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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Nick Ames, Barry Glendenning, Tom Davies, Luke McLaughlin and John Brewin

Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

Watford's Juraj Kucka, Liverpool's Mohamad Salah and Nick Pope of Burnley.
Watford's Juraj Kucka, Liverpool's Mohamad Salah and Nick Pope of Burnley. Composite: Reuters, Getty Images

1) Win or bust for Liverpool and Spurs

For the second week in a row, Liverpool can get their work done before sitting back to see how Manchester City fare. The extent of any European bounce or, in City’s case, hangover may be hard to predict but Jürgen Klopp’s men have certainly built up a fearsome head of steam to carry into the final four games. Like Liverpool, Spurs have a rival sitting just above them who, by and large, keep on winning: falling five points behind Arsenal this weekend could prove very costly going into Thursday’s north London derby and it adds to the sense that neither team can really afford anything but victory at Anfield. Spurs were not especially convincing in beating Leicester but, with an on-song Harry Kane and Son Heung-min kept fresh for the best part of a week, might fancy exposing any tired legs from that monumental comeback at Villarreal. Seasons are on the line for both sides, who would doubtless have preferred different opponents at this point. NA

  • Liverpool v Tottenham, Saturday 7.45pm (all times BST)

2) City need to be built up for el gasico

Even before their midweek Champions League defeat at the Bernabéu, Manchester City’s home match against resurgent Newcastle looked one of the more likely banana skins on their top-flight run-in. Until, that is, you examined Eddie Howe’s record against Pep Guardiola – a miserable 11 defeats from 11 with an aggregate score of 34-5. All but one of those losses occurred before Wor Eddie joined Pep in the managerial ranks of the nation state-owned sportswashing vehicles, only to lose his first el gasico derby 4-0 at St James’ Park in December. His much-improved side travel to the Etihad Stadium to take on a team that were left floored and visibly distraught after their mugging by Real Madrid. It is up to Guardiola to rally his troops, a task that may take some doing. After City’s failure in a massive midweek test of their mettle, a season that promised so much could be completely derailed by Sunday evening. BG

  • Manchester City v Newcastle, Sunday 4.30pm

Oleksandr Zinchenko after the defeat in Madrid
Oleksandr Zinchenko reacts to the defeat in Madrid. Photograph: Michael Regan/Getty Images

3) United seeing out season of broken dreams

This is Manchester United’s penultimate match of a season when their remaining objective is a place in 2022-23’s Europa League. A win against an in-form Brighton will get them there but this wasn’t how it was supposed to be when Cristiano Ronaldo returned to the club last summer, as more optimistic fans dreamed Ole Gunnar Solskjær might be capable of restoring the glory days to Old Trafford. Ralf Rangnick was later brought in to change the club’s culture but will depart to coach Austria and make periodical returns for his consultancy role as the outsider he has always been. What legacy will the caretaker leave? Giving debuts to players such as Álvaro Fernández, the 19-year-old Spaniard, to follow the few minutes granted to Alejandro Garnacho against Brentford on Monday is about all there is left. United fans have spent much of the season as onlookers hoping Liverpool and Manchester City can slip up in some fashion. JB

  • Brighton v Manchester United, Saturday 5.30pm

4) Burnley owners make high-stakes game

The release of Burnley’s accounts on Wednesday revealed exactly how financially ruinous relegation could be for a club that were sitting on extremely healthy cash reserves before their leveraged buyout by ALK Capital in December 2020. In a nutshell, if Burnley go down they will not be financially well-placed to yo-yo straight back up and their situation could get an awful lot worse before it gets better. On the plus side the interim manager, Mike Jackson, has enjoyed a dream start after taking 10 points from his four games in charge, masterminding a team that have shown no shortage of character since the departure of Sean Dyche. Aston Villa travel to Turf Moor on Saturday for another game Burnley will view as eminently winnable against struggling opponents who have taken four points from the past 18 available. While the avoidance of relegation would constitute quite the heroic Houdini act for Burnley and their blameless fans, it remains to be seen if their owners deserve any such reprieve. BG

  • Burnley v Aston Villa, Saturday 3pm

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5) Watford’s fate to be sealed by Palace?

Encounters with Crystal Palace can stir bitter memories for Watford fans – 2013’s playoff final or the FA Cup semi-final of 2016, for example (even if that was avenged in the 2019 quarter-finals) – and the chances are that Saturday will bring another. Watford’s visit to Selhurst is likely to end in the confirmation of relegation and an unhappy return for Roy Hodgson to a former club where he is regarded fondly. Watford’s outgoing manager says this will be his last Premier League job and he will expect his side to at least go down fighting. They are doomed if they don’t win so will have to begin with the same intensity they initially demonstrated against Burnley last week before folding at the last. The trouble is that is likely to expose their defence to an attack that picked them apart in a 4-1 win at Vicarage Road in February. Wilfried Zaha, Jean-Philippe Mateta, Connor Gallagher and co have the form and potency to capitalise. TD

