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point mire after Leeds screwed by Gudmundsson red card

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There were two huge games in the Premier League relegation battle on Sunday afternoon, before Tottenham Hotspur’s terrifying trip to Anfield.

Nottingham Forest, 18th, who played in the Europa League on Thursday, hosted Fulham. Leeds United, 15th, were at Crystal Palace, who played in the Europa Conference League on Thursday.

Both clubs with European exploits would have had their minds on their last-16 second legs.

That played into Leeds’ hands, as Palace are all but safe, but meant Forest would find it tough against a very unpredictable Fulham side, who were knocked out of the FA Cup by second-tier Southampton in their most recent outing.

Starting with Palace vs Leeds, where there were undoubtedly more talking points, or at least one significant talking point across two games with a combined zero goals, it was a tale of six fateful minutes for Daniel Farke’s side at the end of the first half.

Both games were rubbish. Both games did the ‘Premier League is boring’ defenders no good. Both games were entirely forgettable, but a decent point on the road for Leeds considering they played the entire second period with 10 men.

It really depends which way you look at it. Palace played on Thursday, aren’t very good this season, have a manager who hates everyone and everything, and, most importantly, Leeds missed a penalty.

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As the second half drew to a close, Eagles captain Will Hughes decided he was playing volleyball at a corner, and Dominic Calvert-Lewin stepped up to shoot wide of Walter Benitez’s goal.

It was an abysmal, rushed spot-kick from a reliable player, yet it wasn’t the most miserable thing to happen before half time.

Another one of Leeds’ more reliable players, Gabriel Gudmundsson, was sent off for a second bookable offence in the sixth minute of injury time.

Referee Thomas Bramall carded Gudmundsson and seemed to forget the Leeds defender was already on a yellow, which resulted in a sheepishly given red card.

Only Ismaila Sarr, who was the one fouled, seemed to remember, and had Bramall remembered, he probably wouldn’t have brandished a second yellow.

You could just tell it wouldn’t have been a booking had Gudmundsson’s 27th-minute yellow been on his mind, which reaffirms what we already knew: the threshold for first and second yellows are absolutely different in the mind of a Premier League referee.

Some might think that’s right, others might think that’s wrong. But a carded Brennan Johnson getting away with one in the second half was an alarming lack of consistency on a day that left Leeds fans fuming.

Ultimately, they held on to a point and will take solace from that, especially after Jefferson Lerma had a late winner disallowed for offside against that man Johnson.

It’s a point further away from the relegation zone, which is currently occupied by Wolverhampton Wanderers, Burnley, and West Ham United.

Leeds sit on 32 points after 30 games, three points above West Ham, Nottingham Forest, and Tottenham, who play Liverpool later on Sunday.

Forest join Spurs and the Hammers on 29 points after their goalless draw against Fulham.

Dan Ndoye had a goal disallowed in the second half for the narrowest of offsides you’ll see, which would have been gargantuan for Forest and Spurs.

It’s now over to Spurs at Anfield. Eek.

It’s not the absolute worst pair of results in the world for them, but they still look like the worst of the four teams fighting against each other to avoid 18th, above Burnley and Wolves.

The two teams above and the three below Spurs all drew this weekend, and while the immediate focus is obviously on this Liverpool game, it’s hard not to think about Forest’s trip to north London next week.

What a game to go into the international break.

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Tudor sack: Spurs 'emergency' appointment plans revealed as double rejection blow, four top targets surface

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Tottenham Hotspur are reportedly planning to make an ’emergency’ manager appointment, but they have already been rejected by two targets.

Spurs recently brought in Igor Tudor to replace Thomas Frank, but this has proven a disastrous appointment for the relegation candidates.

Under Tudor, Spurs have lost their last four matches against Arsenal, Fulham, Crystal Palace and Atletico Madrid, with reports in recent days claiming the head coach could lose his job if his side loses against Liverpool on Sunday.

Respected journalist David Ornstein revealed on Friday that the north London club are ‘actively working’ on appointing a new manager, so they could have a new boss in the dugout for next weekend’s relegation six-pointer against Nottingham Forest.

On Saturday morning, talkSPORT claimed Man Utd have ‘sounded out’ up to eight possible candidates to replace Tudor, but they have since added that they will not appoint Roberto De Zerbi before the summer.

READ: Liverpool vs Tottenham predictions: Igor Tudor to be sacked after fifth Spurs defeat

De Zerbi has been out of work since leaving Marseille earlier this year and is widely reported to be a leading target to be Tottenham’s next long-term boss, with Mauricio Pochettino another option.

However, talkSPORT are reporting that he has ‘no plans to return to management before the end of the season’, and this leaves them with four targets.

The report claims:

‘De Zerbi is on Tottenham’s list of potential targets as they are set to sack interim Igor Tudor. It means that Spurs are down a candidate to come in and save them in their relegation battle in the Premier League.

‘Sean Dyche is a possible option, while ex-boss Mauricio Pochettino, Ryan Mason and Robbie Keane are options too.’

As mentioned, Dyche is a candidate for Spurs, and a report from Football Insider’s Pete O’Rourke claims they are targeting an ’emergency replacement’ for Tudor.

