Millwall return to The Den on Monday evening with a place in the Championship promotion playoff picture on the line, facing Hull City in the second leg after a goalless first meeting in East Yorkshire on 8 May. It’s a proper knife-edge tie now. One moment of quality, one mistake, maybe even a set-piece scramble, could decide who stays alive and who goes home.
For Millwall, Alex Neil will see this as a chance to turn a solid away result into something bigger in front of their own crowd. Hull, under Sergej Jakirović, arrive knowing they’ve already shown they can make this awkward. The first leg was tight, tense and low on clear chances. That tends to suit the team who are happy to drag the game into a scrap. Millwall probably won’t be thrilled about that. Then again, they’ve handled pressure well lately.
The broader playoff context raises the stakes again. This isn’t about steady league accumulation any more. It’s about one night, one result and the chance to move a step closer to the Premier League dream. Millwall look slightly better placed after the first leg, but this still feels alive. Very alive.
Millwall Form & Analysis
Millwall’s recent run has been built on control, resilience and just enough cutting edge when it’s needed. Their most recent outing was that 0-0 draw away to Hull City in the first leg, a match they actually shaded in the underlying numbers. They had more shots, more efforts on target and spent more time asking the questions, even if the final score never budged. Before that, they beat Oxford United 2-0 at home, which was the kind of composed, efficient win you’d expect from a side with serious playoff intentions.
The pattern stretches back further. They drew 1-1 at Leicester City, then produced one of their best displays of the run with a 3-1 win away at Stoke City. A 2-0 home victory over Queens Park Rangers followed, and before that they held West Bromwich Albion to a goalless draw on the road. Six unbeaten from six is the headline. Four of those games were clean sheets. That’s a decent platform. It’s also the sort of sequence that tells you a team knows how to stay in games when it matters.
At home, Millwall have been strong enough to trust. Their ground record this season reads well: they’ve won plenty, drawn enough to stay stable and lost only sparingly, while keeping opposition chances under control. Goals at The Den haven’t been flowing wildly, but they’ve been efficient, and the defensive work has been the more persuasive part of the story. That fits the wider picture too. Millwall aren’t chasing glamorous football here. They’re leaning into structure, duels and game management. The numbers from the first leg point in the same direction — Hull were kept to very little, and that will encourage Neil’s side ahead of the return.
The flip side? They don’t always blow teams away. Even in matches they control, the scoreline can stay tight for a long time. That’s no disaster in a playoff tie, though. If anything, it’s a strength. Millwall have been comfortable winning by small margins and grinding out draws when they can’t force the issue. On Monday night, that sort of edge matters more than style.
Hull City Form & Analysis
Hull arrive at The Den with a mixed body of recent work and a clear sense that they’ll need to be sharper than they were in the first leg. The 0-0 draw at home against Millwall was not a disaster, but it wasn’t a performance that screamed authority either. They managed only six shots and just one on target in that match. That’s not enough if you’re trying to dictate a playoff tie. Simple as that.
Their latest league form before the first leg was a bit all over the place. They beat Norwich City 2-1 at home on 2 May, a welcome lift after a 2-1 defeat away to Charlton Athletic. Before that came a lively 2-2 draw at Leicester City, followed by a 1-1 home draw with Birmingham City and a 2-1 defeat away at Sheffield United. It’s a run that has had moments, but not much consistency. Hull can score. They’ve done enough to show that. The problem is that they’ve also been vulnerable, especially when the tempo rises and the opponent gets on top of midfield.
Away from home, the picture is less flattering. Hull have lost more than they’ve won on the road in this recent stretch, and they’ve been conceding too often to feel settled. Their away results have had goals in them, which suits a BTTS-type outlook in general, but it also reflects a team that’s been open at the back. If they go behind early on Monday, it could get messy. They don’t look built to chase the game for long periods against an organised side like Millwall.
Still, Hull aren’t dead in the water. They’ve shown enough attacking life to suggest they can nick something if Millwall get too cautious. The first leg also reminded everyone that they’re capable of keeping things tight for spells. That said, they’ll need more than survival mode here. Jakirović needs a more decisive attacking performance, and he needs it quickly. Another cagey start won’t help them. Millwall will be happy with that.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been tight and argumentative for a while, which only adds to the pressure of a playoff decider. The last meeting finished 0-0 in Hull on 8 May, and that was far from unusual. Millwall did, though, beat Hull 3-1 at the MKM Stadium back in March, a result that stands out in a series that has otherwise been a bit of a slog for both sides.
Hull actually won the December meeting at The Den 3-1, so there’s no simple home-or-away pattern to rely on. What does stand out is how often this pairing has stayed low on flow and high on tension. You don’t tend to get easy afternoons here. You’d expect that again.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Millwall to win at 4/6 here. Our treble tips page is a useful companion here because it pulls together treble tips if you want a middle ground between singles and full accumulators. The first leg gave them a useful marker, even without a goal, and their recent body of work is stronger than Hull’s. Millwall are unbeaten in six, they’ve been far more secure defensively, and they looked the more controlled side in the opening leg despite the 0-0 scoreline. At home, that should count for plenty.
A 2-1 Millwall win feels the likeliest outcome. Hull have enough threat to make this awkward — they’ve scored in enough of their recent games to avoid being dismissed outright — but Millwall’s organisation and home edge should tell over 90 minutes. If you want a small alternative, Millwall and under 3.5 goals is the sensible safety play. This still looks like a tight playoff tie, but the home side have the better shape, the better momentum and the better chance of finding the one big moment that settles it.