
Heartbreak for Boro after missing three chances to go up
Middlesbrough make unwanted history by becoming the first club to miss three chances at Premier League promotion in the same season.
Next season will be Middlesbrough's 10th successive campaign in the Championship
On an afternoon more suited to a day at the beach or jetting off to sunnier climes, Middlesbrough achieved unwanted history as their promotion dream died in agonising fashion at Wembley.
After goalkeeper Sol Brynn could only palm away a cross, Oli McBurnie was on hand to score an injury-time winner that sent Hull City to the Premier League, and Boro's third shot at promotion evaporated.
Most teams only get two chances in one season to do it - either automatically or via the play-offs. Boro had an unexpected three and could not take any.
It was not until the final day of the regular season that their hopes of a top-two finish were completely ended, before they were beaten over two legs by Southampton in the play-off semi-final amid the swirl of passion and ill-feeling over Spygate.
Saints' expulsion gave Boro a third and final chance to reach the Premier League, but again they could not take it.
So while the fallout of Spygate and the past fortnight will linger and rumble on, the real summer hurt will come, not from finding someone watching their training, but from not being able to capitalise on a glorious opportunity to end a nine-year exile from the top flight.
2 May: Middlesbrough begin the day with an outside shot at automatic promotion. But they only draw at Wrexham and drop down a place to fifth, losing the chance to be at home in the second leg of the play-offs.
The draw also allows Hull to leapfrog the Welsh club and claim the final spot in the play-offs.
7 May: Southampton intern Will Salt is found at Boro's Rockliffe Park training ground attempting to record a training session, contravening English Football League regulations.
9 May: Boro host Saints in the first leg of the play-off semi-final at a fired-up Riverside Stadium.
Despite bombarding the visitors' goal, especially in the first half, they fail to score and the game ends goalless.
12 May: The return leg at St Mary's is another full of drama as, despite scoring early, the Teessiders cannot hang on and are beaten deep into extra time to send Southampton into the final. Or so it seemed.
19 May: An Independent Disciplinary Panel rules Southampton guilty in the Spygate scandal and they are kicked out of the play-off final, with Middlesbrough reinstated.
20 May: Southampton appeal against that decision, but the sanction is upheld by a separate panel and Boro's place at Wembley is rubber-stamped.
23 May: Middlesbrough lose the play-off final to Hull after an injury-time winner.
Hull promoted with late Wembley winner against Boro
Southampton expelled from play-offs for spying
Charles sends Saints past Boro and into play-off final
Southampton face EFL probe over alleged spying on Middlesbrough
Kim Hellberg has won 14 of his 33 games in charge of Middlesbrough
Head coach Kim Hellberg called this period a "rollercoaster of emotions" as despite doing so many things going well during the season, Boro were left with nothing tangible to show for it.
They spent 35 of the 46 matchdays in the Championship's top two and went top in early February after a sparkling spree of six straight wins, but they were crucially undone by a late run of only two wins in 10 games.
The Swede has been a revelation since he replaced Rob Edwards in November after his predecessor's departure for Wolves, with his team playing some great football and the 38-year-old's humility really shining through with the Teesside public.
But Hellberg's biggest task possibly lies ahead of him in the coming weeks in picking up the whole club to go again come August.
Continue with Matchday Global
Source: BBC Sport Football
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