After a 25-year exile, Coventry City will be back in the Premier League next season. The man in the dugout? None other than former Everton boss Frank Lampard, who seems to have finally found the managerial "redemption" that eluded him at Goodison Park

Frank Lampard’s 1-year tenure at Everton was, to put it mildly, a rollercoaster. But as Coventry City secured their promotion on Friday night with a gritty 1-1 draw at Blackburn, Evertonians might be forgiven for feeling a strange sense of déjà vu

For Evertonians, the scenes of Lampard celebrating with a 7,500-strong away end after a 1-1 draw with Blackburn felt eerily familiar. While the Sky Blues were clinching promotion rather than avoiding the drop, the "Super Frank" blueprint was all over it: late drama, emotional outbursts, and a heavy dose of that survivalist mentality he forged during his chaotic but unforgettable year at Goodison Park.

ToffeeWeb regulars will remember that night — the 2-0 half-time deficit, the Dele Alli cameo, and the pitch invasion sparked by Dominic Calvert-Lewin’s diving header. It was the night Lampard "got" Everton.

Speaking after Coventry's promotion was confirmed, Frank admitted that the spirit of that night has been his coaching "cheat code" at the CBS Arena:

"I’ve told these boys about that Palace game a dozen times. When we were 1-0 down tonight with ten minutes to go, I told them: 'I've seen a group of players look death in the face at Goodison and refuse to blink.' That Palace game taught me that momentum is a physical force. We used that tonight."

At Coventry, Lampard has traded the frantic "vibes-based" football of his later Everton days for a more disciplined 4-2-3-1. The Sky Blues are currently the Championship’s highest scorers, led by the clinical Haji Wright and a familiar face informer Everton Academy product, Ellis Simms, who has flourished under Lampard’s guidance.

But it wouldn't be a Lampard promotion without the "antics." We’ve seen:

  • The Fist Pumps: He’s brought back the triple-fist-pump to the fans, a move that became iconic at the Park End during our 2022 escape.

  • Touchline Flare-ups: A few heated exchanges with Championship officials have reminded us of the man who wasn't afraid to go toe-to-toe with Klopp or anyone else on the touchline.

  • The Redemption Arc: After being written off following his Chelsea caretaker stint, Lampard has rebuilt his reputation by taking a club that was languishing near the bottom in November 2024 and turning them into a promotion machine.

With Coventry securing promotion to the Premier League for the 2026-27 season, Lampard will return to the North West to meet Everton in the new Hill Dickinson Stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock.  No flimsy-looking flat-roofed executive boxes to climb up on...

But he remains a bit of a divisive figure among the faithful; some remember the passion he brought when we needed it most, while others recall the tactical naivety that led to his exit. Regardless, seeing "Super Frank" back in a Premier League dugout should provide something extra to watch next season.