
EPL Index
·25 May 2025
Newcastle into Champions League as Old Trafford twist saves their season

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·25 May 2025
Newcastle United may have fallen short on the pitch, but off it they soared into the Champions League. Despite a 1-0 defeat to a composed and revitalised Everton side, Eddie Howe’s men were gifted passage into Europe’s top competition thanks to results elsewhere.
Nerves dictated much of Newcastle United’s performance. Starting the day in fourth place, their grip on that coveted position looked increasingly shaky. Everton, showing organisation and intent under David Moyes, seized their moment when Carlos Alcaraz headed home from Vitalii Mykolenko’s cross after 65 minutes. “You entered the pitch as players, you left it as legends,” read the banner draped across the Gallowgate End. But for long stretches, legend was a distant word.
Photo: IMAGO
Everton, sitting 13th before kick-off, looked every bit the more settled team. Newcastle, by contrast, appeared gripped by anxiety, barely stringing passes together, their movements laboured and minds muddled. The crowd inside St James’ Park grew increasingly restless, their energy mirroring the tension unfolding on the pitch. When Alcaraz struck, silence spread like fog across the stadium.
There was a collective holding of breath, a sense of dread that Newcastle’s dream might collapse just metres from the finishing line. That was until word arrived that Manchester United had taken the lead against Aston Villa. Suddenly, deflation turned to hope, then joy, as fans erupted, realising the dream remained alive.
As confirmation filtered through that Villa had fallen, so too did the weight from Howe’s shoulders. Newcastle’s players, visibly spent, could finally take in the significance of the moment. A lap of honour followed, one not earned by the 90 minutes just played, but by a season of resilience and progress.
This qualification marks Newcastle’s first appearance in the Champions League since the Bobby Robson era, and it arrives in a season already marked by silverware. Their Carabao Cup triumph over Liverpool at Wembley ended a 70-year domestic trophy drought and was the first major prize since 1969.
In truth, Newcastle scrambled over the line. But they crossed it. Champions League football will return to Tyneside, even if not in the fashion they envisioned. A historic season deserved its reward, and thanks to Old Trafford’s echoes, they now have it.