Full TimeSecond Half ends, Blackpool 2, Millwall 3.Post updateFoul by Jerry Yates (Blackpool).Post updateDuncan Watmore (Millwall) wins a free kick in the defensive half.Post updateAttempt blocked. Jerry Yates (Blackpool) right footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked.Post updateAttempt saved. CJ Hamilton (Blackpool) header from the centre of the box is saved in the bottom right corner.Post updateAttempt blocked. CJ Hamilton (Blackpool) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.Post updateAttempt saved. CJ Hamilton (Blackpool) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner.Post updateCorner, Blackpool. Conceded by George Long.
Blackpool were relegated from the Championship after suffering a 3-2 defeat to play-off chasing Millwall at Bloomfield Road. The Seasiders’ two-season stay in the division came to an end with a game to go despite twice levelling the scores after Tom Bradshaw scored in either half for the visitors. Jerry Yates levelled with a penalty and Lewis Fiorini equalised with a stunning strike from long range, but Fiorini later brought down Duncan Watmore, leading to Zian Flemming scoring from the spot to win it for Millwall and ensure Blackpool will play third-tier football next season.
Millwall move up to fifth and are three points clear of seventh place, with a home match against play-off rivals Blackburn concluding their campaign. Knowing they needed to get a result to avoid becoming the first club to be relegated from the Championship this season, Blackpool got off to the worst possible start when Flemming and Jamie Shackleton combined on the right wing before teeing up Ryan Leonard, who found Bradshaw to slot past Seasiders keeper Dan Grimshaw within just two minutes.
Blackpool rallied as the first half ticked down, with Morgan Rogers forcing Lions goalkeeper George Long into a fine save shortly before the hosts were awarded a penalty when CJ Hamilton went to ground under pressure from Shackleton. Yates duly converted after referee Matt Donohue pointed to the spot. The game tipped in Millwall’s favour once again when Bradshaw scored his second with a tremendous composed finish, having been played through by a superb Watmore pass.
There was more drama to come as Fiorini scored his first goal in over a year, and his first for Blackpool, courtesy of his drive from distance. But his joy did not last for long as, just minutes later, he fouled Watmore in his own box leading to the Lions’ winning penalty and bringing an end to Blackpool’s stay in the second tier. The hosts’ misery was compounded late on when Jordan Gabriel was stretchered off, leading to 13 minutes of stoppage time.
After the highs of promotion to the Premier League in 2010, Blackpool had soon experienced lows with anger at the club’s ownership, supporters vowing not to attend matches and a freefall down to League Two. Neil Critchley reinvigorated Blackpool, taking them up from League One via the play-offs in his first full season with the club in 2021. After keeping Blackpool in the Championship with a 16th-placed finish in their first campaign back, he then left to join Steven Gerrard as his assistant at Aston Villa last summer.
In stepped Michael Appleton for a second spell in charge but, following a run of one win in 11 games, he departed in January with the Tangerines in a relegation battle. Veteran boss Mick McCarthy stepped in to oversee the rest of the season with the club three points off safety on his arrival but wins were hard to come by under his tenure. March’s 6-0 thumping of fellow strugglers QPR gave glimpses of hope but losses soon followed as they plummeted towards the drop zone. Following a dispiriting defeat at home to fellow strugglers Cardiff City on Easter Monday, however, McCarthy’s short spell in charge came to an end as he left with the club now deep in the relegation mix.
Stephen Dobbie was left with the unenviable task of keeping them in the division but despite wins against Wigan and Birmingham, he could not prolong their stay in the Championship. Wigan will join Blackpool in the third tier if they fail to win at Reading on Saturday.
Interim boss Stephen Dobbie told BBC Radio Lancashire: “I thought in the first half we didn’t play the way we have been playing. I let the lads know what was expected of them and I thought they came out the traps in the second half. The second goal was very poor from our point of view and we were the ones trying to go for it but then they got the penalty. The lads gave everything and I can’t fault their effort. We just lost our way a little bit, we started to find our way and the half-time whistle probably came at the wrong time for us.”
Millwall manager Gary Rowett told BBC Radio 5 Live: “We changed formation to a 5-2-3, but an attacking version, just to change the players’ mentality because our form hasn’t been good enough. We haven’t managed to get momentum, but at this stage of the season lots of teams around us are doing exactly the same thing. There is pressure, nerves and something to lose. Because we had dropped out of the top six it almost felt like we weren’t hanging on to something. I thought the players showed a lot of character and scored some very good goals. I felt we deserved to win the game, but it wasn’t an easy game for sure.”
Blackpool are now three points behind Huddersfield in 21st and two points behind 22nd-placed Reading, but with the Terriers playing the Royals in the final game of the season it means the Seasiders are unable to leapfrog both teams and remain in the Championship for another season.