The tale behind Sunderland's quest to end their four-year League One exile will be retold when the club returns to the small screen next week.
Netflix will screen the third season of its acclaimed 'Sunderland 'Til I Die' documentary, which charts the Black Cats' bid for promotion back to the Sky Bet Championship at the end of the 2021-22 campaign, from Wednesday, February 13.
The Fulwell 73 production picks up the story with 24-year-old chairman Kyril Louis-Dreyfus now at the Stadium of Light helm and manager Lee Johnson attempting to drag the club out of the third tier.
Johnson's reign was brought to a premature halt after his side, second in the table at the time, lost 6-0 at Bolton at the end of January 2022 with Alex Neil taking his place 12 days later.
Neil would go on to lead the club to a fifth-placed finish and into a play-off semi-final showdown with Sheffield Wednesday.
Ross Stewart's goal handed Sunderland a 1-0 first leg advantage which they defended at Hillsborough, where Patrick Roberts' stoppage-time strike secured a 2-1 aggregate victory and a trip to Wembley.
Wycombe lay between the Black Cats and their promotion dream under the famous arch, but Elliot Embleton and Stewart ensured it was they who triumphed 2-0 to secure the final place in the following season's Championship.
The fly-on-the-wall show documents the club's trials and tribulations on and off the pitch, but also highlights their impact on non-football staff - some of whom have established themselves as TV personalities in their own right in the two previous series - fans and the whole community.
Season one covered Sunderland's 2017-18 Championship campaign following their relegation from the Premier League, during which hopes of a swift
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