'Immortality' awaits Walsall play-off hero - Kelly

David Kelly wearing a grey shirt and black jacketImage source, Getty Images
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The 1988 play-off final was David Kelly's last game for Walsall as he moved to West Ham for £600,000 that summer

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Walsall legend David Kelly says "immortality" awaits any Saddlers player who can score the goal to get them promoted at Wembley next week.

The Saddlers face AFC Wimbledon in the League Two play-off final on Bank Holiday Monday (26 May), bidding to end a six-year absence from the third tier.

It is only the third time Walsall have reached a play-off showpiece game - and they won both of the previous two.

The Saddlers beat Reading at the Millennium Stadium in 2001 and Bristol City back in 1988, winning promotion to the second tier on both occasions.

Kelly, now 59, scored a hat-trick in the 4-0 'third leg' replay win over the Robins 37 years ago, back when the play-off finals were decided over two legs, home and away.

That is a day still treasured by players and fans all these years later and Kelly told BBC Radio WM: "It's immortality for whichever player scores that winning goal."

While Kelly's Saddlers treble did not come at the national stadium, he did score there for Tranmere Rovers in their EFL Cup final defeat by Leicester City towards the end of his playing career in 2000.

Walsall, meanwhile, somewhat staggeringly for a club founded in 1888, have only ever played at Wembley once, losing the 2015 EFL Trophy final 2-0 to Bristol City.

So, should any Saddlers player find the net on Monday, they would write their name in Walsall folklore as the club's first ever Wembley goalscorer.

"It's a fabulous opportunity," former Republic of Ireland striker Kelly added.

"The build-up to a Wembley game is so very, very different. It's nerve-wracking, that's for sure.

"It's the home of football. It will be a very, very big crowd. It's something to look forward to and embrace.

"You very, very rarely get to play in the best stadium in world football – Wembley is the most iconic stadium out there. It's a big, big privilege to play there."

David Kelly dribbling with the ball for Walsall during a game in the 1980sImage source, Rex Features
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David Kelly scored 63 goals in 147 Walsall appearances between 1983 and 1988

While Kelly retains strong links with the club, another Walsall play-off hero - Darren Byfield, who scored the extra-time winner against Reading in Cardiff 24 years ago - is even closer.

Byfield, former husband of pop star Jamelia, is a member of Saddlers boss Mat Sadler's coaching team at Bescot.

He's witnessed a rollercoaster season first-hand. Walsall led the league by 12 points in January only to falter and end up in the play-offs after the agony of Bradford snatching the final automatic promotion place on the regular season's final day.

But they rebounded strongly to beat in-form Chesterfield 4-1 over two legs in the semi-final.

"Both performances, home and away, against Chesterfield, were brilliant - Mat [Sadler] set his team up really, really well," added Kelly.

"We would all have taken [at the start of the season] the play-offs. They've done brilliantly to get to the final and we just need that little bit of fortune to get over that fence and into League One."