Middlesbrough kept their Championship promotion push on track with a 4-0 victory over Queens Park Rangers, cutting the gap to leaders Coventry City back to five points. Hayden Hackney’s outstanding strike headlined a dominant display at Loftus Road, where Kim Hellberg’s team rarely looked troubled after an early scare and controlled most areas of the match.
The result came one day after Coventry City stretched their advantage at the top, placing extra pressure on Middlesbrough. Hellberg’s side answered firmly, delivering a composed away performance that produced four different scorers. The win also underlined Middlesbrough’s strength on the road during the 2025-26 campaign, with another confident display in the capital.

The match opened with QPR threatening first, as Richard Kone tested Sol Brynn at the near post in the third minute. That chance sparked Middlesbrough into life rather than QPR, with the visitors then taking control. From that point, Middlesbrough dictated the tempo, restricted QPR’s attacks and steadily built pressure around the home penalty area.
The breakthrough arrived on 20 minutes, following a scramble inside the QPR box. Morgan Whittaker’s effort appeared to be heading on target, and David Strelec diverted the shot into the net from close range. Middlesbrough carried that 1-0 lead into half-time, having limited QPR to few clear sights of Brynn’s goal after Kone’s early attempt.
The contest moved out of QPR’s reach during a productive spell for Middlesbrough after the interval. By the 72nd minute, the visitors led 3-0. Luke Ayling’s volley crashed against the crossbar, and Alan Browne reacted quickest, meeting the rebound with a header at the back post to double the advantage.
Hackney then produced the game’s standout moment, underlining Middlesbrough’s superiority. After receiving the ball from Tommy Conway, Hackney controlled neatly before shaping a right-footed shot into the far corner. The effort clipped the post on its way beyond Joe Walsh, giving Middlesbrough a three-goal cushion and reflecting the control already built in midfield.
The scoring was completed from the penalty spot in the 88th minute. Conway drew a foul from Tylon Smith inside the area and stepped up to take the resulting kick. Conway finished calmly from twelve yards, adding a deserved goal to a lively display and confirming a convincing away success for Middlesbrough at Loftus Road.
Middlesbrough’s attacking threat was backed by strong underlying data across the 90 minutes. The visitors recorded an expected goals figure of 3.68 from 16 shots, compared with QPR’s 0.63 from nine attempts at Brynn’s goal. That gap reflected both Middlesbrough’s regular creation of clear chances and QPR’s struggle to generate meaningful openings.
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Individual numbers also highlighted Hackney’s influence on the match. Hackney led Middlesbrough in both chances created, with two, and shots, with three. In possession, Hackney completed 69 passes, a total bettered only by Ayling, with 105, and Aidan Morris, with 101, as Middlesbrough controlled large spells through accurate distribution.
Hackney’s performance came after January transfer speculation, with Nottingham Forest reportedly interested in the midfielder. The display here showed why several Premier League clubs are monitoring the Middlesbrough captain. Hackney’s contribution and leadership helped Middlesbrough secure a 10th away league win of the 2025-26 season, reaching double figures on their travels for the ninth time, with six of those seasons occurring since 2000.
Overall, Middlesbrough combined clinical finishing, controlled possession and solid defence to answer Coventry City’s earlier win. The 4-0 result strengthened their promotion credentials, maintained pressure at the top of the Championship, and highlighted Hackney’s growing importance. QPR, by contrast, were second best for long periods and rarely threatened to alter the outcome.