List of EFL Cup finals

The EFL Cup is a knockout cup competition in English football organised by and named after the English Football League (EFL).[1] The competition was established in 1960 and is considered to be the second-most important domestic cup competition for English football clubs, after the FA Cup.[2] The competition is open to all 72 members of the English Football League and the 20 members of the Premier League. For the first six seasons of the competition, the final was contested over two legs, one at each participating club's stadium. The first Football League Cup was won by Aston Villa, who beat Rotherham United 3–2 on aggregate, after losing the first leg 2–0. The competition's first single-legged final was held in 1967: Queens Park Rangers defeated West Bromwich Albion 3–2 at Wembley Stadium in London.[1]

The Football League Cup on display.
The winner of the final receives the eponymous EFL Cup.

As of 2024, 23 clubs have won the EFL Cup. Liverpool hold the record for the most EFL Cup titles, with ten victories in the competition. Liverpool's wins include four consecutive titles from 1981 to 1984, while Manchester City's, who have won eight times, include four consecutive titles from 2018 to 2021. Nottingham Forest and Manchester United are the only other clubs to have won consecutive titles. Forest won two consecutive titles twice – in 1978 and 1979, and 1989 and 1990, while United won consecutive editions in 2009 and 2010. Arsenal have been runners-up more than any other club; they have lost the final six times. The current holders are Liverpool, who beat Chelsea 1–0 after extra time in the 2024 final to win their tenth League Cup.

History

The first winners of the tournament were Aston Villa. The final was contested over two legs for the first six years of the competition. During this period many First Division clubs refused to take part, allowing clubs from outside the First Division to regularly reach the final. The first club from outside the First Division to win the competition was Norwich City of the Second Division in 1962. Queen's Park Rangers and Swindon Town, both then of Division Three, matched this feat in 1967 and 1969 respectively. Sheffield Wednesday, then in the Second Division, became the last club to win the competition while competing outside the First Division, when they beat Manchester United in the 1991 final.[1]

In the late 1960s, the winners of the competition were granted automatic qualification to the UEFA Cup.[3] With the promise of potential European football, First Division clubs entered the competition, and all 92 Football League clubs entered the League Cup for the first time in 1969–70. Meanwhile, the final of the competition had also been altered; it would now be played over a single leg at Wembley Stadium. The final went to a replay for the first time in 1977, with Aston Villa requiring two replays to overcome Everton; the first was held at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, and the second at Old Trafford in Manchester.[1]

The following year, Nottingham Forest won the first of two consecutive titles, the first time that any club won back-to-back League Cup titles. The first took a replay at Old Trafford to beat Liverpool, and they beat Southampton 3–2 to win the second. Liverpool won four consecutive titles between 1981 and 1984, a record equalled by Manchester City in 2021. Nottingham Forest won two more consecutive titles in 1989 and 1990.[3]

The last League Cup final replay was held in 1997; Leicester City beat Middlesbrough 1–0 after extra time at Hillsborough, after the two clubs had played out a 1–1 draw at Wembley. The rules were changed afterwards with a penalty shootout incorporated instead of replays.[4] The first single-match final to be played outside London was held in 2001, as the final was moved to Cardiff's Millennium Stadium while the new Wembley Stadium was under construction.[1] Liverpool and Chelsea were the two most prolific League Cup sides in Cardiff, as both clubs won two titles each. The final returned to London in 2008, where Tottenham Hotspur became the first side to win the competition at the new Wembley, beating Chelsea 2–1 after extra time.[5]

Finals

Key to the list of finals
Match was won during extra time
*Match was won on a penalty shoot-out
&Match was won after a replay
§Match was won after a replay in extra time
£Match was won after two replays in extra time
ItalicsClub from outside the top-tier of English football
(#)Number of trophy win of club

All teams are English, except where marked (Welsh).

