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Latest updates

  1. Follow transfer deadline daypublished at 12:44 GMT 2 February

    An image featuring Newcastle's Jamaal Lascelles, Middlesbrough's Hayden Hackney and Brentford's Frank Onyeka spread across a red banner with the words 'Transfer Deadline Day' above them on a black backgroundImage source, Getty Images

    Today is the final chance of the season for your Championship team to do transfer business.

    The window closes at 19:00 GMT, meaning teams - and fans - can avoid the usual late-night transfer scramble.

    It has already been a busy window - for some teams anyway - but whether it turns out to be a day of transfer action or a pretty quiet one for your club, you will be able to keep across it all on BBC Sport.

    Follow our live text coverage throughout the day here

  2. Addicks revel in the chaos at the King Powerpublished at 10:49 GMT 2 February

    Paul Sullivan
    Fan writer

    Charlton Athletic fan voice banner
    Harry Clarke applauds Charlton Athletic fans while wearing a red home shirt with a long-sleeved red top underneathImage source, Getty Images

    Few gave Charlton Athletic much hope when they headed to the King Power, but Nathan Jones' side sensed blood.

    Leicester City - a club drifting into chaos with no permanent manager, no January signings, no clean sheets in 23 matches (make that 24 now), a points deduction imminent and looking like a shell of the team that lifted the Premier League trophy nearly a decade ago.

    The Addicks, by contrast, arrived with a sense of purpose — and a hunger to right the Millwall wrongs.

    The tone was set early when Miles Leaburn's power unsettled Leicester's back line, leading to Caleb Okoli's red card after just 15 minutes.

    Charlton played with intent and conviction. Conor Coady, making his full debut, marshalled midfield authority, blending composure with leadership.

    Sonny Carey continued his goalscoring prowess with a sublime opener - lifting the ball over a defender with his right foot, spinning inside before finishing crisply with his left for his seventh goal of the season.

    When Luke Chambers whipped in a delivery of Premier League quality, Lyndon Dykes stretched to guide home Charlton's second superbly just before half-time.

    It was a clever contact by the Scottish international that settled nerves and underlined Jones's game plan: aggression, organisation and work rate over reputation.

    Leicester rallied after the interval, even winning a penalty, but Jordan Ayew's effort struck the post and with it went the Foxes' belief.

    Charlton managed the closing stages superbly, reshaping and resisting to secure their first away win of 2026 and a precious clean sheet.

    This 2–0 victory sends Jones's men three points behind Leicester with a game in hand and for now, a six-point buffer from the relegation zone.

    Coady's influence already feels transformative, while Leaburn's fitness will be a pressing concern after a shoulder knock.

    What's certain is that Charlton showed character, clarity and bite in a performance built on togetherness - a perfect riposte after the mauling at Millwall.

    For a club still fighting to stay afloat, this was a reminder that survival - and perhaps something more - remains well within reach.

  3. Jones delighted with Charlton's response at Leicesterpublished at 15:58 GMT 31 January

    Charlton boss Nathan Jones instructs his players at LeicesterImage source, Shutterstock
    Image caption,

    Nathan Jones watches on at Leicester

    Charlton boss Nathan Jones was pleased with how his side responded to their derby drubbing by Millwall to win 2-0 at Leicester to ease their relegation fears.

    Sonny Carey, with his seventh goal of the season, and Lyndon Dykes, with his first since his move this month from Birmingham, netted at the King Power Stadium to give the Addicks their first league away win since October 21.

    Leicester were reduced to 10 men when Caleb Okoli was sent off after just 15 minutes at 0-0 for pulling back Miles Leaburn and Jones praised his side's approach.

    Jones told BBC Radio London: "That's a massive win, the result was everything today.

    "It's huge. Last week was damning, it was really hurtful to the football club. One, because of who we played, two, because of the manner of it and three, because we care. Look, I'm immersed in this football club, so it hurts me because I live and breathe this club, so I wanted to have a reaction today.

    "Miles was clean in and got pulled back, a definite red. That kind of changed the complexion of the game, but I'm really pleased because we wanted to be aggressive against them and put it on them. We didn't come here and try and sit back, we went after them and that's what I want us to give."

  4. Pick of the stats: Leicester City v Charlton Athleticpublished at 15:00 GMT 29 January

    Leicester City and Charlton Athletic club badgesImage source, Opta

    Leicester City will look to keep their lingering play-off hopes alive in their first game since Marti Cifuentes was sacked when they welcome relegation-battling Charlton Athletic on Saturday (kick-off 12:30 GMT).

    The Foxes, who will have Andy King in temporary charge, are 14th and six points adrift of the top-six after just two wins in their past eight games (D1 L5).

    The 19th-placed Addicks are only three points clear of the drop zone and have won just twice in 14 games (D3 L9).

