Buzzer
Languidly Clinical
- Oct 1, 2006
- 26,121
I've been reading a lot of early season reviews of Brighton's overall performance in the PL and a lot of them make reference to the huge step up that Brighton needed to make from the Championship to the PL. But looking at the clubs who have been promoted into the PL for the first time in ages over the last few seasons, they've all faired quite well. From the 14/15 Championship. B'muff and Watford are still in the PL and from last season Hudds and Brighton are making a good go of it so far. (I've excluded the likes of Burnley, Boro, Hull, Derby, Norwich, Newcastle as all have featured in the PL fairly recently) and all those sides have done very well to keep a backbone of players from their Championship sides. There doesn't seem to be many cases of a one-off side going up for the first time and then going straight back down.
And likewise when you look at how recently relegated Premier League sides have faired in the Championship, it doesn't suggest that they are necessarily a whole lot better. Even accounting for complacency, a dysfunctional squad and star players leaving, the Championship is littered with sides that thought they would go straight back up again but haven't.
Personally, I think far more is made of this gap than really exists. The biggest differences are that the top PL sides are clearly much, much better than the also-rans whereas any team from 18 in the Championship have a good chance of a top 6 finish and the Championship sides are all of a much more equivalent size. The media attention surrounding the PL is 100 times more than the Championship and this is one of the reasons why so much ignorance about who plays in the Championship and the quality of football is expressed by the pundits and PL fans - and these are the people who talk about this mythical gulf in class.
It's a shame that there's not a more equitable share of money going into the Championship because I bloody love that league. I think it's the most competitive top league in Europe.
And likewise when you look at how recently relegated Premier League sides have faired in the Championship, it doesn't suggest that they are necessarily a whole lot better. Even accounting for complacency, a dysfunctional squad and star players leaving, the Championship is littered with sides that thought they would go straight back up again but haven't.
Personally, I think far more is made of this gap than really exists. The biggest differences are that the top PL sides are clearly much, much better than the also-rans whereas any team from 18 in the Championship have a good chance of a top 6 finish and the Championship sides are all of a much more equivalent size. The media attention surrounding the PL is 100 times more than the Championship and this is one of the reasons why so much ignorance about who plays in the Championship and the quality of football is expressed by the pundits and PL fans - and these are the people who talk about this mythical gulf in class.
It's a shame that there's not a more equitable share of money going into the Championship because I bloody love that league. I think it's the most competitive top league in Europe.