
Next stop Vegas - jubilant Hull back in the big time
Even the most dedicated Hull City fan could not have envisaged their season ending like this, with Wembley glory and a return to the top flight.
Hull's Wembley triumph came a year after they were almost relegated from the Championship
Even the most devoted Hull City fan could not have envisaged their season ending like this.
Oli McBurnie's late, late winner against Middlesbrough means the Tigers, who finished 21st in the Championship last season, will play Premier League football next term.
The East Yorkshire side have confounded expectations, a transfer embargo, and the off-field drama surrounding Southampton and Spygate, to secure a remarkable promotion.
How to mark it? Well, the players are heading to Las Vegas, having been promised a trip there by club owner Acun Ilicali.
But head coach Sergej Jakirovic will be sitting out the Sin City jaunt as he takes a more peaceful breather before the bright lights of the Premier League beckon.
"This is a trip for the players. I will be with my family in Croatia. We have a beautiful coast there," Jakirovic said.
"They go to Vegas. You know what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. This is not for me."
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Jakirovic said before Saturday's game that his side had become "collateral damage" from Southampton's expulsion from the play-offs, which left Hull having to pivot from preparing for a game against Saints to plotting for Middlesbrough four days before the final.
Despite the pre-match difficulties and being the underdogs, as they had been in the semi-final against third-placed Millwall, Hull got the job done on a boiling hot day at Wembley.
Promotion capped off a tremendous first season in English football for Hull's boss, a former Bosnia international.
Jakirovic had won titles in Bosnia and Croatia before a brief spell in Turkey at the end of last season, but he was perhaps only really known in the UK for being the Dinamo Zagreb boss when they were hammered 9-2 by Bayern Munich in the Champions League in 2024-25. He was sacked days later.
If he came to England to prove a point, then it is very much a case of mission accomplished.
"When Oli scored the goal I was thinking 'I am dreaming and this is a movie'," Jakirovic said.
"I'm very emotional. A lot of players were crying from happiness.
"It's an unbelievable journey. I think we are not aware of everything we have achieved today. We had so many problems.
"I'm very proud of everyone, especially the players; they are the main actors."
Hull City promoted to the Premier League
Hull were given a transfer embargo in the summer, confining them to free transfers and loans. The sanction was imposed because of late payments to other clubs.
Even with the limitations, Jakirovic had the team in promotion contention throughout the campaign and guided them to a play-off win over a Millwall side who finished three places and 10 points above them.
The 49-year-old is an imposing figure, but his players have benefited from his relaxed approach.
In the news conference after Saturday's win, he joked that Southampton might have watched his side train but that it wasn't a problem as "sometimes we are too bad".
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Source: BBC Sport Football