    • Leicester will be looking to achieve a league double over Charlton for the first time since 1981-82 (also in the second division), having won 1-0 at The Valley earlier this season.

    • Charlton have only won one of their past 10 away league matches against Leicester (D5 L4), with that lone victory coming in February 2013 under Chris Powell (a 2-1 win in the Championship).

    • Leicester haven't kept a clean sheet in the Championship since a 0-0 draw with league leaders Coventry in September 2025, going 23 matches without one. Since the start of last season, they have the lowest clean sheet percentage (9%) of any team in England's top four tiers (6/67).

    • Since the start of November, only West Brom have fewer points (1) in Championship away games than Charlton (2). The Addicks are one of only three sides without an away win in this period (D2 L6), along with West Brom and Sheffield Wednesday.

    • Abdul Fatawu has the most goal involvements and assists for Leicester in the Championship this season (13 - 6 goals, 7 assists), while his 74 completed dribbles are at least 22 more than any other player in the division (Mikey Johnston, 52).

  5. Dundee Utd sign Charlton keeper Maynard-Brewerpublished at 20:06 GMT 28 January

    Ashley Maynard-BrewerImage source, Getty

    Dundee United have signed "terrific" goalkeeper Ashley Maynard-Brewer from Charlton Athletic for an undisclosed fee on an initial six-month deal.

    Maynard-Brewer, 26, helped Charlton win promotion from League One last season but has made just one appearance this term.

    The academy graduate spent almost a decade at Charlton and had various loan spells, including helping Ross county to a sixth-place Scottish Premiership finish in 2021-22.

    Born in England and raised in Australia, Maynard-Brewer played at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics with the Socceroos Under-23s.

    He will compete with Dave Richards for the starting spot at United following Yevhen Kucherenko's departure earlier this month.

    "He is a terrific young goalkeeper as far as we are concerned, he knows the league having spent a loan spell at Ross County four seasons ago," said United manager Jim Goodwin.

    "He is a lot more experienced now for the opportunities he has had at Charlton and we believe we are getting a really good goalkeeper to come in and compete for that first-place slot.

    "We were light in that department anyway, it is a position we have been working hard on since the beginning of the window. I am delighted to get Ashley over the line."

    An image detailing how to follow your Premier League team on BBC Sport: "On the app? Tap the bell icon to get news about your club sent to you. Signed in on a browser? Hit 'Follow' to stay up to date.
  6. Charlton appoint Miller as academy bosspublished at 17:14 GMT 27 January

    View of Charlton Athletic ground The Valley from behind the goal.Image source, Getty Images

    Charlton Athletic have appointed Greg Miller as the club's new academy manager.

    Miller will join the Addicks in March once he has completed his notice period at current club Portsmouth.

    Born in Glasgow, he started his playing career at Hibernian, and has been the head coach of Pompey's Under-18 side since 2021.

    He previously held roles in the youth set-ups of the Scottish national side and Barnsley.

    "It's no secret that we have one of the best academies in the country, and I'm delighted that Greg is joining us as our new academy manager to help drive us forward," Charlton managing director James Rodwell told the club website., external

    "We interviewed a number of outstanding candidates through a detailed and testing process, and Greg stood out at every stage."

  7. Roussillon leaves Charlton without playing a gamepublished at 16:15 GMT 26 January

    Jerome Roussillon during his time with Union BerlinImage source, Getty Images

    Jerome Roussillon has left Charlton Athletic after a two-month stint in which the left-back made no appearances for the club.

    The 33-year-old moved to The Valley as a free agent on a short-term contract in November.

    Despite the continued absence of Josh Edwards - who has been ruled out for the rest of the season with an ankle injury - Charlton head coach Nathan Jones elected not to call on the Guadeloupe international.

    Roussillon, who has previously played for Montpellier, Wolfsburg and Union Berlin, has now joined French Ligue 2 outfit Amiens SC for the remainder of the season.

  8. 'A derby day collapse that cuts deep'published at 09:30 GMT 26 January

    Paul Sullivan
    Fan writer

    BBC Sport's Charlton Athletic fan's voice banner
    Charlton players look dejected as Millwall celebrate scoring in a 4-0 win for the LionsImage source, Shutterstock

    They say beating Millwall is the shortest route to a Charlton fan's heart.

    Back in June 2016, the late, great Kevin Nolan of the South London Press told the incoming Addicks manager at the time, Russell Slade, exactly that. Fast-forward nearly a decade and we're still waiting.

    In fact, it's nearly 30 years since our last win at The Den and those scars deepened again with a humiliating 4-0 defeat.

    Just 3.75 miles separate us, but right now it feels like a footballing chasm. Realistically, these local rivals could be two divisions apart next season.

    Seven minutes in, we were already chasing shadows after calamitous defending.

