“Will the return of Rodri propel Manchester City back to the top of the table? Is this the year Manchester United finally regain their status as a genuine Premier League power? How will a tragic summer affect Liverpool on the pitch? Can the promoted teams break the pattern of recent seasons and stay up? The 2025-26 season kicks off on Friday and what better way to start the week than by looking ahead to what might be in store over the coming months. We asked all of our writers to submit their predicted Premier League table — you can see that a little further down this article. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Tag Archives: Premier League
What last season’s Premier League data can tell us about 2025-26
“The modern football calendar rarely allows us to catch our breath, but at least the start of a new domestic season always sparks fresh excitement among supporters. New teams, new signings and new managers mean that there are plenty of easy narratives to unpack for the upcoming Premier League campaign, but can we zoom out a little further and predict what broader topics could pop up in 2025-26? Here, The Athletic thought it best to look back before looking forward, using some interesting data trends from 2024-25 to examine what tactical quirks might emerge in the upcoming season. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

2025–26 Premier League, Attendance Map [2024-25 league figures].
“… The map shows the average attendance of the 20 clubs that comprise the 2025–26 Premier League. The main map [of England & Wales] shows the locations of 13 of the clubs; the Inset-map shows the locations of the 7 clubs that are based in Greater London. The larger the club’s average attendance from last season [2024-25], the larger their circle-and-badge are on the map(s). Each club’s home venue-name, and regional location, are also shown. Clubs are grouped by region (that is, by City or County). The location of Everton’s former home (Goodison Park) is shown, as well as the club’s new home on the docks of the River Mersey (Everton Stadium, aka Hill Dickinson Stadium). …”
billsportsmaps
BBC debate is nostalgic reminder of English crisis never being far away
Graham Taylor argues with fourth official Markus Merk during England’s World Cup-qualifying defeat to Netherlands in October 1993. The match took place the night after the BBC’s On The Line was broadcast.
“Nostalgia for the 1990s remains heavy. Just look at all those stadiums and parks the Gallaghers are filling. Football from the late 20th century has a similar cachet. No video assistant referees, no sportswashing; just good, hard, honest, simple fare, when men were men and pressing was what you did to your Burton suit. If the past is a foreign country then a recent BBC Archive release is a primary source of a time when the continental import remained exotic and not the dominant division of labour. ‘Is English Football In Crisis?’ asks an edition of On The Line in October 1993, broadcast the night before Graham Taylor’s England played a key World Cup qualifier in Rotterdam. …”
Guardian (Video)
Gazza’s chaotic 39 days at Kettering: Mid-training pizza, a fully clothed shower and a Ferrari promise
“… The date was October 27, 2005, and Paul Gascoigne, one of the most naturally gifted English footballers of all time, was spelling out his grand plans for Kettering Town, having just been announced as their new manager. Gascoigne was speaking at a packed out press conference to mark the momentous occasion for Kettering, a historic non-League club playing in the sixth tier of English football. Gascoigne, who had a prominent bandage on his neck following an accident on a Christmas ice-skating special of BBC One’s Strictly Come Dancing, was sat next to another decorated ex-professional footballer, former Arsenal midfielder Paul Davis, who had agreed to work alongside him as his assistant. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Football Architects: How the sport’s data pioneers convinced the world to take notice

“… Ian Graham had been hired to assist Spurs’ recruitment team, but his first meeting with Michael Edwards, his boss at Tottenham Hotspur, and future sporting director at Liverpool, was not going well. … Working under Edwards and Jurgen Klopp at Liverpool, Graham’s work helped turn the club into Premier League and European champions, transforming the squad in the process. But his first experience was typical of many of the first data pioneers of English football. They have now, however, broken through — their work becoming mainstream across recruitment, training methodology, and even the sport’s dialect. …”
NY Times/Athletic

The kids are alright: How the profile of Premier League transfers has changed

“Under no circumstances should 27 be considered old. But football’s transfer market rarely deals in conventional wisdom, and Arsenal’s big-money move for the 27-year-old Viktor Gyokeres stands out as something of an old-age outlier, with the rest of the market pouring its resources into fresher-faced talent. Liverpool’s capture of Florian Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen this summer makes him the third player aged 22 or under to be signed by a Premier League club for £100million ($136.4m) or more in the past four seasons, joining Chelsea’s Moises Caicedo and Enzo Fernandez. Young talent is clearly in demand in the 2020s, but just how much have Premier League clubs shifted their recruitment towards attracting the shiny new wonderkids? …”
NY Times/The Athletic

