Planet Football
·24 April 2026
The 10 most watched football matches in UK television history ft. Chelsea vs Leeds…

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Yahoo sportsPlanet Football
·24 April 2026

England unsurprisingly dominate the most-watched football matches in UK television history, but Leeds United, Chelsea, Manchester United and Liverpool are among the clubs that feature towards the top end.
For as long as football has been shown live on television, flagship events like the World Cup, FA Cup and European Cup finals have brought people together in a way like little else can.
Here are the 10 most-watched football matches in the history of UK television.
The most-watched Liverpool match in the history of UK television. Almost 24 million sat down to watch Bob Paisley’s Reds take on the champions of Belgium at Wembley.
Kenny Dalglish’s strike was the difference on the night, with Liverpool’s 1-0 win soundtracked by the voice of Brian Moore on ITV, with the iconic commentator accompanied by scouse sidekicks Ian St John and Tommy Smith.
This was the second successive year that Liverpool lifted Ol’ Big Ears, and the most-watched of their historic six European Cup wins.
Perhaps too many among the British public felt they had seen this show before because the TV audience for this showpiece was some way down on the European Championships final three years prior.
And, to a large extent, they were right. Cole Palmer gave the English viewers a moment to get off their sofas but they were slumped back into them soon after when Mikel Oyarzabal scored an 86th-minute winner for Spain, ensuring the years of hurt clock would tick over into a sixth decade.
England lost but the Beeb won, taking a 63% audience share in their battle with ITV.
The reason that Leeds fans still chant “We are the champions, champions of Europe“, having left that infamous Paris final with the distinct feeling of being robbed.
Over 24 million witnessed one of the most controversial matches in English football history, in which Bayern – featuring Franz Beckenbauer, Uli Hoeness and Gerd Muller – ran out 2-0 winners, having benefitted from some questionable decisions from referee Michel Kitabdijan.
Legendary former Leeds manager Don Revie served as co-commentator and was left aghast.
The most-watched match in Manchester United’s history, as well as the European Cup, the storied competition’s viewing figures have never been bettered since that unforgettable first-ever final featuring an English side.
Twenty-six million watched David Coleman introduce a special edition of Grandstand live from Wembley. Ten years after the Munich air disaster, Matt Busby’s side triumphed in Europe, going all the way to extra-time against the champions of Portugal before running away with it with a flurry of goals from George Best, Brian Kidd and Bobby Charlton.
Over three times the population of London watched Gazza cry those tears, having picked up a booking that ruled him out of a final that England were ultimately absent from.
Sickener.

Yet another landmark occasion played at Wembley – seven of the top 10 were played at the iconic stadium – over 26 million were watching as England ended their 55-year wait to reach a major final in a nerve-shredding semi-final against Denmark.
Mikkel Damsgaard’s stunning free-kick threatened to spoil the party, but England fought back to force the match to extra-time – and eventually won out when captain Harry Kane slotted home the rebound of his saved penalty.
The most-watched football match in the UK in almost half a century, it’s estimated that 80% of all viewers watching TV at the time were tuned into England’s defeat to Croatia in Moscow.
The audience peaked in extra time as Southgate’s Three Lions tried in vain to find an equaliser.
Comfortably the most-watched club match in the history of UK television, it seems as though the British public just have an appetite for violence.
The more pearl-clutching members of the commentariat would have described some of the more robust challenges as “what we don’t want to see” – but the record viewing figures for the rematch, the first FA Cup final to go to a replay, well and truly prove that wrong.
Chelsea came from behind to win the replay 2-1, with David Webb scoring the match-winner in extra time.

“I am sure it a few days that will be more possible than it is now really,” Southgate told BBC One after England’s penalty shootout defeat to Italy at Wembley.
“At the moment the pain of the defeat is huge, we wanted to give our nation one more special night and a first European championship and we haven’t quite been able to do it.”
Thirty-one million watching on telly shared his pain.
England’s finest hour unsurprisingly tops the list. More than half of the country’s population at the time watched Geoff Hurst score a hat-trick as Alf Ramsey’s men beat West Germany 4-2 after extra time.
Not only the most-watched football match in the history of UK television, but the most-watched event full stop, beating the funeral of Princess Diana by two hundred thousand viewers.









































