Huddersfield Town will face six new sides in next season's Championship, with five already revealed.

Relegated Premier League trio Norwich City, Fulham and Cardiff City will play in the second tier next term, as will promoted duo Wolverhampton Wanderers and Brentford.

The identity of the sixth side will be discovered on Sunday, when Leyton Orient and Rotherham United face off in the League One play-off final, but we continue our series with promoted Wolves, who bounced straight back to the second tier having previously suffered back-to-back relegations from the Premier League to League One.

The season itself:

After two years of turbulence at Molineux, Kenny Jackett stepped in to arrest the slide and not only did that, but also achieved a comfortable promotion from League One as champions.

The mess left to him by Dean Saunders and Terry Connor before that gave Jackett the ultimate baptism of fire upon arrival at the club but he dealt with the situation admirably to turn things round in style.

He moved for experience in the transfer window and drafted in Sam Ricketts from Bolton Wanderers, who he would make his captain, as well as Kevin McDonald from Sheffield United, who was the star man in central midfield.

They recovered from an early setback as Morecambe dumped Jackett and his side out of the Capital One Cup at the first hurdle before they launched a five-game winning run which catapulted them to the upper reaches of the league table.

It proved a position they would not relinquish and, despite also suffering an FA Cup upset in the first round to Oldham Athletic, nine consecutive victories between January and March - fuelled by the goals of Nouha Dicko and Bakary Sako - led them to their ultimately comprehensive title success.

Highlights of the promotion campaign:

- A 1-0 win against strugglers Notts County does not sound as if it should appear in a section devoted to Wolves' seasonal highs, but it proved crucial to their promotion as they found themselves in the midst of one of their only blips of the season. Young defender Ethan Ebanks-Landell struck a late winner to seal all three points at Meadow Lane in November.

- Wolves secured a 2-0 win over Preston North End during January to strengthen their promotion push and hinder the Lilywhites. The victory spurred Jackett's men on to usurp Brentford and Leyton Orient at the top.

- Travelling to Brentford, unbeaten in 19 games, was Wolves' litmus test in the title race but they passed it with flying colours as they secured a 3-0 win at Griffin Park to leapfrog their hosts into second place.

- Wolves' turnaround was completed by a 3-1 win at Leyton Orient to seal the title in style after a dramatic 6-4 success against Rotherham Untied had put them in pole position.

Top scorer:

Nouha Dicko/Bakary Sako - The former only arrived in January this year but had a stunning impact up front for Jackett's side, netting two braces and a hat-trick in the stunning 6-4 win over Rotherham. He started the season out at the Millers and actually scored twice against Wolves in the reverse fixture, which was also a thriller, finishing 3-3.

Sako only managed to score more than once in a game on the one occasion - a 4-1 win at Swindon Town - but struck crucial goals at Shrewsbury Town, Rotherham and Leyton Orient to wrap up the title.

Other key players:

Kevin McDonald - The former Sheffield United man was one of the key reasons behind Wolves' promotion and was nominated for the League One Player of the Year, having scored five goals from midfield, but was pipped to the post by Brentford's Adam Forshaw.

James Henry - The winger proved the revelation of the season for Wolves. Having been snapped up by Millwall in the summer, Henry took League One by storm to notch 10 goals and register a further nine assists to finish as the club's most productive player.

Sam Ricketts - Jackett brought him in and immediately made him his new captain, with the manager reaping the rewards after the defender enjoyed a magnificent season. No other defender scored more goals than the 32-year-old, who also grabbed six assists, a tally bettered only by Henry and Scott Golbourne.

Last meeting with Town:

The Terriers and Wolves last faced off on April 13 2013, with Town emerging 3-1 winners at Molineux.

Town were ruthless against a poor defence to seal a come-from-behind win, having initially trailed to Stephen Ward's neat finish from a Kevin Doyle cross.

The visitors rallied, however, with Sean Scannell scoring a tremendous individual goal before Jermaine Beckford took centre stage, scoring twice to plunge Wolves - who also had Jamie O'Hara sent off - into the Championship relegation mire.

Did you know?

Gabriel Hanot, the French founder of the European Cup, once travelled to England to see Wolverhampton Wanderers FC play Honved and FC Spartak Moskva.

Wolves won both games and, to Hanot’s surprise, the Daily Mail proudly ran the headline: ‘Hail Wolves, champions of the world now’. Hanot felt that, with clubs like Real Madrid and AC Milan prominent, the claim was far-fetched and suggested in French newspaper L’Equipe that a European championship be organised between clubs.

Part one of the Huddersfield Town 2013/2014 end-of-season survey: the results - click here to read

Part two of the Huddersfield Town 2013/2014 end-of-season survey: the results - click here to read            

Huddersfield Town 2013/2014 end-of-season survey: the results at a glance - click here to read

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