'We were just a final pass away' - Morrisonpublished at 23:15 BST 10 April
23:15 BST 10 April
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West Bromwich Albion interim boss James Morrison spoke to BBC Radio WM following their 0-0 draw with Millwall.
"They had the better of the first 30 minutes," he said.
"We needed to sort a couple of bits out at half-time and then I thought [in the] second half we were the stronger team, had the bigger chances and kept them away from our goal.
"I felt we were just a final pass away tonight - the right shot, choosing the right pass.
"The big moment, the goalkeeper's [Anthony Patterson] made a great save so I think overall it's probably a fair result."
Good form down to learning from failures - Morrisonpublished at 15:44 BST 10 April
15:44 BST 10 April
Media caption,
Morrison: 'We have to stand tall and be brave'
West Bromwich Albion head coach James Morrison said his side's timely run of good form has been down to them learning from past failures.
The Baggies are unbeaten in six games and have their Championship destiny in their own hands going into the final five matches of the season, with a four-point gap to the relegation zone.
That run - two wins and four draws - since a 2-1 defeat by Oxford United on 28 February earned Morrison a nomination for manager of the month for March, and he has taken Albion from the bottom three to relative comfort in 20th place.
"The reaction from Oxford, the belief and the determination of trying to, one, improve the performances and, two, get the club out of this position - sometimes you learn the most off your failures," he told BBC Radio WM.
"I think that's a sign of a good team when you have that disappointment and then you come back from it.
"We can control some sort of disappointment, but it's how you control the big disappointments and how you react through that. And I've talked about that with the group - coming through some difficult moments and going again."
A win over top-two chasing Millwall on Friday [20:00 BST] would put the Baggies in touching distance of 50 points - widely accepted as the tally usually needed to stay up.
And Morrison said he has been reminding his players of how close they are to doing that.
"Ever since I've come in, we've had targets," he said. "So we keep reminding ourselves of theneed to be day-to-day, game-to-game, and then we keep working for them.
"I think everyone knows in this division, statistically, what it is, so we keep fighting for that and we'll breathe when we can breathe."
EFL confirms fixture release datepublished at 14:38 BST 10 April
14:38 BST 10 April
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Image caption,
The 2026-27 EFL season will kick-off on August 7 with the opening round of the Carabao Cup
The EFL has announced the fixtures for the 2026-27 season will be published at midday on Thursday, 25 June.
The first-round draws for the Carabao Cup and the Vertu Trophy will be made on the same day.
The new season will kick off on the weekend of August 7-9 with the first round of the Carabao Cup, and the opening fixtures in the Championship, League One and League Two will follow a week later on 14-16 August.
The first round of the Vertu Trophy will be played in the week commencing 21 September.
Millwall's Coburn wins March awardpublished at 08:09 BST 10 April
08:09 BST 10 April
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Image caption,
Josh Coburn joined Millwall from Middlesbrough in July 2025
Millwall striker Josh Coburn has been named the Championship's player of the month for March.
The 23-year-old scored three goals last month as the Lions won two, drew one and lost one of their four matches.
Coburn scored the winning goal against Derby and an important equaliser at promotion rivals Ipswich with his tally for the season currently standing at nine.
It is the second successive month a Millwall player has won the award with winger Femi Azeez taking the February prize.
West Brom defender George Campbell, Southampton goalkeeper Daniel Peretz and Derby defender Matt Clarke were also nominated.
Millwall visit West Brom on Friday night (20:00 BST).
Southampton's Eckert wins manager of the month awardpublished at 08:08 BST 10 April
08:08 BST 10 April
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Image caption,
Tonda Eckert has won 20 of his 31 games in charge of Southampton
Southampton's Tonda Eckert has been named the Championship's manager of the month for March.
The Saints went unbeaten in the league last month, winning three and drawing one of their four games including a victory at the leaders Coventry.
The Sky Blues' Frank Lampard, Matt Bloomfield of Oxford United and West Brom interim boss James Morrison were also nominated.
Eckert also won the award in February when Southampton were again unbeaten and have continued their good form into April, moving into the play-off places as well as reaching the semi-finals of the FA Cup.
Eckert, Lampard, Morrison & Bloomfield up for MotMpublished at 09:40 BST 9 April
09:40 BST 9 April
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Image caption,
Matt Bloomfield, Tonda Eckert, James Morrison and Frank Lampard all had success in March
Oxford United's Matt Bloomfield, Tonda Eckert of Southampton, West Brom interim boss James Morrison and Coventry's Frank Lampard have all been nominated for the March Championship manager of the month award.