2025–26 Premier League

“The 2025–26 Premier League will be the 34th season of the Premier League and the 127th season of top-flight English football. The fixtures were released on 18 June 2025 at 09:00 BST.[1] The season will consist of 33 weekend and five midweek rounds of matches. Liverpool are the defending champions, having won their second Premier League title (and 20th English top-flight crown overall) in the previous season. The season reintroduces promoted sides Leeds United, Burnley, and Sunderland. This is the first season to feature the Tyne–Wear derby since the 2015–16 season, following Sunderland’s promotion via the Championship play-offs. …”
Wikipedia
YouTube: Premier League – 2025/26 Stadiums, PREMIER LEAGUE STADIUMS 2025/26 RANKED, PREMIER LEAGUE STADIUMS 2025/26 RANKED From Worst to Best

Inside the world of sporting directors: What do they do? And what makes a good one?
“Players are the focus of any football transfer storyline. Managers, agents and club owners add to the intrigue, of course, but it’s a relatively new role which has been garnering increased attention with every transfer window — the sporting director. Fundamentally, the remit of the sporting director is to be a link between the coaching staff and the club’s hierarchy, providing continuity, sustainability and a stable strategy in the club’s football operations. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Why do so many footballers go bankrupt?
“It was the brown envelopes that kept falling through the letterbox that filled Dean Windass with foreboding. Windass was a spiky but effective striker whose 18-year senior career had taken him through all four divisions, including spells in the Premier League with Bradford City, Middlesbrough and Hull City, plus the Scottish top flight with Aberdeen. While he was never one of the game’s superstars, he had earned good money at a time when English football was booming. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Does the football season ever really end?
“‘Let’s hear it for the boys — make some noise!’ cries the voice over the public address system at Park Hall Stadium on a beautiful summer evening. It’s July 8, in Oswestry, an English market town that’s only three miles from the Welsh border and where the whistle has just sounded to start a Champions League first qualifying round first-leg tie between The New Saints (TNS), the Cymru Premier title winners, and KF Shkendija of North Macedonia. Typically, the kick-off in these early Champions League fixtures is regarded as the curtain-raiser to the new season and a sign that club football is finally back. Except club football never went away this summer. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How Sheffield Wednesday descended into chaos under Dejphon Chansiri’s ownership
“It is nine weeks since Sheffield Wednesday last played a home game but the flyposting around Hillsborough helps to illustrate a long summer of rancour. ‘Chansiri out’ is the simple, scrawled message, set against a collage of cult heroes and trophy lifts. Wednesday’s happiest recent times in the early 1990s, when they were regulars in the upper echelons of the top flight and frequent travellers to Wembley in cup competitions, seem a long time ago. It is 25 years since they were last in the Premier League and Wednesday now resemble a decaying club under the ownership of Dejphon Chansiri, a 57-year-old businessman whose family own the Thai Union Group (TUG), the world’s largest producer of canned tuna. The money has dried up and so, too, has hope. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Does football have a doping problem?
“Arsene Wenger had a lot to get off his chest in the autumn of 2015. His Arsenal side were in danger of exiting the Champions League at the group stages and their 2-1 loss away to Dinamo Zagreb had become an acute source of irritation. Not because Arsenal had stumbled against their weakest opponents, but because the Croatian side had triumphed with a player — Arijan Ademi — who had returned a positive drugs test after playing the full 90 minutes. Ademi would eventually be given a four-year suspension (later reduced to two on appeal) after traces of the banned steroid stanozolol were found in a routine urine sample, but Wenger bristled at Zagreb facing no disciplinary sanctions from UEFA, European football’s governing body. ‘That means you basically accept doping,’ he said. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – Mykhailo Mudryk’s doping charge explained: Can Chelsea sack him if found guilty and could he appeal?
The offside law, Bill McCracken and, a century on, the decision that changed football forever

“One hundred years ago today, at a meeting at 22 Rue de Londres, Paris, association football — soccer — changed forever. The International Football Association Board voted that Law 11 of the game, the offside law, would be altered from season 1925-26 so that two players would need to be between an attacker and the goal line to remain onside, not three as it had been previously. This was arguably the most significant rule change since football was professionalised in the mid-1880s. It is possibly the most significant until the introduction of the back-pass rule in 1992. It may even have a claim to be the biggest moment in the history of the professional sport. Every organised match played since 1925 has had its geometry defined by the June 1925 offside law. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Chelsea players react furiously after referee GC Denton rules out a goal for offside
The Athletic’s 2024-25 Alternative Premier League Awards
“It’s that time of year again. Liverpool have finally lifted the Premier League trophy after securing the title last month, but the main prize is not the only thing being handed out. Mohamed Salah hoovered up the individual awards, with 29 goals securing the Golden Boot and 18 assists grabbing the Playmaker award for the second time in a Liverpool shirt. Golden glove? That goalkeeping accolade was shared between Nottingham Forest’s Matz Sels and David Raya of Arsenal, with 13 clean sheets apiece. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Premier League roundtable: The best and worst of 2024-25
“Manchester City’s dominance finally came to an end, Liverpool were able to celebrate the title in front of their fans for the first time in 35 years, two of the ‘Big Six’ finished in the bottom six and the promoted clubs all went straight back down.Those might be the raw headlines from 2024-25 but this Premier League season offered so much more — this was the campaign, don’t forget, when a player got booked for imitating a seagull. Seb Stafford-Bloor, Tim Spiers, Nick Miller, Oliver Kay and Stuart James reflect on the highs and the lows as another year of English top-flight football reaches its conclusion. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Race for the Champions League: Man City, Newcastle and Chelsea sneak in but agony for Villa and Forest
“For a lot of this season, the Premier League has been light on compelling, competitive narrative. It was pretty clear that Liverpool would be champions from fairly early on, and it was even more obvious that Ipswich Town, Leicester City and Southampton were going to go down. Stakes seemed low, attention could easily wander, the summer loomed. But then, emerging over the hill to save us all as winter turned into spring, was the race for the Champions League places. The fact that the Premier League had five places this season rather than four gave things an added element of spice, so as Nottingham Forest faltered, Manchester City started to look more like themselves and both Newcastle United and Aston Villa found some form, it was all headed inexorably towards high drama and teeth-chattering tension on the final day. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The Athletic’s end-of-season awards, 2024-25: Men’s football

