Hull City are heading to Wembley. A 2-0 win at The Den on Monday night was enough to end Millwall's Premier League ambitions and send Hull through to the Championship play-off final — the most lucrative single match in world football, and the biggest occasion this club has faced in years.
Millwall needed this one. The Den is not a comfortable place to come and defend a lead — the atmosphere, the pressure, the crowd — and yet Hull City handled it. A 2-0 win away from home in a play-off semi-final second leg is not a performance you stumble into. That is a controlled, clinical away day from a side that knew exactly what it was doing.
The scorers and specific match details are yet to be fully confirmed across sources, but the result itself is not in doubt: Hull progress on aggregate, Millwall are out, and Gary Rowett's side — who built so much of their season around this exact run — will not be playing Premier League football next year.
Millwall's fans had given them everything. It wasn't enough.
The Championship play-off final is, by any measure, a life-changing fixture for a football club — reportedly worth over £200 million in Premier League revenue when you factor in broadcast deals, commercial uplift and parachute payments. For Hull City, a club that has yo-yoed between the top two divisions for over a decade, reaching Wembley represents a genuine crossroads moment.
They have been here before — Hull have played in the Premier League, reached an FA Cup final, experienced relegation battles — but this version of the club, rebuilt patiently through the Championship, will want to make it count. One game. Wembley. The Premier League on the other side.
For Millwall, this is a painful exit. They pushed deep into the play-offs and came within touching distance of the top flight — but Hull were simply the better side across the tie. There will be a rebuild conversation at The Den this summer, and it will start from a difficult place emotionally.
Hull's opponents in the final are yet to be confirmed, pending the outcome of the other semi-final. But whoever they face, they arrive at Wembley with momentum, a clean sheet on the road, and the belief that they can finish the job.
Hull City are heading to Wembley. A 2-0 win at The Den on Monday night was enough to end Millwall's Premier League ambitions and send Hull through to the Championship play-off final
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Sky Sports — Football, The Telegraph — Football
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Yksi klikkaus poistaa tilauksesta. Emme jaa sähköpostiosoitteita.
“Stays on Championship — different angle, same beat.”
Dave Challinor is not a man given to hyperbole. So when Stockport County's manager calls being one game from the Championship amazing, take him at his word — because the journey that got them here is
“Stays on Championship — different angle, same beat.”
Dave Challinor is not a man given to hyperbole. So when Stockport County's manager calls being one game from the Championship amazing, take him at his word — because the journey that got them here is