Key events
The players are in the tunnel! Hull’s captain, Lewie Coyle, has a pair of Hull-branded headphones on and is glowering moodily.
“Very much looking forward to the MBM,” writes Jeremy Boyce. Aren’t we all! “But sorry, you are completely wrong. Millwall may have the form, but when it comes to the playoffs the form book goes out of the window. I’m a Leeds fan so I know thing or three about all that. Ironically, the playoffs have brought us back to the basics of footie. On the day(s) it just 11 v 11 (plus 9 subs) and, as in Stingray, anything can happen in the next half hour, plus stoppage time, and eventually penalties. The form book is ripped up and Stranger Things happen. Ask Luton Town. Or Coventry City, who Luton famously beat in a play off final. And who have just found redemption, many years later.” Well, three years. As a Watford fan I have some playoff experience myself (including against Leeds), and our attempts to negotiate them have gone with form every time. Other experiences are available.
Due to spending a fair chunk of this season in far-flung places covering cricket I haven’t seen as much live football this season as usual, but I have seen both of these teams in the flesh, once. I don’t think I saw the best of Hull, who looked a pretty ordinary team with a very good striker for this level in Oli McBurnie, but I thought Millwall were just brilliantly competent and organised. Looking forward to seeing both again tonight, and hoping that the scale of the occasion doesn’t lead to a little negativity creep.
Sergej Jakirovic, the Hull City manager, has a chat:
I think we are very similar teams, it’s 50/50 and we’ll see. Today we have to be very tactically wise. Of course we will try to score and take an advantage into the second leg … Nothing will be decided tonight, but we will try to win the game.
In my opinion, the regular season is over. It doesn’t matter who’s in bigger form. It’s a tournament. We have to be better in two games. No away goals. And we will try to beat Millwall. They have to believe in themselves. We showed already, we played almost all season very good. All season, it’s believe in yourself, try to do what we are practising in training sessions, and I think in the end we deserve to be there because mostly we were there.
It’s been an amazing experience for me. I spoke a lot to Slaven Bilic, he told me everything, but when you feel for yourself it’s amazing. Everyone’s prediction was that we will be in a relegation battle but this is football, and you must believe in yourself.
Alex Neil has had a chat with Sky. It was quite a lengthy chat, and he speaks very quickly, but here’s a taster:
We’re really relaxed. We’re ready. The club’s been trying to get in the playoffs for 24, 25 years and we’ve managed that, so it’s been a brilliant season so far. The first leg, naturally once it’s done, might shape what the second leg looks like, but our aim naturally is to win the first game. For us, we’ve played Hull twice this year, what it did show is both teams are more than capable of beating each other. It’s going to be an end to end game. I’ll be interested to see how it goes.
The owners made it clear to me how he wanted things to evolve. The recruitment’s been brilliant and the lads are absolutely first class. They’re very humble, they’re very hard working and I think if you’ve got a lot of those ingredients, that’s the recipe for success. As far as we’re concerned, we’ve got an unbelievable opportunity and we’ve got to just go for it.
The teams!
Team sheets have been handed in, and these were the names upon them:
Hull: Pandur, Coyle, Egan, Hughes, Giles, Slater, Crooks, Belloumi, Millar, Gelhardt, McBurnie. Subs: Phillips, Hirakawa, Dowell, Lundstram, Joseph, Koumas, Ajayi, Gyabi, McNair.
Millwall: Patterson, Leonard, Crama, Cooper, Sturge, Mazou-Sacko, De Norre, Azeez, Neghli, Ballo, Coburn. Subs: Crocombe, McNamara, Mitchell, Ivanovic, Doughty, Langstaff, Watson, Cundle, Bannan.
Referee: Gavin Ward.
Hello world!
Well, after 46 games the Championship is over. Now for the important bit.
At the end of the regular season Millwall and Hull were separated by precisely 10 points, with the Londoners ending up just a couple away from skipping the playoffs entirely by coming second, and Hull also two away from skipping the playoffs by finishing seventh. That despite Millwall scoring just 64 goals, the fewest in the top eight – and, indeed, not as many as Sheffield United, who finished 13th.
But sure, the playoffs are notoriously about recent form. Here Millwall’s superiority is even more pronounced: three wins and no defeats in their last five put them fourth in the form table, while Hull lost two and won only one of theirs and are 17th. Over the final 10 games of the season Millwall won 18 points, a solid playoff-securing level of achievement, and Hull a midtable 13. Across the entire second half of the season only Southampton – who play the first leg of their playoff semi-final at Middlesbrough tomorrow lunchtime – won more points than Millwall’s 47, while Hull only got 35.
The two games they already played this season aren’t much of a predictive help, both having been won 3-1 by the away team, though Millwall’s victory at the MKM Stadium in March was the more recent by three months (Gavin Ward, who refereed Hull’s win at the Den, is also in charge of this game). So, in short, Millwall could actually be heading for a third season in the top tier of English football, and their first since 1989-90, when they were relegated with a squad that included Teddy Sheringham, Mick McCarthy, Phil Babb and Tony Cascarino.
“We’re in the play-offs with an unbelievable season but there’s still a lot to play for,” their manager, Alex Neil, told BBC Radio London this week. “For this group, what we’ve done, I think we deserve to have something for our efforts come the end of it, not just a pat on the back and a well done. We’re hoping there is still a fairytale ending for us.”
Sergej Jakirovic, the Hull manager, has experience of big two-legged knockout ties from his time with Dinamo Zagreb. “You have to be very clever, or wise, in these games because in the first game, we will not decide anything,” he said. “You have to be better in two games. Who will score more goals or who will concede less, we will see. It’s huge, yes. Who will handle the pressure better? I can say that I can handle pressure better.”
So, a huge match for two teams who have had outstanding seasons. “If you said Millwall would have finished third and we’d have finished sixth at the start of the season, I’m sure people would have laughed at you,” said Hull’s top scorer, Oli McBurnie. But who’ll be laughing after Monday’s second leg?
Source: https://www.theguardian.com/football/live/2026/may/08/hull-city-v-millwall-championship-playoff-semi-final-first-leg-live