“The Premier League title has long since been won and the battle to avoid relegation was also decided weeks ago, leaving the fight to qualify for European football in 2025-26 as the major outstanding issue of this season. As the 20 clubs of the domestic top-flight prepare to wrap up their league campaigns over the next week, including Sunday’s 10-game final day, The Athletic’s team of experts have been voting in our annual end-of-season awards. These cover the Premier League, the Championship and also the big competitions in Europe. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Long throws are in vogue in the Premier League – Rory Delap and Stoke will be proud
“The defining moment of Stoke City’s 10 years in the Premier League came on November 29, 2008. They were playing Hull City at home, whose defender Kamil Zayatte had just played a backpass to goalkeeper Boaz Myhill. Myhill was immediately closed down by two Stoke attackers, so the standard clearance up the pitch was not an option. There wasn’t a short pass on. The next most logical choice was to go sideways and put it out for a throw — not ideal, but it would have dealt with the immediate issues. After all, how dangerous can a throw-in really be? But Myhill stopped, hesitated, stuttered, regretted every one of his life decisions that had led him to this point, weighed up his options… and kicked it out for a corner. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Archibald Leitch: The forgotten godfather of Goodison Park and Britain’s football stadiums

John Moores, the Everton chairman, right, and manager Harry Catterick inspect the new roof on Goodison’s Bullens Road Stand in 1963
“For 99 years, the criss-cross balcony motif that runs along the Bullens Road Stand has been the symbol of Goodison Park’s enduring charm. On Sunday, those season-ticket holders in the front row of the stand’s top tier will have one last opportunity to drape their flags and bang on the steel before Everton (the men’s team anyway) say goodbye. The balcony was not always in the club’s blue and white colour scheme, as it is today. Originally, it was painted matt green because this was a functional aspect of the design by its Glaswegian architect, Archibald Leitch, in 1926, rather than a deliberate aesthetic extra, even though it has become fashionable to use the reversed saltire as piping on the collar of Everton’s home kits. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Postecoglou to Wrexham, Guardiola to Saudi and Frank upstairs? Predicting each Premier League manager’s next job
“In football, we obsess over which team is going to win every competition, where every side will finish in the league and the future transfer destinations of top players. What we talk about far less is where managers will end up, other than in the unemployment queue — which, obviously, is only a metaphorical image because in reality they’re all multi-millionaires and set for life financially. Which club will Marco Silva call home after he leaves Fulham? Ever wondered where Crystal Palace’s Oliver Glasner will work next? Nope, us neither. But maybe it’s time we started. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The Bradford City fire, 40 years on: ‘I can still hear the crackling of the timber burning’

11th May 1985: The fire at Valley Parade, the football ground in Bradford where 56 people died.
“… For Stuart McCall, it’s the ashen-faced police officer quietly revealing an hour or so after Bradford City’s antiquated wooden main stand had been engulfed in flames, ‘All those who could get out, got out’. Former police chief inspector Terry Slocombe, meanwhile, recalls vividly how the intense heat meant those pulling fans to safety had to keep retreating to the centre of the pitch to take precious breaths, just as sports reporter David Markham can “still hear the crackling of the timber burning” when he closes his eyes. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
“Only the concrete corner block housing the dressing rooms remains today from the Valley Parade where tragedy struck in 1985. Looking around Bradford City’s rebuilt home, it’s hard to believe 56 lives were lost here as fire ripped through the wooden main stand with such ferocity that eye-witnesses later described the flames spreading ‘faster than a man could run’. Hundreds more were left seriously injured in what, until Hillsborough four years later, was the worst stadium disaster in the history of English football. …”
NY Times/The Athletic: The Bradford City fire, 40 years on: How the club, the city and football responded