EFL Cup winners
FinalWinnersScoreRunners-upVenueAttendance
1961Aston Villa (1)0–2Rotherham UnitedMillmoor12,226
3–0Villa Park31,202
Aston Villa won 3–2 on aggregate
1962Norwich City (1)3–0RochdaleSpotland11,123
1–0Carrow Road19,708
Norwich City won 4–0 on aggregate
1963Birmingham City (1)3–1Aston VillaSt Andrew's31,850
0–0Villa Park37,921
Birmingham City won 3–1 on aggregate
1964Leicester City (1)1–1Stoke CityVictoria Ground22,309
3–2Filbert Street25,372
Leicester City won 4–3 on aggregate
1965Chelsea (1)3–2Leicester CityStamford Bridge20,690
0–0Filbert Street26,958
Chelsea won 3–2 on aggregate
1966West Bromwich Albion (1)1–2West Ham UnitedBoleyn Ground28,341
4–1The Hawthorns31,925
West Bromwich Albion won 5–3 on aggregate
1967Queens Park Rangers (1)3–2West Bromwich AlbionWembley Stadium97,952
1968Leeds United (1)1–0ArsenalWembley Stadium97,887
1969Swindon Town (1)3–1ArsenalWembley Stadium98,189
1970Manchester City (1)2–1West Bromwich AlbionWembley Stadium97,963
1971Tottenham Hotspur (1)2–0Aston VillaWembley Stadium100,000
1972Stoke City (1)2–1ChelseaWembley Stadium97,852
1973Tottenham Hotspur (2)1–0Norwich CityWembley Stadium100,000
1974Wolverhampton Wanderers (1)2–1Manchester CityWembley Stadium97,886
1975Aston Villa (2)1–0Norwich CityWembley Stadium95,946
1976Manchester City (2)2–1Newcastle UnitedWembley Stadium100,000
1977Aston Villa (3)0–0EvertonWembley Stadium100,000
1–1Hillsborough Stadium55,000
3–2£Old Trafford54,749
1978Nottingham Forest (1)0–0LiverpoolWembley Stadium100,000
1–0&Old Trafford54,375
1979Nottingham Forest (2)3–2SouthamptonWembley Stadium96,952
1980Wolverhampton Wanderers (2)1–0Nottingham ForestWembley Stadium96,527
1981Liverpool (1)1–1West Ham UnitedWembley Stadium100,000
2–1&Villa Park36,693
1982Liverpool (2)3–1Tottenham HotspurWembley Stadium100,000
1983Liverpool (3)2–1Manchester UnitedWembley Stadium99,304
1984Liverpool (4)0–0EvertonWembley Stadium100,000
1–0&Maine Road52,089
1985Norwich City (2)1–0SunderlandWembley Stadium100,000
1986Oxford United (1)3–0Queens Park RangersWembley Stadium90,396
1987Arsenal (1)2–1LiverpoolWembley Stadium96,000
1988Luton Town (1)3–2ArsenalWembley Stadium95,732
1989Nottingham Forest (3)3–1Luton TownWembley Stadium76,130
1990Nottingham Forest (4)1–0Oldham AthleticWembley Stadium74,343
1991Sheffield Wednesday (1)1–0Manchester UnitedWembley Stadium77,612
1992Manchester United (1)1–0Nottingham ForestWembley Stadium76,810
1993Arsenal (2)2–1Sheffield WednesdayWembley Stadium74,007
1994Aston Villa (4)3–1Manchester UnitedWembley Stadium77,231
1995Liverpool (5)2–1Bolton WanderersWembley Stadium75,595
1996Aston Villa (5)3–0Leeds UnitedWembley Stadium77,065
1997Leicester City (2)1–1MiddlesbroughWembley Stadium76,757
1–0§Hillsborough Stadium39,428
1998Chelsea (2)2–0MiddlesbroughWembley Stadium77,698
1999Tottenham Hotspur (3)1–0Leicester CityWembley Stadium77,892
2000Leicester City (3)2–1Tranmere RoversWembley Stadium74,313
2001Liverpool (6)1–1 *[a]Birmingham CityMillennium Stadium73,500
2002Blackburn Rovers (1)2–1Tottenham HotspurMillennium Stadium72,500
2003Liverpool (7)2–0Manchester UnitedMillennium Stadium74,500
2004Middlesbrough (1)2–1Bolton WanderersMillennium Stadium72,634
2005Chelsea (3)3–2LiverpoolMillennium Stadium78,000
2006Manchester United (2)4–0Wigan AthleticMillennium Stadium66,866
2007Chelsea (4)2–1ArsenalMillennium Stadium70,073
2008Tottenham Hotspur (4)2–1ChelseaWembley Stadium87,660
2009Manchester United (3)0–0 *[b]Tottenham HotspurWembley Stadium88,217
2010Manchester United (4)2–1Aston VillaWembley Stadium88,596
2011Birmingham City (2)2–1ArsenalWembley Stadium88,851
2012Liverpool (8)2–2 *[c] Cardiff CityWembley Stadium89,041
2013 Swansea City (1)5–0Bradford CityWembley Stadium82,597
2014Manchester City (3)3–1SunderlandWembley Stadium84,697
2015Chelsea (5)2–0Tottenham HotspurWembley Stadium89,294
2016Manchester City (4)1–1 *[d]LiverpoolWembley Stadium86,206
2017Manchester United (5)3–2SouthamptonWembley Stadium85,264
2018Manchester City (5)3–0ArsenalWembley Stadium85,671
2019Manchester City (6)0–0 *[e]ChelseaWembley Stadium81,775
2020Manchester City (7)2–1Aston VillaWembley Stadium82,145
2021Manchester City (8)1–0Tottenham HotspurWembley Stadium7,773
2022Liverpool (9)0–0 *[f]ChelseaWembley Stadium85,512
2023Manchester United (6)2–0Newcastle UnitedWembley Stadium87,306
2024Liverpool (10)1–0ChelseaWembley Stadium88,868

