Kalo te përmbajtja
  • EN
  • SQ
  • IT
  • FR
  • ES
  • DE
  • EL
VA-NEWS VA-NEWS
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Health
  • Technology
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
LIVE
Navigation

VA-NEWS

  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Health
  • Technology
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
Shortcuts
Home Latest
LIVE
Gjuha
  • EN
  • SQ
  • IT
  • FR
  • ES
  • DE
  • EL

Search news

  1. Kryefaqja
  2. Football
  3. Spygate explainer: Why Southampton were booted from Championship playoff
Football

Spygate explainer: Why Southampton were booted from Championship playoff

• May 23, 2026 • 7 min read • 👁 2
◉ WhatsApp 𝕏 X
News

Southampton have been expelled from the Championship playoff final in disgrace. The playoff final, often dubbed as “the richest game in sports” due to the prize on offer — a Premier League spot for next year — is a showpiece event in the English soccer calendar, and Hull City will instead now be facing Middlesbrough at Wembley Stadium on Saturday with that on the line, after Southampton’s appeal was dismissed.

The Saints were one of the most remarkable stories of the 2025-26 season, as they went from two wins from their first 13 Championship matches under Will Still to reaching the playoff final under their under-21 boss Tonda Eckert. It was an astonishing tale that unfolded over the course of the season, but Southampton’s season has collapsed after they were found guilty of spying on the training sessions of multiple opponents during the campaign.

This is the harshest possible punishment: the EFL has made an example of Southampton, and Middlesbrough — who lost against Southampton in their playoff semifinal — are now one game from the Premier League as they prepare to face Hull City on Saturday. Southampton, meanwhile, will remain in England’s second tier.

It’s an unprecedented case, with “spygate” dominating the sport ever since the allegations came to light.

Read more:Matías Almeyda back in Liga MX to manage Monterrey

What did Southampton do?

On May 7, two days before Middlesbrough’s home leg of their playoff semifinal against Southampton, their players were training at the club’s Rockliffe Hall base. As the team went through its final paces ahead of Saturday’s match, a member of Middlesbrough’s staff spotted a figure hiding behind a tree, seemingly filming the session.

– Hamilton: The passport scandal that engulfed Dutch soccer
– Connelly, O’Hanlon: Final Premier League re-rank of 2025-26
– Tighe: How data can help clubs find their next great coach

A source told ESPN they suspected the person was live streaming the session. The figure in question ran off, changed clothes at the nearby golf club and fled. Middlesbrough suspected they were being spied on and subsequently identified the figure as Southampton’s first-team analyst intern. Middlesbrough reported Southampton to the EFL.

The EFL opened an investigation into the allegation of spying before the semifinals and charged Southampton with spying on May 8. On May 9, the two teams faced each other at the Riverside, with the first leg finishing 0-0. Kim Hellberg, Middlesbrough’s manager, said postmatch every team in the Championship “should be angry” at what Southampton had done.

Read more:Ebola global health emergency: Expert answers 6 key questions

Hours before the second leg on May 12 at St Mary’s, Southampton requested more time to conduct an internal review. Southampton beat Middlesbrough 2-1 that evening, thanks to an extra-time winner from Shea Charles. Hellberg was visibly emotional postmatch, saying: “If we wouldn’t have caught that man that they sent up on a five-hour drive, you would sit there and say, ‘Well done in the tactical aspect of the game,’ and I would go home and feel like I had failed.

“When someone decides, ‘Nah, we’re not going to watch every game, we send someone instead and film the session, see everything and hope they don’t get caught’ — I guess that’s why he was switching clothes and everything that I have seen on the television — it breaks my heart in terms of all those things I believe in. I think that it’s disgraceful. It makes me very sad.”

Southampton coach Eckert was asked if he was a cheat and walked out of the postmatch news conference.

On Wednesday, May 13, a photograph emerged of the analyst filming the evening training session. Middlesbrough’s players returned to training the next day, just in case they still had a match to prepare for. Middlesbrough then released a statement on May 15 calling for Southampton to be expelled from the playoffs.

Read more:Tim Bezbatchenko returns to oversee Columbus MLS, NWSL teams

Why the EFL decided this now

It all came down to urgency. Once the EFL released a statement on May 14 admitting that the date of the playoff final might have to change, the widespread uncertainty left fans in limbo. Hull City had safely booked their spot in the playoff final after knocking out Millwall, but they weren’t sure when the final would be or whom they would play.

The charge against Southampton related to breaches of EFL Regulation 3.4 — which requires clubs to act toward each other with good faith — and Regulation 127, which was brought in after Marcelo Bielsa’s Leeds were found guilty of spying on Derby in 2019. That regulation prohibits any club from observing, or attempting to observe, another club’s training session within 72 hours of a scheduled match between the two clubs.

