Hull City’s triumph should not be tainted by most farcical play-offs in history
WEMBLEY STADIUM — “Spygate!” a Middlesbrough fan shouts at his mates on Wembley Way while half-hidden in a bush.
The group crack up, the surrealness of this day translating to giddy excitement, as though they’re all up past their bedtime, their parents yet to spy the clock.
Spygate, aka one man behind a tree with his phone, is the reason Boro are here to face Hull City in this Championship play-off final and why Southampton are not.
There has never been a build-up like this in 40 years of the play-offs. “Challenging and overshadowed by events off the pitch,” is how English Football League chair Rick Parry put it in the match programme.
Quite.

“It doesn’t feel real, this,” another passing Middlesbrough supporter says. The sight of thousands descending on this stadium is an arresting sight on any given matchday, but for a final your side weren’t even playing in as recently as four days ago? That disbelief reaches a whole new level.
Holidays, weddings, anything but watching this match. Any previous Bank Holiday plans were rendered irrelevant now one match stood between their team and the Premier League, and you didn’t need binoculars to see the joy on Boro faces.
This was a bonus, and they weren’t going to let the occasion pass them by, nor forget how they got here.
Boro were riding on the high of a remarkable reprieve having lost their semi-final to Southampton before the Saints were expelled for cheating, found to have spied on numerous Championship rivals – including Boro – this season.
Hull City meanwhile were the lesser-spotted innocent team in all this. They had reached the final fair and square back on 11 May, beating Millwall, and it would be eight days before learning they would in fact face Boro and another day before Saints’ appeal was rejected.
A fixture with so much riding on it only confirmed on Wednesday. A final that has evolved into the £200m game, and here were Boro chasing that ultimate prize on the back of a three-game winless run.
Just as bizarre was the realisation this scandal might not be over if Boro won. The prospect of legal action had been exclusively reported by The i Paper on Tuesday.

So to kick-off – 90, 120 or more minutes away from a result that may still be contested.
Hull were looking to become the first sixth-placed side to earn promotion via the play-offs since Blackpool in 2010, and though rightful finalists it was still unexpected 12 months on from surviving relegation on goal difference.
They had defied stats and expectation to get here. They boasted the worst defence of any top-half Championship side this season, and had won just one of their final seven games before the play-offs, but they were then watertight against Millwall.
Here, Hull were up against it early on. With both teams attacking towards their own fans in the first half, Boro were in the ascendancy, dominating possession as many thought they would.
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The biggest chances for both came just before half-time, with Oli McBurnie’s header hitting the bar for Hull before David Strelec shot a whisker wide.
It wasn’t a thriller, but this fixture rarely is given what’s at stake – there were 22 goals in the previous 14 Championship play-off finals. All that mattered was that one moment as the game began to stretch in the 29C heat.
That moment arrived in the 95th minute, with extra time beckoning but never coming as McBurnie pounced on to the loose ball and sent the Hull side of Wembley into dreamland.
McBurnie had unfinished business in the Premier League, he told The i Paper earlier this month, and now he was scoring the decisive goal to get them there after Boro goalkeeper Sol Brynn fumbled the ball in his direction.
The scenes on the pitch, the delight and despair in the stands, are what play-offs are really about, not scandals. Now Hull are going up, Spygate can’t taint that. The easiest outcome for the EFL has the Tigers roaring their way back to the north-east, and back to the promised land for the first time since 2017.
Cut to scenes of Ilicali hugging loved ones up high in a Wembley box. His summer is just beginning – and his lawyers can take it off.
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