Frank Lampard has been refreshingly honest about the scale of the task ahead, admitting that Coventry City will need to remain a special club if they are to survive their first Premier League season in over two decades.
The Coventry boss made the comments after sealing the Sky Bet Championship title in style, with a 3-1 victory over Wrexham at a packed CBS Arena on Sunday. More than 31,000 fans turned out to celebrate a moment that has been 24 years in the making – Coventry’s last top-flight campaign came in 2000-01, a relegation that triggered a long and painful spiral through the divisions.

Lampard issues honest Premier League warning
Speaking to ESPN after the final whistle, Lampard was asked what the club must do to make their Premier League stint stick. The Coventry manager did not shy away from the difficulty of it, framing the challenge around the identity he has worked to rebuild since arriving at the club in November 2024 when the side sat 17th in the Championship.
“It needs to remain a special place because it’s been an incredibly supported club in the city, the tradition and history,” Lampard said. “There wasn’t that feeling when I came in – and I know Mark [Robins] had done incredible work as a manager here – because of a lack of confidence and connection at the club.”

It is a candid admission, and a smart one. Lampard is effectively setting the tone before a single Premier League ball has been kicked, making clear that atmosphere and belief alone will not be enough – but that without them, survival becomes even harder.
Coventry’s promotion in context
Coventry finished the Championship season 12 points clear at the top, recording 27 league wins – a dominant campaign by any measure. Lampard transformed a side that had lost in the playoff semi-finals the previous season into runaway champions, a turnaround that has drawn widespread praise from pundits and analysts alike.
The Premier League relegation battle is notoriously unforgiving for promoted clubs, and Coventry will be under no illusions about what awaits them. The squad will need significant reshaping over the summer to cope with the step up in quality, pace and intensity.
The challenge ahead for Lampard and Coventry
Lampard also reflected on what this title means personally, placing it alongside the biggest moments of a glittering career. “It compares with every trophy I’ve lifted, they’re all amazing,” he said. “The Champions League is extra special because of the stage that it is. I can’t put it down in any way because it’s a collective effort and I know the hard work that has gone in to it.”
He also acknowledged the transformation at the club more broadly: “We built that in the second half of last season to where it’s a serious football club in this league, and you have to do that if you haven’t been a Premier League team recently to go up. To be 12 points clear is amazing.”
With fixture release day set for June 18 and pre-season training beginning in July, the real work starts now. Defensive reinforcements will almost certainly be a priority, and how Coventry navigate the summer transfer window will go a long way to determining whether this promotion becomes a platform or a brief visit. The Premier League waits for no one.
