The case was heard by an independent committee on Tuesday. Sources said they expected a verdict either late Tuesday, or early Wednesday, but at 6:45 p.m. on Tuesday evening, the statement dropped, detailing how Southampton had admitted to multiple instances of spying, with Oxford United and Ipswich also victims. Sources told ESPN at least two other clubs had suspicions of also having their training sessions spied on ahead of playing Southampton.

The sanction saw Southampton expelled from the playoffs and docked four points ahead of next season. They appealed the punishment, with the EFL’s League Arbitration Panel judging the appeal on Wednesday afternoon. But the case was dismissed, and the original punishment upheld

Read more:ADHD: Why do women get missed out?

“The original sanction of expulsion … remains in place, as does the four-point deduction to be applied to the 2026/27 Championship table and the reprimand in respect ​of all charges,” the EFL said in a statement.

What it means for Southampton

Well, in short, their season has collapsed into ignominy, and you’d expect jobs will be lost. The EFL’s statement contained no clarity on whether members of Southampton’s staff would also be banned. This was the case when Canada‘s women’s team was found guilty of using drones to spy on New Zealand’s training session ahead of their Olympic match in July 2024. In that instance, head coach Bev Priestman and two other staffers were banned by FIFA for a year.

What it means for Middlesbrough

Middlesbrough’s staff and players always hoped this would happen, and that Southampton would be hit by the sternest possible penalty. The Middlesbrough staff and players put postseason holiday plans on hold and have been training as normal in the expectation they would be reinstated for the playoff final.

The club’s statement read: “Middlesbrough Football Club welcomes the outcome of today’s Disciplinary Commission hearing. We believe this sends out a clear message for the future of our game regarding sporting integrity and conduct. As a club, we are now focused on our game against Hull City at Wembley on Saturday.”

Read more:Saudi Arabia investment fund joins 2026 World Cup as official supporter

Who wins on Saturday?

The final will be held at London’s Wembley ​Stadium on Saturday, kicking off at 3:30pm BST.

It’s a fascinating matchup between Hull, who only found their opponents on Tuesday evening, against another side who weren’t sure if their season was over or if they’d be one match from the Premier League. We’re in uncharted territory.

Hull’s preparations will have been slightly less frantic, but Middlesbrough will be riding a massive wave of emotion. Middlesbrough have the stronger squad and should have enough.

Read also
Football

England have Marc Guéhi, Declan Rice fitness concerns before Norway World Cup quarterfinal – sources

Football

Jürgen Klopp reveals Kylian Mbappé, Liverpool talks on private jet before PSG move

Tags: #Canada #Championship #Event #Fifa #Golf #Has #leeds #Live

Journalist

From the same category
  • England have Marc Guéhi, Declan Rice fitness concerns before Norway World Cup quarterfinal – sources
  • Jürgen Klopp reveals Kylian Mbappé, Liverpool talks on private jet before PSG move
  • USMNT failed at the World Cup because of the players — no coach could save them
  • France’s Kylian Mbappé allays any World Cup injury concern: ‘I’m all good’
  • World Cup recap: Mbappé, Dembelé strike to send France to last four over Morocco
From the same tags
  • England have Marc Guéhi, Declan Rice fitness concerns before Norway World Cup quarterfinal – sources
  • Jürgen Klopp reveals Kylian Mbappé, Liverpool talks on private jet before PSG move
  • Community screenings help a movie set during an Indian insurgency bypass censorship
  • In any language: English speakers are tuning into World Cup broadcasts in Spanish
  • France’s Kylian Mbappé allays any World Cup injury concern: ‘I’m all good’
Më të lexuarat — 48h
  1. 01
    Football Mexico start Márquez era on ‘strong foundation’ after Aguirre 1 lexime · 1 day ago
  2. 02
    Opinion Ruth Ellis’s pardon will comfort her family, but the system still lets down abused women like her | Joan Smith | The Guardian 1 lexime · 16 hours ago
Similar articles
Football

England have Marc Guéhi, Declan Rice fitness concerns before Norway World Cup quarterfinal – sources

Marc Guéhi has emerged as an injury concern ahead of England‘s World Cup quarterfinal against Norway after suffering…

• 25 minutes ago • 2 min read
Football

Jürgen Klopp reveals Kylian Mbappé, Liverpool talks on private jet before PSG move

Jürgen Klopp has revealed the lengths Liverpool went to in an attempt to sign Kylian Mbappé in 2017,…

• 2 hours ago • 2 min read
Football

USMNT failed at the World Cup because of the players — no coach could save them

Three years ago, the United States Soccer Federation released a dossier that I’m still surprised was ever made…

• 3 hours ago • 15 min read
VA-NEWS VA-NEWS

Modern portal of reliable, independent and multilingual news. Accurate information, every day.

  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • News
    • World
  • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Football
  • uncategorized
  • © 2026 VA News. Made with ♥ in Albania
    ⌂ Home ◷ Latest

    Powered by
    ►
    Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
    None
    ►
    Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
    None
    ►
    Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
    None
    ►
    Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
    None
    ►
    Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
    None
    Powered by