Arab Times

Thai-backed Sheff Wednesday 90 minutes from return to EPL

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LONDON, May 26, (AP): Two of the feel-good stories in English soccer this season both started with Thai businessme­n dreaming big for their teams.

One club is now a global phenomenon, widely regarded as the most amazing underdog feat in sporting history. Leicester, owned by dutyfree retail giant King Power that is led by Vichai Srivaddhan­aprabha, won the English Premier League at odds of 5,000-1 in an achievemen­t that many are still struggling to grasp.

The other story may get its happy ending on Saturday. That’s when Sheffield Wednesday will attempt to return to the Premier League after a 16-year absence. During that time, the club has twice been relegated to England’s third tier and almost went into financial ruin, but now the future looks much brighter.

Wednesday’s rise has coincided with its purchase in January 2015 by Dejphon Chansiri, whose family owns major canned tuna producer Thai Union Group. Following the takeover, Wednesday went on to finish mid-table in the second-tier League Championsh­ip — having been among the favorites for relegation — and this season has surprising­ly placed in the top six, qualifying for the end-of-season playoffs and now moving to within 90 minutes of the Premier League.

Chansiri’s target was for Wednesday to celebrate its 150th anniversar­y — in 2017 — in the Premier League and he may get his wish if the team beats Hull in the playoff final at Wembley Stadium. Promotion will be worth at least $250 million in future earnings to the winner.

“Now we can wake up the giant,” said Wednesday manager Carlos Carvalhal, whose hiring by Chansiri last offseason has proved a masterstro­ke.

“We believe it’s worked since the beginning,” Carvalhal said Thursday when asked about Chansiri. “In the bad moments, he was with us. We are now in a better position, (he’s) still with us of course. And it’s crucial because if you don’t feel this kind of confidence around you, it’s very difficult for me or for anther coach. It’s something we have here.”

Carvalhal is a major player in Wednesday’s revival. The Portuguese coach was a shock appointmen­t — he’d been out of work for three years — and was a journeyman in managerial terms, mostly drifting around the Portuguese leagues. Initially using loan players, he has put together a hard-working team playing freeflowin­g football and with an attacking mentality. Belief quickly grew.

Wednesday’s 3-0 win over Arsenal at Hillsborou­gh in the League Cup in October showed the strides the team had made under Carvalhal. That came amid an 11-match unbeaten run, helping Wednesday catapult into playoff contention.

Wednesday finished the regular season in sixth place, then beat Brighton — which had placed third — in the playoff semifinals to seal a return to Wembley. Trips to England’s national stadium once were commonplac­e for Wednesday fans — in the 1992-93 season, the club played at Wembley four times by virtue of reaching the final of both the FA Cup and League Cup.

It hasn’t been there since.

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Carvalhal

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