The ball hung in the air for what felt like an eternity before falling to Bolton Wanderers’ Sam Dalby, standing on the six-yard box with his back turned to the 28,000 sun-baked Trotters’ supporters packed into Wembley Stadium.
Having orchestrated the goal which put his side 2-1 in the lead with a defence-splitting flick just moments after his introduction, here, Dalby well and truly etched his name into Bolton folklore.
Almost falling backwards under the clutch of desperate Hatters defender Ethan Pye, the No 10 flung his left foot in the air, connecting perfectly with an overhead kick to send the ball past the helpless Corey Addai.
It was the moment which killed this year’s League One winner-takes-all showpiece – and the fourth goal which followed, a penalty from Ruben Rodrigues, came as the icing on the cake for Bolton fans who have endured such suffering.
This victory put right the wrongs of two summers ago when they succumbed to a 2-0 defeat to Oxford United. From August, the Trotters will grace the second tier of English football once again, eight years after they dropped out of the division.
Steven Schumacher spoke of an ‘expectation’ in his pre-match press conference that Bolton return to the division where they belong. There had indeed been a considerable weight resting on his side’s shoulders heading into this occasion and they well and truly held their nerve.
Sam Dalby etched his name into Bolton Wanderers’ folklore with an overhead kick against Stockport County to send his side to the Championship

Almost falling backwards under the clutch of desperate Hatters defender Ethan Pye, the No 10 flung his left foot in the air, connecting perfectly with an overhead kick to send the ball past the helpless Corey Addai
The Trotters ran out 4-1 victors after an impressive performance against a spirited Stockport County side
On an afternoon where temperatures soared past 30C in the capital, it took less than three minutes for the Trotters to put themselves into the ascendancy.
Thierry Gale, who was a constant threat, struck a speculative effort from distance towards the bottom corner. Hatters keeper Corey Addai parried straight to Mason Burstow, whose cross was blocked to Rodrigues. With an almost open goal gaping in front of him, the Portuguese side-footed home his first of the day.
But in the period thereafter, Stockport grew into the game. Oliver Norwood probed with balls from deep and, on 10 minutes, found Adama Sidibeh with a ball over the top. The striker found the back of the net, only for VAR to chalk it off for an earlier foul.
Yet it was just 19 minutes later that Stockport standout Sidibeh got his goal. The 27-year-old flicked home a delightful, in-swinging ball from the left before taunting the Trotters fans away to his right.
A typically cagey period followed until, on 62 minutes, Dalby carved open the Stockport defence with a sumptuous flick on his left foot. It found star man Cozier-Duberry, who fired past the County keeper the help of Kyle Wootton’s heel.
With the Hatters wilting in the London sunshine, it was from this point that Bolton asserted their dominance.
Dalby made it three with his acrobatic strike, sending the Bolton end into pandemonium, before his side were awarded a penalty in added time for a Josh Dacres-Cogley hair-pull on Ibrahim Cissoko. Rodrigues stepped up and slotted into the bottom corner to complete his brace – and put the final out of Stockport’s reach.
Josh Dacres-Cogley was sent off for Stockport County after being deemed to have pulled Ibrahim Cissoko’s hair in the box
The Bolton supporters stayed long after the final whistle. At times, Wembley felt more akin to sitting in the stands at their home in Greater Manchester. A sleeping giant has awakened, after a long period out in the wilderness
By that point, many of the Stockport faithful had already begun their pilgrimage back to the north-west. Here, they stumbled at the last hurdle despite enjoying large periods of possession.
The Bolton supporters stayed long after the final whistle. At times, Wembley felt more akin to sitting in the stands at their home in Greater Manchester. A sleeping giant has awakened, after a long period out in the wilderness.
Midfielder Josh Sheehan said after the final whistle: ‘This is the best day ever, with the group of lads we’ve got, they’re such a great group and to do it for this club and these fans after so much heartache it’s all worth it now.
“The first day I signed here the target was to get in the Championship, obviously it’s taken longer than we wanted but this is the best feeling ever.’