But O’Rourke also claims Dyche’s ‘stance’ on joining Spurs is that he is not keen on taking the position.

O’Rourke explained: “If they have to make a change and replace Igor Tudor so early, they’re going to have to make a decision quickly.

“And I think they’ll want somebody who’s used to being in a relegation fight.

“Obviously, Sean Dyche has that on a CV.

“He’s been a firefighter in previous jobs and has a proven track record of keeping teams in the Premier League, he kept Burnley and Everton up.

“He would’ve ticked a lot of boxes being out of work as well, but he is believed to be unwilling to take the role as Tottenham boss.”

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Tudor sack: Tottenham 'consider eight options' as Slot tipped to be next Spurs manager on one condition

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Liverpool boss Arne Slot has been tipped to be the next Tottenham manager on one condition, while Spurs are ‘considering eight options’.

Spurs could make another manager change in the coming weeks as current boss Igor Tudor has had a dire start, losing all four of his games in charge.

It was initially reported that Tudor would be given until the March international break to improve Tottenham’s situation, but the manner of his side’s midweek 5-2 loss to Atletico Madrid has forced a change in their thinking.

On Friday night, respected journalist David Ornstein revealed Spurs are ‘actively working on options’ to replace Tudor and they could make a change if/when they lose to Liverpool on Sunday afternoon.

After Liverpool, Tottenham’s remaining games before the next international break are the home second leg against Atletico Madrid and a relegation six-pointer against Nottingham Forest.

READ: Liverpool vs Tottenham predictions: Igor Tudor to be sacked after fifth Spurs defeat

Despite Tudor’s embarrassing start at Spurs, Paul Merson has explained why he is not surprised that he did not get dismissed after the loss to Atletico Madrid.

“I am and I’m not.I am because of the results and I’m not because it’s Liverpool away,” Merson said on Sky Sports.

“I don’t know what manager would want to come in for that game. There are timings – I think they will wait until this game is over and it gives them another week then before the big game.”

And Merson has also named struggling Liverpool boss Slot as a candidate to join Spurs in a warning to the Dutchman.

“He will have to get in the top four, I would have thought, otherwise he’d be [the next] Tottenham manager,” Merson claimed.

“If he won the FA Cup but didn’t finish in Champions League positions it wouldn’t make any difference at all. I think Liverpool have got to get in the Champions League with the [financial] fair play rule.

“The more you get into the Champions League, the better quality player you can bring in.”

Slot would realistically only be an option for Spurs in the summer and if the north London side avoids relegation from the Premier League.

And a report from talkSPORT claims Spurs are ‘considering eight options’ to replace Tudor before the end of this campaign, with the head coach ‘informed’ of his situation.

The report explains:

Tottenham are sounding out up to eight names to replace Igor Tudor as manager. TalkSPORT understands that Tudor has already been informed that Spurs are looking at other options.

‘One of the reasons for transparency is to try and bring forward the search for a permanent boss, the club are aware this is difficult but has not been ruled out.’

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Liverpool vs Tottenham: predictions, expected line

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Liverpool fans won’t forget this same fixture last season when, in the late April sunshine, the Reds thumped Tottenham 5-1 to clinch the Premier League title.

It’s a very different story this time with Arne Slot’s side in sixth and battling hard to claim a Champions League spot for 2026/27.

But if they’re looking for accommodating opponents to help them achieve that goal, step forward Spurs.

Tottenham are in freefall. They’ve lost six matches in a row for the first time in history and Igor Tudor is under pressure to keep his job, having lost all four of his games.

When it appears things can’t get any worse, Tottenham prove they can.

A series of disastrous errors in midweek led to a 5-2 thumping away to Atletico Madrid and they’ve shipped 14 goals in their last four games.

Then again, it was hardly a midweek to remember for Liverpool either. They lost their Champions League last-16 first-leg tie 1-0 away to Galatasaray.

How to watch Liverpool v Tottenham

Liverpool v Tottenham kicks off at 16:30 GMT on Sunday, March 15 at Anfield.

The game will be shown live on Sky Sports Main Event & Sky Sports Premier League, with coverage starting from 16:00.

BBC Radio 5 Live will provide full match commentary.

Liverpool team news

Arne Slot reported on Friday morning that goalkeeper Alisson could be back in time after missing the last two matches with a muscle injury.

Giorgi Mamardashvili stands by if Slot decides the game will come too soon for the Brazilian.

Federico Chiesa missed the trip to Galatasaray but could be back following an illness to give the Reds another attacking option from the bench.

Conor Bradley, Wataru Endo and Giovanni Leoni are out for the rest of the campaign, while Alexander Isak continues his rehabilitation following a fractured fibula and ankle problem sustained in the reverse fixture against Tottenham in December.

Liverpool expected line-up

(4-2-3-1) Alisson; Gomez, Konate, Van Dijk, Kerkez; Gravenberch, Mac Allister; Salah, Szoboszlai, Wirtz; Ekitike.

Tottenham team news

Spurs have suffered with injuries all season and Mohammed Kudus, Dejan Kulusevski, James Maddison, Wilson Odobert, Lucas Bergvall, Ben Davies, Destiny Udogie and Rodrigo Bentancur all remain sidelined.

