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Latest updates

  1. Charlton appoint Miller as academy bosspublished at 17:14 GMT

    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."

  2. 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.

  3. '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.

  4. '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."

  5. 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."

  6. 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.

  7. 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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  8. 'Charlton's defensive frailties exposed again'published at 09:26 GMT 22 January

    Paul Sullivan
    Fan writer

    BBC Sport's Charlton Athletic fan's voice banner
    Charlton players look dejected after conceding a goal during the 2-1 defeat by DerbyImage source, Getty Images

    Derby County arrived at The Valley buoyed by their impressive weekend win at Preston North End and their confidence showed.

    Despite Charlton's battling draw at Pride Park back in October, the visitors carried greater fluency and punished the Addicks' defensive shortcomings to claim a 2-1 victory.

    Macaulay Gillesphey's unfortunate own goal opened the scoring, though it stemmed from smart approach work by Derby's Patrick Agyemang.

    It was the first of two needless goals from a Charlton perspective in a night that again exposed defensive frailties.

    Charlton's first-half play was too often laboured, attacks breaking down before gathering any momentum.

    In the second half, Ibrahim Fullah's decision not to square a promising chance to his right summed things up - moments later, Derby broke and doubled their lead.

    Tyreece Campbell, arguably Charlton's best performer on the night, cut the deficit with a well-taken finish.

    His tireless effort at both ends stood out, offering a glimpse of what's possible when energy meets quality. Yet such consistency remains elusive for this side.

    The Addicks had sufficient possession to trouble Derby but lacked the clinical edge that defines Championship survival.

    Teams like the Rams show the composure to turn attacking moves into goals - Charlton too often fall short in those key moments.

    To their credit, Nathan Jones' men fought to the end despite a rain-lashed, blustery south London night and a stretched, injury-hit defence.

    There was more bad news on that front with a setback confirmed for Josh Edwards. However, the loan signing of left-sided defender Luke Chambers from Liverpool is encouraging.

    Jones also confirmed midfielder Harvey Knibbs will be out for some considerable time.

    Charlton stay 18th but a point closer to the relegation zone.

    With difficult trips to Millwall and beyond looming, they need to rediscover resilience - and clean sheets - fast.

    Derby's trajectory offers hope. Last season, in their first back in the Championship, they clung to safety and now sit comfortably in the top half.

    For Charlton, survival this term remains the first step on the long road back to the good old days.

  9. EFL games to kick off late for CPR awarenesspublished at 12:21 GMT 21 January

    Bristol Rovers defender Tom Lockyer wearing an Every Minute Matters t-shirt in the warm-up before a gameImage source, Shutterstock
    Image caption,

    Tom Lockyer suffered a cardiac arrest while playing for Luton Town in December 2023

    All English Football League games across a four-day period in February will begin one minute late to raise awareness for the Every Minute Matters campaign.

    The initiative will be in place for 36 matches across the Championship, League One and League Two between 5 and 9 February.

    EFL sponsor Sky Bet and the British Heart Foundation (BHF) have been working together since May 2024 to highlight the importance of speed when it comes to performing live-saving CPR.

    Later kick-off times will serve as "a stark reminder that every minute matters", the EFL said.

    Bristol Rovers defender Tom Lockyer collapsed while playing for Luton Town eight minutes into the Championship play-off final against Coventry in May 2023.

    Lockyer then suffered a cardiac arrest on the pitch seven months later during a Premier League game at Bournemouth.

    "What happened to me can happen to anyone, anywhere, at any time," said Lockyer, who is now a BHF ambassador.

    "Every year, more than 40,000 people in the UK suffer an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and most of them never make it home.

    "I'm here today because of the transformative power of CPR as every minute matters when it comes to saving a life.

    "This February, we want everyone to get behind this life-saving initiative, learn the skills and be ready to step in because your actions could give someone else the chance I was given."

