Wade Elliott puts Burnley ahead in the first half with a stunning shot from distance. Photograph: Adam Davy/Empics Sport
After 33 long years, and a season that has now encompassed 61 energy-sapping matches, Burnley
are a top-flight club once again. A small Lancashire town that has
endured life in the shadow of Blackburn Rovers too long burst back into
the limelight here, their elevation back to the elite constituting a
staggering performance by one of the Championship's thinnest squads and brightest managers. The Premier League is coming to Turf Moor.
Wade Elliott's early goal proved sufficient to blunt Sheffield United
at Wembley yet, while the scoreline ensured nail-biting moments in the
frantic latter stages, the better side prevailed. Other chances were
passed up or denied by desperate United defence. The Yorkshiremen
bemoaned the denial of penalties in both halves but their frustration
saw them reduced to 10 before the end, Jamie Ward's dismissal for two
bookable offences adding to Kevin Blackwell's fury at the performance
of the referee, Mike Dean.
Reunions with West Ham United and an
opportunity for revenge after the Carlos Tevez fiasco will have to
wait. This was Burnley's day. Some 22 years ago, this club teetered on
the brink of non-league before goals from Ian Britton and Neil Grewcock
against Leyton Orient sent Lincoln City down on the season's final day
instead. Expectations have changed since and this season's finale has
thrust the Clarets back among Manchester United, Liverpool and Chelsea.
Their
campaign's decisive goal was gloriously crafted and ruthlessly
executed. Burnley had been becalmed, concerned only with dealing with
United's early urgency, when Wade Elliott collected a throw-in near the
halfway line and charged forward at pace. Stephen Quinn and Nick
Montgomery melted in his slipstream, the latter recovering only as
Elliott slipped Chris McCann into the area at his side. Matt
Kilgallon's challenge on the midfielder sent the ball spinning away
from goal yet Elliott, ever alert, clipped a first-time shot from 25
yards before any Blade could recover that arced wonderfully into the
top corner with Paddy Kenny aghast.
The concession deflated
United, their performance suddenly ragged as Burnley's slicker approach
threatened further reward. Martin Paterson might have added a second,
looping a shot just over the bar, with Steve Thompson unfortunate to
guide a header just wide of the far post. Even after the interval, with
United more energetic and crying foul after seeing penalty appeals
against Graham Alexander and Paterson denied, the better chances were
Burnley's. That they were not taken left a season on edge.
Those
in claret and blue wailed at the misses. First Paterson's cross found
Thompson at the far post for the Scot to nod back across goal,
by-passing Kenny, and Gudjonsson to swivel and tap in. Somehow
Montgomery, his head turned, deflected that attempt just wide of an
upright. Yet if that owed everything to fortune, Kyle Walker's
excellent recovery to choke Robbie Blake's side-foot from Thompson's
centre was staggering and so timely. When Kyle Naughton repeated the
trick to charge down Paterson's shot on the break, United breathed
again.
Yet their outlook was increasingly tinged with rage.
Blackwell had been hugely critical of the appointment of Dean in the
build-up, a legacy of Kilgallon's dismissal in the Sheffield derby at
Hillsborough last October, though the United manager whipped himself up
into another frenzy in his technical area as his team's penalty appeals
continued to fall on deaf ears. Alexander's first-half trip on Brian
Howard was contentious. Christian Kalvenes' barging of Walker off the
ball as the full-back sprinted to the touchline seemed clear-cut.
Both
appeals were waved away. The substitute Ward's dismissal for two
deliberate handballs, the second to collect a pass chipped into the
area, crystallised the Yorkshire club's opinion of the referee. Not
that Burnley cared. The Premier League awaits.
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