To make matters worse, defender Micky van de Ven is suspended due to his red card in the 3-1 defeat to Crystal Palace.

Tudor will also be without both Cristian Romero and Joao Palhinha after they clashed heads in the heavy defeat to Atletico.

Yves Bissouma has been ruled out with a muscle injury and Conor Gallagher is a doubt as he battles a fever, although the January signing is likely to feature.

Tudor confirmed that Guglielmo Vicario will replace Antonin Kinsky in between the sticks after the latter made two mistakes against Atletico.

Tottenham expected line-up

(4-2-3-1) Vicario; Porro, Danso, Dragusin; Spence, Gallagher, Sarr; Kolo Muani, Simons, Tel; Solanke.

Liverpool v Tottenham stats

– Liverpool have lost just one of their last 31 home league games against Tottenham (W21 D9), and are unbeaten in 14 (W10 D4) since a 2-0 loss in May 2011.

– Tottenham have won just one of their last 16 Premier League games against Liverpool (D3 L12), losing the last four in a row since a 2-1 home win in September 2023.

– Liverpool vs Tottenham is the highest-scoring fixture in Premier League history, with 209 goals. Liverpool have scored 127 of these.

– Liverpool have lost nine Premier League games this season, more than they did in 2023-24 (4) and 2024-25 (4) combined (8). The Reds last suffered 10+ defeats in a league season in 2015-16 (10), and last did so under a single manager in 2014-15 under Brendan Rodgers (12).

– Tottenham have lost each of their last five Premier League games; only in February 1994 (7) and November 2004 (6) have they ever suffered 6+ successive defeats in their league history.

– Only Sunderland (25) have seen fewer goals in the first halves of their Premier League games this season than Liverpool (28 – 16 for, 12 against). On the other hand, Liverpool’s second halves have produced a league-high 59 goals (32 for, 27 against).

– Tottenham are the only side without a Premier League win so far in 2026, drawing four and losing seven of their 11 games.

– Liverpool’s Mo Salah has scored 16 goals in his career against Tottenham in all competitions (14 for Liverpool, 1 for Fiorentina, 1 for Basel), his joint-most against a single opponent (also 16 v Manchester United).

– Richarlison has been involved in more Premier League goals against Liverpool than any other opponent (8 – 5 goals, 3 assists), including five in five games with Spurs (3 goals, 2 assists).

Liverpool v Tottenham predictions

Liverpool continue to prove hit and miss. But at least that’s better than Spurs who are miss and miss.

After suffering six straight defeats, it’s hard to see how that streak doesn’t extend to seven.

Tottenham are in a complete mess and this is where the Tudor era could end.

Liverpool are extremely short at 1/3 so the bet here could be backing Liverpool to win and both teams to score.

Despite a series of woeful results, Spurs are still managing to find the net at some point in matches. They banked two goals in Madrid and have scored in 23 of their last 26 games.

Liverpool to win and both teams to score is 17/10.

Florian Wirtz has four goals in his last nine Premier League games and could easily have bagged a couple against Galatasaray.

The classy German will certainly relish the chance to punch a hole in this woeful Spurs backline. Wirtz to score anytime and both teams to score pays 5/1 if you’re playing a Bet Builder.

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Merson reveals only reason Tudor hasn’t been sacked by Tottenham after Ornstein update

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Tottenham would have already sacked Igor Tudor if Spurs didn’t have to face Liverpool at Anfield in their next match, according to Paul Merson.

Tudor replaced Thomas Frank in the middle of February with Tottenham in terrible form before the Dane was sacked by the north London club.

Tottenham have not improved under Tudor with the Croatian interim boss losing all four of his matches in charge of the club.

Spurs are now in serious danger of being relegated from the Premier League with Tudor’s side just one point ahead of the Premier League’s drop zone.

Their 5-2 loss against Atletico Madrid marked a new low after Tudor decided to start young goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky in one of the biggest matches of the season, before deciding to substitute him after just 17 minutes with Tottenham 3-0 down.

The Athletic‘s David Ornstein revealed on Friday night that Tottenham ‘are actively working on options to replace’ Tudor if Spurs lose to Liverpool on Sunday.

READ: Why Leeds will go down over Tottenham, Kinsky case study, and f*** the celebrity circus in the EFL

Ornstein added: ‘Spurs are contingency planning for the event of bringing Tudor’s reign to an end following the Anfield trip.’

When asked if he was shocked that Tudor was still in charge of Tottenham, Merson told Sky Sports: “I am and I’m not.I am because of the results and I’m not because it’s Liverpool away.

“I don’t know what manager would want to come in for that game. There are timings – I think they will wait until this game is over and it gives them another week then before the big game.”

Put to him that a new manager could have seen a trip to Liverpool as a free hit, Merson replied bluntly: “No. Who did we see it with, Ange (Postecoglou)? At Forest? he took it at Arsenal, they got ripped to shreds and it was the start of going down. It’s not a free hit at all, you come in and get beat three or four and it’s, ‘what has he done?’.

MORE TOTTENHAM COVERAGE ON F365…

* Leicester collapse is the warning sign Spurs, West Ham and Forest all ignored

* Tottenham: Tudor reveals injury, illness hammer blows as Spurs can ‘cry or fight’

* Vinai Venkatesham fires clear shots at Daniel Levy’s running of Tottenham in worrying ‘sales’ update

“I think they will wait and I’ll be shocked if he’s manager next week against Nottingham Forest.”

