The Winners and Losers in the Championship This Season

The agony and ecstasy of life in the Championship. Composite: Getty, Shutterstock, PA
The agony and ecstasy of life in the Championship. Composite: Getty, Shutterstock, PA
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The Winners and Losers in the Championship This Season

The agony and ecstasy of life in the Championship. Composite: Getty, Shutterstock, PA
The agony and ecstasy of life in the Championship. Composite: Getty, Shutterstock, PA

The final night of Championship action – for the regular season at least – promised to be a dramatic one. It exceeded all expectations, turning into an emotional rollercoaster for so many clubs. With three teams fighting for the last automatic promotion spot, three aiming for the play-offs and eight battling against relegation, all but one of the 12 games on the night had something riding on it.

Ultimately, West Bromwich Albion secured promotion despite failing to win any of their last four matches; Nottingham Forest somehow conspired to lose their seemingly secure play-off spot to Swansea; and both Charlton and Wigan (as things stand) succumbed to the drop. The winners and losers of the final day are painstakingly obvious, but what about the season as a whole?

The winners
Leeds (obviously)
Their mid-season wobble sparked fears of a repeat of their collapse last season, but Leeds were more mentally tough than their rivals in the end. Twelve wins and just one defeat from their last 14 matches meant they won the title by 10 points. The team ethos that the magnificent Marcelo Bielsa has built offers them a real platform for success in the Premier League.

While there have been impressive individual performances throughout the team, there is no reliance on one man and there is a level of competition within the squad that suggests major work in the summer is not necessary. Leeds have clearly been the best team in the division yet only one of their players – Luke Ayling – makes it into our statistical team of the season. This has been a team effort.

Saïd Benrahma
Brentford blew their hopes of automatic promotion with back-to-back defeats in their last two games, but Saïd Benrahma will undoubtedly be playing top-flight football next season. The top scorer in the league post-lockdown, with seven goals taking his tally to 17 in total, the Algerian has caught the eye at various clubs, including Chelsea, in his second season in England.

To say he is the Lionel Messi of the Championship is probably a slight stretch, but comparisons to his compatriot Riyad Mahrez are merited given his flair, creativity and confidence. There were some really exciting attacking performers throughout the Championship campaign – Matheus Pereira at West Brom and Eberechi Eze at QPR in particular – but Benrahma finished top of our ratings. He was among the top five players in the league for shots, dribbles and key passes.

Gerhard Struber
Gerhard Struber took the reins at Oakwell when Barnsley were bottom of the league with just one win from 16 matches. It was his first job outside of his native Austria and it looked like an impossible task. Fast forward to the final day and a 91st-minute winner at promotion-chasing Brentford has seemingly secured the club their second-tier status – pending the result of Wigan’s appeal against a 12-point deduction.

It was the club’s 11th league win in 30 matches under Struber. If the campaign had started when he arrived, they would have finished 13th – just seven points shy of the play-offs. Barnsley looked so out of their depth before Struber joined but the 43-year-old masterminded a remarkable turnaround. He made the team more aggressive –they rank top in the Championship for tackles – but also a passing game that meant they averaged 54.3% of possession since his appointment. His work will not have gone unnoticed.

The losers
Charlton
Following an unexpectedly strong start to the campaign, very little seemed to go Charlton’s way. Their early-season form quickly fell away and Lee Bowyer’s side were their own worst enemies, conceding nine times in second-half stoppage time alone. They dropped so many points over the season, the most pivotal of which was in the 93rd minute of a 1-1 draw at fellow strugglers Birmingham last week.

They lost some some of their best players from last season, including Karlan Grant, Patrick Bauer, Anfernee Dijksteel, Joe Aribo and loanee Krystian Bielik, and that trend continued into this season. Chelsea decided that it was best for his development that the talented Conor Gallagher switch to Swansea in January, while top scorer Lyle Taylor refused to play after lockdown as he was worried about picking up an injury and ruining his chances of a transfer this summer. The Charlton fans continue to be put through the mill.

Jack Butland
When Stoke managed to retain their prized assets last summer after their relegation from the Premier League, they would have expected a quick return to the Premier League. Jack Butland was chief among those players who stuck around. He was a target for Aston Villa, among other clubs, but Stoke stood firm, demanding a big asking price for their keeper, and he stayed. The Potters may well wish they had cashed in now. It has been a dismal season for the England international, whose reputation and market value has plummeted.

He was deemed too good for the Championship at the start of the season. Not any more. He ended the campaign as our lowest ranked player with at least 30 appearances. His save success rate of just 56.8% was the second worst in the division and he made five errors that led to opposition goals before being dropped. Stoke’s win rate rose from 31.4% in the keeper’s 35 starts to 45.5% when he didn’t play. The team conceded 0.51 goals per game fewer without him. That big-money move suddenly looks a long way off.

