⚽ EPL Standings
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Arsenal FC
26W 7D 5L
85
🔵
—

Manchester City FC
23W 9D 6L
78
🔵
—

Manchester United FC
20W 11D 7L
71
🔵
—

Aston Villa FC
19W 8D 11L
65
🔵
—

Liverpool FC
17W 9D 12L
60
🟠
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AFC Bournemouth
13W 18D 7L
57
🟢
▲2

Sunderland AFC
14W 12D 12L
54
▼1

Brighton & Hove Albion FC
14W 11D 13L
53
▼1

Brentford FC
14W 11D 13L
53
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Chelsea FC
14W 10D 14L
52
▲2

Fulham FC
15W 7D 16L
52
▼1

Newcastle United FC
14W 7D 17L
49
▼1

Everton FC
13W 10D 15L
49
—

Leeds United FC
11W 14D 13L
47
—

Crystal Palace FC
11W 12D 15L
45
—

Nottingham Forest FC
11W 11D 16L
44
—

Tottenham Hotspur FC
10W 11D 17L
41
—

West Ham United FC
10W 9D 19L
39
🔴
—

Burnley FC
4W 10D 24L
22
🔴
—

Wolverhampton Wanderers FC
3W 11D 24L
20
🔴
⚽ Title Race & Relegation Battle
Is the title race already over? Arsenal sit seven points clear at the top of the EPL standings with 85 points from 38 matches, and for once, they’ve actually held their nerve when it mattered most. This isn’t the Arsenal that crumbled in previous seasons—this is a team that’s learned how to win ugly, grind out results, and most importantly, not look over their shoulders at Manchester City every single week.
Manchester City at 78 points are seven points adrift with the season complete, and you have to wonder if Pep’s dynasty is finally showing cracks. Twenty-three wins sounds respectable until you realize they drew nine matches—that’s where titles are lost. Meanwhile, Manchester United have quietly secured third place with 71 points, guaranteeing Champions League football, which feels like progress even if they were never really in the title conversation.
Down at the bottom, it’s absolutely brutal. Wolves with just 20 points and Burnley with 22—these aren’t even close calls, they’re catastrophes. Three wins all season for Wolves? That’s not a Premier League table performance, that’s a team that was out of their depth from August. Burnley managed four wins and hung around a bit longer, but ten draws don’t save you when you can’t actually beat anyone that matters.
West Ham on 39 points are sweating in 18th, just two points above the drop zone. The Hammers faithful must be wondering how it came to this—from European nights to genuinely fighting for survival. That’s the Premier League in 2026: unforgiving, relentless, and absolutely zero room for a bad month.
⚽ Rising & Falling Teams
Fourth place with 65 points—Villa have absolutely smashed expectations and secured Champions League football. Unai Emery has built something special here, and they’re not pretenders anymore, they’re genuine top-four quality.
Eighteen draws? That’s the most remarkable stat on this entire Premier League table. They’ve finished sixth on 57 points by basically refusing to lose or win decisively—Europa League football through sheer stubbornness.
Fifth with 60 points—this is genuinely concerning for a club of Liverpool’s stature. Twelve losses and scraping into Europa League spots isn’t the Liverpool way, and the rebuild clearly hasn’t gone to plan.
Seventeenth with 41 points—Spurs have completed one of the most shocking collapses in recent memory. This is a club that’s supposed to challenge for Europe, not flirt with relegation all season long.
Sunderland finishing seventh in their return to the top flight deserves massive respect—54 points and a genuine shot at European qualification through the cups. The Black Cats have adapted brilliantly, and this feels like the start of something sustainable rather than a one-season wonder.
Chelsea at tenth with 52 points? That’s three seasons now of mid-table mediocrity. The spending hasn’t translated to results, the managerial changes haven’t worked, and at some point you have to ask if the entire project needs rethinking from the ownership level down. Newcastle sitting twelfth on 49 points is another puzzler—the Saudi investment promised so much, but they’ve regressed significantly from last season’s heights.
⚽ Fan Mood Check
Finally, FINALLY, they’ve delivered the title—North London is painted red and white right now.
From battling relegation a few years back to Champions League nights—Villa Park is absolutely bouncing.
Seven points off the pace—this squad needs refreshing, and Pep might actually face real questions this summer.
Fifth place and Europa League football isn’t what Anfield expects—major changes needed this summer.
Seventeenth place, seventeen losses—this is the darkest timeline for a club with Spurs’ ambitions.
Twenty points, three wins—this wasn’t just relegation, it was a complete structural failure from top to bottom.
⚽ Hot Issues
Has Pep’s Manchester City era peaked? Nine draws in a title-losing season suggests the squad needs major surgery, and for the first time in years, City look vulnerable going into a transfer window.
The Bournemouth draw record—eighteen draws from 38 matches is almost statistically absurd. Are they the most frustratingly entertaining team in the league, or just tactically too cautious to ever truly threaten?
Looking at the final EPL standings, the top-four race delivered exactly what we expected from Arsenal, City, and United, but Aston Villa gatecrashing the party is the story of the season. They’ve outperformed Liverpool, left Chelsea and Newcastle in their wake, and proven that smart recruitment and tactical discipline beats unlimited budgets every single time.
The mid-table congestion between Bournemouth in sixth and Crystal Palace in fifteenth—just twelve points separating them—shows how competitive this league has become. One bad month could’ve dropped Bournemouth into mid-table obscurity; one good run could’ve pushed Palace into European contention. That’s the beauty and brutality of the Premier League table in 2026.
And let’s be honest: Tottenham’s seventeenth-place finish is genuinely shocking. This is a club that’s invested heavily, that has a world-class stadium, that’s supposed to be competing at the top end. Instead, they collected just 41 points and spent most of the season looking over their shoulders at the relegation zone. Something is fundamentally broken there, and it’s not just about the manager or the players—it’s the entire culture.
Arsenal winning the title at 85 points isn’t just about their brilliance—it’s about consistency. Twenty-six wins, only five losses, and most importantly, they didn’t collapse when City came charging. That’s champion mentality, and it gave me chills watching them finally get over the line. This Arsenal team is different, and they might just be getting started.
Bournemouth drew EIGHTEEN matches—that’s not a football strategy, that’s a commitment to never making anyone happy. Also, Spurs finishing seventeenth while Arsenal win the title? North London derby banter just got nuclear.