EPL
Next six games after Brendan Rodgers’ departure

After four years, two seasons of European football and the club’s first-ever FA Cup trophy, Brendan Rodgers’ tenure at Leicester City has come to a bleak conclusion.
Ever since the Foxes let a two-goal lead slip against Brentford on the opening weekend of the season, Leicester have been fighting an uphill battle. The club were in the relegation zone for much of the pre-World Cup portion of the season and slipped back beneath the dotted line after what proved to be Rodgers’ final match at the helm as another lead was lost against Crystal Palace.
With huge six-pointers against fellow strugglers fast approaching, here’s what lies ahead for manager-less Leicester City.
Aston Villa offer the golden example of the positive impact a managerial change can have. Since Unai Emery has taken the helm, only the Premier League leaders Arsenal and Manchester City have won more top-flight matches.
Naturally, Leicester will be hoping for a similar revival but there aren’t many managers of Emery’s calibre – a four-time Europa League winner – kicking their heels and waiting for Leicester to ring.
Both Bournemouth and Leicester have endured ruinous hangovers since football returned post-World Cup. No side has collected fewer points than Leicester in this period – just eight in 13 games – but the Cherries have not fared much better, earning just 11.
The two leakiest rearguards in the division since Christmas have also dropped the most points from winning positions.
Leicester haven’t always been so porous this season. Across the club’s eight matches before Christmas Day, Leicester conceded just one goal – and what a goal it was. It took a stunning free kick from Kevin De Bruyne to decide a devilishly tight encounter when Manchester City travelled to the King Power Stadium in October.
However, with Leicester yet to keep a clean sheet post-Qatar, Pep Guardiola’s side may have an easier game ahead of them at the Etihad Stadium.
When the Foxes faced Wolves at Molineux in October, everything clicked for once in this dreary season. Leicester took five shots, diverted four on target and somehow came away with a 4-0 victory.
The stars have scarcely aligned since Leicester’s largest win of the season.
With ten games of the campaign left to play, just one point separates Leeds and Leicester. Last season, the Foxes finished nine places and 14 points above the Yorkshire outfit that have recent experience of surviving a relegation scrap.
Leicester may be able to take some comfort from a record of one defeat across their last nine trips to Elland Road – last losing a top-flight fixture away to Leeds in 2004 – but a game against a direct relegation rival will no doubt be a tense affair.
Leicester may be lacking a permanent figurehead in the dugout – first team coaches Adam Sadler and Mike Stowell will take charge in the immediate future – but Everton’s grizzled manager doesn’t have fond memories of the Foxes.
Sean Dyche has faced Leicester City more often than any other club in his career (19 times). Yet, the Toffees boss is yet to record a win in any of his nine trips to the King Power Stadium.
EPL
Mohamed Salah’s record in the Europa League

Though Liverpool have become accustomed to the Champions League, their star man Mohamed Salah is no stranger to Europe’s second-tier competition, the Europa League.
Jurgen Klopp’s outfit now have time to reflect and recuperate after finishing 5th in the Premier League and out of the Champions League spots for the first time since the 2014/15 campaign.
Unai Emery – now in charge of high-flying Aston Villa – put the sword to Liverpool in the final of the 2015/16 Europa League final, with Coke’s second-half double proving crucial for Sevilla that day.
As they exchange their Tuesday and Wednesday nights for Thursday’s, Klopp, who had pledged to make the Europa League “our competition” will look to Salah in particular to prevent a repeat of that torrid night in Basel seven years ago.
FC Basel plummeted out of the Champions League after failing to meet their aim of reaching the group stage in 2012/13.
The Egyptian King, in the infant years of his career, made more appearances from the bench than he did as a nailed-on starter in Basel’s Europa League campaign but he was a star nonetheless.
Salah scored his first of eventually many goals on the European stage in the quarter-finals as Basel edged past Tottenham on penalties after drawing 4-4 on aggregate scoring.
His scoring exploits did not halt there as his future employers Chelsea were at the hands of a Salah double in west London. Although the Egypt international crashed out of the competition thanks to the Blues, his Europa League showings earned him a rightful move to the English giants a few months later.
Salah helped Basel to their best-ever finish in the competition, performing when it mattered the most and often being the difference-maker.
Wedged in between his other two Europa League campaigns came his least successful one, with just a goal and assist apiece.