Riots at Heysel during Liverpool’s European Cup final against Juventus on May 29, 1985
How the Premier League fell in love with long throws again
“Football tactics have experienced a boom in recent years, but even the most progressive fan still loves to see their team ‘stick it in the mixer’. In many ways, the football we watch has become increasingly cultured in the Premier League, but ask yourself this: who doesn’t reminisce about Rory Delap’s iconic long throw-ins for Stoke City in the late 2000s? The drop in directness from these towards the end of the previous decade in the Premier League coincided with a decrease in the percentage of goalkeeper passes played long — defined as ones that travel at least 32m (35 yards) — as more teams were focusing on maintaining possession, building out from the back, and recycling the ball if they lost it. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Bruno Guimaraes and the art of winning (100) free kicks
“Mohamed Salah is five goals clear of Alexander Isak in the race for the Golden Boot and leads Newcastle United’s Jacob Murphy by seven in the assist charts. While Salah looks a shoo-in for both accolades, there is a Newcastle player who dominates the Egyptian at one (admittedly niche) skill. When Bruno Guimaraes received a throw-in from Kieran Trippier and was tripped by Simon Adingra in the 65th minute of Newcastle’s 1-1 draw at Brighton & Hove Albion on Sunday (below), it appeared an instantly forgettable moment. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Tears, tributes and Everton being Everton: Saying goodbye to Goodison with my dad

“It is always the first strain of Z Cars that gets you. That song I’ve heard thousands of times still has the capacity to make the hairs on the back of my neck stand up and provoke the most thunderous response from Goodison Park. At that very moment, there is nowhere else on the planet I’d rather be. Goodison has always been a special place but on Saturday it glistened and sparkled in the May sun. Pre-match banners and confetti, organised by supporter group The 1878s gave it a magical, otherworldly quality. In my 30-plus years watching Everton, I’d never seen the stadium looking better. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – ‘I had two goals when I was ill: Walk my daughter down the aisle and go to Goodison. It was magical’ (Video)
Luton were relegated – now they’ve been relegated again. How did it happen?
“Luton Town fans looked dumbfounded. Their team had just been beaten 5-3 by West Bromwich Albion in a breathless game on the final day of the Championship season to confirm relegation into English football’s third tier. Some hugged loved ones for comfort; others just held their heads in their hands. It was a dark day in the club’s recent history, and all the more painful given that — just 12 short months ago — Luton still had a chance of staying in the Premier League. They ultimately lost that fight but started this season among the promotion favourites. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The BookKeeper – Exploring Newcastle United’s finances and a takeover that changed everything
“Newcastle United’s long wait for a trophy ended under Wembley’s arch just as evening was descending, the sun disappearing and, with it, 70 years of domestic strife. Mid-March’s victory over Liverpool in the Carabao Cup final marked the end of seven trophyless decades on Tyneside (the 1969 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup excluded) and, with it, perhaps, the beginning of something else. As black-and-whites on the pitch and in the stands celebrated the end of an unwanted era, one emblem of their new era stood front and centre. Yasir Al-Rumayyan, club chairman, made his way onto the pitch and held up the trophy. He is also the governor of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), Newcastle’s majority shareholder. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The BookKeeper – Exploring Tottenham Hotspur’s finances and their reduced spending power
“There was a time, not all that long ago, when Tottenham Hotspur were routinely highlighted as the Premier League’s best-run club. And by not that long ago, we mean last August. Fair Game, a campaign group for improved football governance, placed Spurs as the highest-ranking English club in their Fair Game Index last summer, a measure that assesses clubs in terms of financial sustainability, governance, fan engagement and ethics. Daniel Levy, chairman of Spurs since 2001, expressed his delight. Spurs were, Levy said, ‘a club that prides itself on good governance — with a key focus on sustainability and engagement with stakeholders and communities’. Topping the index could be seen as a vindication of Levy’s approach to running the club since he arrived over two decades ago, when the English National Investment Company (ENIC) assumed a controlling stake. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How an English club’s bid to ‘be the most famous for Arabs’ collapsed in five days
“Just over a week ago, a new part-owner of fifth division team Dagenham & Redbridge appeared on Sky Sports and talked up his ‘dream’ to reach the Premier League. Marwan Serry, an Egyptian YouTuber and entrepreneur, said he wanted Dagenham, with average attendances at their east London home of around 1,700, to ‘be the most famous club for Arabs’. He added: ‘I’m really excited, I feel like a child playing FIFA as a gamer and suddenly it becomes reality.’ …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
W – Dagenham & Redbridge F.C.

