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Every EFL Home and Away Attendance in Midweek – 19th August

Time to take a look at the crowd numbers from the fourth tier, first up it’s the home attendances for the midweek League Two fixtures.

The game with the most fans in through the turnstiles came at Valley Parade, as Bradford City played host to Stevenage and ended up winning 4-1.

Andy Cook scored a first-half hat-trick as Bradford maintained their unbeaten league start to the season with a 4-1 win over Stevenage at Valley Parade.

It was Stevenage’s first defeat of the campaign – they had previously won three in a row – two in the league and one in the League Cup.

1) 14,257 – Bradford City v Stevenage

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8,274 – Swindon Town v Tranmere Rovers
6,005 – Bristol Rovers v Oldham Athletic
4,943 – Port Vale v Carlisle United
4,009 – Walsall v Scunthorpe United
2,667 – Barrow v Exeter City
2,188 – Rochdale v Salford City
2,354 – Colchester United v Mansfield Town
2,167 – Crawley Town v Salford City

Here’s a look at some of the photos of away fans at League Two fixtures…

1) 381 – Tranmere Rovers fans at Swindon Town

2) 286 – Oldham Athletic fans at Bristol Rovers

No description available.

3) 284 – Carlisle United fans at Port Vale

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4) 224 – Mansfield Town fans at Colchester United

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5) 165 – Exeter City fans at Barrow

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101 – Stevenage fans at Bradford City
87 – Forest Green Rovers fans at Rochdale
76 – Salford City fans at Crawley Town
-) TBC – Scunthorpe United fans at Walsall

There were modest increases in attendances so far in the English Football League compared to the last season without capacity limits.

With Covid still lingering around, on this occasion, it didn’t deter fans from attending matches over the weekend, with crowds up overall in each division compared to the average for the 2019/20 season.

Data gathered by the PA news agency shows that there is a modest increases in the third and fourth tiers of English football, though there was a drop at Championship level.

On the first weekend of the season, an there was an average attendance in League One which was up by almost 1,000 overall compared to the average among the weekend’s home clubs in 2019/20 – 11,200 compared to 10,319.

The total number of fans in the grounds in League Two was up by more than 500, which was 4,595 compared to 4,026. That figure excluded Harrogate and Hartlepool, who were in the National League in 2019/20.

The figures will be a boost to lower league clubs, who generally depend more heavily on matchday revenue than those in the Premier League and the Championship and were therefore hit hardest by being forced to play the entire season behind closed doors in some cases last term.

The average second-tier attendance in the first round of Championship games was 16,294, 1,437 lower than the combined average for the clubs playing at home in the 2019/20 season.

Clarke says the FSA membership has a broad range of opinions on whether vaccine passports is something that should get the green light, but adds the most important thing is a clear, rational approach.

“Speaking to the leagues, I get the impression they are a little bit frustrated that there hasn’t been central guidance on this on what measures are appropriate,” he said.

“The result of that is that local safety advisory groups, advised by their local directors of public health, seem to be taking some different views in different areas. Where that’s justified by higher infection rates, that’s fully understandable and you might expect the measures taken are a bit more stringent. But where it’s not, it feels a bit arbitrary.

“If fans feel that a decision to do a particular procedure at a ground that isn’t being done at a different ground can’t be explained by infection rates then they’re likely to get a bit annoyed and frustrated by it.

“The key message from us is for all the Cs – clear communication and consultation about how it works in practice. If clubs do that I think fans will understand. It’s a problem for all of us, and we’re all on the same page.”

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