    By the time the second goal was conceded from a corner, you could see what was coming - another derby day collapse. Charlton's lack of fight was glaring.

    Losing the 50-50s, showing no bite, no belief.

    Nathan Jones put it bluntly afterwards: "We treated it as a day in the sun." For a game of this magnitude, that's unforgivable.

    The stats say it all. Millwall's 23 shots to our three, expected goals 3.91 to 0.14, touches in the opposition box 57 to 11. Those numbers scream a side that was bullied and beaten in every department.

    Fans calling for Jones' head will feel justified - humiliation like this always stings. Yet we're still out of the bottom three, which, two years ago, you'd have bitten someone's hand off for. But something needs to shift fast.

    A massive reset needs to occur on the training pitch and in the classroom at Sparrows Lane this week.

    The owners need to dig deep into their pockets and get some proven quality into the side.

    Otherwise, the big derby day we'll be looking forward to next season could be Bromley FC.

  9. 'We treated derby defeat as a day in the sun'published at 17:25 GMT 24 January

    Media caption,

    Nathan Jones said his players outworked and out-battled at Millwall

    Charlton Athletic boss Nathan Jones spoke after his side's 4-0 defeat at Millwall:

    "We got outworked, out-battled – they treated it as a derby, we treated it as a day in the sun and we got exactly what we deserved.

    "It's not how we work - we work hard, we work a press, we compete, we've had success from doing that.

    "We've been bullied all over today. Millwall were excellent. But we were nowhere near that level.

    "It's a poor first goal, we don't get to the cross, we allow them to play the ball into the box. And then it's not a great header. We don't deal with it.

    "We settled nicely, there wasn't massive problems in the first half. We had opportunities, moved the ball well, got in – possible penalty shout – had some chances.

    "But second half we were overrun, outworked on every single level.

    "We didn't prepare to get bullied, we don't work like that."

  10. EFL's 'Scan to Smile' highlights community workpublished at 17:57 GMT 23 January

    Millwall supporters involved in one of the EFL's club charity projects cheer and lift one of their team-matesImage source, EFL

    A new initiative highlighting the work of football club charities has been launched by the English Football League (EFL).

    'Scan to Smile' will be rolled out in stadiums across the EFL from Friday until the end of January, with supporters invited to scan QR codes on posters displayed around grounds.

    Each scan will unlock a short, uplifting story from a person whose life has been positively impacted by the support of their local club charity.

    The subjects tackled include mental health support, combating loneliness, improving physical wellbeing, employability and confidence.

    The EFL said it hoped the initiative would use "the reach and influence of football to offer fans a moment of positivity on matchday".

    Trevor Birch, chief executive at the EFL, said: "Behind every club are people whose lives have been positively changed through the work and dedication of their local EFL club charity.

    "This initiative gives supporters the chance to see that impact first-hand and reminds us that football truly is a force for good."

  11. Charlton defender Edwards to miss rest of seasonpublished at 14:38 GMT 23 January

    Josh Edwards Image source, Getty Images

    Charlton Athletic defender Josh Edwards has been ruled out for the rest of the season with an ankle injury he picked up in September.

    The 25-year-old started all of the Addicks' opening seven Championship games of the season before picking up the injury in a 3-0 win over Blackburn Rovers.

    "It was an impact injury and anybody that was at The Valley that day saw it," Charlton managing director James Rodwell told the club website., external

    "It was a nasty injury and it hasn't quite healed the way we would have wanted.

    "It's unlikely Josh will play for us again this season, but he'll be back in pre-season. He'll be back better than new, raring to go for next season."

    The Addicks travel to London rivals Millwall on Saturday.

  12. Pick of the stats: Millwall v Charlton Athleticpublished at 17:07 GMT 22 January

    The club badges of Millwall and Charlton Athletic side by side

    This will be the 76th meeting between Millwall and Charlton Athletic, with all 75 previous games in the English Football League and none in cup competitions.

    Millwall are unbeaten in their past three home league games while Charlton have failed to win on any of their past eight road trips, with their last away victory coming at Ipswich on 21 October.

    • Millwall are unbeaten across their past 13 league games against Charlton Athletic (W7 D6), since a 2-0 defeat in March 1996. They have conceded just eight goals in these 13 games, four of which came in the first match in the run (4-4 in December 2009).

    • Charlton Athletic have lost nine of their past 12 away league games against Millwall (W1 D2), losing their past three in succession. Their only victory during that time came with a 2-0 success in December 1995.

    • Having lost three of their first four home league games this season (W1), Millwall have now lost just one of their past 10 at The Den (W7 D2).

    • Charlton have won just one of their past 18 away London derbies in the Championship (D5 L12), conceding at least twice in each of their past six.

    • Charlton have won just two of their past 13 league games (D3 L8), with both victories in that run coming at home.

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