With the reduction of the Premier League from 22 to 20 clubs for the 1995–96 season, there would be just two promotion places from Division One in the 1994–95 season, as well as a fourth relegation place instead of the usual three. Middlesbrough clinched the division's only automatic promotion place by finishing champions in their first season under player-manager
Bryan Robson, with promotion being clinched in the final game at
Ayresome Park at the end of April. After 92 years at their historic home, the club would be relocated to the new 30,000-seater
Riverside Stadium over the summer of 1995. Runners-up Reading, another club planning to build a new stadium in the near future, would normally have won automatic promotion, but the latest restructuring of the league meant that they had to navigate a play-off semi-final with fifth-placed Tranmere Rovers. They easily overcame the
Wirral side, whose veteran striker
John Aldridge topped the Division One goal charts with 24 league strikes, but then had to take on Bolton Wanderers in a Wembley clash. The Royals were still 2–0 ahead and looking set to reach the top flight for the first time ever with more than hour left on the clock, but then Bolton pulled a goal back in the 75th minute and followed this with an equaliser to force extra time, and the
Burnden Park side ended up winning a dramatic match 4–3 and ending their 15-year absence from the top flight. However, they were faced with having to fight for Premier League survival in 1995–96 without their manager
Bruce Rioch, who left to manage
Arsenal over the summer and was succeeded by joint managers
Roy McFarland and
Colin Todd. A number of Division One sides enjoyed memorable runs in the FA Cup and League Cup. Weeks before their dramatic playoff triumph, Bolton Wanderers had travelled to Wembley for their first major cup final in 37 years, to take on
Liverpool in the final of the League Cup, but lost 2–1 to the
Merseysiders. Wolves, who went on to lose to Bolton in the playoff semi-finals, had held
Crystal Palace to a 1–1 draw in their FA Cup quarter-final at
Selhurst Park and had high hopes of a semi-final tie with
Manchester United, only to lose the replay 4–1 at home to the
South London side. At the other end of the table, Swindon Town quickly found themselves battling against a second successive relegation, having been relegated from the Premier League in 1993–94. Their manager
John Gorman was sacked in November and replaced by 33-year-old
Manchester City midfielder
Steve McMahon as player-manager. The
Wiltshire club's new manager was able to guide Swindon to the semi-finals of the League Cup, but he was unable to guide them to Division One survival, as they went down in the fourth and final relegation place along with
Burnley,
Bristol City, and
Notts County. During this season, a number of Division One clubs had a new stadium in the pipeline. Middlesbrough were preparing for their move from Ayresome Park to the new Riverside Stadium, while their local rivals Sunderland had identified a former colliery site on the banks of the
River Wear as their preferred site for a new all-seater stadium after nearly 100 years at
Roker Park. Bolton Wanderers, who went up alongside Middlesbrough, were aiming for a new 25,000-seater stadium at
Lostock to replace
Burnden Park. Beaten playoff finalists Reading had lined up a site on the southern side of the town as the site of a replacement for antiquated
Elm Park, while Luton Town's new owner
Simon Kohler unveiled ambitious plans to build a new 20,000-seater indoor stadium, the latest in a string of proposals which had emerged over the last 40 years as possible replacements for the cramped stadium at
Kenilworth Road. Derby County, who missed out on the playoffs, were planning to rebuild the
Baseball Ground as a 26,000-seater stadium, after considering relocating to a new site at
Pride Park.
Play-offs Results Top scorers Locations Attendances Source: == Second Division ==