Hull City

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  1. Follow Friday's FA Cup ties livepublished at 18:50 GMT 13 February

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    There are two ties on Friday as the FA Cup fourth round gets under way, and BBC Sport will bring you every moment.

    Kick-offs 19:45 GMT

    Follow all of the action and reaction here

    You can also listen to today's 5 Live commentaries on most smart speakers. Just say "ask BBC Sounds to play Hull v Chelsea" or "ask BBC Sounds to play Wrexham v Ipswich".

    Find out more about how to listen to football on BBC Sounds

    How to follow the FA Cup fourth round on the BBC

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  2. Sutton's predictions: Hull City v Chelseapublished at 11:14 GMT 13 February

    Chris Sutton smiling on a yellow and black background with 'Sutton's predictions' written below his face

    Chelsea boss Liam Rosenior is really well thought of by Hull City fans from his time in charge there, and he is a former Tigers player as well.

    So, he should get a great reception there on Friday night, but what he really needs is a win - especially after letting a two-goal lead slip against Leeds on Tuesday.

    Rosenior has had some great results with Chelsea but it seems some fans aren't convinced by him. He will be desperate to prove them wrong by winning a trophy and the FA Cup is a great opportunity for him to do that this season.

    Hull are going well in the Championship under Sergej Jakirovic but I just see Chelsea being too strong for them.

    I scored for Chelsea against Hull in the FA Cup, many years ago. We won 6-1 that day and the Blues are going to win comfortably this time too.

    Sutton's prediction: 1-4

    Read the full predictions and have your say here

  3. Pick of the stats: Hull City v Chelseapublished at 10:38 GMT 13 February

    Club badges bannerImage source, Opta

    Hull City welcome former manager Liam Rosenior and Chelsea to the MKM Stadium in the FA Cup fourth round on Friday night (19:45 GMT).

    The Tigers, finalists in 2014, lie fourth in the Championship, 19 places below the eight-time winners in the ladder, but they have won just one of their past four home games while the Blues have won four of their past five away from Stamford Bridge.

    • Hull have won one of their past 35 games against Chelsea in all competitions (D8 L26), a 3-0 win in October 1988 under Eddie Gray. They have lost their past eight games against the Blues.

    • Chelsea have progressed from all eight of their FA Cup ties against Hull City – it's the joint best 100% progress rate by a team against another in FA Cup history, along with Leicester City against Birmingham City.

    • Hull are looking to reach the FA Cup fifth round for the first time since 2017/18. However, the Tigers have been eliminated in their last 16 ties against top-flight teams while playing outside the top-flight themselves, since a 1-0 win against West Ham in 1972/73.

    • Chelsea have progressed from 62 of their past 64 FA Cup ties against sides from outside the Premier League, although both defeats in this run have been against Yorkshire teams: 1-0 vs Barnsley in 2007/08 and 4-2 vs Bradford City in 2014/15.

    • Enzo Fernandez has been involved in five goals in seven FA Cup appearances for Chelsea (3 goals, 2 assists), while he has four goals and two assists in eight domestic cup appearances against sides from a lower division.

    An image detailing how to follow your Championship team on BBC Sport: "On the app? Tap the bell icon to get news about your club sent to you. Signed in on a browser? Hit 'Follow' to stay up to date.
  4. Middlesbrough celebrate January awards doublepublished at 10:06 GMT 13 February

    Middlesbrough's Kim Hellberg (manager) and Alan Browne (midfielder)Image source, EFL
    Image caption,

    Kim Hellberg (left) and Alan Browne have helped take Middlesbrough to the top of the Championship

    Championship leaders Middlesbrough are celebrating winning both the manager and player of the month awards for January.

    Boss Kim Hellberg led Boro to five wins from their six league games last month, with them scoring 14 goals as they chased down the leaders Coventry City before overtaking them at the top of the table last weekend.

    Midfielder Alan Browne won the player award, having also filled in at wing-back and scored three goals.

    Philippe Clement of Norwich, Wrexham's Phil Parkinson and Derby head coach John Eustace were also nominated for the manager accolade.

