'Pretty special' — Leeds and Burnley's fight for Championship title — BBC 3/5/25
Leeds players lift the Championship title
Leeds won 29 Championship games this season - more than any
other side
Harry De Cosemo
An incredible Championship title race came to a fitting end
on Saturday, running all the way into stoppage time before Leeds United finally
pipped Burnley to the post.
Manor Solomon's last-gasp winner at relegated Plymouth
Argyle meant Leeds matched the Clarets' win over play-off chasing Millwall,
just as the home fans at Turf Moor were gearing up for an almighty party.
Before kick-off, Leeds knew it was in their hands, but in
typical style, twists and turns followed.
It was an epic ending to what has statistically been the
most closely-fought hunt for the title.
For the first time ever, two teams reached 100 points in the
same Championship campaign, with Leeds' superior goal difference proving
decisive.
With Birmingham City also finishing with 111 points in
League One, it is the first time in the Football League's 137-year history that
three sides have earned a century of points in the same campaign.
Burnley had seen records tumble, including a
Championship-best 30 clean sheets - equalling Port Vale's Football League
record set in 1953-54 - and have conceded just 16 goals.
They have not lost at home all season, have been beaten only
twice in the league, and have been unbeaten in 33 Championship games since
losing at Millwall in November.
It seemed unlikely they would not return to the Premier
League as champions, as manager Scott Parker admitted.
"If you'd have said to me you'd reach 100 points, 33
games unbeaten, 16 goals conceded and you wouldn't win the league I'd have said
'no chance'," Parker told BBC Radio Lancashire, after adding a third
promotion to his name after success with Fulham in 2020 and Bournemouth in
2022.
"We've done remarkably this year. I'm so proud. We came
into today hoping it would go our way, but wanting to win the game and get to
100 points, We did that."
Meanwhile, where Burnley have thrived as a defensive unit,
Leeds shone in attack. With 95 goals, they were by some distance the top
scorers in the division. Joel Piroe (19), Dan James (12) and Solomon (10) have
all reached double figures this season.
"I can't put into words what I'm feeling right now. It
is a dream come true to score the winning goal and take this
Championship," an emotional Solomon told BBC Radio Leeds at full-time.
"Throughout the season we've shown we deserve this
trophy and to finish in the first spot. I'm so glad it happened.
"We all knew what was happening at Burnley and we knew
we needed to score. It paid off and the ball went into the net. It will take me
a few days to digest what happened today, right now I'm going to
celebrate."
Like Parker, Leeds boss Daniel Farke has vast experience of
getting out of the Championship.
He did so as champions with Norwich City in 2019 and 2021
and has now led the West Yorkshire club back to the Premier League after
bouncing back from play-off final heartache against Southampton a year ago.
Farke told BBC Sport: "Of course I'm happy that we won
this game in the final stages and are officially allowed to label ourselves as
champions and the best team this season.
"It's an emotionally moving day because we have
invested so much and wanted to crown ourselves with some silverware.
"It feels pretty, pretty special in the dressing room
and I'm very happy for my players and staff, it means so much for them, and
also our supporters."
Nobody should forget Sheffield United, either. Although four
defeats in five games in April, including a loss at Burnley which ultimately
knocked them out of contention for automatic promotion, proved fatal, the
Blades led for long periods and looked the most likely.
Chris Wilder's side will need to go again in the play-offs,
starting against Bristol City in the semi-finals. They have shown their
readiness for the Premier League this season, finishing on 90 points, a tally
which would have been enough to go up automatically in three of the previous
six seasons.
While that points to a more competitive top of the
Championship than ever, successive seasons with all three promoted clubs coming
down, including Burnley and the Blades, offers a stark warning too.
A strong defensive unit will be crucial to hopes of
survival, and Clarets captain Josh Brownhill, who also scored 18 goals,
believes his team have a strong chance of improvement this time around.
"This is a different team, we look in really good shape
to go up for next season and hopefully stay up. It is going to be difficult but
we've worked hard on everything; our defensive record speaks for itself,"
he told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"Credit to the staff and the fans but mainly the
gaffer. He has worked harder than anybody. 100 points, unbeaten at home,
unbeaten in 33 games, our defensive record has been exceptional."
Never before have two teams accrued so many points in the
same season at the top of the second tier.
Their consistency and strength of character laid the
groundwork. Leeds held their nerve in the end, and right at the end, but
ultimately, both they and Burnley can revel in achievements fit for the history
books.