Bloomfield led Oxford to seven points from their four games last month to give them hope of avoiding relegation from the Championship, while Eckert's Southampton went unbeaten in March - and won at leaders Coventry.
Morrison was handed the task of lifting West Brom clear of the bottom three and took eight points from an unbeaten four-game run.
Coventry have continued their charge towards the Premier League, with Lampard overseeing three wins and just that one blemish in the defeat by Southampton.
Southampton goalkeeper Daniel Peretz and West Brom defender George Campbell are nominated for the player of the month award along with Millwall striker Josh Coburn and Derby defender Matt Clarke.
The winners of both awards will be announced on Friday morning.
Pick of the stats: West Bromwich Albion v Millwallpublished at 08:23 BST 9 April
08:23 BST 9 April
Image source, Opta
There's a big game to begin the Championship weekend as relegation-battling West Bromwich Albion welcome promotion-chasing Millwall to The Hawthorns on Friday night (20:00 BST).
Albion are one of the division's form teams, unbeaten in six, claiming 10 points, and with three clean sheets in their past four games.
That run has hauled Albion up to 20th, four points and two places above third-bottom Leicester with five games remaining.
The points are potentially just as precious for the Lions who lie fourth, outside the automatic promotion places on goal difference, though having played two games more than second-placed Ipswich going into this game.
Monday's home defeat to Norwich was a second straight at The Den but Alex Neil's men have only lost back-to-back league games once this season, and that came in December.
West Brom are winless in their past nine league games against Millwall (D6 L3) since a 2-0 away win in February 2020.
Following their 3-0 win in October, Millwall are looking to complete the league double over West Brom for the first time since 2001-02.
Since the start of March, West Bromwich Albion are one of only three sides unbeaten in the Championship (W2 D4), along with Southampton and Ipswich. They've also faced the fewest shots on target (12) and have the lowest xG faced (5.3) in that time.
Millwall spent three days in 2nd place in early April but are now 4th. In total – up to the night of 9 April – the Lions have ended 168 days in the play-off positions in 2025-26, 43 more than any other Championship side.
No side have won more away points in the Championship this season than Millwall (36), winning 10 of their 20 games on the road (D6 L4). They last won more than 10 away league games in a season in 2015-16 in League One (11), and have never done so in the top-two tiers of English football.
Morrison getting the best from limited squadpublished at 12:59 BST 8 April
12:59 BST 8 April
Chris Hall Fan writer
Image source, Getty Images
West Bromwich Albion currently find themselves on their longest unbeaten run for over a year, and while going six games without defeat might not seem miraculous on the face of it, the circumstances make it much more impressive.
First, there's what preceded it.
Albion had not won for three months prior to this run of form and had lost eight of their last 12 league games.
Were it not for Sheffield Wednesday, Albion would have been rock bottom of the Championship's form table.
The turnaround has been incredible; the Baggies now sit sixth in the current six-game form table, and everyone associated with the club has reason to believe this team can avoid the drop.
Of course, it could always be better.
Fans will be frustrated by points seemingly dropped in that run.
A 2-0 lead was squandered on Good Friday against Wrexham, while a last-minute equaliser at home to Southampton stopped Albion ending the Saints' own impressive unbeaten run.
However, the fact that we are left disappointed to not be beating that play-off chasing duo simply underlines how far we've come in such a short time under James Morrison. And we have done it with extremely limited options.
Throughout this six-game run, Morrison has been without Karlan Grant, Mikey Johnston, Tammer Bany and Chris Mepham, while Jed Wallace and Krystian Bielik have both suffered potentially season-ending injuries.
It has left Morrison going back to the well with the same group of players.
Seven outfield players have started every single one of those six unbeaten games, and between the Good Friday and Easter Monday games, Albion made just one outfield change.
This might go some way to explain why, across the Easter weekend, Albion were convincingly better in the first half of both games than the second, especially as Morrison lacked experienced options from the bench.
Just two of the Throstles' substitutes against Blackburn were aged over 22. The rest of the Albion bench represented a total of 12 league starts between them this season.
Not ideal for a relegation six-pointer, where Morrison admitted after that he wanted to rely on experience in such a big game.
There is light at the end of the tunnel, though, for the battle-weary Baggies who've given so much to this unbeaten run.
