Erm...either West Brom or Birmingham, I think.
Sunday's answer: Ayresome Park (Middlesbrough), Baseball Ground (Derby County), Burnden Park (Bolton Wanderers), The Dell (Southampton), Filbert Street (Leicester City), Highbury (Arsenal), Highfield Road (Coventry City), Maine Road (Emirates Marketing Project) Plough Lane (Wimbledon) and Roker Park (Sunderland).
Monday 29th October 2012:
Which club holds the record for the highest number of promotions & relegations in English League Football?
Sunday's answer: Ayresome Park (Middlesbrough), Baseball Ground (Derby County), Burnden Park (Bolton Wanderers), The Dell (Southampton), Filbert Street (Leicester City), Highbury (Arsenal), Highfield Road (Coventry City), Maine Road (Emirates Marketing Project) Plough Lane (Wimbledon) and Roker Park (Sunderland)
Plough Lane was a football stadium in Wimbledon, south west London. It was the home ground of Wimbledon Football Club from September 1912 to May 1991, when the club moved their first team home matches to Selhurst Park as part of a groundshare agreement with Crystal Palace. Both clubs' reserve teams then used Plough Lane as their home ground until 1998, when it was sold ...
Monday 29th October 2012:
Which club holds the record for the highest number of promotions & relegations in English League Football?
Sunderland and City have a lot of top flight ones. I'd say Sunderland have the most (7 or 8?). A club like Grimsby might have had more total relegations.
P.S. If you count having to apply for reelection as a relegation, then it would probably be Newport County or Barrow.
Leicester.
Hasn't ArcspacE called it?
Spurs or Chelsea?
Yanited.