2016–17 EFL Trophy explained

EFL Trophy
Year:2016–17
Other Title:Checkatrade Trophy
Country:
Num Teams:64
Defending Champions:Barnsley
Champions:Coventry City
Runner-Up:Oxford United
Nextseason:2017–18

The 2016–17 EFL Trophy, known as the Checkatrade Trophy for sponsorship reasons,[1] was the 36th season in the history of the competition and the first since being rebranded from Football League Trophy. It was played as a knock-out tournament for English football clubs in League One and League Two of the English football system and for the first time was expanded to include 16 Premier League and Championship "B Teams" with Category One status as part of a trial.

In all, 64 clubs entered the competition. Barnsley were the reigning champions,[2] but were ineligible to defend their title following promotion to the Championship.[3]

Change in format

On 9 June 2016, the newly rebranded EFL announced that the 2016–17 EFL Trophy competition would include sixteen "category 1 Premier League academy sides" for the first time. The first knockout round would also be replaced with a new group stage, the sixteen regional groups each to comprise three League One/Two teams plus an academy side, with the top two teams from each group progressing to the knockout second round.[4]

Following the EFL's announcement of these format changes, many of the invited clubs declined to allow their academies to participate,[5] and their places had to filled by the academy sides of several Championship clubs.

Reception to the new format by League One and Two fans was overwhelmingly negative.[6] The opening rounds of fixtures were marked by record low attendances,[7] and the format changes were described as "a complete and utter failure".[8]

Participating clubs

Notes Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester United, Manchester City, Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur declined to participate.[9]

Eligibility criteria for players

Dates

The competition dates were announced in July 2016.[10]

RoundDatesNumber of teams
Round 1 (Group stage)29 August – 4 September 201664
3–9 October 2016
7–13 November 2016
Round 25–11 December 201632
Round 39–15 January 201716
Quarter-finals23–29 January 20178
Semi-finals6–26 February 20174
Final2 April 2017 (Wembley Stadium)2

Group stage

Northern Section

Group A

Group B

Group C

Group D

Group E

Group F

Group G

Group H

Southern Section

Group A

Group B

Group C

Group D

Group E

Group F

Group G

Group H

Knockout stage

If scores were level after 90 minutes in rounds 2, 3 and 4, the game was determined via a penalty shoot-out.

Round 2

The second round draw was made on 10 November 2016.[11] The 32 remaining teams were drawn into 16 ties; each group winner was at home to a runner-up from a different group within their own region.

Southern Section

Round 3

The third round draw was made on 8 December 2016. The sixteen remaining teams were drawn into eight ties as a "free draw."

Quarter-finals

The quarter-final draw took place on 12 January 2017. The eight remaining teams were drawn into four ties as a "free draw."

Semi-finals

The semi-final draw took place on 26 January 2017. The four remaining teams were drawn into two ties as a "free draw."

Final

See main article: 2017 EFL Trophy final.

Match proceeds

After deduction of match expenses, all proceeds were split:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: EFL Trophy: Checkatrade check in as trophy title sponsor. English Football League. 4 August 2016.
  2. Web site: Johnstone's Paint Trophy final: Barnsley 3-2 Oxford United. Phil. Cartwright. BBC.
  3. Web site: Barnsley 3-1 Millwall. Rob. Wembley. BBC Sport.
  4. News: Premier League trial for the trophy. 13 June 2016. EFL. 9 June 2016.
  5. News: Smith. Alan. Premier League clubs to opt out of revamped EFL Trophy. 31 August 2016. The Guardian. 8 July 2016.
  6. News: Shepka. Phil. EFL Trophy: 'Overwhelming majority' against Premier League under-21 sides joining. 15 June 2016. BBC Sport. 14 June 2016.
  7. News: Checkatrade Trophy: Low crowds & manager cameos. 31 August 2016. BBC Sport. BBC. 30 August 2016.
  8. News: Ashdown. John. The revamped EFL Trophy is a complete and utter failure – and here’s why. 10 November 2016. The Guardian. 8 November 2016.
  9. Web site: Manchester United, Arsenal, Liverpool & Manchester City among EFL Trophy rejections. BBC Sport. 27 July 2016. 27 July 2016.
  10. Web site: EFL Trophy: Format Confirmed For 2016/17. English Football League. 6 July 2016.
  11. Web site: Checkatrade Trophy: Round Two draw. 10 November 2016. EFL. 10 November 2016.