The Independent
·23 maggio 2026
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Yahoo sportsThe Independent
·23 maggio 2026
Heaven for Hull. A team tipped for relegation at the start of the season, who only stayed up on goal differences last year, who were unable to buy players because of a transfer embargo, have indeed swapped divisions. But instead of dropping into League One, they are back in the Premier League. A play-off campaign that will forever be remembered for Spygate had one last surprise, Oli McBurnie infiltrating the Middlesbrough penalty area to prod in the most lucrative goal in Hull’s history.
A free transfer got the £200m strike, the richest game in world football decided by a product of the freeze on Hull’s spending. Enforced austerity has never been so profitable. But Middlesbrough, left devastated by losing a semi-final to a club who admitted cheating, were hurt again. “Two heart-breaking losses in one week,” said manager Kim Hellberg.
So Boro have a unique double, beaten in both the semi-finals and the final. This time, it is safe to say, they will not get a reprieve. “It has been a rollercoaster for everyone in the football club,” added Hellberg. “It was the toughest two weeks I have been through.”
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Oli McBurnie snatched a 95th minute winner to seal Hull promotion (Getty)
There was no happy ending for him and a cruelty about the injury-time decider for Sol Brynn; Middlesbrough-born, on their books since he was a boy, a former season-ticket holder, the goalkeeper erred, spilling Yu Hirakawa’s cross at the feet of McBurnie, who swept in the lone goal. A scruffy strike had a beauty for Hull: they have twice been promoted to the Premier League in this manner before, with glorious goals from Dean Windass in 2008 and Mohamed Diame in 2016. McBurnie’s piece of predatory finishing was still more valuable, given the rise in Premier League revenues.
At least, the EFL may think, they do not have to worry about Hull owner Acun Ilicali taking legal action, as he threatened to, were they not promoted. Instead, the Turkish businessman can argue his impatient approach has been justified. He changed managers three times in a year before settling on Sergej Jakirovic. A winner of league titles in Bosnia and Croatia was an unknown in East Yorkshire when appointed. Now he joins Phil Brown and Steve Bruce as the only managers to take Hull into the top flight in their 122-year history. “Amazing feeling,” he said. “I cannot believe we did it.”
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Sergej Jakirovic has delivered Hull a return to the Premier League (Getty)
And, while the shift in Hull’s fortunes had been overshadowed by the transformations in Southampton’s and Middlesbrough’s, it is quite a turnaround. Hull were out of the play-offs after 45 games of the league season, and for parts of the 46th. They entered them as the outsiders. But McBurnie, who scored the goal to get them into the play-offs, scored the goal to win them. And a side who had the joint-fourth worst defensive record in the Championship season then turned themselves into paragons of frugality. They did not concede in either leg of the semi-final against Millwall. They did not even allow Middlesbrough a shot on target. “Today we lack a bit of that offensive quality,” added Hellberg.
That could reflect the fact his side were without the injured Tommy Conway, wasteful though his finishing can be. Maybe Boro would have fared better with perfect preparation, rather than suddenly being reinstated on Tuesday evening. But Hellberg’s side have found both goals and wins too infrequent in the last 10 weeks. As a club, they have never won at Wembley and only scored once at the national stadium. Unenviable records were extended.
Wembley was hot, but this was a slow-burner of a match. It seemed the appetite for drama had been exhausted, consumed by disciplinary commissions and arbitration panels and interns and lawyers.
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Middlesbrough were dealt play-off heartbreak for the second time in a week (Getty)
Rather less happened on the pitch. Boro captain Dael Fry looped a header just over. On the stroke of half-time, McBurnie’s header was deflected on to the bar by Adilson Malanda. The Hull substitute Joe Gelhardt’s volley on the turn went wide.
Extra time looked an inevitability; until, suddenly, it wasn’t. Hull’s strength in depth proved telling. They had the better bench, Hirakawa came off it and his burst down the left to cross. Brynn’s handling betrayed him.
The Championship’s player of the season, Hayden Hackney, came on for a first appearance in two months, to a huge cheer. There was a chorus of “he’s one of our own”. But Brynn is one of their own, too, and his reaction showed he recognised the severity of his mistake. “There is a time to be devastated and there are emotions,” said Hellberg.

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Sol Brynn’s handling let him down for Hull’s late winner (PA)
No one could come to Brynn’s rescue. Middlesbrough had tracked the man behind the tree, but not the one who materialised in their box. “I felt like it was written for me to get it,” said McBurnie. “What a feeling.”
It was his 18th goal of the season. He has been a magnificent signing. McBurnie left Las Palmas for Hull last summer, trading Gran Canaria for the banks of the Humber. The climate may be colder, the tourism industry smaller in East Yorkshire, but now there will be a different type of visitor to Hull next season: Arsenal and Aston Villa, Liverpool and Chelsea, Manchester United and Manchester City.







































