Five years after their relegation from the Championship, Bolton Wanderers missed the chance of a fairytale return.
Their most recent spell in English football's second tier ended in 2019 at the tail end of former owner Ken Anderson's tenure.
That summer, the club went through the ringer - first entering administration, then being handed a 12-point deduction, before they narrowly averted liquidation.
A final hour takeover, led by chairman Sharon Brittan, rescued the club in August of 2019 with near neighbours Bury - themselves battling their own financial troubles - expelled from the EFL roughly around the time Wanderers were saved.
But even by that early stage of the season their fate was sealed and relegation to League Two followed.
Former Barrow boss Ian Evatt arrived after a Covid-curtailed season off the back of guiding the Bluebirds to the English Football League and was tasked with returning Bolton to the big time.
He led them out of League Two at the first attempt but two bites of the play-off cherry followed in three seasons, culminating in their display against the U's at Wembley.
Gone was the guile they had shown at points this season when they had pushed and pushed for a top-two spot, without the agony of another play-off campaign.
Even in their second-leg defeat by Barnsley there had been a fight about Bolton, battling to the very end.
But, ultimately, from the moment of Murphy's first strike, Wanderers looked down and out and unable to formulate a response to what their opponents had served them.
With some financial big hitters in League One next season, it will be a tough ask to regroup and go yet again for promotion after the manner in which they were beaten.