping points, Lincoln City became the first EFL team to achieve promotion thanks to a 1–1 draw with Cheltenham. On the same day, Ipswich were relegated to the 3rd tier for the first time since 1957 after drawing 1–1 with Birmingham City.

19 April 2019: Bolton are relegated to League One after losing 2–0 to Aston Villa, who were on a club equalling 9 wins in a row.

22 April 2019: Aston Villa, who won 10 games in a row for the first time ever, and West Brom confirm their places in the playoffs.

24 April 2019: Manchester City defeat United 2–0 in the derby to go top again.

26 April 2019: The Football League confirm that the EFL Championship game between Bolton Wanderers and Brentford, scheduled to take place the following day at the University of Bolton Stadium, has been postponed due to a PFA approved strike by the Bolton players over unpaid wages owed to them by owner Ken Anderson. It is the first case of a game being postponed due to industrial action by the players in the 131-year history of the Football League. The EFL later confirmed Wanderers must fulfill their remaining fixtures against Brentford and Nottingham Forest, even if it means using U23 or U18 players. Few days later, on 3 May, Brentford were awarded a 1-0 win by the EFL.

27 April 2019: Rotherham are relegated after a year being promoted as they lost 2–1 at West Brom and Millwall drew with Stoke City. At the top, Sheffield United are all but promoted to the Premier League after a 2–0 win against relegated Ipswich. A few hours later, Norwich confirmed theirs with a 2–1 home victory over Blackburn. In the National League, Leyton Orient return to the EFL after drawing 0–0 with Braintree.

28 April 2018: Leeds’ 1–1 draw with Aston Villa confirms Sheffield United’s promotion.

30 April 2019: Luton Town and Barnsley are promoted without kicking a ball after Portsmouth and Sunderland both lost their games in hand.

4 May 2019: Cardiff are relegated to the Championship after losing 3–2 to Crystal Palace at home. This meant that the Premier League would be all English for the first time since 2011. Elsewhere, Liverpool win 3–2 at Newcastle to push the title race to the final day.

5 May 2019: Derby County beat Middlesbrough to the final playoff spot by defeating West Brom 3–1 on the final day.

6 May 2019: Vincent Kompany scores a rocket of a goal as Manchester City defeat Leicester to go to the final day top of the league.

12 May 2019: Manchester City win the Premier League after defeating Brighton 4–1 away, despite going behind and Liverpool winning 2–0 against Wolverhampton Wanderers. City become the first team to defend the title since the 2008-09 season, and first to win the league away from home since the 2007-08 season. They become the 12th team to do the former.

18 May 2019: Manchester City complete the first ever English domestic quadruple of trophies (the Premier League, FA Cup, EFL Cup and Community Shield) by winning the FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium by beating Watford 6–0. That matches the record set by Bury against Derby County (also 6–0) as the biggest win margin in the final of the competition's history, back in 1903. This confirms next season's FA Community Shield to be between treble winners City and league runners-up Liverpool.

27 May 2019: Three years after getting relegated from the Premier League, Aston Villa win promotion back to the top division by winning the play-off final against Derby County 2-1.

1 June 2019: In the second ever all English UEFA Champions League final, Liverpool defeats Tottenham Hotspur 2–0 to win their sixth European Cup/UEFA Champions League and their first trophy since winning the EFL Cup in 2011-12.

New clubs

Clubs removed

Deaths

Retirements

References

This article uses material from the Wikipedia English article 2018–19 in English football, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license ("CC BY-SA 3.0"); additional terms may apply (view authors). Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
®Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wiki Foundation, Inc. Wiki English (DUHOCTRUNGQUOC.VN) is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wiki Foundation.

Tags:

2018–19 In English Football National teams2018–19 In English Football UEFA competitions2018–19 In English Football Mens football2018–19 In English Football Womens football2018–19 In English Football Managerial changes2018–19 In English Football Diary of the season2018–19 In English Football New clubs2018–19 In English Football Clubs removed2018–19 In English Football Deaths2018–19 In English Football Retirements2018–19 In English Football

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

FranceKeiko (orca)Immaculate (2024 film)XXX (2002 film)Elvis PresleyList of Hindi films of 2024The Moody BluesIndonesiaSean Foley (director)Ryan ReynoldsFIFA World CupTillu SquareDarién GapSalman RushdieJ. J. McCarthyYoung SheldonXXX (film series)Bernard ArnaultTelegram (software)MaldivesSex and the CityEva MendesBreaking Bad2019 NFL draftRita OraQueen VictoriaSeppukuKent State shootingsHiroyuki SanadaJimmy CarterGulf WarScott PorterFeyenoordBrad MarchandSkibidi ToiletDarrell GreenMichael J. FoxAmazon (company)Kylie JennerRajiv Gandhi International Cricket StadiumPromising Young WomanInterstellar (film)The GodfatherSimon CowellVance DrummondWorld War IIGoogleWorld War IRed Eye (British TV series)BeyoncéOppenheimer (film)EarthCharlie SheenBarack ObamaKaya ScodelarioCatherine, Princess of WalesJean-Philippe MatetaTikTokJake GyllenhaalMain PagePuyallup peopleAmy Coney BarrettNicole KidmanSeven deadly sinsAlex GarlandNational Hockey League2024 Indian Premier LeagueBangalore Central Lok Sabha constituencyTwo-upJack AntonoffPornhubBMW 1602 Elektro-AntriebDark webFallout (series)Columbia University🡆 More