Burnley's players sang their hearts out with a chart-topping popstar at their promotion party on Saturday.<br /><br />Turf Moor became a personal festival site for the Clarets as Scott Parker and his men danced around the pitch and lifted the second-place trophy after beating Millwall 3-1.<br /><br />They had already been promoted via a 2-1 win at Sheffield United on April 21 but were unable to seal the title in front of their fans despite equalling Leeds' tally of 100 points. <br /><br />It marks an immediate return to the Premier League after an outstanding season in which they conceded just 16 goals. They will have a bus parade on Tuesday.<br /><br />However, they managed a point fewer than in their previous promotion campaign under Vincent Kompany in 2022-23. <br /><br />After getting in a sweat on the pitch, it was time to turn the dressing room into a nightclub as they welcomed a noughties pop sensation. <br /><br />The players huddled together, busted their moves, and chanted Natasha Bedingfield's 'Unwritten' as the English popstar sang among them.<br /><br />That's right - Bedingfield, 43, whose 2004 single 'These Words' topped the UK charts, was in the thick of things as a special guest for the Lancashire side.<br /><br />Her song 'Unwritten' (most easily identified by the lyrics 'feel the rain on your skin') has been an unofficial anthem for them this campaign. <br /><br />Bedingfield performed for supporters and even shared a drink with manager Parker in the dressing room. <br /><br />Mihailo Ivanovic had given Millwall a lead inside 11 minutes, but Josh Brownhill restored parity a couple later.<br /><br />Jaidon Anthony put the Clarets in the driving seat in the second half, and Brownhill added another in stoppage time, but they were unable to unseat Leeds for the throne.<br /><br />Daniel Farke claimed his third Championship title on goal difference, having twice won it with Norwich, though Burnley still have a lot to be proud of.<br /><br />The plight of Luton, who suffered a second consecutive relegation, shows the perils of the Championship even for sides who have come down, but Burnley never looked like they would struggle. <br /><br />Burnley thrashed Luton 4-1 in the first game of their season and battered Cardiff 5-0 in the next to set the tone for a domineering campaign.<br /><br />At one stage, they kept 12 consecutive league clean sheets, a sign of their solidity under Parker. <br /><br />'I'm so proud. We came into today hoping it would go our way, but wanting to win the game and get to 100 points, we did that,' Parker said. <br /><br />'If you'd have said to me you'd reach 100 points, 33 games unbeaten, 16 goals conceded, and you wouldn't win the league, I'd have said "no chance". We've done remarkably this year.<br /><br />'Over the past month or so, when we've gone a goal down, the players' reaction is one of needing to get back in it. We were superb today, we had real quality, created numerous chances; on another day, it could have been a lot more.<br /><br />'The challenge goes up a level or two next year. We've got a rock-solid foundation, and we've proven that this season. We are going to rest, reboot,