in

Championship plan to stage play-offs for Premier League promotion even if season axed with Leeds and West Brom going up


FOOTBALL LEAGUE bosses are reportedly hoping to stage the Championship promotion play-offs even if the regular season cannot be completed.

Talks are ongoing over the viability of bringing second, third and fourth-tier clubs back for the final rounds of 2019/20 on both health and financial grounds.

 Fulham and Nottingham Forest are two of the teams sat in the top six

Fulham and Nottingham Forest are two of the teams sat in the top sixCredit: PA:Empics Sport

Staging games behind closed doors would slash clubs’ revenue streams and cost them in terms of appearance fees and other bonuses.

Such a matter is less of an issue for the Premier League, where broadcast income holds a greater sway on the top 20 clubs’ coffers.

And while Championship sides may also be able to plot a financially viable course to finish the season, it is far from guaranteed that they will be allowed to do so.

In the event of the season being cancelled, the Guardian report on EFL bosses still hoping to hold the play-offs.

Should the Premier League round off each club’s nine or ten remaining games, the Championship is said to view staging at least three promotion showdowns as feasible.

The traditional home and away two-legged semi-finals could be replaced by one-match deciders, behind closed doors and potentially at a neutral venue, before a final.

Championship top six ‘to take legal action’ if Premier League season declared null and void and three clubs not promoted

This will allow the division to promote three teams on the premise that three sides are relegated from a completed Premier League season.

Should the top-flight not finish and refuse to accept a 23-side roster in 2020/21, negotiations and legal challenges are predicted to be rife as clubs jostle for the limited spots among English football’s elite.

In particular, Leeds and West Brom sit seven and six points clear, respectively, in the automatic promotion spaces.

Under this plan, the pair would be granted their place in the Premier League.

Currently residing in the play-offs are Fulham, Brentford, Nottingham Forest and Preston.

The Championship is unlike most other leagues in this pandemic as every side has played the same number of games, making it relatively straightforward to draw a line across tight contests.


⚠️ Read our coronavirus in sport live blog for the latest news & updates


Points-per-games ratios would not be necessary when condemning Bristol City, Millwall, Cardiff, Blackburn and Swansea to another season in the second-tier despite there being just a three-point gap between sixth and 11th in the notoriously tight play-off race.

Down the other end, it remains unclear how relegation would be settled given the difficulty of creating a League One with 27 teams.

A similar plan at that level would have its own issues.  There could be a backlash against a points-per-game calculation that changes the make-up of the third-tier’s existing play-offs by pushing Wycombe up from eighth to sixth.

Give now to The Sun’s NHS appeal

BRITAIN’s four million NHS staff are on the frontline in the battle against coronavirus.

But while they are helping save lives, who is there to help them?

The Sun has launched an appeal to raise £1MILLION for NHS workers.

The Who Cares Wins Appeal aims to get vital support to staff in their hour of need.

We have teamed up with NHS Charities Together in their urgent Covid-19 Appeal to ensure the money gets to exactly who needs it.

The Sun is donating £50,000 and we would like YOU to help us raise a million pounds, to help THEM.

No matter how little you can spare, please donate today here

www.thesun.co.uk/whocareswinsappeal


Source: Soccer - thesun.co.uk


Tagcloud:

The story of rising talent Kobe Jae Chong: Brasilia Futsal star, AWOL West Brom rebel, and now a Prem target

Best players never to win the Ballon d’Or include Arsenal legend Henry, England ’66 hero Moore, and Kenny Dalglish