Hull and Middlesbrough set for unique play-off final
Hull City boss Sergej Jakirovic and Middlesbrough counterpart Kim Hellberg are both looking to end their first season in English football with promotion to the Premier League In the 40-year history of the play-offs, never has the pre-match talk before a final been so overshadowed by a team who are not involved in the match. Tuesday brought the news that Southampton had been expelled from the Championship play-offs for spying on opponents, with their place in the final against Hull City instead taken by Middlesbrough, who they had beaten in the semis. Since then Saints have appealed unsuccessfully against the decision , with an independent commission ruling their boss Tonda Eckert had "specifically authorised the observations".
There is likely to be more fallout in the coming weeks but, in the meantime, it will be one of Hull or Middlesbrough who will be celebrating promotion to the Premier League on Saturday evening. BBC Sport takes a look at the two teams who will be contesting the '£200m game' at Wembley (15:30 BST). Mo Belloumi (centre) came off the bench to score Hull City's first and set up their second in their 2-0 semi-final win at Millwall Hull City boss Sergej Jakirovic did not hold back when asked about his feelings on where the furore surrounding Southampton's activities left his own side.
"We can say everything is unfair in this last two weeks. You don't know what's going on," he told BBC Radio Humberside. "We are collateral damage because we are waiting on [an] opponent and you don't know what's going on, what's happening.
" The Tigers, who beat third-placed Millwall to secure their place in the play-off final last Monday, have been the division's surprise package this season. The East Yorkshire side survived relegation to League One on goal difference last May before appointing former Bosnia international Jakirovic as their new boss. They were then hit with a three-window transfer embargo, which was later reduced to two after a successful appeal, and few had them down as promotion contenders.
However, they confounded those expectations and spent the vast majority of the season in the top six. The Tigers were still in automatic contention at the end of March only for a six-game stretch in April to leave them seventh going into the final day. Victory at home over Norwich City and Boro's draw at Wrexham meant they climbed back into the play-off spots when it mattered most and they overcame the Lions, who had finished three places and 10 points above them, to reach Wembley.