Premier League all sewn up? This is where to look for drama in the coming weeks…
“You see the bus at the stop. It’s just over there. You can obviously make it. You quicken your step. As you do, you hear the engine start. The doors fold closed. You could sprint for it — you’re fast enough — but the idea is unappealing. The sweat, sure, but also just the indignity of it. You don’t need this bus. There will be others. The doors reopen. Someone else is now getting on. It’s extremely makeable now, you could probably just jog. But something stops you. You have already committed to not going for it, your nonchalance now non-negotiable. It could linger there for 20 or 30 more seconds for all you care. You’re walking slowly, you’re missing that bus and that’s the end of the matter. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Sadness, despair and anger: A three-day road trip to the Premier League’s drop zone
“Three games, three days and three degrees of desperation, a tragical misery tour that leads from Suffolk to London and on to the East Midlands. Roll up for a relegation road trip featuring Ipswich Town, Southampton and Leicester City, clubs promoted to the Premier League last season and now going, gone and almost certainly going, who have found the promised land to be harsh and infertile. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How one Ipswich backpass caused two of the craziest minutes in the Premier League this season
“Just when you think you’ve seen everything that football has to offer, along come Ipswich Town. Amid another morale-sapping defeat that all but sealed their relegation from the Premier League, Ipswich, with a little help from their opponents, Wolverhampton Wanderers, served up the maddest two minutes of Premier League action you are likely to see this season. A backpass, a mistake, a save, a free kick, a melee on the goal line, a thudding shot and a point-blank block… there was nothing technically proficient about any of it, but it was memorable. Are you not entertained? For the uninitiated, this was all about the backpass law, introduced to football in 1992 with the aim of making the game less dull. In the main it has been a huge success, and it certainly was at Portman Road on Saturday. …”
NT times/The Athletic
Reader poll results – Discussing Kevin De Bruyne and the most influential midfielders of the Premier League era

Steven Gerrard – Liverpool 1998-2015
“… Pep Guardiola of Kevin De Bruyne’s impending exit from Manchester City. De Bruyne’s impact at City since joining from Wolfsburg in 2015 has been huge, with the Belgian scoring 106 goals in 413 appearances, contributing to 187 Premier League goals (scoring or assisting), equalling the assist record for a single season and winning 19 trophies. While Guardiola was careful about discussing where he stands in the greatest player debate, the City coach praised his ‘influence in our success in the last decade’. Which had us asking, who are the most influential midfielders of the Premier League era? …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Southampton and the unwanted Premier League lowest points record: ‘It would be a stain’
“There has been little to cheer about for supporters of Southampton Football Club this season. Southampton were promoted back to the Premier League last summer at the first time of asking via victory over Leeds United in the Championship’s play-off final, but it has not been a happy first campaign on their return to the English top flight. They’ve only managed two league wins in their 29 games, sacked the manager who brought them up, Russell Martin, in December, are on a nine-match losing streak at home and have conceded 70 goals, which, unsurprisingly, is more than any other top-flight team. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The Premier League is back – and it’s all about the race for a top-five finish
“With the Premier League title race and relegation battle seemingly wrapped up before April, you might think there is little peril remaining in the final weeks of 2024-25. Fear not. Any thrill-seekers need only look as far as the race for Champions League spots, with as many as seven teams still fighting to dine at Europe’s top table next season. Liverpool, Arsenal, and Nottingham Forest have separated themselves from the remaining pack at the top of the table but based on the latest UEFA coefficient standings, fifth is enough for a place in the 2025-26 Champions League. One more win for any of the five English sides remaining in a European competition this season should confirm that additional spot in the continent’s top tournament. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Liverpool 1 Newcastle 2: Isak and Burn end 70 years of hurt as Slot’s side fall flat

Burn towers over Mac Allister to do what he hadn’t been doing in training: score
“Newcastle United had waited 70 years for a moment like this. It was 1955 when the north-east club last won a piece of major domestic silverware but that drought is over after a 2-1 win over Liverpool in Sunday’s Carabao Cup final. Nobody could argue it was not deserved, either. Newcastle were hungrier and carried more thrust throughout and could have been leading by more than just the goals scored by Dan Burn and Alexander Isak before Federico Chiesa ensured a nervy finale with a late strike. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
NY Times/The Athletic – Inside Newcastle United’s Carabao Cup glory – Shearer’s text, Howe’s banner and tactics, and a half-time slideshow (Video)
Guardian: Liverpool have been utterly dominant. But cracks are starting to emerge – Jonathan Wilson

