Millwall's Oxford win not enough to end Championship promotion anxiety

Millwall finished the Championship season with a comfortable 2-0 win over already-relegated Oxford United on 2 May 2026, only for the result to prove insufficient for automatic promotion. Femi Azeez scored both goals for the Lions at The Den, yet the victory left Millwall in the playoff places rather than in the two slots that guarantee a return to the Premier League without further knockout games.
The outcome illustrates a recurring dynamic in the second tier: dominant performances against lesser opponents do not automatically translate into elevation. Winning comfortably against a side with nothing left to play for cannot compensate for dropped points in earlier fixtures against direct rivals.
The playoff puzzle
Ipswich Town, Millwall, and Middlesbrough entered the final day of the regular season separated by a handful of points, with all three clubs in contention for the second automatic promotion place behind Leeds United. The Championship's three-promotion-spot structure — two automatic, four in playoffs — means that clubs finishing third through sixth joust for the final ticket via a short knockout bracket. The arithmetic means a season of 46 games can be undone by a handful of results in a two-week window.
For Millwall, the playoff route means two additional matches against fellow playoff finishers before any Premier League elevation can be confirmed. The club has not competed in the top flight since 1990, when a celebrated FA Cup final appearance ended in defeat to Manchester United — a defeat that denied the London club the financial windfall and broadcasting reach that automatic promotion would deliver.
The financial architecture of the Championship
The stakes are not merely sporting. The television revenue differential between Premier League and Championship status runs to tens of millions of pounds per season. Clubs that spend years yo-yoing between the second tier and the top flight — or, like Millwall, remain in the second tier for decades — face structural constraints on stadium development, wage bills, and recruitment quality. The playoff semifinal and final, broadcast to audiences dwarfing those watching Championship regular-season fixtures, represent a narrow window in which clubs can reshape their financial trajectories almost overnight.
Millwall's situation reflects a broader pattern in English football's economic architecture: clubs in large metropolitan areas with passionate fanbases but limited recent top-flight exposure find themselves caught between supporter expectations and the randomness of a system designed to limit the number of promoted clubs. The Den's proximity to central London — less than four miles from Premier League territory occupied by West Ham United — makes the gap between current standing and potential standing feel all the more acute.
The road ahead
Azeez's brace against Oxford provided a positive endpoint to a gruelling regular season. The questions now concern the playoff bracket: whom Millwall will face, whether the scheduling provides sufficient recovery time, and whether the club's squad depth can sustain the intensity that knockout football demands after a 46-game marathon. The sources do not specify Millwall's playoff seed heading into the semifinals, and the identity of their opponents depends on results across other final-day fixtures still in progress at time of publication.
What is clear is that another season in the Championship awaits regardless of the playoff outcome — either as a playoff victor facing Premier League competition, or as a playoff semifinal loser returning to a second tier whose financial asymmetry from the top flight continues to widen.
This publication covered the Championship's final-day sprint as a story about economic architecture and institutional constraints rather than purely as sporting drama — the financial structure of promotion and relegation shapes clubs' strategic options more durably than any single result.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/Millwall_news