Throughout the history of the English Football League play-offs, the semi-finals have been conducted as two-legged matches played at the two stadia of the competing teams, less than a week apart. Between the
1987 and
1989 play-offs, the finals were also played on a home-and-away basis over two matches, occasionally with a replay being required: in the
1988 Football League Third Division play-off final, the aggregate score after the two legs between
Walsall and
Bristol City was 3–3, so a penalty shoot-out was used to determine which side would host the replay. Walsall won 4–2 and earned the right to play the deciding match at their home ground,
Fellows Park, where they triumphed 4–0. From the
1990 play-offs, each play-off final was a single match, which was hosted at
the original Wembley Stadium. Typically, the finals of the three divisions took place, one match per day, across the second
bank holiday weekend in May. During that first "Wembley Weekend" in 1990, spectators totalled almost 130,000, including nearly 73,000 for the
Second Division final between
Swindon Town and
Sunderland. This was markedly greater than the largest crowd during the
1989–90 First Division season, around 47,000, at
Old Trafford to watch
Manchester United against
Arsenal, and roughly the same as the attendance at the
1990 FIFA World Cup Final. All of the second tier play-off finals played between 1990 and 1999 attracted crowds in excess of 55,000, with half of them seeing more than 70,000 in attendance. During that period, the record attendance for the third-tier decider came at the
1999 Second Division play-off final, when 76,935 people watched
Manchester City beat
Gillingham in a penalty shoot-out after scoring twice in the final two minutes to force the match into extra time. The former Wembley Stadium record for attendance in the fourth tier play-off final came in
1997 when a crowd of 46,804 witnessed
Northampton Town's
John Frain score in the last minute of the match to beat
Swansea City 1–0. The play-off finals were held outside England for the first time from the
2000 season. Due to the redevelopment of Wembley Stadium, along with the
FA Cup Final, they were hosted by the
Millennium Stadium in
Cardiff,
Wales. Teams who prepared for matches, including in cup competitions, in the south changing room went undefeated in twelve consecutive games; however, the "jinx" was broken in the
2002 Second Division play-off final, when
Stoke City beat
Brentford after having used the north changing room. Attendances continued to be high at the Welsh national stadium, with the second tier finals attracting more than 65,000 spectators on all but one occasion and the
2003 third tier final watched by 66,096 people when
Cardiff City beat
Queens Park Rangers 1–0 with an extra-time goal from
Andy Campbell. The play-off finals returned to Wembley Stadium for the first time after its reconstruction in the
2007 season, and over the next five seasons attendances improved further. The
2007 fourth tier play-off final between
Bristol Rovers and
Shrewsbury Town drew a crowd of 61,589, while 75,132 people watched
Doncaster Rovers beat
Leeds United 1–0 in the
2008 Football League One play-off final. The same season saw 86,703 in attendance at the
Championship play-off final in which
Hull City beat Bristol City 1–0. Owing to the
2011 UEFA Champions League Final being held at Wembley Stadium on 28 May 2011, it was confirmed in January 2011 that Wembley would host the Championship play-off final on 30 May, while
Old Trafford would host the League Two and League One finals on the preceding two days. From the
2012 final onwards, the final matches for all three divisions have been at Wembley. For the
2020 finals, all three games were delayed until August and played
behind closed doors, with an official attendance of zero, because of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
The following season, a restricted number of supporters were allowed to attend the finals. That year the
Championship play-off final was watched by 11,689 spectators, while the third and fourth tier finals both saw crowds of under 10,000. ==Prize==