Adam Wharton and a perfect pass that must have impressed Thomas Tuchel
“As Adam Wharton turned and played a perfect through ball to Eddie Nketiah, Thomas Tuchel must have raised an eyebrow. The England head coach watched Crystal Palace from the stands for the second successive match with several players on his radar. But if there was a pass which by itself warranted an England call-up then this was it. Wharton received the ball 10 yards inside Palace’s half, surveyed the surroundings and advanced forward. He spotted Nketiah, who was through a crowd. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Mousa Dembélé, the Alkmaar years: The one-in-three forward who became a unique midfielder
“Mousa Dembele was a players’ player: a rare talent whose quality is best articulated by his team-mates. Kyle Walker, who played alongside Dembele at Tottenham Hotspur for five seasons before joining Manchester City in 2017, said he was ‘probably the best player I have ever seen play football’, and he has lined up with and against some of the greatest of his generation. One is those is City’s Kevin De Bruyne, who incidentally described his former Belgium team-mate as ‘the best player in the world’ at five-a-side. Former Spurs manager Mauricio Pochettino ranked him in the ‘genius’ bracket of those he had worked with, alongside Diego Maradona and Ronaldinho. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
W – Mousa Dembélé (Belgian footballer)
Time is ticking: The Premier League player contracts to watch out for at each club
“Premier League clubs will already be planning who they want to bring in this summer when the transfer market reopens, but making sure they hold on to key players is also a major part of successful squad building. As Liverpool have found out with Trent Alexander-Arnold, Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk, it can be challenging for clubs if contracts drift into the final year, or even the final two years. Here, we look at which Premier League players are entering a crucial period in their deals. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How to brand (or re-brand) a Premier League club: Names, locations, kits and crests

“What is the best way for a Premier League club to promote its brand? And what is the thinking behind changes to approach? After Jack Pitt-Brooke revealed Tottenham had emailed Premier League broadcasters asking not to be referred to as Tottenham, but rather ‘Tottenham Hotspur’ or ‘Spurs’ for short, The Athletic spoke to experts to try and understand the thinking behind this move — and the strategies of other Premier League clubs. Steve Martin, founding partner of MSQ sport and entertainment, explains the general mindset for top-flight clubs when they are looking to boost their image. ‘What all these clubs are looking to do is constantly find a way to connect with their fans, bring new supporters in, and try to make it more diverse in terms of fanbase and cultural relevance,’ the tells The Athletic. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Explained: Shocking challenge on Jean-Philippe Mateta that Crystal Palace chairman says ‘endangered’ his life
“Jean-Philippe Mateta had his ‘life endangered’ in a challenge from Millwall goalkeeper Liam Roberts that left the Crystal Palace striker with a head injury, his club’s chairman Steve Parish said. Mateta was given oxygen on the pitch following the challenge in Saturday’s FA Cup fifth-round tie, before being taken off on a stretcher from the field of play in a neck brace and being directly taken to an ambulance, with play stopped for over 10 minutes. Millwall’s Roberts was shown a straight red card after the video assistant referee (VAR) recommended on-field referee Michael Oliver to review the decision, after the goalkeeper was initially not punished for the incident. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Preston v Burnley, a bog-standard English fixture or… football’s ultimate heritage match?

“On the face of it, Preston North End versus Burnley seems like a bog-standard Championship fixture. Since the start of the 21st century, the clubs have met 26 times in the second tier of English football, making it one of the division’s most regular encounters. Such a sense of routine was supported by the outcomes in two league fixtures this season, with meetings at Turf Moor in October and Deepdale earlier this month finishing in goalless draws. The BBC wrote of ‘a typically frantic and feisty Lancashire derby’ in February — that game has subsequently led to an investigation by the Football Association following claims of an alleged racist comment by the Preston forward Milutin Osmajic (Osmajic ‘strongly refuted’ the claims, Preston said) — but it was otherwise only notable because the visiting team extended their remarkable record of consecutive clean sheets to 11. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Our picture archives do not stretch back to the 1880s, but this image shows Preston scoring a penalty against Burnley in 1953.
Ange Postecoglou thinks that the assist is a ‘useless statistic’ – is he right?

“Football can be a divisive sport, but one thing most can agree on is the value of setting up a team-mate for a goal. Not so for Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou. When asked about Dane Scarlett’s assist against Ipswich Town this week, he initially praised the young forward’s character, before launching into a dismissive speech about the metric. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Crossing is back on the menu in the Premier League
“You could argue that Emile Smith Rowe’s goal did not stand out in last weekend’s wider collection of finishes. Fulham ran out 2-1 winners against Nottingham Forest, with their opener coming from a well-worked sequence that saw Adama Traore cut inside onto his left foot before delivering a delightful ball for the onrushing Smith Rowe to head home. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Marco Asensio’s movement and positioning led to Aston Villa’s victory against Chelsea
“Being in the right place at the right time is a priceless skill. It is often the result of understanding space and knowing when to time your off-ball movement. In Aston Villa’s 2-1 victory against Chelsea on Saturday, Marco Asensio was twice in the right place at the right time and his goals earned Unai Emery’s side three valuable points. First, on the second phase of a set piece, Asensio was positioned towards the near post when Matty Cash tried to find Marcus Rashford towards the far one. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Dean Huijsen and the pass that proves how valuable he is to Bournemouth
“It was a moment many watching the game may have missed — but it has become increasingly common for Andoni Iraola and Bournemouth fans. As Milos Kerkez passes backwards under instruction from Bournemouth team-mate Antoine Semenyo during Saturday’s match at the St Mary’s Stadium, Southampton forwards Kamaldeen Sulemana and Paul Onuachu start to press the intended recipient, Dean Huijsen. Centre-back Huijsen controls the ball with the studs of his right boot, then rolls it to open up his body. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
‘Nothing about that game felt safe’ – The 2009 Upton Park riot retold by those who were there