12 days after scoring his first goal for the club against Sassuolo, Salah added one to his European CV against, once again, Tottenham. Spurs had become a familiar sight for the tricky winger and a match-up that he flourished in.
Bearing in mind his spell in Fiorentina was merely a loan, Salah enjoyed positivity for the majority of the season and spurred his side into the semi-finals of the Europa League. His influence – goals aside – was undeniable, though his game time was limited on the centre stage.
A theme begins to reoccur with Salah and the Europa League as he helped Fiorentina – very much a surprise package of the 2014/15 Europa League season – reach the semi-finals of the competition for only the third time in the entirety of the club’s history.
Salah’s most recent Europa League campaign came just before his high-profile move to Liverpool, featuring in six games for Roma in 2016/17.
The Italian side endured a torrid campaign in Europe, preventing Salah from showing the footballing world his undeniable talent. Domestically, Roma finished in second place and secured themselves a spot at Europe’s top table for the following campaign, but cracked under pressure when vying for European silverware in the same season.
Neither goal amounted for anything in this term, either. Roma’s four-goal thumping over West Ham’s conquerors in Astra Giurgiu was already wrapped up before Salah’s effort came, and he managed to grab his second of the competition in a last 16 defeat to Lyon.
EPL
Erling Haaland set to beat Premier League record set by Thierry Henry 20 years ago

Manchester City’s goalscorer-in-chief has set the Premier League alight in his inaugural campaign, breaking record after record and is closing in one Thierry Henry’s long-standing achievement.
Though goals are Erling Haaland’s forte, he has also dished out the odd assist, taking his goal involvement tally to a highly respectable 44. His latest lay-off to Phil Foden at Brighton matched the Premier League record of total goal involvements in a single season.
Arsenal legend Thierry Henry set the same record two decades prior, but the new kid on the block will want to leave the Frenchman in the dust by surpassing it in City’s finale at Brentford.
44 – Erling Haaland’s assist tonight was his 44th Premier League goal involvement in 2022-23 (36 goals, 8 assists) – a joint-record in a 38-game Premier League season, along with Thierry Henry in 2002-03 (24 goals, 20 assists). Machine. pic.twitter.com/Ni4XS7WXyE
— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) May 24, 2023
Both Premier League cult heroes in their own right, but with Haaland’s career still in his infancy, he has all the sufficient tools to surpass Henry’s legacy. Marry that up with Pep Guardiola’s ideology and we have an all-timer on our hands.
His arrival divided opinion: some believed he was the world-beating attacker that City craved while some were under the impression he couldn’t hit the heights of the likes of Harry Kane and Mohamed Salah. Oh, how wrong were they.
Guardiola muttered that Sergio Aguero was irreplaceable upon his departure but has been proved entirely wrong by Haaland’s first season in England. An audacious chip over Lukasz Fabianski recorded his record-breaking 35th goal of the campaign, but was just the latest of many to remind us what an alien talent the Spaniard has at his disposal.
Month |
Goals |
Assists |
---|---|---|
August |
9 |
1 |
September |
2 |
0 |
October |
6 |
2 |
November |
1 |
0 |
December |
3 |
0 |
January |
4 |
0 |
Feburary |
2 |
1 |
March |
1 |
1 |
April |
6 |
2 |
May |
2 |
1 |
Two hat-tricks in August had rival fans trembling and City fans relishing in the presence of their new focal point, but few understood what the phenom was capable of.
Next up for the 22-year-old is to eclipse old-timer Dixie Dean, who set the all-time goal record across all competitions – a total of 63 back in 1927/28.
At the rate that Haaland is excelling at, Alan Shearer and Andy Cole’s joint-record of 47 goal involvements in a 42-game campaign could be his next season, although he has four fewer games to manage it.
Should he remain in the Manchester City ranks for years to come, surely Shearer’s 260-goal record is in jeopardy?
Month |
Goals |
Assists |
---|---|---|
August |
2 |
2 |
September |
4 |
2 |
October |
0 |
1 |
November |
3 |
2 |
December |
2 |
0 |
January |
6 |
1 |
February |
2 |
2 |
March |
0 |
2 |
April |
3 |
3 |
May |
2 |
5 |
Amazingly, Henry failed to secure the Golden Boot in this monumental season, with Ruud van Nistelrooy taking the award back to Manchester with him.
The former France international remains the only player to notch 20 in both goals and assists, though, and given Haaland’s speciality in being the finisher rather than the provider, this record seems to be safe for the foreseeable future.
