Premier League: Title celebrations, tears of farewells and the relegation shootout

It all comes down to the final day for West Ham and Spurs. The latter only need a draw at home while the Hammers must beat Leeds and hope To...

It all comes down to the final day for West Ham and Spurs. The latter only need a draw at home while the Hammers must beat Leeds and hope Tottenham doesn't. Who goes down on Sunday? (Photo credit: GOAL)


The 2025/2026 Premier League season will conclude across ten grounds on Sunday, leaving a few questions still unanswered.

Arsenal has wrapped up the title conversation. No questions in that regard; Arsenal will lift the title on Sunday, regardless of their result at Selhurst Park. It will be a surreal experience for the lads who are getting one over rivals after 22 long years of pain.

Manchester City will finish the season with two trophies. They may have lost the biggest one to Arsenal, but their League Cup and FA Cup trophies will be paraded at the Etihad when they file out against Aston Villa.

Pep Guardiola has also announced that he will be stepping down at the end of the season. There's a question in that regard: Where does he go from here? Does he go on a sabbatical? Does he take up another job immediately? Time will tell.

There's a question of how many English teams will make it to the Champions League next season. Five of them are guaranteed already, but the sixth spot needs some results to fall in line before it becomes available for the Premier League.

Aston Villa must finish in fifth spot; this means that Manchester City must beat Villa at the Etihad, while Liverpool must also beat Brentford at Anfield. This will be music to the ears of everyone at Bournemouth, as it means they could be playing Champions League football next season.

Lots of players are saying goodbye to the league. Bernardo Silva and John Stones are leaving Manchester City. Seamus Coleman has said goodbye to Everton fans, and a host of others will be doing the same across grounds on Sunday.

There's still an outside chance for Sunderland to make it to Europe. If they beat Manchester United and the trio of Chelsea, Brentford, and Brighton don't win, you might have an extraordinary story on the cards come the end of the day on Sunday.

The relegation dogfight will go down to the wire. West Ham will fight for their lives at home against Leeds United. Daniel Farke's side has nothing outside pride to play for. Can this be the Hammers' moment of glory?

Tottenham only needs a draw against Everton to retain their top-flight status. The problem is the fact that Spurs only have two home wins from their 18 games this season. If Everton beats Spurs, and West Ham beats Leeds, Spurs will go down. How will this play out?

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