    Wrexham striker Sam Smith and defenders Charlie Hughes (Hull City) and Caleb Taylor (Millwall) missed out of the player award.

    Middlesbrough visit second-placed Coventry in the Championship on Monday night (20:00 GMT).

  5. Browne, Hughes, Smith and Taylor up for January awardpublished at 16:17 GMT 12 February

    (L-R) Alan Browne of Middlesbrough, Charlie Hughes of Hull City, Sam Smith of Wrexham, Caleb Taylor of Millwall.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    (left to right) Alan Browne of Middlesbrough, Charlie Hughes of Hull City, Sam Smith of Wrexham, Caleb Taylor of Millwall

    Alan Browne, Charlie Hughes, Sam Smith and Caleb Taylor are the nominees for January's Championship player of the month award.

    Browne has come back into favour under Kim Hellberg at Middlesbrough and has been deployed at right wing-back as well as in central midfield.

    The 30-year-old Republic of Ireland international helped Boro to five wins in January, scoring in the 4-0 home wins over Southampton and Preston and scoring one and assisting the other in a 2-1 win at Stoke.

    Hughes was part of a Hull City side that enjoyed a fine month, with four wins in five matches and just three goals conceded.

    The 22-year-old centre-back also headed what turned out to be the winner in a 2-1 victory at Southampton, his first goal of the campaign.

    Smith took his chance at Wrexham, replacing the injured Kieffer Moore, with the 27-year-old forward scoring in all four of his starts in January to help the Red Dragons to 13 points from six games to move into the play-off places.

    Taylor impressed at the back for Millwall, who claimed 11 points from their six games with Taylor helping ensure three clean sheets and also weighing-in with goals in wins against Swansea and Charlton and two assists too.

    The winner will be announced on Friday, 13 February.

  6. 'Emotional family connection' - Rosenior on 'incredible' Hull returnpublished at 15:10 GMT 12 February

    Liam Rosenior of Hull City celebrates scoringImage source, Getty Images

    Returning to the club where his grandmother was a season holder will be an "amazing thing for me and my family", says Chelsea boss Liam Rosenior.

    The Blues visit Championship Hull City in the FA Cup fourth round on Friday evening, providing Rosenior an emotional opportunity to return to the club he watched as a child, played for, and later managed.

    "Incredible," he told BBC Sport.

    "I've got an emotional family connection with the club through my grandma. I used to go up there when I was a little boy. I'm talking four or five years old on summer holidays all the way through. Without that football club, I wouldn't be here now.

    "She was a season ticket holder. She got to see me play there. Sadly she passed away pretty much a year to the day before I joined Hull as manager."

    "I think she did the draw," Rosenior added with a smile.

    "She must have messed around with the balls in the hat. Amazing for my family to get together. I think I need about 20 tickets so we'll see how it goes.

    "Without that club and without being there, I wouldn't be in this situation now. I'm so thankful. It's a club that I will always love, and have a special place in in my heart for.

    "And it's an amazing thing for me and my family that we go back there."

    Liam Rosenior of Chelsea during a news conferenceImage source, Getty Images

    Rosenior has started well as Blues manager, winning seven out of his first 10 matches in charge and remaining unbeaten in the Premier League. He believes supporters are beginning to see how his approach differs from previous boss Enzo Maresca.

    "What I'm conscious of as well is that they're already part of a very good team," he added.

    "My ideas are similar with tweaks and different things, but what you don't want to do is change too much too soon because the players lose their rhythm.

    "I think people are starting to see a few things that are different. It's not about being different. It's about winning games of football. And that's the balance that I have to find."

  7. Hull helped 'special' Rosenior reach Chelsea - Keslerpublished at 09:21 GMT 12 February

    Nizaar Kinsella
    Chelsea reporter

    Liam Rosenior speaks during a Hull City press conference in Antalya, Turkey in March 2024. Hull City's owner Acun Ilicali and vice president Tan Kesler are sat alongside him. Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    (from left to right) Tan Kesler, Acun Ilicali and Liam Rosenior, pictured in March 2024

    Former Hull City vice-chairman Tan Kesler has revealed how "really ambitious" Liam Rosenior became a success in management.

