Coventry City sealed a breathtaking return to the Premier League after a 25-year exile thanks to an 85th-minute equaliser from defender Bobby Thomas at Blackburn.
Frank Lampard’s men only needed a point but it looked for much of this frenetic night at Ewood Park that they would have to keep the champagne on ice for another day after Ryoya Morishita put Blackburn ahead.
But a header from Thomas – who had seen the ball deflect off him for Blackburn’s goal – helped complete a remarkable redemption story. A travelling army of 7,500 fans chanted his name for several minutes after his emphatic header.
Lampard wore a gigawatt smile as he told Sky Sports: ‘It’s amazing. The fanbase, what they’ve gone through, the disappointments, the moments.’
Then his voice cracked: ‘To get a promotion with a non-parachute club, to see the boys there, it makes me emotional. They’re so great to work with. They deserve every moment of celebrating.
‘I’m proud. I’m proud of myself and the staff. We went into a bit of an unknown. We’ve fallen in love with the players and the fanbase, how they reacted. It’s right up there with what I’ve achieved – and I’ve won Champions Leagues with Chelsea.
‘But here we’re overachieving. Automatic promotion wasn’t in our plan.’
It has been a turbulent couple of decades for the Sky Blues, who were a League Two team as recent as 2018.
They have had four stadiums since leaving Highfield Road in 2005 and at one stage they were playing 34 miles away at Northampton’s Sixfields Stadium.
That was because Coventry’s owners, SISU Capital, were in a rent dispute with the local council, who owned their stadium, then called the Ricoh Arena. Attendances plunged to below 2,000 and some would watch the action from a hill overlooking Sixfields in protest.
Coventry lost tens of millions of pounds during SISU’s tenure between 2007 and 2023.






But the club’s fortunes have turned around since Doug King, who completed a majority takeover of the club in January 2023 and immediately cleared all of their debts.
He then bought the club’s stadium from Mike Ashley for £50million last August, ending any anxiety about their long-term future. Their deal at the CBS Arena had been due to expire at the end of the 2027-28 season.
In recent years they have been the Championship’s nearlymen, losing the 2023 play-off final on penalties to Luton and being dumped out by Sunderland in the semi-finals last season.
Now their tears are tears of joy. Broadcaster and lifelong fan Richard Keys was effusive in his praise on X, writing: ‘Well done guys but that was harder than it should’ve been. Next – the title. Travelling support was fantastic again.
‘I’m chuffed to bits it was Bobby Thomas that nailed it. but everyone was a hero. Super Frank deserves enormous credit.’
They arrived in a boisterous mood and goalkeeper Carl Rushworth was made to pop a gigantic balloon which had been launched onto the pitch just after kick-off.
But the hosts were in no mood to roll out the red carpet and nearly took the lead early on when Yuki Ohashi ghosted in behind the Coventry backline and almost nipped a header past Rushworth.
Blackburn created the better chances in the first half but only got their reward after the break, when Morishita’s shot deflected off Thomas and into the Coventry net.
Morishita celebrated wildly – a draw puts Blackburn five points clear of the bottom three – while Lampard’s face turned to stone.
The Chelsea legend threw on a fearsome trio in top scorer Haji Wright, Victor Torp, and Romain Esse, but it seemed that nobody could beat Rovers stopper Balasz Toth.
Jack Rudoni, Lampard’s attacking midfield protege, chipped an effort onto the roof netting and smashed a header against the bar. Wright dragged a limp volley into Toth’s arms.
It looked like it wasn’t going to happen for the league leaders – until it did. From a free-kick, Thomas rose above the crowd to head past Toth and write his name into Coventry history.


