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25 May 2014

QPR's Tony Fernandes celebrates RM733 million goal as they beat Derby With last Minute Goal and return to Premier League


Tan Sri Tony Fernandes was beside himself with joy last night after Bobby Zamora scored the £134 million (RM733 million) goal, which lifted Queens Park Rangers into the Premier League next season.
The AirAsia boss tweeted: “What a day. What a day”, as he posed with the playoff trophy after QPR defeated Derby County 1-0 at Wembley.
The 2014 SkyBet Championship playoff final between Derby County and QPR last night had been billed as the most lucrative single match in football, including global sport.
The Daily Mail had reported that the game would be worth a conservative £134 million to the winner.
"The £134 million is made up of cash for finishing bottom of the Premier League next season (£62m) plus estimated parachute payments over four years (£72m)," it said.
The paper reported that the parachute payments would likely be bigger as the next Premier League TV deal from 2016 to 2019, on which the payments will partly be based, was expected to grow.
At Wembley, Fernandes saw his team dominated by young and energetic opponents for 89 minutes and 50 seconds, according to the Daily Mail.
However, QPR and 33-year-old Zamora needed just one late glimpse of the goal to separate the men from the boys.
"Ageing, written off, derided, it just had to be Zamora who scored the winning goal which took QPR back into England's top flight and saved them from financial ruin."
Derby County captain Richard Keogh mistimed a clearance straight to Zamora and he returned it in a flash into the top corner of the net, the Mail said.
It said QPR manager Harry Redknapp was besieged on the touchline while owner Fernandes looked as if he had just escaped a heart attack.
With 10 seconds left, QPR were back in the game, despite playing most of the second-half with only 10 men following Gary O’Neil’s red card.
For two years, QPR and Fernandes had been on the receiving end of criticism as the squad were paid more than Atletico Madrid but relegated and then failed to ignite the Championship.
With QPR reporting a loss of £65 million in their latest financial report, the club needed the result to go their way.
There were scenes of joy on and off the pitch when the final whistle blew, with Fernandes carried by Joey Barton around the Wembley turf.
Following the match, Fernandes tweeted: “Happy gila” with a picture of QPR players lifting the SkyBet Championship playoff trophy aloft.
Fernandes's next task is to fight the prospect of a £50 million fine which QPR has been slapped with for breaching financial fair play rules, incurred after the club registered a £65.4million loss for the year-ending May 2013.
Under the rules, clubs are only entitled to make an £8million loss per season. – May 25, 2014.


Ten-man QPR clinched promotion to the Premier League in dramatic fashion as Bobby Zamora's stoppage-time strike secured a 1-0 win over Derby in the Championship play-off final at Wembley on Saturday.
Harry Redknapp's side were reduced to 10 men for the final 30 minutes after Gary O'Neil's red card, but Zamora punished a mistake by Richard Keogh to steal victory against the run of play and ensure the west Londoners will make a quick and lucrative return to the English top-flight after last season's relegation.
It was a real smash and grab raid by QPR, who struggled to find any rhythm even before O'Neil's dismissal, but although Derby dominated they had only themselves to blame for failing to make the most of their chances.
QPR's triumph made them the first team to win promotion after finishing fourth in the second tier for 16 years.
But the historical significance of the victory will pale in comparison to the relief felt by QPR's Malaysian owner Tony Fernandes, who has funded a £70 million wage bill reportedly higher than Spanish champions Atletico Madrid, while also coping with annual losses of around £65 million.
In that context, promotion to the promised land of the Premier League, where QPR will now land a minimum windfall of £80 million, was essential and somehow Redknapp's men have delivered.
For Derby manager Steve McClaren, Wembley once again proved the most painful of venues.
It was McClaren's first time in the Wembley dug-out since November 2007 when his underwhelming spell as England manager came to a farcical end with the coach lampooned as the 'Wally with the brolly' after he huddled under an umbrella during a 3-2 defeat against Croatia that shattered his country's hopes of qualifying for Euro 2008.
If McClaren was a superstitious type he might have suspected the fates were aligning against him as torrential rain lashed Wembley just before kick-off.
There was no umbrella in sight as McClaren led his team onto the pitch, but he had a familiar sinking feeling by full-time.
In a scrappy first half, McClaren's men appealed in vain for a penalty when teenage midfielder Will Hughes raced onto Jamie Ward's pass, cleverly turned back in the other direction and took a tumble after Richard Dunne's awkward challenge.
Robert Green came to QPR's rescue in the 40th minute when he plunged low to his left to turn away an inswinging free-kick from Ward that almost crept in at the far post.
Derby were on the front foot again after the break, but they almost fell behind to a sucker punch when Armand Traore's cross picked out Charlie Austin and the forward stabbed just wide.
- Desperate lunge -
The momentum swung back in Derby's favour moments later when O'Neil was sent off in the 60th minute.
Hughes seized on a loose pass and picked out Johnny Russell, who flicked the ball through Dunne's legs and appeared poised to bear down on goal until O'Neil's desperate lunge sent him crashing to the turf and brought a red card from referee Lee Mason.
McClaren's side tried to press home their numerical advantage and substitute Craig Bryson drew a smart save from Green before Martin's near-post strike was repelled by the former England goalkeeper.
Green was keeping Derby at bay almost single-handed and he made another good stop to claw away Simon Dawkins' shot from point-blank range.
Derby were the division's top scorers with 84 goals, but they just couldn't find a way past a QPR defence superbly marshalled by Dunne.
And with extra-time looming there was an astonishing sting in the tale.
QPR winger Junior Hoilett showed great determination to win the ball wide on the right, but his cross should have been cleared by Keogh.
Instead the Derby defender diverted his clearance straight to Zamora, who could hardly believe his luck as he dispatched a fine first-time finish past Lee Grant to send QPR back to the big time.



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