The Championship season draws to a close on Saturday, with a number of matters at the top and bottom still to be decided.
BBC Sport takes a look at what’s at stake and who could be celebrating or commiserating after what is shaping up to be a dramatic final day.
Town close in on successive promotions
Leicester City wrapped up the Championship title on Monday with a comprehensive 3-0 win at Preston.
The Foxes had had the weekend to celebrate promotion after Leeds’ shock 4-0 reverse at QPR on Friday confirmed their return to the Premier League at the first time of asking.
The Whites’ heavy defeat opened the door for Ipswich, who had two games in hand on them, to wrap promotion up before the final day.
Town have enjoyed a superb season and four points from a draw at Hull City and a win at Coventry mean they simply have to avoid defeat by all-but relegated Huddersfield to end their 22-year exile from the top flight.
Boss Kieran McKenna has overseen a remarkable turnaround in their fortunes and promotion this season will see them become the first team since Southampton in 2011 and 2012 to win successive promotions to the Premier League from League One.
Should the Suffolk side get the job done on Saturday it will also guarantee that once again the three teams relegated from the Premier League will not all bounce straight back.
“Every point in the Championship is hard fought,” McKenna told BBC Radio Suffolk. “We’ve got a team of professional footballers with a lot of pride (Huddersfield) coming to Portman Road to try and finish their season off well and to try and stop us.
“It’s a football match, anything can happen but all you can do is control all the things you can control to put the odds in your favour and you do that by getting the details of your performance right. That’s what our focus will be, as it has been for the last 45 league games as well.”
As for Leeds, three defeats from their past five games mean they are likely to be the first second-tier side since Sunderland in 1998 to win 90 points or more and not go up automatically.
They must beat play-off bound Southampton, who have lost their past three to play themselves out of top-two contention, and hope their West Yorkshire rivals can do them a huge and unexpected favour.
“I’m far away from being in a depression mode, it feels more like it’s great that after 45 games we still have the chance to finish in the top two,” Leeds boss Daniel Farke said.
“I want to go for it and try and surprise everyone. If it doesn’t work we go for the play-offs.”