    The 41-year-old is now in charge of Chelsea and will lead his side into an FA Cup fourth‑round tie at his former club, where he made 161 appearances as a player between 2010 and 2015.

    Having previously served only as caretaker manager at Derby County in League One, Rosenior was appointed by Hull as a relatively inexperienced head coach in 2022.

    Kesler told BBC Sport what he said to owner Acun Ilicali during the hiring process:

    "I remember telling Acun: we're speaking to top international coaches, but this young coach has something special," he said.

    "Acun comes from the entertainment world - he owns rights to reality shows like The Voice and Survivor. I told him Liam could be someone we bring into the limelight by giving him an opportunity.

    "Liam spoke very well and we hoped he could apply his ideas.

    "Finally, I asked him in our first meeting over coffee where he saw himself in five years.

    "Knowing Championship coaches have short lifespans, I wanted to see if he was pragmatic or really ambitious. He said: 'I see myself coaching in the Champions League'."

    "We took a risk - a calculated risk, not a crazy one."

    Now working in the same role at Polish top‑flight side Pogon Szczecin, Kesler explained that Rosenior went to extra lengths to persuade players to join Hull.

    He recalled driving with club recruiters from Yorkshire to London to convince Fabio Carvalho to sign on loan, and said not every attempt was successful, pointing to a similar trip to Burnley which ended without a deal.

    "Liam focuses on communication and delivers what he needs to say in a very short period," Kesler added. "That's key for young players with short attention spans."

    Rosenior was ultimately sacked after 18 months and 78 matches in charge, having missed out on the 2023-24 Championship play-offs by three points, because of what Ilicali said was a "difference of opinions".

    Kesler "believes everything happens for a reason", with his own exit following six months later because he felt he needed a break after the birth of his son.

  8. 'Crucial mistakes' cost Hull City - Jakirovicpublished at 18:54 GMT 7 February

    Sergej JakirovicImage source, PA Media
    Image caption,

    Sergej Jakirovic saw his side lose a league game for the first time since New Year's Day

    Hull City manager Sergej Jakirovic says "crucial mistakes" were to blame as his side lost 3-2 at home to Bristol City.

    The defeat saw the tigers drop a place to fourth in the Championship table, four points off the automatic promotion places.

    "We made a lot of crucial mistakes in today's game," he told BBC Radio Humberside:

    "We started well I think, we controlled their everything, but after a while we started to lose easy duels or easy balls, we were very soft in those duels and they had a good two chances when it was 0-0.

    "We took the lead with with a nice action, great finishing from Oli and then I think that we brought them into the game with our two mistakes.

    "Two cheap goals because we are there with the numbers, we can control those players there, but when you make those mistakes it's mostly a goal, they punish you immediately."

  9. Pandur 'belongs' at Hull Citypublished at 11:40 GMT 6 February

    Media caption,

    Pandur: 'It's changed me completely'

    Hull City goalkeeper Ivor Pandur feels he "belongs" at Hull City and is not interested in leaving the Championship promotion challengers.

    He was linked with a move away from MKM Stadium last summer and has been telling BBC Radio Humberside he did not want that sort of speculation in the January transfer window.

    "I spoke to my agent and said he doesn't need to talk to me about football as I want to stay, be here for the team and see how far we can go," Pandur said.

    "I know they need me. I feel good here so in the winter and even in the summer I didn't want to leave."

    The 25-year-old joined Hull from Fortuna Sittard in January 2024 and will bring up 75 appearances for the club when they host Bristol City on Saturday (15:01 GMT).

    "Then [in the summer] there was too much talk and my decision wasn't less clear than it is now, so I just talked straight and focused on football," he added.

    "I know I am here, I don't want to go - you are not forced to go, this is where I belong. I feel it inside so I listened to my gut and that's where I want to be so it's easy."

