Huddersfield's two-year stay in the Premier League is over after their relegation to the Championship was confirmed.
Jan Siewert's side needed to win at Crystal Palace for their destiny to remain in their own hands, but their 2-0 defeat to Roy Hodgson's side on Saturday sealed their fate before the start of April.
Burnley's 2-0 victory over Wolves, coupled with Southampton's 1-0 win at Brighton, left Huddersfield 19 points adrift of safety with six games remaining.
The Terriers' return to English football's second tier was confirmed at the venue where they made their Premier League debut in such memorable fashion, beating Palace 3-0 on the opening day of last season.
But they have found their second campaign in the top flight a much more difficult proposition, registering just three wins so far from their 32 league matches.
The West Yorkshire club have become only the second club to be relegated this early in a season, matching Derby's record in the 2007/08 campaign.
Paul Jewell's Rams were relegated on March 29 that year after their 2-2 home draw with Fulham and Birmingham's 3-1 win over Manchester City left them 19 points away from safety with only six games left. Ipswich were also relegated with six games remaining, but in a 42-game season in 1994/95.
The downfall in stats
- Huddersfield have failed to score in 38 of their 70 Premier League games (54.3%) - the highest such percentage in the history of the competition.
- Huddersfield have been relegated with six games to play - the joint-earliest in terms of games in the Premier League era (Derby County - 2007/08 and Ipswich Town - 1994/95).
- Only Derby County who were relegated on March 29 in the 2007/08 campaign have been relegated sooner than Huddersfield in a Premier League season (March 30, 2019).
- Huddersfield boss Jan Siewert is the first permanent Premier League manager to lose his first five away matches in the competition since Ole Gunnar Solskjaer in 2013/14, when the Norwegian was Cardiff City manager.
How fate was sealed
Huddersfield had the better chances in an end-to-end first half, only denied the lead as Palace goalkeeper Vicente Guaita produced two wonderful saves to foil Chris Lowe.
But Palace dominated the second half and, after a number of wasted chances, Luka Milivojevic (76) opened the scoring from the spot, before Patrick van Aanholt (88) secured victory with a fine finish.
At Turf Moor, Dwight McNeil sealed the points for Burnley against Wolves, after Conor Coady's early own goal, and Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg's goal for Southampton at Brighton proved decisive as results combined to condemn the Terriers to the drop.
Reaction
Boss Jan Siewert: "It's a big disappointment for everyone in the club - for me, for the players. The important message is that we have to learn from our failures as a club. We have to look at everything that went wrong and try our best to get some good results in the next few games. It sums it up that a penalty killed us in this game."
Defender Christopher Schindler: "It's very frustrating. It's hard to find the right words. We have to be realistic - we knew maybe for six-eight weeks that we were going to need a miracle to stay up. I'm empty at the moment."
Palace boss Roy Hodgson: "All I can say is both he and his players should be very proud of their performances. There's a lot to between not winning and doing good things."