ENGLISH PREMIER LEAGUE
ENGLISH PREMIER LEAGUE
The Premier League
is the most-watched sports league in the world, broadcast in 212 territories to
643 million homes and a potential TV audience of 4.7 billion people. In
the 2014–15 season, the average Premier League
match attendance exceeded 36,000, second highest of any professional
football league behind the Bundesliga's
43,500. Most stadium occupancies are near capacity. The Premier League
ranks third in the UEFA coefficients of leagues based on
performances in European competitions over the past five seasons.
Premier League is an English professional
league for men's association football clubs.
At the top of the English football league system,
it is the country's primary football competition. Contested by 20 clubs, it
operates on a system of promotion and relegation with
the English Football League (EFL; known
as "The Football League" before 2016–17). Welsh clubs that compete in
the English football league system can also qualify.The Premier League is a
corporation in which the 20 member clubs act as shareholders. Seasons run from
August to May. Teams play 38 matches each (playing each team in the league
twice, home and away), totalling 380 matches in the season.[1] Most
games are played on Saturday and Sunday afternoons; others during weekday
evenings. It is colloquially known as the Premiership and outside the UK it is commonly referred to as
the English Premier League (EPL).
The
competition formed as the FA
Premier League on 20 February 1992 following the decision of clubs
in the Football League First Division to
break away from the Football League, which was founded in 1888, and take
advantage of a lucrative television rights deal. The deal was worth
£1 billion a year domestically as of 2013–14, with BSkyB and BT Group securing
the domestic rights to broadcast 116 and 38 games respectively. The league
generates €2.2 billion per year in domestic and international television
rights. In 2014–15, teams were apportioned revenues of £1,600 million, rising
sharply to £2,400 million in 2016–17.
Despite
significant European success in the 1970s and early 1980s, the late '80s marked
a low point for English football. Stadiums were
crumbling, supporters endured poor facilities, hooliganism was rife, and English
clubs were banned from European competition for five years following the Heysel Stadium disaster in 1985. The Football League First Division,
the top level of English football since 1888, was behind leagues such as
Italy's Serie A and
Spain's La Liga in
attendances and revenues, and several top English players had moved abroad. By
the turn of the 1990s the downward trend was starting to reverse: at the 1990 FIFA World Cup, England reached the
semi-finals; UEFA,
European football's governing body, lifted the five-year ban on English clubs
playing in European competitions in 1990, resulting in Manchester United
lifting the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1991, and
the Taylor Report on stadium safety standards,
which proposed expensive upgrades to create all-seater stadiums in the
aftermath of the Hillsborough disaster, was published in
January of that year.
In
1990, the managing director of London Weekend Television (LWT), Greg Dyke,
met with the representatives of the "big five" football clubs in
England (Manchester United, Liverpool, Tottenham, Everton and Arsenal) over a
dinner. The meeting was to pave the way for a break away from The Football League. Dyke believed that it
would be more lucrative for LWT if only the larger clubs in the country were
featured on national television and wanted to establish whether the clubs would
be interested in a larger share of television rights money. The five clubs
decided it was a good idea and decided to press ahead with it; however, the
league would have no credibility without the backing of The Football Association and so David Dein of Arsenal held
talks to see whether the FA were receptive to the idea. The FA did not enjoy an
amicable relationship with the Football League at the time and considered it as
a way to weaken the Football League's position.
At the close of
the 1991 season, a proposal was tabled for the establishment of a new league
that would bring more money into the game overall. The Founder Members
Agreement, signed on 17 July 1991 by the game's top-flight clubs, established
the basic principles for setting up the FA Premier League. The newly
formed top division would have commercial independence from The Football Association and the
Football League, giving the FA Premier League licence to negotiate its
own broadcast and sponsorshipagreements. The argument given
at the time was that the extra income would allow English clubs to compete with
teams across Europe. Although Dyke played a significant role in the creation of
the Premier League, Dyke and ITV would lose out in the bidding for broadcast
rights as BSkyB won
with a bid of £304 million over five years with the BBC awarded the
highlights package broadcast on Match of the
Day.
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