Tottenham interim boss Tudor insists that the rumours that he could be replaced make him “laugh” as the reality would just be “hope” that things will change.

Tudor told Sky Sports on Friday: “People think a new coach will come in and things will change and the problems will resolve. It makes me laugh.

“When people want a new coach, it’s a new hope. People always want new hope that things will change but the reality is totally different. The reality is not that.

“In this world where everyone has an opinion, you can never win. But as coaches we have to focus on what we can change. We need to stay calm and believe in ourselves.”

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Why Leeds will go down over Tottenham, Kinsky case study, and f*** the celebrity circus in the EFL

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The Mailbox reckons Leeds United are the most likely club to take 18th place in the Premier League as Tottenham will ‘wake up soon’.

Plus, we have an Antonin Kinsky case study after his nightmare against Atletico Madrid, why only three clubs are likely to win the Champions League and some are not happy with Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney doing alternative commentary of Wrexham versus Swansea.

Send your thoughts to theeditor@football365.com

Goalkeepers, Confidence, and the Kinsky Case Study

Watching Antonín Kinský against Atlético Madrid was a reminder of something that rarely gets discussed properly outside goalkeeping circles: confidence is not just helpful for a goalkeeper — it is the position’s operating system.

When a striker loses confidence, he might snatch at chances or hesitate in the box. When a defender loses confidence, he might drop a yard deeper or play it safe. But when a goalkeeper loses confidence, the entire defensive structure starts to wobble because the goalkeeper’s decisions affect everything: positioning, command of the area, communication, distribution, and even how brave the back line feels.

Kinský’s performance was a textbook example of that erosion happening in real time.

Early in the match, you could see the hesitation. Crosses that normally would be claimed were punched. Punches that should have been confident became half-measures. His starting positions looked uncertain — sometimes a step too deep, sometimes oddly aggressive. And the moment a goalkeeper starts second-guessing himself, the whole game speeds up around him.

Goalkeeping is the one position where doubt multiplies instantly. A striker can miss three chances and still score the fourth. A goalkeeper doesn’t get that luxury. One moment of uncertainty can spiral because the next decision arrives within seconds.

You could see it in the body language. The shoulders drop slightly. The set position becomes rigid instead of reactive. Instead of reading the game, the goalkeeper begins anticipating mistakes — his own.

And the cruel thing is that confidence for a goalkeeper is rarely rebuilt during a game. Once it slips, every action becomes heavier. A routine catch feels like a test. Every shot feels like an exam.

It reminded me of that famous line from Rocky Balboa: “It ain’t about how hard you hit. It’s about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward.” For goalkeepers, that resilience is everything. They live in a psychological environment where mistakes are public, immediate and often decisive.

The best goalkeepers — the Buffons, Neuers, van der Sars — have that almost irrational certainty about them. Even after mistakes, they still attack crosses, still command their area, still play with the same authority. Confidence for them isn’t just form; it’s identity.

What Kinský’s night showed is how fragile that identity can be when things start going wrong.

And it’s why goalkeeping might be the most psychological position in football. You’re the last line of defence, the first point of attack, and the only player on the pitch whose mistake usually ends up on the scoreboard.

When confidence goes, everything goes with it.

Gaptoothfreak, Man. Utd., New York (René Higuita was oozing confidence when he made that scorpion save back in ’95)

EPL is tougher, if not better

There/s a lot of noise implying Arsenal won’t be worthy winners of the Prem this year, if they manage to cross the line ahead of the rest. And, of course, this was given a boost with this week’s performances in Europe. Summarized as, the Prem is really shit, so that makes Arsenal, who may win the Prem pretty shit too.

The first ‘myth’ is that a league can only get stronger because the historic best teams are stronger – in this case, trashing teams in Europe – is just one perspective.

But what if it’s because the rest of the league—the other 14 teams—have improved dramatically? Making it much harder for the ‘best’ teams to dominate, to play the way they want to, and not force them to change style or find new ways to win.

At the same time, having to play tougher league games throughout the season takes its toll on those ‘best’ teams. It’s no coincidence that the English teams in the CL were winning easily and securing many of the top-8 positions in the CL first round while they were still relatively fresh. But the winter season is always tough in the Prem – something Klopp discovered.

If you watch any games from the other top 5 leagues in Europe, you can see how relatively uncompetitive these leagues are. The Premier League money gap is so huge that teams guaranteed relegation continue to fight all the way because the rewards are substantial, but the downside is a massive chasm. Relegated in Serie A, Bundesliga, La Liga, or Ligue 1? The gap isn’t so great. Maybe going down for one season isn’t so bad.

The reality is that any team that wins the Premier League deserves it. Being better than the rest over 38 games, playing everyone home and away, living with the same rules and yet still managing to top the league. And generally doing well across 4 fronts too.

The Premier League is definitely tougher. It makes it a slog for the teams vying for the top, especially with almost constant midweek football. Time to lay off Arsenal (not a fan.)

Paul McDevitt

Place your bets!

