Newsletter issue ERWFL Premier 2025/26 Published 3 May 2026
Season-close newsletter A short final issue for a league whose active weekly coverage has paused.
Friday newsletter · season-close issue

Stevenage made the league simple.

ERWFL Premier 2025/26 is done. The useful read is not just "Stevenage won it"; it is how the division split into tiers, where the high-output sides fell short, and which profiles carry into next season.

Issue Final newsletter
Status Season finished
Champions Stevenage
Table gap +16 pts

The weekly read

Stevenage closed the ERWFL Premier season by going to Wroxham and winning 5-2. That final-day result placed first against third and made the whole campaign easy to read: Stevenage were the only side that paired heavy scoring with a defensive floor.

The final table records Stevenage on 62 points from 22 matches, with 83 scored and 13 conceded. Royston Town were second on 46; Wroxham third on 43; Atletico London fourth on 39. The title gap was not a one-week swing. It was a season-long separation between a complete side and a chasing group with visible flaws.

The richer story sits below the champions. Royston were clearly the best chaser but conceded 32. Wroxham held third without an elite attacking number. Atletico produced top-three signals in goals and goal difference but dropped too many results.

Table snapshot

Stevenage solved both boxes Stevenage · 62 pts · +70

Best attack, best defence, unbeaten record. The season was defined by one side solving both boxes at once.

The chase split three ways Royston · Wroxham · Atletico

Three different versions of contention: Royston's points, Wroxham's table position, Atletico's goal profile.

Goals without control Haringey · Bowers · Harpenden

All three could score. None defended tightly enough to sustain a top-four push.

Bottom line Watford Dev · Hutton · Enfield

The bottom end is mostly about goals against: 67, 52 and 85 conceded.

Carry-forward notes

Stevenage control 83 for, 13 against

The title profile is not just attacking power. Conceding 13 in 22 league games is the part that made the season feel solved.

Royston's chase 59 goals, +27 GD

The second-best points total still left them 16 back. The upgrade area is not scoring; it is removing the defensive drag.

Wroxham volatility Third, but 30 conceded

Wroxham stayed dangerous all season. The closing 5-2 home loss shows why danger alone did not become a title push.

Atletico's swing profile Fourth, +17 GD

If one side outside the top three looks capable of changing the top of next year's table, it is the team that already carried top-three numbers.

Enfield's rebuild marker 85 conceded

The bottom marker is clear: every next-season improvement starts with reducing heavy defensive damage.

This league was decided by control, not just goals.

There were plenty of goals outside the champions. Royston scored 59, Atletico 51, Haringey 50, Bowers 46, Wroxham 44 and Harpenden 43. The difference is that Stevenage turned attacking volume into a protected table position by conceding only 13.

That is the next-season lens. Royston need to narrow the defensive gap to first. Wroxham need more scoring volume without losing their table discipline. Atletico, Haringey and Bowers need to turn high-output weeks into repeatable points. The bottom three need to reduce damage before anything else can matter.

Fixture board

The league season has finished, so this newsletter is not taking active-week subscriptions right now. Live weekly issues return when the next fixture list is available.

Facts checked 3 May 2026. Corrections reviewed on request.