“Rob Green could not believe what he was seeing. The then-West Ham United goalkeeper was aware of the hatred between West Ham and Millwall supporters — but not to this extent. ‘I was in front of the Millwall fans, they’d ripped up the chairs and started throwing them on the pitch. But then they started pulling out the metal framework that held the seats in. That’s when I realised, ‘S***, this is going to be a long night.’ It was venomous hatred.’ Green, who played for West Ham between 2006-2012, is reflecting on the 2009 League Cup tie against Millwall, a game labelled ‘the Upton Park riot’. West Ham won 3-1, but the match was marred by violence outside the ground and pitch invasions by fans during it. There were arrests and a Millwall supporter was stabbed in the chest before the match. …”
NY Times/Athletic

The impact of being only player from your country to play in the Premier League
“Gunnar Nielsen’s Premier League career was brief. Extremely brief, in fact: it lasted 17 minutes. The goalkeeper was introduced as a late substitute for Manchester City against Arsenal in 2010 after Shay Given had aggravated a shoulder injury he picked up a week earlier when diving in vain for Paul Scholes’s late winner in the Manchester derby. But it was a big deal back home. Those 17 minutes represented the first — and only — time a player from the Faroe Islands had played in the Premier League. It was such a big deal that a local radio station couldn’t even wait until the game had finished to call his brother for some reaction. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
UEFA’s talks with Relevent Sports explained: Games in the U.S? What would a deal be worth? Why them?
“One of the most successful and lucrative commercial rights partnerships in football is ending. On Tuesday, it was announced that UEFA had entered into exclusive talks with Relevent Sports, the company owned by Stephen Ross, an American real-estate developer and principal owner of the NFL franchise Miami Dolphins and the Hard Rock Stadium in that Florida city. This means UEFA’s three-decades-long relationship with TEAM Marketing, the agency that played a pivotal role in the rebranding and growth of the Champions League, turning it into the global sporting behemoth it is today, is expected to end in 2027. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How did Newcastle’s Lloyd Kelly end up in the Champions League with Juventus?
“Lloyd Kelly’s first start of 2025? Against Bromley of League Two, English football’s fourth tier, in the FA Cup’s third round on January 12 as one of nine Newcastle United changes to their previous line-up as coach Eddie Howe fielded a largely second-string side. Kelly’s second start of 2025? Against Dutch title holders PSV on February 11 in a Champions League play-off to decide who goes forward to the round of 16 next month as the 26-year-old defender made his home debut for Juventus, 36-time champions of Italy and two-time winners of the European Cup/Champions League (among their nine appearances in the final). …”
NY Times/The Athletic
2009–10 Notts County F.C. season
“During the 2009–10 English football season, Notts County competed in Football League Two, the fourth tier of the English football league system. Shortly before the season began, the club was subject to a high-profile takeover by Munto Finance, purportedly a wealthy Middle East-based consortium with ambitions to take the club to the Premier League. The former England manager Sven-Göran Eriksson was appointed director of football, and lavish spending began in apparent early efforts to achieve these ambitions. In reality, Munto Finance was controlled by the convicted fraudster Russell King, and the club had been acquired as part of an elaborate scheme to list a fake mining company on the stock exchange. The promised money did not exist, King fled when the scheme collapsed and Notts County were left deeply in debt. Eriksson resigned following a further takeover by Ray Trew, who prevented bankruptcy and oversaw a successful conclusion to the season, with the team winning the League Two championship and promotion to Football League One. The team also fared well in the FA Cup, reaching the last sixteen of the competition. …”
Wikipedia
NOTTS COUNTY AND THE BIZARRE TAKEOVER OF 2009

