Who will be top at Christmas – Sorting the wheat from the chaff
Article by Robert Wake
Ok, so maybe the title is a little harsh, but you get my drift. Each of the top eight in the Premiership, currently separated by just 6 points will play six games, weather permitting, between now and when we sit down to stuff ourselves with turkey and Christmas pud. After this International break, the games will come thick and fast, punctuated only by the early rounds of the FA Cup in January. Traditionally, this is the time of year when the real contenders put together a run of results that confirm them as genuine title challengers, while others fall away. A snowy trip to Sunderland, a cold day in Hull can derail even the best.
LIVERPOOL
Everton (A)
Hull City (A)
Norwich (H)
West Ham (H)
Tottenham (A)
Cardiff (H)
CHELSEA
West Ham (A)
Southampton (H)
Sunderland (A)
Stoke City (A)
C.Palace (H)
Arsenal (A)
SOUTHAMPTON
Arsenal (A)
Chelsea (A)
A. Villa (H)
Man City (H)
Newcastle (A)
Tottenham (H)
Swansea (A)
TOTTENHAM
Man City (A)
Man United (H)
Fulham (A)
Sunderland (A)
Liverpool (H)
Southampton (A)
MAN CITY
Tottenham (H)
Swansea (H)
West Brom (A)
Southampton (A)
Arsenal (H)
Fulham (A)
Ok, so maybe the title is a little harsh, but you get my drift. Each of the top eight in the Premiership, currently separated by just 6 points will play six games, weather permitting, between now and when we sit down to stuff ourselves with turkey and Christmas pud. After this International break, the games will come thick and fast, punctuated only by the early rounds of the FA Cup in January. Traditionally, this is the time of year when the real contenders put together a run of results that confirm them as genuine title challengers, while others fall away. A snowy trip to Sunderland, a cold day in Hull can derail even the best.
Some Clubs have, what on paper seem tougher
schedules than others. For instance, Southampton, undoubtedly the
surprise package so far face back to back trips to Arsenal and
Chelsea as well as home games with Manchester City and Tottenham.
Everton, start the next six with the Merseyside derby against
Liverpool, and face trips to Old Trafford and The Emirates before
Christmas.
Looking at the fixtures would perhaps suggest
Liverpool have the easiest run up to the festive period with three
winnable home games against Norwich, West Ham and Cardiff City.
Liverpool fans though would be the first to tell you that, in the
past, these are the games where they have unexpectedly dropped
points. Similarly, Chelsea’s fixtures also appear at first glance
to be fairly kind, but having only taken one point from Newcastle and
West Brom, nothing can be taken for granted. The last Premiership
game before the festivities at Arsenal though promises to be a
Christmas cracker.
Before that, Arsenal travel to Manchester City in
what will be a huge test of their title aspirations. City at the
Etihad are a very different proposition to the away version where
they have lost four times, and trips to West Brom and Southampton
could prove more than a little troublesome for a side lacking
confidence on the road.
Tottenham’s next two could be pivotal to their
challenge. A trip to Manchester City is followed by Manchester
United’s visit to White Hart Lane. Tottenham currently lie seventh
and can ill afford any more home slip-ups to the likes of West Ham
and Newcastle if they are to maintain a challenge into the New Year.
United have not been convincing, but, partly due
to the failings of the others, remain very much in touch. Their trip
to Tottenham is followed by a home game with Everton, while they also
visit Cardiff and Villa. In years gone by those two away fixtures
would almost certainly have yielded six points, but they still appear
vulnerable, and the loss of Michael Carrick for a few weeks will not
help their cause.
Reading back on my musings, I appear, perhaps
unwittingly, to have made a case for and against just about all of
the top eight, and that is very much how it appears at the moment.
All the above Clubs have undoubted quality, but have also shown
weakness and vulnerability, sometimes when you least expect it. But
isn’t that what makes the Premiership so predictably unpredictable?
Expect the unexpected and you won’t be far wrong in this
topsy-turvy season.
ARSENAL
Southampton (H)
Cardiff (A)
Hull City (H)
Everton (H)
Man City (A)
Chelsea (H)
LIVERPOOL
Everton (A)
Hull City (A)
Norwich (H)
West Ham (H)
Tottenham (A)
Cardiff (H)
CHELSEA
West Ham (A)
Southampton (H)
Sunderland (A)
Stoke City (A)
C.Palace (H)
Arsenal (A)
SOUTHAMPTON
Arsenal (A)
Chelsea (A)
A. Villa (H)
Man City (H)
Newcastle (A)
Tottenham (H)
MAN UNITED
Cardiff (A)
Tottenham (A)
Everton (H)
Newcastle (H)
A.Villa (A)
West Ham (H)
EVERTON
Liverpool (H)
Stoke City (H)Liverpool (H)
Man United (A)
Arsenal (A)
Fulham (H)Arsenal (A)
Swansea (A)
TOTTENHAM
Man City (A)
Man United (H)
Fulham (A)
Sunderland (A)
Liverpool (H)
Southampton (A)
MAN CITY
Tottenham (H)
Swansea (H)
West Brom (A)
Southampton (A)
Arsenal (H)
Fulham (A)
ROBERT WAKE
15 November 2013
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