The interim boss confirmed that Mepham, Bany and Grant have all started training last week and their potential returns will be very welcome for a vital run-in as certain players must be feeling the effects of a long, hard season.
Aune Heggebo has now played over a year without a break (due to his previous club Brann's season running to a different schedule from the UK season) and has appeared in every league game for Albion and SK Brann in that time.
That's 64 league games in a row for the Norwegian, if you're counting.
Versatile attacker Isaac Price has appeared in every game for club and country for over a year, totalling 60 consecutive appearances.
And that's before you mention that Danny Imray, Callum Styles and George Campbell have played every minute of every game for over a month now, while Ousmane Diakite and Jayson Molumby have missed just 10 minutes and 13 minutes of football respectively in the same period.
It's something of a miracle Morrison has got so much out of so few players over the past month, and it's a testament to the players involved that they've given so much to the cause.
But I'm sure none of them would be averse to seeing the cavalry riding over the hill to help them out in the final weeks of this relegation battle.
Baggies 'happy' with point at Ewood - Molumbypublished at 11:57 BST 7 April
11:57 BST 7 April
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West Bromwich Albion midfielder Jayson Molumby claimed the side are "happy" with their goalless draw with Blackburn Rovers, as the bottom Championship clubs all dropped points across Easter Monday.
Oxford United and Portsmouth shared a 2-2 draw at Fratton Park in the lunchtime kick-off, before the game against Sheffield Wednesday and Leicester City also resulted in a draw.
However, while the Irishman may have had a keen eye on the results elsewhere, his attention is still firmly on the side's own performance.
"The effort and the attitude was there so we are happy with a point in the end," Molumby told BBC Radio WM.
"I'd be lying if we weren't looking at the table after games because that's where we are at the minute.
"If the teams around us or below us drop points, then that's a bonus, but we are definitely focused on ourselves and trying to get as many points as possible before the end of the season."
The Baggies had the best chance to break the deadlock when Aune Heggebo's first-half shot was superbly tipped onto the crossbar by Rovers goalkeeper Balazs Toth.
The point keeps West Brom four points above the relegation places with five games to play.
"I saw my players give everything," told BBC WM.
"We just lacked a bit of quality in the final third, just lacked that bit of composure - someone who's going to get that final pass off and give our strikers a chance in the box.
""Having said that, the keeper's made a terrific save off Heggebo. It was world-class. Then (had Albion scored) it would have been a different game, sat here 1-0 with a really good away performance.
"It keeps the momentum and we've seen that the results have gone for us again, so we've just got to keep getting the results and points on the board and keep moving forward."
Morrison happy to keep momentum despite Wrexham drawpublished at 17:51 BST 4 April
17:51 BST 4 April
Media caption,
Morrison: 'Every point is a good point'
West Bromwich Albion interim head coach James Morrison is preferring to focus on the positives after his side's Good Friday home draw with Wrexham.
The Baggies gave up a two-goal half-time lead to only share the points with their play-off chasing Welsh visitors.
But for Morrison, it was another game ticked off in their battle for survival as the gap between West Brom and the bottom three remains at four points with six matches to go.
"I was really pleased with the first half performance, disappointed with the second half, but happy with getting a point in the end," he told BBC Radio WM.
"It's another game ticked off, another point, five unbeaten and I'm happy we saw it out as we were under a lot of pressure.
"Every point in this situation's a good point, it sets us up nicely to go into Blackburn.
"We have to keep the same belief we've had in recent weeks, go into it positively and we'll be ready."
Morrison welcomes West Brom selection headachepublished at 17:33 BST 2 April
17:33 BST 2 April
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Interim Albion boss James Morrison says he has a welcome selection headache for the Baggies' Good Friday visit of Wrexham (15:00 BST).
Goalkeeper Max O'Leary is fit to return after limping off against Hull City on 14 March, with Josh Griffiths coming on to see-out the 3-0 win and then kept a clean sheet in a win at O'Leary's former club Bristol City on 21 March.
"I've made my decision on who starts," Morrison told BBC Radio WM. "It's good for them to compete. They are both important.
"Josh came in and was ready. Max did well leading up to the games he missed. It's a good [headache] to have."
Defender Chris Mepham and attacking midfielder Tammer Bany have also returned to training and Morrison added: "It's a big plus, getting a few faces back. It's positive for the group.
"Ultimately I want people fighting for the spot, putting pressure on people starting. When someone drops out, someone replaces them with the same level of intensity and fight, that's what I've been banging the drum about."