    Throughout February, the Every Minute Matters campaign will call on fans to learn CPR using the BHF's online RevivR, external tool.

    "Each minute without CPR reduces a person's chance of survival, so we're urging fans to learn the skills now, before you ever need them," said Dr Charmaine Griffiths, chief executive of the BHF.

    EFL chief executive officer Trevor Birch added: "The one minute kick-off adjustment is a simple, powerful reminder that swift CPR can be the difference between life and death."

  10. Derby's goals 'avoidable' says Jonespublished at 23:19 GMT 20 January

    Nathan Jones clappingImage source, PA Media
    Image caption,

    Nathan Jones' Charlton are four points above the relegation zone

    Charlton Athletic manager Nathan Jones believes Derby's goals against his side were "avoidable" following the Addicks' 2-1 home loss.

    A Macaulay Gillesphey own goal and Bobby Clark finish were enough for the Rams to see off Charlton at The Valley despite Tyreece Campbell pulling one back with 20 minutes to go and the visitors going a man down late on.

    The loss leaves Jones and Charlton stuck in 18th in the Championship table.

    "I'm disappointed because I felt the goals were avoidable," Jones told BBC Radio London after the match.

    "If the goals were avoidable and we have the second-half performance like we did, then that's what we want to do and what we've been doing.

    "But of late, we've struggled to keep clean sheets and struggled to defend how we normally defend, and that's cost us because you can't chase Championship games two-nil down.

    "There's a lot of endeavour. We moved the ball first half without really having enough purpose, but Derby came with a game plan and sat in. It was very difficult."

  11. Pick of the stats: Charlton Athletic v Derby Countypublished at 13:20 GMT 19 January

    Charlton Athletic and Derby County club badgesImage source, Opta

    Charlton Athletic will aim to move further clear of the Championship relegation zone when they welcome Derby County on Tuesday night (19:45 GMT kick-off).

    The Addicks are five points ahead of Norwich in 22nd and unbeaten in their past three games (W1 D2).

    The Rams, who are five points behind the top-six, are hoping to keep their play-off hopes alive and are seeking consecutive wins for the first time since November after the 1-0 victory at Preston last time out.

    • Charlton and Derby drew their first league meeting this season 1-1 in September, but haven't drawn both league clashes in a campaign since 1982-83.

    • Derby won their most recent league visit to Charlton 1-0 in League One in February 2024, last winning back-to-back such trips in January 1995.

    • Derby have drawn each of their past four away league games at newly promoted opposition, including 1-1 stalemates at Wrexham and Birmingham City in 2025-26.

    • Charlton's Nathan Jones has only lost one of his eight previous managerial league games against Derby (W3 D4), a 2-0 defeat with Luton Town in April 2021.

    • Derby have only won three of their past 22 Championship away games at London sides (D11 L8), failing to win their previous five (D3 L2) since a 1-0 win at QPR in January 2021.

  12. Addicks ride their luck in 'barmy' Blades winpublished at 11:34 GMT 19 January

    Paul Sullivan
    Fan writer

    Charlton Athletic Fan's Voice banner
    Sonny Carey holding out his arms in victory towards the crowd as his team-mates head to the tunnel at The ValleyImage source, Getty Images

    Charlton's January arrivals, Harry Clarke and Lyndon Dykes, made their debuts on a day that brought both encouragement and alarm.

    Dykes, who can boast Australian side Surfers Paradise Apollo as one of his previous teams, was sporting the rarely seen No 99 shirt. He is no prolific scorer but offers a valuable foil for the likes of Charlie Kelman, Matt Godden and Miles Leaburn.

    With Scotland bound for the World Cup this summer, the striker has every incentive to impress. Also, he will be looking forward to the visit of his old club QPR when they arrive at The Valley under the lights on 6 February.

    Clarke meanwhile, who joins on loan from Ipswich Town, brushed aside any concerns of match readiness in this barmy contest.