I was having a chat with friends about football over drinks (as you do), and the subject of predicting the Champions League winner for 2026 inevitably came up. I decided to do some digging which has thrown up some pretty interesting observations, the simplest of which was that in order to win, you most likely needed to have been at least semi-finalists the year before.

Here’s the run-down of the winners from the last 10 years, and their final positions the year prior to winning.

Only twice in the past 10 years has any team won without being at least semi-finalists the year before.

Even then, Bayern had form by being semi-finalists two years prior, while Chelsea were the only real dark-horses, having gone out in the Round of 16 both years prior to winning.

Of the teams remaining this year, 3 of them were in the semi-finals last year – Arsenal, Barcelona and eventual winners PSG.

If you’re a betting person, there’s an 80% chance your eventual winners will be one of these 3 teams (based on 8 of the last 10 winners being semi-finalists the year prior). There’s a 10% chance of it being Bayern who were quarter-finalists in 2025 and semi-finalists in 2024, slightly bettering their own form prior to winning in 2020. And there’s a 10% chance of it being Real Madrid due to the sheer weight of experience (quarters in 2025, winners in 2024, semi’s in 2023, winners in 2022, semi’s in 2021), not to mention being champions 5 times in the last 10 years.

Anyone else is going to be the longest shot underdogs simply due to their lack of experience in handling the pressure at the business end of the tournament.

Sanjit (would love a Bodø/Glimt underdog story though!) Randhawa, Kuala Lumpur.

The Case For Relegation

There are 4 teams in realistic danger of relegation, and so I wanted to make the case for each of them as I think it’s quite an intriguing battle down there. I find it really hard to make a convincing case that any of them will go down, though of course, one has to.

We can delve in to the underlying stats and tactics etc of each team, but those things should only be considered in things like Champions League two-legged ties, and top of the table conversations; the teams at the bottom aren’t deserving of those kind of discussions as relegation is a vibes-based thing.

West Ham: Currently 18th

The FA Cup 3rd Round weekend was a turning point — it was when Taty and Pablo came in, and enabled Summerville to start being good and let Nuno do what he wants to do with his front line. Plus Disasi being the no-nonsense antidote to the all-nonsense Kilman. Before that point, 14 points from 21 games. Since then 14 points from 8 games. That’s 1.75 points a game over a good sample size, translating to 66.5 points over a season. Only 2 losses away at Chelsea and Liverpool, scoring twice in each (though admittedly conceding 3 & 5). Everyone looking happy in a group photo in the dressing room post Brentford FA Cup win. Everyone seems to be pulling in the right direction. They’ve clicked, they’ll be fine, on that form could even bridge the gap up to 14th. Admittedly I’m a fan, but I know the patterns of our club, and this mirrors early days of Moyes Mk.2.

Forest: Currently 17th

Since Vitor has come in they’ve only picked up a single point from 3 games in the league. But I truly think they pass the eye test. Losing to Brighton isn’t ideal, but their performance in the Liverpool loss was actually excellent, and then to get a score draw away at the Etihad is really impressive. Plus that handsome Fenerbahce away win. I think that once their fixtures start to get a bit nicer that they’ve got enough to get themselves maybe 3 wins, taking them to 37pts, and maybe the odd draw might keep them safe. Of their remaining 9 games I’d only look at Chelsea and United away as being games that they can probably write off. The others (even Villa, Fulham and Bournemouth) are the kind of games that scrapping teams will consider winnable with backs against the wall.

Spurs: Currently 16th

Honestly, Spurs going down would bring me happier tears than when Leicester won the league. I’d even love to see Arsenal win the league to compound their misery, and for it all to happen on May Bank Holiday so fans of all other London clubs can gather for a celebratory drink at Seven Sisters station. They’re on their worst ever run of form in the Premier League Era, and their worst winless streak in 91 years. So it would seem to make them favourites. However…again, based on vibes and history, whenever I want something bad to happen to a Big 6 team, they all eventually find some muscle memory and turn it around quite quickly. After all, in 2019 they decreed that they were too good for the Champions League and tried to break away. So I’m expecting them to wake up soon and remember who they are; they could easily beat Brighton, Wolves and Leeds.

Leeds: Currently 15th

Leeds have been just about touching competent all season, not ever being bad, not ever particularly catching the eye for being great. They were heavily tipped to go back down due to A) Daniel Farke, and B) their own recent history. So this kind of quiet, steady competence is actually really promising for Leeds and their fans should be happy. But…it’s not been enough to get them in amongst that mid-table set; they’re 6 points away from the team above them, and one game week could see them in the drop zone albeit with a big GD swing. In a relegation run-in you need a bit of momentum, and their good and bad results have been spread too thinly all season, and I don’t know if they’ll find the fight to pull themselves fully clear. Plus they have to play 2 of the others, both of which are seeing Leeds as winnable.

Honourable Mention: Brighton, Currently 14th

They’re 9 points above it. But Hurzeler is a bit of a snivelling dweeb, and no one realistically knows or cares about them or any of their players; as far as I’m concerned, they’re simply a bunch of baristas who play midfield. Their results are always impossible to predict, and always have been, they’re basically just a CPU-controlled team that only exist to provide notable results against more popular teams (eg the odd battering of United, or letting Palace play themselves back in to form). Their remaining games are not easy. By their very nature, they could win/draw/lose any of them, and no one other than their fans will notice until GW37.

