The referee for the match, which was played in front of a crowd of 55,419, was Lee Mason. In the 20th minute, Martin Devaney's cross was headed by Kevin Austin and Paul Reidvolleyed the ball past Swansea goalkeeper Willy Guéret to make it 1–0. Nine minutes later, Swansea equalised when Rory Fallon scored with a bicycle kick. Andy Robinson then scored in the 41st minute after Barnsley goalkeeper Nick Colgan failed to hold his weak strike. On 62 minutes, Brian Howard was fouled on the edge of the Swansea penalty and Daniel Nardiello struck the resulting free kick into the Swansea goal to level the match at 2–2, where it remained at the end of regular time. No goals were scored in extra time, although both Lee Trundle and Adebayo Akinfenwa had chances for Swansea, and the game went to a penalty shootout. The first four penalties were scored, before Akinfenwa struck his spot-kick high over the crossbar. The next three penalties were scored before Colgan saved from Alan Tate, ensuring a 4–3 victory for Barnsley and promotion to the Championship.
Barnsley's next season, during which their manager Andy Ritchie was sacked, saw them finish in 20th position in the Championship, two places and eight points above the relegation zone. Swansea City finished their following season in seventh place in League One, one position below the play-offs.
Swansea City faced Brentford in their play-off semi-final with the first match of the two-legged tie taking place at the Liberty Stadium in Swansea on 11 May 2006. Jay Tabb put Brentford ahead on 29 minutes when he converted a loose ball. Eight minutes into the second half, the visitors' goalkeeper Stuart Nelson was shown a red card for a professional foul. With three minutes of the match remaining, Sam Ricketts equalised for Swansea with a deflected shot to ensure the match ended 1–1.[2] The second leg of the semi-final was contested three days later at Griffin Park in Brentford. Leon Knight opened the scoring for Swansea after eight minutes when he struck the ball over Nelson from around 20 yards (18m). On 15 minutes, Knight doubled his tally and Swansea's lead, shooting past Nelson after receiving a through-ball from Leon Britton. The Swansea goalkeeper Willy Guéret made a number of saves in the second half and the match ended 2–0, with his side progressing to the final with a 3–1 aggregate victory.[3]
Barnsley's opponents in their play-off semi-final were Huddersfield Town; the first leg took place at Oakwell in Barnsley on 11 May 2006. Martin Devaney's shot skimmed the Barnsley crossbar and Danny Schofield hit the post for Huddersfield. After a goalless first half, Huddersfield's Gary Taylor-Fletcher scored from close range in the 85th minute, and the game ended 1–0 to the visitors.[4] The return leg was held four days later at the Galpharm Stadium in Huddersfield. The first half ended goalless but Paul Hayes put Barnsley ahead when he converted a penalty after being fouled in the penalty area by Schofield in the 58th minute. Jon Worthington equalised seven minutes later when the ball crossed the Barnsley goal-line after he charged down a Nick Colgan clearance. A header from Paul Reid in the 71st minute put Barnsley 2–1 ahead on the day and levelled the aggregate score at 2–2. In the 78th minute, the Huddersfield goalkeeper Paul Rachubka failed to gather Brian Howard's shot and Daniel Nardiello scored, to send Barnsley to the final with a 3–2 aggregate victory.[5]
The referee for the match was Lee Mason.[12] The match was broadcast live in the UK on Sky Sports.[13] It was the final time that the League One play-off final was played at the Millennium Stadium during the redevelopment of Wembley Stadium.[14] Swansea had around 35,000 supporters at the Welsh stadium, compared to around 20,000 Barnsley fans.[15] Both teams adopted a 4–4–2 formation,[16] with both starting elevens remaining unchanged from their respective semi-final second-leg matches.[15]
Summary
Barnsley kicked off the match around 3p.m. on 27 May 2006 in front of a Millennium Stadium crowd of 55,419.[12][15] Swansea started the stronger of the sides with Owain Tudur Jones taking a shot in the third minute which went wide before Nardiello's strike was also off target two minutes later. In the 10th minute, Howard's low shot was saved by Guéret in the Swansea goal before Reid scored to put Barnsley ahead in the 20th minute. Devaney's cross was headed by Kevin Austin and Reid volleyed the ball past Guéret to make it 1–0. Five minutes later, an offside Knight struck the Barnsley post with a shot and in the 29th minute, Swansea equalised: Tudur Jones flicked on a cross from Garry Monk and Fallon scored with a bicycle kick. Two minutes after scoring, Fallon cleared Stephen McPhail's effort off the Swansea goal-line. Robinson then scored in the 41st minute after Colgan failed to hold his weak strike. Just before the interval, both Howard and Bobby Hassell were shown the yellow card. The score was 2–1 to Swansea at half-time.[15][17]
Neither side made any substitutions during the break and Swansea kicked off the second half. Three minutes in, Knight's shot cleared the Barnsley crossbar, and six minutes later, Guéret comfortably saved a strike from McPhail. On 62 minutes, Howard was fouled on the edge of the Swansea penalty area to win a free kick. Nardiello struck the set piece low, past a motionless Guéret, and into the Swansea goal to level the match at 2–2. Swansea made their first change in the 69th minute with Trundle coming on for Knight and soon after, Tommy Wright replaced Richards for Barnsley; Dale Tonge then replaced an injured Howard in the 73rd minute. With five minutes remaining, Reid's header at the far post went wide before Tudur Jones' shot was too high. In stoppage time, Alan Tate had only Colgan to beat but sliced his shot wide. Regular time ended 2–2, sending the match into extra time.[15][17]
Two minutes into the first period of extra time, Trundle's long-range shot went wide. Swansea then made their second substitution of the game with Adebayo Akinfenwa coming on for Fallon. Almost immediately, Akinfenwa struck a shot just wide of the Barnsley goal. A minute later Chris Shuker came on to replace Nardiello. Swansea dominated extra time with opportunities for both Trundle and Akinfenwa but after a minute of stoppage time, the final whistle was blown and the game needed to be decided by a penalty shootout. The first four penalties were scored, before Akinfenwa struck his spot-kick high over the crossbar. Paul Heckingbottom scored to make it 3–2 before Tudur Jones levelled the shootout. Antony Kay then converted his penalty to put Barnsley ahead before Colgan saved from Tate, ensuring a 4–3 victory for Barnsley and promotion to the Championship.[15][17]
Andy Ritchie, the winning manager, said "The players were absolutely magnificent and they deserve a great deal of credit... We always felt that we could get a goal back when we were 2–1 down and at half-time we got them to focus."[18] Colgan said of his error that he "wanted the roof to open up and take me up after my mistake. But that's the nature of goalkeeping, one minute you are the villain and the next you are a hero."[18]Kenny Jackett, the Swansea manager, suggested his side's failure to take their chances was the reason for their defeat: "It's a bitter disappointment, particularly considering we had more chances and more of the play... we had more than enough chances to win the game."[19]
Barnsley's next season saw them finish in 20th position in the Championship, two places and eight points above the relegation zone.[20] Ritchie was sacked in November 2006 with the club second from bottom of the Championship table.[21] Swansea City finished their following season in seventh place in League One, one position below the play-offs.[22]