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  10. Pick of the stats: Hull City v Bristol Citypublished at 15:02 GMT 5 February

    The club badges of Hull City and Bristol City side by side

    Hull City's five-match unbeaten Championship run has taken them up to third place in the table, four points outside the automatic promotion places.

    The Tigers will be without forward Yu Hirakawa for the visit of Bristol City as he will not be allowed to play against his parent club who themselves are four points short of the play-off places.

    • Hull City have won just one of their past 15 league games against Bristol City (D6 L8), a 2-1 home win in July 2022.

    • Following their 4-2 win in August, Bristol City are looking to do the league double over Hull for just the second time in the 21st century, the first coming in the 2019-20 campaign.

    • Hull City have lost just one of their past 11 league games (W8 D2), with the Tigers' eight wins the most of any Championship side since the start of this run in December.

    • No side have kept more clean sheets in the Championship than Bristol City this season (11). However, at the other end the Robins have failed to score in four of their past five games.

    • No player has been involved in more Championship goals this season than Hull's Oliver McBurnie (16 – 11 goals, 5 assists). It is also his second best return in an English league campaign, after 2018-19 (22 goals, 4 assists).

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  11. Jakirovic happy with Hull pointpublished at 22:47 GMT 3 February

    Media caption,

    Hull manager Sergej Jakirovic says his players "gave their all" in a 0-0 draw with Watford that ended a four-game winning run.

    He told BBC Radio Humberside: "I think that we must be very, very satisfied with this point. It was a very difficult game for us. Watford were better on the ball.

    "Without the ball they were very powerful. We struggled there. We tried to be compact.

    "I am maybe more satisfied with the second half, but struggled with decisions (of players) in open play and on the counter-attack. Some decisions I cannot understand.

    "I congratulate my boys because they gave their all. It's not easy, but sometimes we were not calm around the box, and we need more confidence."

  12. Hull 'doing magic' in restricted transfer windowpublished at 15:32 GMT 3 February

    Mike White
    Sports editor, BBC Radio Humberside

    Side-by-side photos of Yu Hirakawa, Lewis Koumas and Toby Collyer playing footballImage source, Shutterstock
    Image caption,

    (Left to right) Yu Hirakawa, Lewis Koumas and Toby Collyer

    City did not need eleventh-hour drama or wheeling and dealing having completed their incoming business in advance of the weekend. And impressive business it appears to be with five new faces – three on-loan and two permanent.

    Despite being under the constraints of the second of their two-window EFL transfer restriction sanctions, City were still able to bring in a mix of experience and younger, promising talent using free transfers and loan additions with what owner Acun Ilicali described as "doing our magic".

    In Paddy McNair and Kieran Dowell, they have players who have experience at Premier League and Championship level, having both started out at top-flight clubs.

    Yu Hirakawa was deemed surplus to requirements - and maybe not utilised in the right way - at Bristol City, but in his initial substitute appearances for the Tigers, the Japanese winger has already got fans clamouring to see what more he can offer when his first start comes along.

    Lewis Koumas did not have the best of times whilst on-loan at Birmingham City this season but he made an immediate impact for Sergej Jakirovic's side at the weekend. His took his late winning goal at Blackburn Rovers well after only being on the field for about four minutes. It feels like the Liverpool attacker arrives in East Yorkshire with a bit of a point to prove.

    And rounding off the new signings is Manchester United midfielder Toby Collyer, who, like Koumas, had the chance to join City in the summer but opted for a temporary switch to West Bromwich Albion, which at the time felt understandably like a more lucrative option.

    He is just recovered from a calf injury and has not played since November so I would imagine the club will be patient with him given they are a club who have incurred the wrath of the injury gods more than many other teams this season already.

    The club also managed to move a couple of players on to free up the finances needed to make these deals happen and keep within PSR limits. Kasey Palmer went to Luton Town on loan, Brandon Williams had his contract paid up, and Tyrell Sellars-Fleming was loaned to nearby Grimsby Town.

    Amid all of that, keeping the likes of highly rated defender Charlie Hughes and experienced centre-half John Egan, amid interest in both players during this window, might be the best bits of (non) business they were able to do for a team with genuine promotion aspirations.