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The English Championship was the third most-watched league in European football during the 2016-17 season.
The Premier League tops the list with total attendances of more than 13m, with Germany’s Bundesliga second.
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England’s second tier, with an total of more than 11m, ranks higher than Spain’s La Liga, Italy’s Serie A and France’s Ligue 1.
League One – which was won by Sheffield United – is ninth in UEFA’s Club Licensing Benchmarking Report.
The Championship was fourth in last year’s report and enjoyed an average attendance of 20,125 during the 2016-17 campaign.
Title winners Newcastle United’s 1-1 draw with Leeds United saw the league’s highest attendance of the season, with more than 52,000 fans taking their seat at St James’ Park.
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In League One, more than 31,000 people watched Sheffield United defeat Chesterfield 3-2 at Bramall Lane.
UEFA’s report also found that the Premier League and Championship continued to top the list of foreign club ownership last season.
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Almost two thirds of Premier League clubs have foreign owners compared to 58% of Championship clubs.
For the first time, the average wage bill of the Premier League (153.9m euros) is more than double that of the next highest-paying league – the Bundesliga (75.3m euros).
Five Premier League teams – Manchester United, Chelsea, Manchester City, Liverpool and Arsenal – feature in the top 20 clubs by wages.
Other findings
- For the first time in European football, 11 clubs have reported aggregate league attendances of over one million.
- West Ham, Celtic and Liverpool have now surpassed the one million mark, joining Man Utd, Arsenal and Man City in the top 11.
- England’s 20 top tier clubs together reported more revenue than all 597 clubs combined from the 48 smaller UEFA countries (all except Germany, Spain, Italy, France, Russia and Turkey).
- Twelve English clubs feature in the top 30 revenue rankings, with Man City (sixth), Arsenal (seventh), Chelsea (eighth) and Liverpool (ninth) all in the top 10.
- English clubs occupy 16 of the top 20 places in the broadcast revenues table. Man Utd is top (146m euros – 21% of total revenue).