Manchester City moved to the top of the Premier League table with a 1-0 victory over Burnley on Wednesday. Erling Haaland bagged the winner, his 24th Premier League goal of the season, in a back and forth first half which then gave way to Burnley curiously playing negative football through a turgid second half. City, nine points back in the title chase less than two weeks ago, now has the exact same point total and goal differential as Arsenal. The Citizens, however, own the tiebreaker as a result of having scored three more goals than the Gunners.
Arsenal, a loser in its last two outings, falls out of the top spot for the first time since October. Manchester City, now unbeaten in eleven matches, moves to the top spot for the first time since the season’s opening week. Burnley’s loss on Wednesday, meanwhile, relegates the Clarets to the second tier for the second time in three years. This Burnley side could make history as it still needs four more points to match the total of the Clarets’ worst ever Premier League point total. Burnley now joins Wolverhampton in having clinched places in the Championship next season.
A disjointed Week 34 kicked off Tuesday with another Chelsea disaster. The Blues were defeated 3-0 at Brighton to mark a fifth consecutive league loss, a run in which the club failed to score a single goal. The spiral has all but destroyed chances of a Champions League berth for next season and question now looms as to whether Chelsea will qualify for any continental football next season. An emergency meeting of Chelsea ownership on Wednesday resulted in the sacking of overmatched manager Liam Rosenior.
Former mangers Mauricio Pochettino and Enzo Maresca, each of whom had elusive moments of success, both left the club on bad terms with an ownership which thought it had its “company man” in Rosenior, who was managing another BlueCo club in France at the time of his January Chelsea appointment. Unfortunately, there are other requisites to be a successful Premier League manager and Rosenior has room for improvement in both tactics and man management.
Brighton, meanwhile, appears to be peaking at the right time after some struggles earlier in the season had raised questions about the future of its own young manager, Fabian Hurzeler. The 33-year-old Hurzeler, however, benefits from a solid operating model at Brighton and has never appeared cowed by the challenges of the English top division. The sacked Rosenior, meanwhile, seemed well out of his depth and was penalized by an operating strategy which appears to be a massive failure for Chelsea in the aftermath of the far more successful Roman Abramovich era. .@DannyWelbeck just gets better and better. 🍷 pic.twitter.com/diEDomXgNg
Brighton leapfrogged Chelsea into sixth place in the table on Tuesday as the Seagulls won for the sixth time in their last eight matches. The Seagulls have also now defeated Chelsea four of the last five times the clubs have met. Brighton’s success versus Chelsea has become a habit since Chelsea began poaching Brighton assets such as former manager Graham Potter, co-sporting director Paul Winstanley, midfielder Moises Caicedo, fullback Marc Cucurella, goalie Robert Sanchez, defender Levi Colwill and striker Joao Pedro.
Embarrassingly for the Blues, Brighton has proven adept at reloading, certainly helped by the funds received from player sales and compensation for the release of Potter and his staff. Brighton is now one point ahead of Bournemouth, Chelsea having fallen all the way to eighth. The Cherries lost an opportunity to move into the top six when Leeds’s Sean Longstaff struck the equalizer in the 97th minute of a 2-2 draw Wednesday at Bournemouth’s Vitality Stadium.
After a brief respite on Thursday, the Premier League restarts on Friday with Sunderland visiting Nottingham Forest. Sunderland still has a small chance for European qualification, but the stakes are much higher for the visiting Trees. Forest, despite winning two of its last three Premier League matches, is still vulnerable with just a four-point cushion versus the relegation line. The schedule, however, provides some odd encouragement for the Trees as Friday remains the only day of the week on which Sunderland has never won a Premier League match.
Six matches unfold on Saturday. Arsenal can, of course, afford no further slipups after two consecutive league losses, as the Gunners host flailing Newcastle, losers of their last three league outings. Tottenham Hotspur also faces a must win scenario. The struggling club, yet to measurably improve under new manager Roberto De Zerbi, must absolutely, positively secure their first league win of the calendar year against Wolverhampton which is already relegated. Spurs will join them if De Zerbi cannot engineer an immediate turnaround.
The other match with massive relegation implications takes place at London Stadium where West Ham are home to Everton. The Hammers are currently only two points above Spurs and could find themselves back in the relegation zone if results do not go their way this weekend. Elsewhere on Saturday, Liverpool can strengthen its stranglehold on the fifth Champions League spot if the Reds win their third consecutive league match when they host Crystal Palace while Manchester United, virtually assured of playing in Europe’s premier competition next season, hosts Brentford which desperately needs a win after five consecutive draws to advance their own European ambitions when the Bees visit Old Trafford.
Aston Villa, meanwhile, will share the same point total and rosy European outlook as Manchester United when Manager Unai Emery takes his squad to Fulham on Saturday. The Cottagers hopes for Europe, however, hang by a thread which will likely be severed if Fulham loses Saturday’s match at Craven Cottage.
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