The feature game at the top of the table this weekend sees Manchester City going to Anfield to face Liverpool on Sunday. The Citizens are still in the title race despite some damaging recent results. The deficit is now six points to catch Arsenal and win yet another trophy which no one, but Manchester City supporters, wants to see. Liverpool, the only side to interrupt Manchester City’s monopoly on titles over the past eight years, will be particularly keen to spoil the hopes of opposing Manager Pep Guardiola. Self-interest is also at play for Liverpool which, despite dashed title hopes, is still vying for the Champions League from its present sixth place position in the table.
Manchester United and Chelsea are immediately above the Reds, and both are within two points of the Reds in a lively scramble to secure participation in Europe’s premier tournament. Manchester United is home to Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday attempting to extend Manager Michael Carrick’s perfect run of three Premier League victories so far, including massive wins over Arsenal and Manchester City.
League leading Arsenal, meanwhile, is home to Sunderland on Saturday. The Black Cats have surprised the league with their current eighth place standing in the table after a nine-year absence from the league. Home results have powered the Black Cats’ success, however, and the road has been far less friendly. Sunderland visits the Emirates on Saturday with the fourth worst away record in the Premier League. Arsenal, meanwhile, has lost only to Manchester United at home this season.
Aston Villa could fall 10 points back of the Gunners, essentially ending their title hopes, should Arsenal handle Sunderland and Aston Villa falter at Bournemouth this weekend. Manager Unai Emery has seen his lineup ravaged by injury in recent weeks as new transfers such as Douglas Luiz and Tammy Abraham have been rushed into the lineup to help keep hope alive. Abraham had a goal reversed on VAR review last week in his debut performance as he stands in for the injured Ollie Watkins.
Bournemouth, meanwhile, has found form in recent weeks, winning three times in a four-match unbeaten run. The Cherries have displayed a penchant for dramatic stoppage time goals which includes a late winner at Liverpool two weeks ago.
Two consecutive losses, including last week’s demoralizing 4-1 defeat at Liverpool, have dropped Newcastle into the bottom half of the table. In the congested Premier League table, however, Newcastle is only three points south of seventh place Brentford, the Magpies’ Saturday opponent. Brentford stopped a two-match losing run of its own with a hard-earned win at Aston Villa last week where the Bees were obliged to play with ten men for the entire second half of a 1-0 victory.
Brentford is one of six teams separated by only three points in place 7-12 in the Premier League table, all of those clubs hoping to emerge from the gaggle and secure a spot in Europe next season. Two of those clubs, Fulham and Everton, will clash at Craven Cottage on Saturday. Everton may boast a four-match unbeaten run but three of those outcomes were draws with the Toffees scoring exactly one goal in each of the four matches.
Low scoring matches are Everton’s forte, not so much for Fulham. The two clubs have exactly the same goal differential, but Cottager matches have seen 69 goals scored in aggregate compared to just 53 balls finding the net in Everton matches. While Marco Silva and David Moyes are well regarded by Fulham and Everton faithful, respectively, a slew of dropped points in recent weeks has increased the heat on Brighton Manager Fabian Hurzeler.
The Seagulls are floundering far from the European places which supporters have now become accustomed to contending for. Brighton will be playing for its coach and trying to defeat a hated rival when Crystal Palace visits American Express Stadium on Sunday. The Eagles are trying to fly clear of the relegation zone and calm the disharmony between Manager Oliver Glasner and Chairman Steve Parrish over transfer policy. Alarmingly, the Eagles have not replaced center back Marc Guehi after the club captain’s transfer to Manchester City.
The relegation fight sees an important matchup on Friday when the Premier League weekend begins with a contest at Elland Road between Leeds and Nottingham Forest. The Whites and the Tricky Trees are both six points clear of the relegation zone as they fend off a suddenly threatening West Ham side and former Nottingham Forest Manager Nuno Espirito Santo. Leeds has joined the relegation battle after winning just two of its last ten Premier League matches, punctuated by a 4-0 home defeat to Arsenal last week.
Nottingham Forest has flirted with the drop zone throughout the season, Manager Sean Dyche having been brought in to replace Santo and ensure survival for the Tricky Trees. Santo meanwhile finds himself below the drop line with his Hammers currently one of the three clubs in the relegation places. Back-to-back victories had raised some optimism before the Hammers squandered a two-goal lead in a crushing 3-2 loss to Chelsea last Saturday.
West Ham faces lesser opposition this week, however, when it travels to Burnley. The Clarets are buried in the relegation zone after going winless in their last 15 Premier League matches. Only Wolverhampton, which hosts Chelsea on Saturday, has accumulated fewer points this season.

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