What Arsenal’s win over Man City means for title race as Premier League supercomputer predicts final table
What Arsenal’s win over Man City means for title race as Premier League supercomputer predicts final table
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ARSENAL'S vengeful demolition of Manchester City might not mean much for the Premier League title race come May. That is according to the latest supercomputer predictions. The Gunners put in a superb performance over hapless City as they ran out 5-1 winners in a spiky showdown at the Emirates on Sunday. Erling Haaland cancelled out Martin Odegaard's opener before Thomas Partey hit and teenagers Myles Lewis-Skelly and Ethan Nwaneri scored either side of Kai Havertz.
But the goals told half the story as Gabriel screamed into Haaland's face at 1-0 and Lewis-Skelly brutally mimicked the Norwegian's meditation celebration. Haaland bit back by showing the home fans his golden Prem badge on his City shirt, before dad Alfie trolled Arsenal on X. The win has Arsenal fans dreaming of a title push as they moved within six points of Prem leaders Liverpool, who have a game in hand against Merseyside rivals Everton pending.
The AI calculator believes Liverpool win finish a huge NINE points above Mikel Arteta's chasing men in a boring two-horse race. It is predicted that Liverpool will win 29, draw six and lose just three to finish on 93 points - six shy of Jurgen Klopp's title winning 2019-2020 season. CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS. While Arsenal are forecast to lose two more games and finish second for the third consecutive year.
And the AI boffins have Nottingham Forest finishing third to record their best-ever Prem finish on 74 points, 10 behind Arsenal. It comes after Forest smashed Brighton 7-0 on Saturday, as Chris Wood's goal tally hit 17 after bagging a hat-trick. Meanwhile, seven-time champs City, who are suffering by their standards, are set to finish inside the top-four and qualify for the Champions League next season.
That would be Pep Guardiola's lowest-ever finish in the English top-flight since he took over the reigns at the Etihad nine years ago. But rivals Manchester United have it far worse after losing 2-0 to Crystal Palace at Old Trafford on Sunday. The miserable Red Devils are predicted to finish 12th after equalling a humiliating 132-year home record. That would be the lowest the iconic club have EVER finished in the league since its inception in 1992.
Meanwhile, Bournemouth and Newcastle are set to beat Chelsea for Europa League qualification, as the Blues might be forced to play Conference League football for consecutive seasons. Fulham (61) take eighth with Aston Villa (61) ninth, both ahead of Brentford (50) and Brighton (48). While Tottenham, who finished fifth last year before being decimated by injuries this term, could finish a lowly SIXTEENTH, and one point behind Everton.
But it spells good news for Leicester fans as Wolves, Ipswich and Southampton are predicted to be relegated. The Saints are set to finish on 18 points and overtake Derby’s embarrassing, record-low tally of 11 points from the 2007-08 season. ARSENAL stunned Man City 5-1 at the Emirates on Sunday evening. It was an incredible result against their rivals of recent years. Here, we take a look at how the Gunners rated...
David Raya - 7/10. Had very little to do in the first half but made a brilliant save in the 22nd minute to deny a goalbound header from Josko Gvardiol. Made another stunning save two minutes from the half-time interval, stopping a deflected Savinho shot from close range. Powerless to stop Erling Haaland's 55th-minute header from briefly levelling the scores. Jurrien Timber - 6. Didn't offer his usual attacking threat going forward but was solid defensively. Picked up a pointless yellow breaking up a harmless counter-attack in the 24th minute. Almost scored late in the second half.
William Saliba - 5. Didn't have much to do in the first half but won all his aerial battles in the first 45 minutes. Marshalled the defence well early in the second period but was embarrassingly outjumped and outmuscled by Haaland for City's equaliser - a major flaw of his that continues to be exposed. Gabriel Magalhaes - 6. Like his defensive partner, he was seldom called into action in the first half. Dominant in the air in his battles with Haaland, who he trolled after Odegaard's goal.
Myles Lewis-Skelly - 8. Continues to endear himself to the Emirates faithful with composure and tenacity beyond his years as he brilliantly floated between left back and midfield. Put real daylight between the two sides with a thumping finish just after the hour mark. This young lad is a real bright prospect for both the Gunners and England. His trolling of Haaland by copying the Norwegian's 'Lotus' celebration went down a storm with fans.
Thomas Partey - 7. Steady in the heart of midfield and broke up play well when required. Fired the Gunners back into the lead in the 57th minute with a deflected shot from outside the box. Martin Odegaard - 7. Was in the right place at the right time to benefit from the aftermath of an uncharacteristic Manuel Akanji error and break the deadlock. Was at the heart of everything good the north Londoners did going forward.