Final Verdict: While 4 of the teams are not easy to like, so will provide a lot of enjoyment for neutrals if they go down, it wouldn’t surprise me if Brighton, the team no one cares about, go down (see also Man City always winning and no one caring). BUT — it will ultimately be Leeds United who I’m putting my fiver on to go down. The others have momentum or muscle memory, and Brighton’s week-by-week random dice-roll results will see them through.

Sam

READ: Leicester collapse is the warning sign Spurs, West Ham and Forest all ignored

F*** the celebrity circus

I’ve just seen that Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney will be doing an alternative commentary for the Wrexham vs Swansea game on Sky Sports.

Apparently the normal commentary will still exist on another channel, which is something at least, but the fact Sky are even doing this tells you exactly where football broadcasting is drifting. The Wrexham story has already become more about a television show than a football club, and this feels like the next step in turning actual matches into a ridiculous celebrity sideshow.

It’s already embarrassing enough that whenever Wrexham appear on television we have to endure the presenters rolling out the same tired lines about how “a touch of Hollywood has arrived in [insert town here] today.” The football almost feels like a supporting act to the narrative.

Wrexham’s owners are actors, Swansea now has Snoop Dogg involved, and Sky are leaning straight into the spectacle because they know it pulls in viewers who might never normally watch a Championship game. From a marketing point of view I understand why they’re doing it. From a football point of view it’s embarrassing.

It’s easy to laugh this off as a novelty, but things like this have a habit of becoming normal once broadcasters realise it generates clicks and attention. Today it’s Reynolds and McElhenney commentating on their own club. Tomorrow it’ll be influencer watch-alongs, celebrity pundit panels, and whatever other gimmick someone in a production meeting thinks will play well on social media.

Football used to manage perfectly well with commentators who actually did the job professionally and broadcasts that focused on the game rather than whoever happens to have bought a small stake in a club. This sort of stunt just reinforces the feeling that the sport is slowly being repackaged as entertainment content rather than treated as a competition.

Perhaps I’m just old-fashioned, but it’s hard not to feel that this is only the beginning.

Ant MUFC (Awaiting the day Sky hand Avram Glazer and Jim Ratcliffe the microphones for a United game)

Yes and no

System over individuals you say? Last season two direct free kicks scored for the first time ever and none since by a 100mil midfielder?

When there is high intensity and physicality, there is no room for technical prowess. A little bit of slowness is needed sometimes. Especially this season, all teams in pl are playing in a similar way so your best game might be conditioned to something else. Similar to a top team in the French league. Sure, competition might be higher but it is on a different game.

Or maybe I’m wrong. It was indeed the system which made Rice punch two holes. Similar to the system which had Pitarch, Diaz making rare starts at home give us a win.

Of all the matchups, Arsenal were the most outplayed. Liverpool a close second.

Madrid fan

Transfer merry-go-round

As we already have the managerial merry-go round, I thought it an excellent suggestion by Mark for a managerial transfer window.

We could see Arse-ball binned in the January transfer window by say Don Carlo, to get them over the line.

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Spurs, West Ham and Nottingham Forest all ignored biggest Premier League warning

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Spurs, West Ham and Forest could tumble towards League One like Leicester - Football365
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Relegation is becoming more dangerous than ever. Leicester City’s collapse shows why. Just ten years after lifting the Premier League trophy, the club now face the possibility of dropping into League One following a six-point deduction.

Their demise is a real warning for West Ham, Nottingham Forest and Tottenham, who are currently split by just one point. Being Too Good To Go Down often means high wages and a squad unsustainable without Premier League wealth.

Leicester’s relegation to the Championship in 2022/23 was completely unexpected. Brendan Rodgers had led the team to eighth the year prior, following fifth and FA Cup glory in 2021. Having established themselves as a top-half team, there were clear intentions to build further.

Those investments amplified the sudden relegation. Leicester had a £107million wage bill – unprecedented in England’s second tier. Losing Premier League revenue soon pushed the club into breach of the profit and sustainability rules.

Much like Leicester in 2023, this season’s relegation rivals were all expected to fight for European positions. Tottenham are the reigning Europa League champions; Nottingham Forest finished seventh last season; West Ham are just three years removed from Europa Conference League glory. Yet they are operating with the 7th, 9th and 13th-highest wage bills in the league respectively. Whichever club goes down will need to cut those figures significantly.

Leicester were not the first club to suffer a relegation against the odds. West Ham were viewed as Too Good To Go Down in 2003. Yet they bounced back within two years and managed to avoid the detrimental effects Leicester are enduring.

The landscape changed dramatically between those relegations. The financial gulf between England’s top two divisions is now wider than ever. As a result, the likelihood of breaching the rules has never been higher.

One of Leicester’s reported mistakes was failing to insert relegation wage drop clauses. The perceived lack of relegation threat may have been a similar oversight among the current crop.

The revenue-generating Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and cost-effective lease of the London Stadium may protect their inhabitants. Forest, however, will likely find it harder to offset their wage bill. The negative effects on each club can only be limited by how much they have future-proofed for worst-case scenarios.