How Bournemouth became the Premier League’s best team to watch – and worst to play against
“Few people expected Bournemouth’s game with Liverpool this weekend to be so important. The Premier League’s broadcast partners certainly didn’t as they made their five picks for live TV from the 10 matches in this latest round of fixtures. Sky Sports and their TNT counterparts choosing to leave the Vitality Stadium clash in the Saturday 3pm slot, behind English football’s longstanding television ‘blackout’, means only viewers outside the UK will be able to (legally) watch what could be one of the matches of the season as it happens. Because this might be the toughest fixture league leaders Liverpool have left as they chase a record-equalling 20th league title. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Why do so many play on after damaging anterior cruciate ligaments? An expert explains
“When Gabriel Jesus fell to the grass clutching his knee around 30 minutes into Arsenal’s FA Cup tie against Manchester United this month, it looked like the Brazilian’s night was over. But after the Arsenal physio ran onto the pitch and carried out tests on the 27-year-old’s left knee, he was back on his feet and deemed fit to continue. Around 10 minutes later, after sprinting to reach Bruno Fernandes on the edge of the Arsenal box, Jesus was down again, clearly in distress. This time, the striker was not able to get back on his feet and left the field on a stretcher, with the club later confirming he had suffered an injury to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in his left knee. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Does the Premier League’s ‘Big Six’ still exist (on and off the pitch)?
“.Over halfway through the 2024-25 season, for fans of certain teams outside the traditional ‘Big Six’, the first item is all they need. Specifically, that is, a table of the current Premier League standings..Nottingham Forest are in third. Newcastle United and Bournemouth are within a point of Manchester City — who, until this weekend, were outside the top four in January for the first time in 15 years. Sixth-placed Chelseaalso look likely to be in the Champions League qualification battle. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Lots of shots, zero goals: Analysing European football’s most wasteful players
“Midway through the second half of Everton’s 3-2 win against Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday, the ball fell to left-back Vitalii Mykolenko. The Goodison Park crowd bellowed “shoot” at him. It was, perhaps, an ironic request. Mykolenko has attempted 11 shots this season, and none of them have been on target, let alone actually gone in. But Mykolenko isn’t the worst offender of the prolific shooters who haven’t scored a goal. Ten players from Europe’s ‘big five’ leagues have attempted more than double that number of shots, yet remain on zero goals this season. Here’s a rundown of the top 10 — with xG separating those with the same number of shots — along with some details about where they might be going wrong. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Nottingham Forest’s signature throw-in explained – and how it led to a goal for Elliot Anderson
“If football viewers are forced to pick a part of matches they could fast-forward through, the most popular choice is likely to be throw-ins. Usually, these are trivial to the audience; just a means to resume the action after the ball goes off one side of the pitch or the other. The fun ones are those launched into the penalty area towards a cluster of players from both teams battling to get on the end of it. The most iconic long throw-ins in Premier League history were Rory Delap’s with Stoke City in the late 2000s, and in recent seasons it is Brentford and Nottingham Forest who have been the flagbearers of this approach. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Dissecting Justin Kluivert’s incredible performance and hat-trick against Newcastle
“There are different ways to score a hat-trick. Not the method itself, but how a player scores their three goals — a hat-trick can come from three tap-ins, or three long-range strikes alongside an incredible performance. Justin Kluivert entered the record books in November when he became the first player in Premier League history to score a hat-trick of penalties during Bournemouth’s 4-2 victory against Wolverhampton Wanderers. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Will Liverpool win this Premier League title – and, if so, when? Our experts’ views
“It is 76 days since Liverpool moved back to the top of the 2024-25 Premier League table with a 2-1 home win against Brighton & Hove Albion — a position they haven’t relinquished since. Arne Slot’s side are not always showing imperious form but have still only been beaten once in their 20 league matches so far and have a four-point advantage over second-placed Arsenal, with a game in hand, going into the weekend’s fixtures. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Special report: The future of St James’ Park
“Sir Bobby Robson declared it ‘the cathedral on the hill’, while Eddie Howe describes it as ‘totally inspiring’. Decision time is finally approaching over whether the iconic (and expanded) St James’ Park will remain Newcastle United’s ground, or whether they take the bold, contentious step of venturing away from their previously ever-present home. … The Athletic has spent weeks speaking to stakeholders, insiders and those affected to outline just how complicated this decision is and has learnt: Talks have yet to commence officially between the club and key stakeholders; There are claims Newcastle cannot sell St James’ — should they wish to do so — because the land is managed by the Freemen of Newcastle; Newcastle’s stadium must be ready ‘a minimum of six months’ before it is due to host its share of matches at the 2028 European Championship, affecting building timescales; etc. … Here is everything we know so far about Newcastle’s stadium plans. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
W – St James’ Park
The name of the Metro station as displayed in St James Metro station
Data has revolutionised football transfers. When will it do the same to real-time tactics?
“The football analytics boom has been firmly established, but its role within the game remains debated. Some argue that data has cleansed the game to such an extent that football has become too uniform for the average fan. For others, a data-led approach is romanticised as the tool that helps clubs find an edge in creating their underdog story. Whatever your opinion, data analysis, paired with video technology, is becoming increasingly complex in football — even if its impact on a team’s tactical approach continues to be discussed. The Athletic’s Michael Cox recently provided a compelling argument that the work being undertaken within football analytics might not have been applied as much on the pitch as we might have thought. While data-led recruitment — and even artificial intelligence — has become increasingly valuable for clubs, there are fewer examples of statistics directly informing decision-making within a game. The question is, why might this disconnect exist? …”
NY Times/The Athletic
