1. Liverpool
2. Manchester United
3. Arsenal
4. Manchester City
5. Everton
6. Aston Villa
7. Chelsea
8. Sunderland
9. Sheffield Wednesday
10. Newcastle United
So 10 clubs have won it multiple time among them, is that right?
What is the definition of a drought?
UP THE OWLS!!!!! (seriously it’s ridiculous that we are on this list, and 95 years of hurt baby!!!)
Also nice colours on that image
Pretty crazy that 6 out of the top 10 (and in fact the top 6, leaving out Aston Villa) are clubs based out of the same cities:
LFC and Everton are both based out of Liverpool
Manchester United and Manchester City are both in Manchester
Chelsea and Arsenal are both based out of London
They are also the teams in the top 10 with the most recent victories.
Do you also have one such for Italy’s serie A?
Why is there a premier league logo when the premier league has only existed since 1992
No club has ever won 5 times in a row
LFC were excellent from 72 to 89. Who was their main player at the time?
Likewise, for MU, I am guessing the 90s to early 10s were because of a certain player?
So 16 to go? At our current rate that only takes us 1568 years.
Wikipedia says a drought is a “period of drier-than-normal conditions”. Based on that, I don’t think drought is the right word here. You would not be able to say what a “normal” amount of wins for a team is, so you can’t say they’re suffering a drought.
Crazy how much of a tear City has been on recently. 7 years ago they only had 4 and 13 years ago they only had 2. Money talks
I feel like you could tidy up the ‘year’ section a bit by only including the year they won it (i.e. Liverpool recently won it in ’25), rather than having to put two years for each win. Might make the graphic a bit cleaner?
13 comments
* source: wiki
* tools: photopea
For football/soccer newbs, order of the clubs:
1. Liverpool
2. Manchester United
3. Arsenal
4. Manchester City
5. Everton
6. Aston Villa
7. Chelsea
8. Sunderland
9. Sheffield Wednesday
10. Newcastle United
So 10 clubs have won it multiple time among them, is that right?
What is the definition of a drought?
UP THE OWLS!!!!! (seriously it’s ridiculous that we are on this list, and 95 years of hurt baby!!!)
Also nice colours on that image
Pretty crazy that 6 out of the top 10 (and in fact the top 6, leaving out Aston Villa) are clubs based out of the same cities:
LFC and Everton are both based out of Liverpool
Manchester United and Manchester City are both in Manchester
Chelsea and Arsenal are both based out of London
They are also the teams in the top 10 with the most recent victories.
Do you also have one such for Italy’s serie A?
Why is there a premier league logo when the premier league has only existed since 1992
No club has ever won 5 times in a row
LFC were excellent from 72 to 89. Who was their main player at the time?
Likewise, for MU, I am guessing the 90s to early 10s were because of a certain player?
So 16 to go? At our current rate that only takes us 1568 years.
Wikipedia says a drought is a “period of drier-than-normal conditions”. Based on that, I don’t think drought is the right word here. You would not be able to say what a “normal” amount of wins for a team is, so you can’t say they’re suffering a drought.
Crazy how much of a tear City has been on recently. 7 years ago they only had 4 and 13 years ago they only had 2. Money talks
I feel like you could tidy up the ‘year’ section a bit by only including the year they won it (i.e. Liverpool recently won it in ’25), rather than having to put two years for each win. Might make the graphic a bit cleaner?
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