The 2023-24 Premier League title race is reaching a dramatic climax this weekend, with Arsenal holding a three-point advantage over defending champions Manchester City and a golden opportunity to pile massive pressure on their chasing rival. Mikel Arteta’s side, commonly known as the Gunners, will take on Fulham at the Emirates Stadium on Saturday evening, and a three points against the London outfit would push their lead at the top out to six points – at least for 48 hours. That gap will hold until City takes their turn on the road, where they face a notoriously tricky test against Everton at Goodison Park on Monday night, a fixture that has upset title-chasing sides on multiple occasions in recent seasons.
This title race has been defined by razor-thin margins, and that trend shows no sign of changing heading into the final stretch of the campaign. Just seven days ago, Arsenal and City were dead level on both points and goal difference, before the Gunners grabbed a crucial narrow victory over Newcastle United to pull ahead. But Arsenal’s path to a first top-flight title since the Invincibles season of 2003-04 is far from smooth: the north London side have failed to find the net more than once in any Premier League fixture since mid-March, a dry spell that could cost them dearly in the final four matches of the season. Even a perfect four-game finish may not guarantee the title, analysts warn, while City – who hold a game in hand over Arsenal – have clicked into devastating form, finding goals with far more consistency than their title rivals in recent weeks.
Former England and Manchester United defender Gary Neville, one of the most high-profile analysts of the league, believes Arsenal will face an almighty battle to cross the finish line first. Speaking on his popular podcast, Neville noted: “They’re not going to sail over the line — it’s going to be a real struggle. They’re not going to all of a sudden hit form in this next couple of weeks.” The pundit added that Arsenal would need every bit of grit and luck to get over the line, saying they would have to be “wheelbarrowed” to the title.
While all eyes are on the title race, the fight to avoid relegation is delivering equally high drama, and nowhere is that more evident than at Tottenham Hotspur. Just as new manager Roberto De Zerbi earned his first win at the club and sparked faint hopes of a Great Escape, the north London side’s season-long injury crisis has struck again with devastating timing. Dutch playmaker Xavi Simons was stretchered off with a serious knee injury during last week’s 1-0 away win over already-relegated Wolves, while striker Dominic Solanke is set to miss the remainder of the campaign with a hamstring injury.
The full extent of Tottenham’s injury list this term makes for grim reading for fans. Long-term absentees already include creative stars Dejan Kulusevski, Mohammed Kudus, James Maddison and Wilson Odobert, while club captain Cristian Romero is the latest high-profile name to join the treatment table. Despite the devastating string of injuries, De Zerbi remains defiant, focusing on what his available players can achieve this weekend. “We can win the games with the players, not with the coaches,” the manager said. “The coaches are important but the players are more important. But I want to be positive.” Tottenham remain stuck in the relegation zone, two points adrift of 17th-placed West Ham United, and face another tough test this weekend as they travel to take on European-chasing Aston Villa.
Elsewhere in the top flight, Chelsea will be looking to build on their first win in six matches and end a dismal domestic season on a positive note, while still clinging to faint hopes of snatching a late Champions League spot. The Blues sacked manager Liam Rosenior last month after a catastrophic five-match losing run in the Premier League, but interim head coach Calum McFarlane has overseen a marginal upturn in form, with a 1-0 win over Leeds United in the FA Cup semi-final booking the side a place in the FA Cup final against none other than Manchester City at the end of the season.
Currently sitting in eighth place in the Premier League table, Chelsea still have a mathematical chance of claiming a top-four spot, though that outcome depends on a complex set of results. If Aston Villa – currently sitting in fifth place – holds that position and goes on to win the Europa League, the Champions League spot that comes with a fifth-place finish for the English league will be passed down to the sixth-placed team in the Premier League. If Villa finish fourth or higher and win the Europa League, however, no extra spot will be awarded. Right now, Brighton & Hove Albion occupy sixth place on 50 points and would be the first to benefit from this scenario, but the gap between the Seagulls and the chasing pack is tiny. Bournemouth, Chelsea, Brentford and Fulham are all within one or two points of Brighton, with Everton and Sunderland also still in touching distance of the European spot.
The full matchweek fixture list (all times listed in GMT) is as follows: Friday at 19:00 sees Leeds United host Burnley. On Saturday, kick-off is at 14:00 for Brentford vs West Ham, Newcastle United vs Brighton, and Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Sunderland, with Arsenal vs Fulham kicking off later at 16:30. Sunday’s fixtures are Bournemouth vs Crystal Palace at 13:00, Manchester United vs Liverpool at 14:30, and Aston Villa vs Tottenham at 18:00. Monday closes out the matchweek with Chelsea vs Nottingham Forest at 14:00, followed by the highly anticipated clash between Everton and Manchester City at 19:00.