    His defensive nous should toughen a squad that has at times shown its Championship inexperience.

    Even so, Charlton still look light at left wing‑back and urgently need reinforcements before the window closes.

    This match, though, was all about survival instincts.

    Sheffield United dominated the first half, enjoying huge amounts of possession and but for Thomas Kaminski's saves, the Blades might have been out of sight within 30 minutes.

    The newly named EFL Championship player of the month, Patrick Bamford, and Andre Brooks were causing plenty of trouble to the Addicks defence.

    But within 12 mad minutes, the Blades lost their cutting edge with two dismissals.

    For all Chris Wilder's various remonstrations, he should be ultimately angry with his players for their ill-discipline after being in the driving seat.

    Following the interval, Nathan Jones' side finally seized the moment. Substitute Dykes combined smartly in the build‑up to an early second-half goal that proved decisive.

    The closing stages were defined by tension rather than fluency, with Charlton cautioned not to invite counter-attacks or concede needless set-pieces.

    Relief swept The Valley as the final whistle blew — three precious points, however fortuitous.

    It wasn't pretty and Jones admitted as much. "I don't care how we get them," he has said before - and that mantra felt apt.

    With Harvey Knibbs now facing a lay‑off and James Bree returning to Southampton, Charlton's new signings will be vital in keeping the Addicks clear of danger as the scrap for survival tightens.

  13. Knibbs injury 'not good', says Jonespublished at 18:54 GMT 17 January

    Media caption,

    Nathan Jones described his side's 1-0 win over Sheffield United as a 'bizarre game'

    Charlton Athletic boss Nathan Jones told BBC Radio London after his side's 1-0 win over Sheffield United:

    "It was a bizarre game. It doesn't feel like a win and the euphoria that it should, having beaten Sheffield United at home.

    "A win is a win. It was a strange atmosphere, they started fantastically well and we needed our goalkeeper to keep us level.

    "When they went down to 10 men we had a little bit more control. Nine men obviously more control, and then we made the right substitutions. Tactically we were felt we were good – we scored the goal, we had other opportunities [and] didn't quite get the second. But a win's a win.

    On playing against nine men: "You have to control the game. What people have to realise is you can't just go gung-ho and 'bang, bang, bang, bang, bang' because every time they turn the ball over they go at you, and they've got good players to do that."

    On Harvey Knibbs' injury: "It's not a good injury. Without speculating, we have to have the results of scans and X-rays and so on. But look, let's see how that is.

    On the red cards: "I felt they were justified. I don't want to get into anything. It's not a good challenge, hence the gravity of the injury [to Knibbs] and then the second one, I just think he's a bit out of control and when the head's involved… we felt they were justified."

  14. Pick of the stats: Charlton Athletic v Sheffield Unitedpublished at 12:06 GMT 15 January

    The club badges of Charlton Athletic and Sheffield United

    This is a first league meeting between these two in London for nearly 10 years with Charlton looking for only their second win in their past five matches.

    Sheffield United are yet to draw an away league game so far this season.

    • Charlton have won three of their past five league games against Sheffield United (D1 L1), including a 1-0 win at Bramall Lane this season.

    • This is Sheffield United's first visit to Charlton in the league since a 1-1 draw in League One in November 2016, while in the Championship it is their first since a 5-2 win in November 2008.

    • Charlton are one of only two sides, along with Sheffield Wednesday, who have faced more shots than they have had themselves in all three game states in the Championship this season: when drawing (72), losing (8) and winning (30).

    • Sheffield United have won seven of their past 10 Championship matches (D1 L2). Since the date of the first game in this run (23 November), the Blades have won the most points of any side in the division (22).

    • Patrick Bamford has scored six goals in 11 appearances in all competitions for Sheffield United. Since his debut for the Blades, the only Championship players with more goals are Norwich's Jovon Makama (9) and Morgan Whitaker of Middlesbrough (7) across all competitions.