Despite the astonishing nature of the Arsenal forward’s exploits in the attacking third, they were still five points adrift of the league summit as none other than Van Nistelrooy’s United won their seventh Premier League title.
BUNDESLIGA
All permutations for Europe and relegation

The end of the Premier League season is upon us and it has certainly been a thrilling campaign with lots of drama along the way.
While the title may have already been wrapped up by Manchester City at the expense of Arsenal, there is still a huge amount to play for all over the rest of the table on the final day of the Premier League season.
The primary focus will be on the relegation zone where only one team has already had their fate sealed, which is Southampton. Some eyes will also be on the various European qualification spots. Here are all of the permutations you need to know about to enjoy the final day of the 2022/23 Premier League season.
Read 90min’s full match previews here
The Champions League race in the Premier League has been thrilling this season, but Manchester United actually brought it to a close on Thursday night when they easily beat Chelsea 4-1. It means that Manchester City, Arsenal, Man Utd and Newcastle will be the Premier League’s representatives in the Champions League next season.
All that is yet to be decided in the top four is who will finish in third place. Man Utd are now two points ahead of Newcastle so they just need to win against Fulham to make sure that they keep third. If they draw and Newcastle win away at Chelsea, the Geordies would nab third due to goal difference. The only real desire to finish third is due to bragging rights and stature, rather than anything too tangible beyond a couple of million in prize money (which, relatively speaking, isn’t a lot).
Position |
Team |
Goal difference |
Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 |
Manchester City |
62 |
89 |
2 |
Arsenal |
40 |
81 |
3 |
Manchester United |
14 |
72 |
4 |
Newcastle |
35 |
70 |
Similar to the Champions League battle, the Europa League battle was expected to go down to the wire. As it turns out, Liverpool are guaranteed to finish in fifth place and Brighton are guaranteed to finish in sixth place, meaning they will be England’s Europa League participants next season.
There is actually a chance that three teams enter the Europa League next season from the Premier League, but only if West Ham win the Europa Conference League final against Fiorentina. That has no bearing on the Premier League table going into the final day.
The Europa Conference League slot is where the interest lies on Sunday, with three teams fighting for seventh place in the Premier League. Seventh in the Premier League gets this spot because Man Utd won the Carabao Cup and they already have a European spot. The teams in question are Aston Villa, Tottenham and Brentford.
Aston Villa are the team in pole position so all they need to do is equal or better the results of Brentford and Tottenham. If Villa are beaten, Brentford do not win and Spurs draw, Spurs will get seventh on goal difference.
Tottenham will also get seventh if they win and Villa draw or lose, while Brentford are going to have to beat Man City and hope both Villa and Tottenham draw or lose if they are to qualify for Europe for the first time. The Bees are certainly the outside bet.
Position |
Team |
Goal difference |
Points |
---|---|---|---|
5 |
Liverpool |
28 |
66 |
6 |
Brighton |
20 |
62 |
7 |
Aston Villa |
4 |
58 |
8 |
Tottenham |
4 |
57 |
9 |
Brentford |
11 |
56 |
This is where the majority of the focus will be on the final day of the 2022/23 Premier League season, as three teams are all vying to finish in the place above the relegation zone.
Everton are currently the team in a position of strength, while Leeds United and Leicester City are in the bottom three. All of the power lies with Everton as if they win their game, Leeds and Leicester’s results are irrelevant.
Leicester and Leeds are level on points. Leicester need to win their game and hope that Everton either lose or draw. Leicester can finish level on points with Everton if they win and Everton draw, but Leicester’s goal difference is better and they would be safe. They also have a better goal difference than Leeds so if Everton draw and both Leicester and Leeds win, it is Leicester that would be safe.
Leeds also simply have to win their game and hope that Leicester lose or draw, with Everton also losing. If Leeds win and Everton draw, they would be level on points and Leeds would need to beat Tottenham by three clear goals in order to get the goal difference swing on Everton.
The clearest way of viewing it is that if Everton win, it is game over. If Leicester and Leeds both lose or draw, it is game over regardless of what the Toffees do.
Position |
Team |
Goal difference |
Points |
---|---|---|---|
17 |
Everton |
-24 |
33 |
18 |
Leicester |
-18 |
31 |
19 |
Leeds |
-27 |
31 |
20 |
Southampton |
-37 |
24 |
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