List of EFL Trophy finals explained

Founded:1983
Number Of Teams:48
Region:
Current Champions:Peterborough United (2nd title)
Most Successful Team:Bristol City (3 titles)

The EFL Trophy is a knockout cup competition in English football organised by and named after the English Football League. The competition was first played in 1981–82 as the Football League Group Cup where it was open to 32 teams from all four levels of the football league. The current format of only being open to clubs in levels three and four of the football pyramid began in 1983–84. It is currently open to the 48 members of League One and League Two with 16 category one academy teams from clubs in the Premier League and Championship being invited.[1] The first final was played at Blundell Park in 1982 before moving to Sincil Bank in 1983. In 1984 the final was due to be played at the then Wembley Stadium, but owing to damage caused to the pitch during the Horse of the Year Show, it was moved to Boothferry Park. The first final to be played at Wembley Stadium was in 1985. From 2001 to 2007 while Wembley was rebuilt, it was played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. In 2008 the finals returned to the new Wembley.

Finals

Key

Match went to extra time
Match decided by a penalty shoot-out after extra time
Match decided by golden goal
Club played in tier 4 at the time
Club played in tier 2 at the time, which was disallowed from the 1983-84 season onwards
BoldClub was promoted to the second-tier of English football
ItalicsClub was relegated to the fifth-tier of English football
Final[2] [3] WinnersScoreRunners-upVenueAttendanceWinning manager
1982Grimsby Townalign=center 3–2WimbledonBlundell Park3,423 Dave Booth
1983Millwallalign=center 3–2Lincoln CitySincil Bank3,142 George Graham
1984Bournemouthalign=center 2–1Boothferry Park6,544 Harry Redknapp
Wigan Athleticalign=center 3–1BrentfordWembley Stadium (original)39,897 Bryan Hamilton
1986Bristol Cityalign=center 3–0Bolton WanderersWembley Stadium (original)54,502 Terry Cooper
1987Mansfield Townalign=center bgcolor=#cedff21–1Bristol CityWembley Stadium (original)58,586 Ian Greaves
1988Wolverhampton Wanderersalign=center 2–0BurnleyWembley Stadium (original)80,841 Graham Turner
1989Bolton Wanderersalign=center 4–1Torquay UnitedWembley Stadium (original)46,513 Phil Neal
1990Tranmere Roversalign=center 2–1Bristol RoversWembley Stadium (original)48,402 John King
1991Birmingham Cityalign=center 3–2Tranmere RoversWembley Stadium (original)58,750 Lou Macari
1992Stoke Cityalign=center 1–0Stockport CountyWembley Stadium (original)48,339 Lou Macari
Port Valealign=center 2–1Stockport CountyWembley Stadium (original)35,885 John Rudge
1994Swansea Cityalign=center bgcolor=#cedff21–1Huddersfield TownWembley Stadium (original)47,773 Frank Burrows
1995Birmingham Cityalign=center bgcolor=#FFD7001–0Carlisle UnitedWembley Stadium (original)76,663 Barry Fry
1996Rotherham Unitedalign=center 2–1Shrewsbury TownWembley Stadium (original)35,235 Archie Gemmill
John McGovern
1997Carlisle Unitedalign=center bgcolor=#cedff20–0Colchester UnitedWembley Stadium (original)45,077 Mervyn Day
1998Grimsby Townalign=center bgcolor=#FFD700 2–1Wembley Stadium (original)62,432 Alan Buckley
1999Wigan Athleticalign=center 1–0MillwallWembley Stadium (original)55,349 Ray Mathias
2000Stoke Cityalign=center 2–1Bristol CityWembley Stadium (original)75,057 Guðjón Þórðarson
2001Port Valealign=center 2–1BrentfordMillennium Stadium25,654 Brian Horton
2002Blackpoolalign=center 4–1Cambridge UnitedMillennium Stadium20,287 Steve McMahon
2003Bristol Cityalign=center 2–0Carlisle UnitedMillennium Stadium50,913 Danny Wilson
2004Blackpoolalign=center 2–0Southend UnitedMillennium Stadium34,031 Steve McMahon
2005Wrexhamalign=center bgcolor=#FBCEB1 2–0Southend UnitedMillennium Stadium36,216 Denis Smith
2006Swansea Cityalign=center 2–1Carlisle UnitedMillennium Stadium42,028 Kenny Jackett
2007Doncaster Roversalign=center bgcolor=#FBCEB13–2Bristol RoversMillennium Stadium59,024 Sean O'Driscoll
2008Milton Keynes Donsalign=center 2–0Grimsby TownWembley Stadium (new)56,618 Paul Ince
2009Luton Townalign=center bgcolor=#FBCEB13–2Scunthorpe UnitedWembley Stadium (new)55,378 Mick Harford
2010Southamptonalign=center 4–1Carlisle UnitedWembley Stadium (new)73,476 Alan Pardew
2011Carlisle Unitedalign=center 1–0BrentfordWembley Stadium (new)40,476 Greg Abbott
2012Chesterfieldalign=center 2–0Swindon TownWembley Stadium (new)49,602 John Sheridan
2013Crewe Alexandraalign=center 2–0Southend UnitedWembley Stadium (new)43,842 Steve Davis
2014Peterborough Unitedalign=center 3–1ChesterfieldWembley Stadium (new)35,663 Darren Ferguson
2015Bristol Cityalign=center 2–0WalsallWembley Stadium (new)72,315 Steve Cotterill
2016Barnsleyalign=center 3–2Oxford UnitedWembley Stadium (new)59,230 Paul Heckingbottom
2017Coventry Cityalign=center 2–1Oxford UnitedWembley Stadium (new)74,434 Mark Robins
2018Lincoln Cityalign=center 1–0Shrewsbury TownWembley Stadium (new)41,261 Danny Cowley
2019Portsmouthalign=center bgcolor=#cedff22–2SunderlandWembley Stadium (new)85,021 Kenny Jackett
2020Salford Cityalign=center bgcolor=#cedff20–0PortsmouthWembley Stadium (new)0 Richie Wellens
2021Sunderlandalign=center 1–0Tranmere RoversWembley Stadium (new)0 Lee Johnson
2022Rotherham Unitedalign=center bgcolor=#FBCEB14–2Sutton UnitedWembley Stadium (new)30,688 Paul Warne
2023Bolton Wanderers4–0Plymouth ArgyleWembley Stadium (new)79,389 Ian Evatt
2024Peterborough United2–1Wycombe WanderersWembley Stadium (new)42,252 Darren Ferguson

