There are few joys in soccer greater than promotion, and recent celebrations have underscored that fact. Coventry City fans wept and waved signs reading “We’re Back” after their team clinched promotion, and Hull City received widespread celebration after winning what is famously the most lucrative single game of the year, the Championship playoff final at Wembley, according to the source.
The euphoria of promotion often gives way to anxiety. Reaching the Premier League and remaining there are distinct challenges: in both 2023-24 and 2024-25, every promoted team went straight back down, and none of the six relegated sides produced more than 26 points. Two clubs posted particularly low totals — Southampton with 12 points in 2024-25 and Sheffield United with 16 in 2023-24, according to the source.
There are, however, recent examples of promoted teams finding stability. In 2025-26, Leeds United played high-quality football for much of the season and, despite poor finishing, will finish between 11th and 15th in the league — comfortably their second-best Premier League season of the last two decades. Sunderland also showed promise, losing just two of their first 11 matches, spending most of the season in the top half and entering the final matchday with a chance at a top-half finish and their first placement above Newcastle United in 10 years, according to the source.
Longer-term survival can follow an initial period of consolidation. Brighton & Hove Albion, promoted in 2017, have spent nine consecutive seasons in the Premier League and transitioned from basic survival to sustained growth. Brighton averaged about 1.04 points and 0.97 goals per game in their first four seasons back, then improved to roughly 1.46 points and 1.52 goals since 2021-22. The club has also become known for developing young talent and generating significant transfer revenue — including fees for Moisés Caicedo (€116 million), Marc Cucurella (€65.3 million), João Pedro (€63.7 million), Ben White (€58.5 million) and Alexis Mac Allister (€42 million), according to the source.
Newcastle United, also promoted in 2017, followed a similar “survive, then thrive” pattern and posted several midtable and top-half finishes in the years since promotion. The source notes the club received a notable boost when Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) became involved. The article raises the question of what lessons from Brighton, Newcastle, Leeds and Sunderland might mean for newly promoted clubs such as Coventry, Ipswich and Hull City.