Jonathan Woodgate
It’s harsh to focus on a rookie coach in his first senior job, but Jonathan Woodgate’s managerial career got off to a dismal start at Middlesbrough. He supported the club as a boy and was a fan favourite as a player, but he could not count on the same support by the time of his sacking. Woodgate was replaced after a 3-0 defeat to Swansea in June, by which time the club were sitting above the relegation zone by virtue of goal difference after 38 matches.

The football Middlesbrough played under Woodgate’s predecessor Tony Pulis was not pretty but, after finishing fifth and seventh in the table, the results were downright ugly under Woodgate. No side had won fewer games than Boro at the time of his departure. They were also the league’s lowest scorers, with just 37 goals. Fearing a second relegation in four years, the board returned to the tried (and tried) and tested Neil Warnock, who oversaw four wins from eight matches to guide the club to safety.

(The Guardian)



Atletico Takes 11-game Winning Streak to Barcelona in Battle for La Liga Top Spot

Atletico Madrid's Antoine Griezmann celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the Champions League opening phase soccer match between Atletico Madrid and Slovan Bratislava at Riyadh Air Metropolitano stadium in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
Atletico Madrid's Antoine Griezmann celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the Champions League opening phase soccer match between Atletico Madrid and Slovan Bratislava at Riyadh Air Metropolitano stadium in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
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Atletico Takes 11-game Winning Streak to Barcelona in Battle for La Liga Top Spot

Atletico Madrid's Antoine Griezmann celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the Champions League opening phase soccer match between Atletico Madrid and Slovan Bratislava at Riyadh Air Metropolitano stadium in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
Atletico Madrid's Antoine Griezmann celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the Champions League opening phase soccer match between Atletico Madrid and Slovan Bratislava at Riyadh Air Metropolitano stadium in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)

When Atletico Madrid led the Spanish league in spending on summer transfers, Diego Simeone's club was making a bet it could challenge for its first title since 2021.

On Saturday, Atletico can move to the top of the table with a win at a Barcelona side that is struggling to reproduce its great start to the campaign. And to make matters worse for Hansi Flick, the hosts will be missing injured star Lamine Yamal for its last game before a short winter break.

Atletico has pulled level on points with Barcelona after reeling off six wins in a row in La Liga, while Barcelona has won only one of its last six league games.

Atletico midfielder Pablo Barrios expects a difficult game despite the contrasting form of the opponents.

“What is happening to them is kind of the opposite of what happened to us,” Barrios told Spanish radio Cadena SER. “When people were doubting us they were playing incredible, and even though they have lost some games now, they still have great players and I am sure it is going to a very tough game.”

Flick was earning praise from Barcelona fans and even Lionel Messi after the German’s great start when Barcelona was scoring in bunches and rolled off win after win, and it looked like the top title candidate when it crushed defending champion Real Madrid 4-0 in late October.

But that turned out to be a peak of performance from which Barcelona has subsequently fallen, The AP reported.

Barcelona has only two wins in its last eight games overall, a bad run during which it has endured humbling home defeats to Liga minnows Las Palmas and Leganes.

Atletico’s trajectory has gone the opposite direction.

Simeone’s team had some troubles early on as it worked to integrate newcomers Julián Álvarez, Conor Gallagher, Alexander Sorloth, and Robin Le Normand.

Atletico was in fourth place and 10 points behind Barcelona on Oct. 27 — the last time it lost a match.

Álvarez and Sorloth are now clicking up front with veteran leader Antoine Griezmann, and the team is on a streak of 11 victories in a row across all competitions. Griezmann has scored seven goals and Álvarez five in Atletico’s last six games. Sorloth struck to beat Getafe 1-0 last round and pull Atletico level on points with Barcelona.

Now it can take the lead of the competition with a win at Barcelona’s Olympic Stadium.

The fixture, while overshadowed by the “clasico” between Barcelona and Real Madrid, has become a must-see game in Spain ever since Simeone turned Atletico into a perennial title contender over a decade ago.

This edition of the matchup will pit Barcelona’s top-scoring attack with 50 goals against an Atletico defense that, along with Real Sociedad, has allowed a league-low 11 goals.

Yamal's ankle injury deprives Barcelona of the league's top assist maker (9).

Raphinha will likely replace Yamal on the right side of the attack to accompany Robert Lewandowski, who leads the league in scoring with 16 goals. Raphinha is the competition’s second leading scorer with 11 goals.

Meanwhile, Real Madrid will be hoping for a draw. It is in third place, one point back before hosting Sevilla on Sunday.

Both Atletico and Real Madrid have a game in hand on Barcelona.