Results by team

Teams in bold compete outside EFL Leagues One and Two as of 2023–24 season and thus do not compete in the EFL Trophy (some Premier League and Championship teams may enter their reserve/academic/youth teams, but none has made a final so far and a win by any such team will not count as a full-team club record).

EFL Trophy winners by team
scope=colTeam[4] [5] scope=colWinnersscope=colRunners-upscope=col class="unsortable"Years wonscope=col class="unsortable"Years runner-up
scope=rowBristol City321986, 2003, 20151987, 2000
scope=rowCarlisle United241997, 20111995, 2003, 2006, 2010
scope=rowGrimsby Town211982, 19982008
scope=rowBolton Wanderers211989, 20231986
scope=rowBirmingham City201991, 1995
scope=rowBlackpool202002, 2004
scope=rowPeterborough United202014, 2024
scope=rowPort Vale201993, 2001
scope=rowRotherham United201996, 2022
scope=rowStoke City201992, 2000
scope=rowSwansea City201994, 2006
scope=rowWigan Athletic201985, 1999
scope=rowTranmere Rovers1219901991, 2021
scope=rowBournemouth1119841998
scope=rowChesterfield1120122014
scope=rowLincoln City1120181983
scope=rowMillwall1119831999
scope=rowPortsmouth1120192020
scope=rowSunderland1120212019
scope=rowBarnsley102016
scope=rowCoventry City102017
scope=rowCrewe Alexandra102013
scope=rowDoncaster Rovers102007
scope=rowLuton Town102009
scope=rowMansfield Town101987
scope=rowMilton Keynes Dons102008
scope=rowSalford City102020
scope=rowSouthampton102010
scope=rowWolverhampton Wanderers101988
scope=rowWrexham102005
scope=rowBrentford031985, 2001, 2011
scope=rowSouthend United032004, 2005, 2013
scope=rowBristol Rovers021990, 2007
scope=rowOxford United022016, 2017
scope=rowShrewsbury Town021996, 2018
scope=rowStockport County021992, 1993
scope=rowBurnley011988
scope=rowCambridge United012002
scope=rowColchester United011997
scope=rowHuddersfield Town011994
scope=rowHull City011984
scope=rowScunthorpe United012009
scope=rowSutton United012022
scope=rowPlymouth Argyle012023
scope=rowTorquay United011989
scope=rowWimbledon011982
scope=rowWalsall012015
scope=rowWycombe Wanderers012024

References

General

Specific

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: PREMIER LEAGUE TRIAL FOR THE TROPHY . The Football League . 10 June 2016.
  2. Web site: Football League Group Cup Summary (1981–1983) . Football Club History Database . 30 January 2024.
  3. Web site: Football League Trophy Summary (1983–2016) . Football Club History Database . 30 January 2024.
  4. Web site: Bristol Street Motors Trophy Roll of Honour . EFL . 30 January 2024.
  5. Web site: Previous Finals . EFL . 30 January 2024.