One of the men behind behind the acclaimed Sunderland ‘Til I Die documentary series has admitted he may have to rethink a decision to call time on it if the club make it to the Champions League.
The third and final season of the Netflix show, which charts the Black Cats’ bid to fight their way out of Sky Bet League One at the fourth attempt, is due to hit screens next Wednesday and provide viewers with the happy ending the first two did not.
Ben Turner, a partner in the Fulwell 73 production company behind the documentary and a lifelong Sunderland fan, believes the story has drawn to a natural conclusion – at least for now.
However, asked if there could be another chapter to be written, he told the PA news agency with a smile: “This feels like the perfect final act from the two that we’ve made. To see us finally get back into to Championship and see us win, it packages that nicely.
“Whether we start a new trilogy, a new ‘Fellowship of the Ring’, to win us the Champions League is yet to be seen. But I’d never say never.”
Ben and brother Gabe, along with friends Ben Winston and Leo Pearlman, founded Fulwell 73 – the Fulwell End was a stand at Roker Park and the club won the FA Cup in 1973 – in 2005 and embarked upon their labour of love as Sunderland attempted to drag themselves back into the Premier League in the wake of relegation at the end of the 2016-17 season.
Things were to get significantly worse before they got better, and play-off final victory over Wycombe finally allowed Turner and his partners to reflect on joy rather than disappointment.
He said: “Part of the success of Sunderland ‘Til I Die is the suffering. In terms of making the show, that was often incredibly painful, especially being Sunderland fans, however good the TV was.
“It was a real joy both to make it and also to bring that on to the screen because those moments when I’ve been with the Sunderland fans and have celebrated when something good has happened and you hug a stranger and you sing together, they’re very, very special.”
The Turner brothers grew up in the south, but did so bound to Sunderland and its football club.
Turner said: “It was my grandmother who lived in Sunderland. My dad, who is a big Sunderland fan, grew up in London and when we would all come together, it was the fact that we all supported Sunderland that was the glue for the family.
Happy birthday, Marco Gabbiadini