Ipswich Town has secured their return to the Premier League, celebrating a triumphant day at Portman Road. The team delivered an impressive performance under pressure, marking a fairytale ending for their fans.
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Ipswich Seal Premier League Return on Perfect Portman Road Afternoon
Ipswich Town are back in the Premier League, and Portman Road has its fairytale ending.
On a final Championship afternoon heavy with tension, calculation and possibility, Kieran McKennaâs side made the equation feel almost simple. Beat Queens Park Rangers, finish second, return to the top table. Ipswich did all of it with clarity, control and conviction, sweeping QPR aside 3-0 to secure automatic promotion and send Suffolk into celebration.
For a club that has known both rapid ascent and sharp disappointment in recent years, this was more than a result. It was a restoration. Ipswich had been asked to prove that last seasonâs pain had not broken their rhythm or dulled their belief. Their answer came early, emphatically and in blue.
George Hirst and Jaden Philogene struck inside the opening ten minutes, turning anxiety into noise and nerves into colour. Kasey McAteer later added the third, giving the scoreline the authority the performance deserved.
Photo: IMAGO
Ipswichâs return to the Premier League at the first attempt carries the mark of a manager who has reshaped the mood around Portman Road. McKenna has rebuilt not only a team, but a sense of direction.
After finishing second in 2024, Ipswichâs previous top flight campaign ended in 19th place with only 22 points. That fall might have left scars. Instead, it became part of the clubâs next climb.
Ipswich Town last played in the Premier League in the 2001-2002 season.
The match at Portman Road was significant as it marked Ipswich Town's return to the Premier League after a long absence.
Ipswich Town delivered an impressive performance, successfully handling the pressure and securing their place in the Premier League.

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Speaking after promotion was confirmed, McKenna captured the emotional weight of the achievement.
âIt means a lot. Itâs probably been the hardest one to be honest. Iâm so grateful. I know how hard weâve had to work to turn it around. The club had such a big climb and then steep fall with such a big turnover of players. Club legends have left this club and weâve had to try and rebuild this team,â McKenna told reporters.
That honesty mattered. Ipswich have not simply bounced back. They have changed, adapted and found a new version of themselves strong enough for the Championshipâs relentlessness.
McKenna continued: âEveryone stuck at it and we deserve to be where we are today. To have the third promotion in four years at home on a sunny May day is perfect. Weâve steadily improved over the course of the year. We donât start thinking about the Premier League today. We are going to enjoy this one.â
That final line felt important. The Premier League will bring its own demands, its own speed, its own questions. Those can wait.
For now, Ipswich have earned their pause, their pitch invasion, their sunlit afternoon of release. Automatic promotion was secured not through luck, but through timing, structure and nerve. QPR were swept away because Ipswich knew exactly who they were and exactly what the day required.