Morrison said it was unlikely either would be ready to feature until after the Easter Monday trip to Blackburn, managed by Michael O'Neill, who also took charge of Northern Ireland in their 1-1 friendly draw against Wales on Tuesday.
Morrison admitted he'd had "genuine concerns" about Isaac Price's involvement in the game, given the significance of Monday's match against O'Neill's club, but added: "I was happy that he only got 45 minutes - Michael did the right thing and I was happy about it."
Bany is hoping to represent Jordan at the World Cup but has played just one solitary minute in the Championship this season and has missed the past 16 games because of a thigh injury.
"He's very keen. He just wants to get back on the pitch to show what he can do," Morrison added. "He's had a difficult period. He's a day to day one, see how he is in training and go from there.
"He's young, come into a new club, when you're injured it can be lonely, sometimes he's on his own. He'll probably feel a bit embarrassed he's been injured for all this period.
"He is young, eager to impress and wants to help on the pitch, it's important he feels the love."
Championship clubs spend more than £69m on agents feespublished at 17:15 BST 1 April
17:15 BST 1 April
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Image caption,
Ipswich signed Sindre Walle Egeli for a club record £17.5m in January
Championship clubs spent just over £69.5m on agents fees over the past 12 months according to figures released by the Football Association,, external an increase of £6m on the previous year.
The figures cover the period from February 2025 with Ipswich Town the top spenders, paying £11.7m having spent the first three months of the accounting period in the Premier League.
Southampton (£8.3m) and Leicester (£5.8m), who were relegated alongside Ipswich are the second and third-highest payers on the list.
Troubled Sheffield Wednesday were the most frugal when dealing with agents, spending £534,559.
Wrexham come in sixth on the list with an outlay of £3.6m while current Championship leaders Coventry spent just short of £1.5m.
Pick of the stats: West Bromwich Albion v Wrexhampublished at 11:12 BST 1 April
11:12 BST 1 April
This is the first league meeting between these two sides at The Hawthorns (15:00 BST) with both having different aims for the remainder of the season.
West Brom have moved four points clear of the Championship's relegation zone and are hoping to win three games in a row for the first time this season.
Wrexham will move back into the play-off places with at least a point with Southampton not in league action as they face Arsenal in the FA Cup over the weekend.
West Brom won the reverse fixture 3-2 in August, and have done the double over each of the past four opponents they have faced for the first time in a league campaign (Scunthorpe 2007-08, Colchester 2006-07, Gillingham 2000-01, Wimbledon 2000-01).
Wrexham have lost just one of their past nine Football League games played on Good Friday (W5 D3), going down 3-0 at home to Swindon in April 1984.
West Brom have won their past two league games, as many as they had in their previous 19 (D6 L11). They have kept a clean sheet in these wins, last winning three in a row without conceding in September 2024.
Wrexham have won 11 of their 17 league games since Christmas (D2 L4), with only Norwich (12) winning more in the Championship in that time.
Only Hull (14.6%) have a higher shot conversion rate than Wrexham (13.6%) in the Championship this season, with the Welsh ranking fifth for goals (60) but only 19th for total shots (440).
Phillips on what's going right at the Hawthornspublished at 15:54 BST 31 March
15:54 BST 31 March
Image source, Getty Images
West Bromwich Albion defender Nat Phillips has praised boss James Morrison's attacking style of play as the side enjoy an uptick in form.
The Baggies are undefeated across their past four league matches, winning their past two under the former assistant coach.
It's a big turnaround from where they were under the guidance of previous boss Eric Ramsay, who was unable to take a win with the team during his nine-game tenure.
"He's [Morrison] been watching us all season, and he would have had his own ideas on what our shortfalls may have been and what he can improve on," Phillips told BBC Radio WM.
"It was one of those things where it just didn't work [with Ramsay]. He wanted to sure things up, especially with the position in the league, and taking away elements of risk and being a bit more direct.
"We've got players who want to dominate possession, who want to have the ball, and be a bit more forward-thinking. Lately, that's shown to have worked better."
Albion will face play-off contenders Wrexham on Friday (15:00 BST) for their first game back following the international break.
But while the side have had some time away from the Championship, the 29-year-old claims the mindset hasn't drifted from the league.
"At a time where results and performances have improved, you want to continue to build on that," Phillips added.
"But I think physically is the big one. It's been a busy period with lots of injuries, and some boys need looking after, so it's given the team a chance to do that."