In the modern Premier League, relegation is no longer just a setback; it is a financial cliff edge. And the higher a club climbs before it falls, the harder the landing becomes. It is perhaps most damning of English football’s structure that a club like Leicester were effectively penalised for their ambition.

In this era, the weight of relegation is only compounded by past success.

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Tottenham: Tudor reveals double injury hammer blow

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Tottenham: Tudor reveals double injury hammer blow but Kinsky 'will play for sure' - Football365
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Igor Tudor has revealed an injury crisis the likes of which he’s “never seen in his career” as the interim Tottenham boss braces himself for Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday.

Tudor oversaw his fourth defeat in four as Spurs boss on Tuesday as Atletico Madrid put them to the sword in the first leg of their Champions League last 16 tie to run out 5-2 winners.

Three consecutive defeats in the Premier League leaves them just one point above the relegation zone ahead of their trip to play Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday.

Another loss will surely bring an end to Tudor’s brief and horrific tenure; it’s a surprise he’s still in the job given the Spurs players clearly haven’t responded to his tactics and – as Antonin Kinsky will advise – are some less than mediocre man-management skills.

The Croat admits he and the Spurs players face a “big challenge to change things” but says “you can cry or you can fight”. Probably cry then.

Tudor said: “It’s tough. For sure. Not just because of the last game but because of the period. Not easy situation, not easy moment. Big challenge to change things. Like everything in life, you can choose how to see the situation.

“You can cry or you can fight. You can be the victim or you can say I can change something and this is the message I want to start with and what I communicate with the players. Everyone speaks and everyone has opinions. The bottle is always half empty or half full. Here, there is nothing full, there are a lot of empty things but difficult moments don’t last.

“I believe the players will take this as a challenge, as an opportunity, to stand up with the courage to change things after this period.”

Plenty of courage will be required from the Spurs player who remain available for selection after Tudor revealed both Joao Palhinha and Cristian Romero are now out following their clash of heads in Madrid, along with the suspended Micky van de Ven, while Conor Gallagher is also a doubt through illness.

He added: “No, no. They [Romero and Palhinha] are out. Micky [van de Ven] is also out. [Yves] Bissouma is out with a muscle [injury]. Conor [Gallagher] has some fever, but probably will be in.

“We have a lot of problems to make first eleven. This is how it is at this club. It happens all the time. We start to build something and then something happens like a red card in the last game or three or four injuries.

“It is very rare, I have never had this situation in my career where you have two players missing every game. It is very unusual but you have to accept this and try and change the things we can change. These things we cannot.”

Tudor was on the receiving end of significant backlash following his decision to substitute Kinsky after just 17 minutes in the defeat to Atletico Madrid, and revealed the 22-year-old has responded well to the slight.

On whether he has any hesitation about playing Kinsky in future, Tudor added: “He will play for sure. He came back the day after and was very good and positive in training. Nothing else. This is probably the first and last time that this happened in my life and the life of a lot of people.

“It is the same message that I had before. You can go out and be the victim – everyone was sending messages of help and ‘I am with you’ and this is nice also.

“But, sometimes, in 2025 in this social media life – it is more important what you say than what you do. But, as I said before, this is a mistake, he will be for sure in his career – make other mistakes – but I think he has the strength and quality in front of him to have a very good career.”

Asked if Guglielmo Vicario will come back in against Liverpool, Tudor confirmed: “He is good. He will be in the goal.”

On concerns over the mental health of his players, he said: “We are trying to help them and we provide everything we can from the club. This is the job we are paid for. It is part of the job, to be under stress and choose what you want to do.

“It is not easy but, all good things are not easy. Messages in training are the same. When we do difficult things, that is the message. The right and the best things are not easy.”

All good things are not easy? Someone’s never sat on the sofa in their pants watching Netflix and eating biscuits. Bet he wishes he was on Sunday afternoon.

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Vinai Venkatesham fires clear shots at Daniel Levy’s running of Tottenham in worrying ‘sales’ update

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Tottenham chief executive Vinai Venkatesham took clear shots at former chairman Daniel Levy’s running of the club during a meeting with the Fan Advisory Board.

Venkatesham, who moved to the white half of north London last April after 14 years at bitter rivals Arsenal, implied that under Levy’s stewardship the club had not prioritised on-field success and that, worringly, player sales may well have to be prioritised going forward.

The Tottenham supremo also admitted “significant change” was needed following an internal review of both the men’s and women’s teams.

Venkatesham’s criticism comes after Levy surprisingly left Spurs in September after nearly 25 years at the club, having combined the roles of chief executive and chairman.

Often painted as a controversial figure during his time in charge, Levy was accused of prioritising the business side of the club over on-pitch success, although he did finally deliver their first trophy since 2008 after success in the Europa League final last May.

However, after a bright start to Thomas Frank’s tenure, it’s been a disastrous campaign domestically for Spurs, who now sit just one point above the relegation zone with an interim manager in Igor Tudor who has lost all four of his games in charge to date.

READ: Klinsmann vows to make Tottenham ‘really ugly and nasty’ if he replaces Igor Tudor

The Fan Advisory Board highlighted a lack of trust from supporters regarding the club’s direction, while the Tottenham Hotspur Supporters’ Trust (THST) called for “emergency action” following the 5-2 Champions League hammering at Atletico Madrid in midweek.

