Sunderland are back in Europe after 53 years, and they did it by beating Chelsea 2-1 at the Stadium of Light in a Premier League finale loaded with jeopardy, nerve and noise.
Trai Hume struck first after 25 minutes, meeting Luke O’Nien’s assist with a sharp first-time volley that caught Robert Sanchez cold. Malo Gusto’s own goal early in the second half doubled Sunderland’s lead, before Cole Palmer replied from distance for Chelsea.
Wesley Fofana’s second yellow card after 62 minutes left Chelsea chasing the game with ten men, and Sunderland held firm.
Chelsea lose control again
For Chelsea, this was a grim conclusion to a muddled campaign. Finishing 10th means no Uefa competition next season, a damaging outcome for a squad built at extraordinary cost.
Their eighth Premier League red card of the season told its own story. Discipline, structure and emotional control have all deserted them too often. Palmer still offered quality, as he has done repeatedly, but isolated moments were not enough.
Interim boss Calum McFarlane departs with Chelsea outside Europe and facing another summer of questions.
Photo: IMAGO
Sunderland’s rise feels extraordinary
Sunderland’s achievement deserves proper weight. Four years ago, they were in League One. Now, after promotion through the Championship play-offs and one bold Premier League season, they have finished seventh and qualified for the Europa League.
That makes them only the fifth newly promoted side in the Premier League era to qualify for Europe through league position the season after going up.
Head coach Regis Le Bris has overseen a side with clarity, aggression and belief. The £163m summer spend was significant, but recruitment alone does not create this. Granit Xhaka’s leadership, Brian Brobbey’s physical presence, Robin Roefs’ authority and Lutsharel Geertruida’s quality all helped lift standards.
Hume and O’Nien, survivors of the lower-league journey, combining for the opener gave the day an…
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