Results by club

EFL Cup winners by club
ClubWinnersRunners-upYears wonYears runner-up
Liverpool1041981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1995, 2001, 2003, 2012, 2022, 20241978, 1987, 2005, 2016
Manchester City811970, 1976, 2014, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020, 20211974
Manchester United641992, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2017, 20231983, 1991, 1994, 2003
Chelsea551965, 1998, 2005, 2007, 20151972, 2008, 2019, 2022, 2024
Aston Villa541961, 1975, 1977, 1994, 19961963, 1971, 2010, 2020
Tottenham Hotspur451971, 1973, 1999, 20081982, 2002, 2009, 2015, 2021
Nottingham Forest421978, 1979, 1989, 19901980, 1992
Leicester City321964, 1997, 20001965, 1999
Arsenal261987, 19931968, 1969, 1988, 2007, 2011, 2018
Norwich City221962, 19851973, 1975
Birmingham City211963, 20112001
Wolverhampton Wanderers201974, 1980
West Bromwich Albion1219661967, 1970
Middlesbrough1220041997, 1998
Queens Park Rangers1119671986
Leeds United1119681996
Stoke City1119721964
Luton Town1119881989
Sheffield Wednesday1119911993
Swindon Town101969
Oxford United101986
Blackburn Rovers102002
Swansea City102013
West Ham United021966, 1981
Newcastle United021976, 2023
Everton021977, 1984
Southampton021979, 2017
Sunderland021985, 2014
Bolton Wanderers021995, 2004
Rotherham United011961
Rochdale011962
Oldham Athletic011990
Tranmere Rovers012000
Wigan Athletic012006
Cardiff City012012
Bradford City012013

Notes

References

General
  • "Carling Cup Records". Football League Cup. Coors Brewing Company. Archived from the original on 11 January 2010. Retrieved 22 October 2008.
  • "England – Football League Cup Finals". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Archived from the original on 29 March 2016. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  • "England – League Cup Finals 1961–2001". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
Specific