But in a move to try and reassure supporters that the club are trying to build in the right direction, Venkatesham suggested that he has removed the club’s previous wage structure, adding that “there is now complete clarity across the club that on-pitch success is our number one priority and focus”.

The minutes, published by Tottenham, read: “VV [Venkatesham] explained that since joining the club in June 2025, there has been a comprehensive review of the organisation to determine the issues and actions required.

“He explained that whilst he had a perspective of the club from the outside, it is only after spending time inside the club you can fully understand strengths, areas to improve and remedial actions needed.

“While the club has made strong progress in areas such as the stadium, training facilities, commercial growth and stadium operations, several areas were identified as falling short of what is required to compete at the highest level.”

Among the issues highlighted by Venkatesham, wage structure and a player transaction approach that had impacted competitiveness in the transfer market were major acknowledgements.

Speaking about the club’s finances, he then added that Tottenham need to plan for ensuring that they do not fall foul of Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules, with accounts revealing four consecutive years when the club have recorded losses.

“VV noted that the club has been loss-making for a number of years, which means compliance with Financial Fair Play rules need to be actively monitored and planned for,” the minutes read.

“An increased emphasis will therefore be placed on player sales alongside continued revenue growth to ensure we have the regulatory headroom to invest.”

READ NEXT: Levy reveals who he would appoint to replace Tudor as ‘player revolt’ emerges

While clearly criticising Levy’s time in charge, Venkatesham and sporting director Lange also need to shoulder some, if not all, of the blame for the disastrous appointment of Tudor as interim coach.

Indeed, they continue to dither over replacing the Croatian, who has been completely unable to get a tune out of a Spurs side who are still to win a top-flight game in 2026 and are spiralling towards relegation.

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Tudor sack: Klinsmann vows to make Tottenham 'really ugly and nasty' as shock appointment

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Tottenham: Klinsmann vows to make Spurs 'really ugly and nasty' - Football365
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Jurgen Klinsmann has thrown his hat in the ring for the Tottenham job, insisting he would “develop a really nasty, ugly, fighting spirit” in the players.

Igor Tudor oversaw his fourth defeat in four as Spurs boss on Tuesday as Atletico Madrid put them to the sword in the first leg of their Champions League last 16 tie to run out 5-2 winners.

Three consecutive defeats in the Premier League leaves them just one point above the relegation zone ahead of their trip to play Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday.

Another loss will surely bring an end to Tudor’s brief and horrific tenure; it’s a surprise he’s still in the job given the Spurs players clearly haven’t responded to his tactics and – as Antonin Kinsky will advise – are some less than mediocre man-management skills.

Wayne Rooney insists there’s “no way” Robbie Keane should leave Ferencváros for Tottenham in their current state and with Sean Dyche and Ryan Mason tipped for an interim stint until the end of the season, former Spurs striker Jurgen Klinsmann insists he would be open to the challenge.

Klinsmann is currently available having been sacked by South Korea in February 2024 after their defeat in the semi-final of the Asia Cup.

He told ESPN: “Who wouldn’t want the job? It is Tottenham.

“Whoever you choose, you need a person who can connect to everyone emotionally, that knows the club, that feels the club, that feels the people.

“Because, to get out of this mess, they need to develop a fighting spirit, a really nasty, ugly, fighting spirit and that goes only over the emotions.

“So you don’t need to have to bring in the mastermind of tactical stuff or whatever, you need to have somebody who gets everybody onboard and go and get these games done in a positive way and get everybody behind the fact that they are in danger of going down to the Championship.

“So no matter who you put in charge now, it goes only over the emotions, the willingness to suffer and fight and maybe take the ball away from some ballboys on the sidelines.”

Klinsmann was referencing the clash between Pedro Neto and a PSG ballboy in Chelsea’s 5-2 defeat on Wednesday and then also reflected on Tudor’s decision to take Spurs goalkeeper Kinsky off just 17 minutes into their defeat to Atletico Madrid.

Tudor has been on the end of stinging criticism, firstly for starting Kinsky ahead of Guglielmo Vicario and secondly for hooking him so early in the game.

Klinsmann added: “I think if you ask him [Tudor] today and he reflects about the decision making before the game to play him and then during the game, obviously to sub him out after 17 minutes, he would re-think their whole situation.

“Obviously, it is a killer for the kid, it is the worst thing a goalkeeper can go through, I feel for the kid because my own son is a goalkeeper and I hope he never gets a moment like that.

“He will obviously make mistakes and he will make similar mistakes like Kinsky did there but obviously to then get pulled off after 17 minutes in a game in front of a sold-out crowd in Madrid, because you have these two blackouts is simply brutal.

“So I think we all felt for the boy and obviously you are on the ground, you get back up and you get going but this is a massive shocker for a young player like him.

“He threw him in the cold water and in that moment, the water was too cold.

“He made those two huge mistakes and then the other story to discuss certainly is how do you react to it, just drag it out until half-time.

“Maybe then you can talk to him and then you explain to him that you will sub him off and bring back Vicario in that moment.

“He decided to do it after 17 minutes and that is a huge punishment for a young kid like him.”

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