Sky Sports Continue Championship Coverage Because Someone Has To
Sky Sports maintains its commitment to broadcasting EFL Championship matches, ensuring fans can watch second-tier football from the comfort of their sofas while questioning their life choices.
In news that will surprise absolutely no one who's ever tried to find Championship football on terrestrial television, Sky Sports continues to broadcast EFL Championship matches for the 2025-26 season. Because apparently, someone needs to show the world that football exists beyond the Premier League's glittering facade.
The broadcaster's ongoing commitment to second-tier football means supporters can continue to enjoy the peculiar pleasure of watching their beloved clubs battle it out in England's most gloriously unpredictable division. Whether it's watching promotion hopefuls stumble over their own ambitions or relegation battlers somehow conjure victories from thin air, Sky ensures these moments of pure Championship chaos reach living rooms across the nation.
For those unfamiliar with the Championship's particular brand of entertainment, it's where dreams go to be tested, bank accounts go to be emptied, and where a team can go from playoff contenders to relegation fodder faster than you can say 'change of manager'. It's also where Sky Sports cameras capture every moment of this beautiful madness.
The continuation of Sky's Championship coverage means fans won't have to resort to dodgy streaming sites or listening to radio commentary while staring at their phones, hoping for updates. Instead, they can witness in full HD glory as their teams either surge towards Premier League glory or plummet towards League One obscurity.
While the Premier League gets most of the attention and approximately 847% more coverage, the Championship remains football's great leveller. It's where former Premier League giants rub shoulders with clubs who've never seen the top flight, and where Sky's cameras document every twist in what's arguably the most competitive league in English football.
The broadcaster's commitment ensures that whether you're following a club's promotion push or watching them desperately cling to second-tier status, you can do so from your armchair with a proper television picture rather than squinting at grainy illegal streams.
So there you have it – Sky Sports will continue to broadcast Championship football, maintaining their role as the division's primary television partner. For supporters of England's 24 second-tier clubs, it means another season of being able to watch their teams' fortunes unfold in real time, complete with all the drama, heartbreak, and occasional moments of brilliance that make the Championship the beautifully unpredictable beast it is.
After all, someone needs to document the chaos.