
EPL Index
·31 Mei 2025
Exclusive: Gus Poyet Sends Heartfelt Message to Sunderland Fans After Premier League Promotion

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·31 Mei 2025
After years of heartbreak and near misses, Sunderland have finally clawed their way back to the Premier League, and few can argue they haven’t earned it. Their dramatic 3-2 aggregate win over Frank Lampard’s Coventry City, capped by a last-minute header from Dan Ballard, and the emotional Wembley finale against Sheffield United will go down as one of the most iconic play-off runs in history.
Former Black Cats boss Gus Poyet, speaking exclusively to EPL Index, captured just how much it means: “It’s massive for the city. If you live there and thankfully I had the chance to feel it, you really know how much it means for the fans. It’s tremendous.”
Photo: IMAGO
This wasn’t a campaign defined by heaps of free-flowing football or dazzling individual brilliance. What got Sunderland over the line was sheer tenacity. In fact, Poyet himself noted: “They’ve done it without playing fantastic and sometimes that’s what you need, to play ugly and win. That’s your best chance going into the Premier League.”
And he’s right. That Ballard header in the dying seconds of the semi-final wasn’t just about timing – it was about belief. Similarly, in the final, Eliezer Mayenda’s equaliser and Tommy Watson’s stoppage-time winner were less about dominance and more about moments. The kind of moments that define seasons.
Photo: IMAGO
There’s something poetic about the way this promotion played out. As Poyet observed, “I think it was their time and sometimes destiny is there. In previous years they were close but they probably weren’t ready.”
This time, they were ready. Mentally, physically, emotionally. Sunderland showed a maturity and resilience they previously lacked. No collapse, no self-sabotage. Just belief and focus when it mattered most.
Even in a final where Sheffield United were tipped as favourites, it was Sunderland who came through. As Poyet bluntly put it, “When you win a final and the man of the match is the goalkeeper, then perhaps you don’t deserve it but Sheffield United were always the favourites. It’s a way of winning.”
Indeed, it is. It’s football. And football doesn’t always reward the prettiest side. Sometimes, it rewards the hungriest.
No one deserves this more than the Sunderland fans. After the despair of back-to-back relegations and years stuck in League One, this promotion is a seismic moment. It brings with it not just financial reward, but the opportunity to once again rub shoulders with the best in English football.
Poyet’s message to the fans is as heartfelt as it is timely: “Enjoy, enjoy, enjoy it as much as you can. Support the team and the coach.” He continues, “It’s going to be the same coach and they know that things can change very quickly and they need to be the extra man to help their club stay in the Premier League. They’ll need you.”
It’s a clear reminder. The job isn’t done. Survival in the top flight will require even more grit, more spirit – and above all, unity between players, manager, and fans. But for now, as Poyet urges, it’s time to enjoy.
Sunderland’s recent success isn’t a fluke. It stems from a refreshed club philosophy, a core of exciting young talent, and a fanbase that never gave up. Tommy Watson’s fairy-tale winner at Wembley was more than a goal – it was a symbol of what Sunderland are becoming. A team built on belief, built on community, and finally, built for the Premier League.