  • Crystal Palace v Watford, Saturday 3pm

6) Nketiah can hinder former teammates

Opportunity knocks for Arsenal on Sunday and it will be positively thrashing at the door if they face Leeds in the knowledge Spurs have failed to win at Liverpool. A fourth straight win could give them a foot in the Champions League; their previous three have not been particularly smooth going but squad players have stepped up and served them admirably. Chief among them has been Eddie Nketiah, who put in his best all-round performance for Arsenal in the victory at West Ham even if he did not score. Nketiah’s contribution outside the six-yard box has long raised question marks about him but he stretched the Hammers with intelligent runs, pressed ferociously and held the ball up well. Whether it is enough to keep him at the Emirates beyond this season remains to be seen but Nketiah has a crucial role to play over the coming fortnight, particularly as Alexandre Lacazette has looked so lacklustre in recent weeks. Against his relegation-haunted former loan club, Leeds, he should receive another chance to be a hero. NA

  • Arsenal v Leeds, Sunday 2pm

Arsenal’s Eddie Nketiah on the ball at West Ham.
Arsenal’s Eddie Nketiah was impressive in last week’s win at West Ham. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

7) Can Wolves stay away from the beach?

Short of marching out at Molineux to face Brighton last Saturday wielding buckets and spades while wearing handkerchiefs knotted at each corner on their heads, the players of Wolves could scarcely have looked more “on the beach” and were duly walloped, leaving Bruno Lage understandably furious. The manager said after the game that many of his charges are playing for their futures and even several of them may not be overly fussed whether that future is somewhere else. It has long been presumed that Chelsea will finish in the top four but with four games to go they have plenty of work to do. They will be hoping Lage’s warning fell on closed ears and Wolves continue their current sleepwalk to the end of the campaign. BG

  • Chelsea v Wolves, Saturday 3pm

8) Will Leicester’s Roman trip benefit Everton?

Leicester jetting off to Rome for a Thursday night Europa Conference League tie would appear to play into the hands of Everton, who remain in the relegation places despite grinding out an unlikely win against Chelsea last Sunday. The problem? The only time this season Everton have won on the road was against Brighton on 28 August, a result that left them sixth, with two wins and a draw from their opening three matches. Heady days. Fast-forward to the current, anxiety-ridden run-in and Sunday would seem a good time for them to double their tally of away wins for the campaign. Leicester will not be at full strength after their efforts in Europe, which must be a concern for Everton’s fellow relegation candidates, Leeds and Burnley. How much has that stirring win against Chelsea boosted Everton’s brittle confidence? LM

  • Leicester v Everton, Sunday 2pm

Richarlison celebrates the decisive goal for Everton against Chelsea with a flare he picked up off the pitch
Richarlison scored the decisive goal for Everton against Chelsea. Photograph: James Gill/Danehouse/Getty Images

9) Bees and Saints need one win for safety

When the fixtures came out last summer, Southampton at home in May could have been the kind of fixture Brentford fans would hope to be an end-of-season stroll, a calm celebration of safety – like a pre-season friendly but with an actual full house. It’s almost come to pass. Almost. What might have been a chance for fans to just kick back and enjoy Christian Eriksen’s elegance or a James Ward-Prowse set piece or two will be laced with just a touch of anxiety. With Burnley and Everton fighting hard below them, both sides could do with more than their tally of 40 points. Despite having the rare misfortune to catch Manchester United on a good day on Monday, Brentford should have the current form to carry them home while Ralph Hasenhüttl’s side have also turned in a few decent displays of late, notably in the win over Arsenal. All of which should provide the combination of quality and urgency to make this a game well worth watching. TD

  • Brentford v Southampton, Saturday 3pm

10) Smith has career direction to ponder

A penny for the thoughts of Dean Smith, who could have enjoyed some well-earned downtime after his dismissal from Aston Villa but chose instead to sup immediately from what has turned out to be a predictably poisoned chalice offered to him by Norwich. While he has not done a particularly bad job in East Anglia with the very limited players at his disposal, he has certainly not done a very good one and now has the stain of relegation on an otherwise impressive managerial CV. With West Ham visiting on Sunday for a game that is of little consequence to either team, this keen chess player could be forgiven for giving serious thought to his next move. BG

  • Norwich v West Ham, Sunday 2pm

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Man City 34 63 83
2 Liverpool 34 64 82
3 Chelsea 34 39 66
4 Arsenal 34 13 63
5 Tottenham Hotspur 34 20 61
6 Man Utd 36 5 58
7 West Ham 35 7 52
8 Wolverhampton 34 1 49
9 Brighton 35 -8 44
10 Newcastle 35 -16 43
11 Leicester 33 -6 42
12 Crystal Palace 34 3 41
13 Aston Villa 33 -2 40
14 Brentford 35 -11 40
15 Southampton 35 -17 40
16 Burnley 34 -15 34
17 Leeds 34 -34 34
18 Everton 33 -20 32
19 Watford 34 -37 22
20 Norwich 34 -49 21
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