Five talking points from the first half of the Premier League season
3rd January 2024
Liverpool lead the league standings and have a 5-point advantage at the top.
- Only six points separates the top five teams in the league.
- The promoted trio of Sheffield United, Burnley and Luton occupy the bottom three.
- Everton's 10-point deduction has put their 70-year stay in the topflight at risk.
Liverpool lead the way in a tantalizingly poised Premier
League title race heading into 2024 with just six points separating the top
five.
Champions Manchester City are ominously poised to strike in
the new year despite a dip in form from last season's treble winners, while
Arsenal, Aston Villa and Tottenham are also in the mix.
But it has been a disastrous start for some of the other
pre-season big spenders. Manchester United, Newcastle and Chelsea are mired in
mid-table having lost a combined 26 games.
At the bottom, the promoted trio of Sheffield United,
Burnley and Luton occupy the bottom three, but Everton's 10-point deduction has
put their 70-year stay in the topflight at risk.
Here are the five talking points from the opening half of the season.
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New-look Liverpool back in the hunt
Last season marked the end of an era for the Reds as a
tired-looking squad sank to fifth just 12 months after coming close to an
unprecedented quadruple.
There have been some teething problems after a midfield
overhaul in the summer and Darwin Nunez's erratic form in front of goal is
still to justify the £85 million ($108 million) splashed on the Uruguayan in
2022.
But Liverpool are back to the position they have often found
themselves under Jurgen Klopp as City's biggest threat.
A demolition of Newcastle on Monday, that should have been
more comfortable than a 4-2 scoreline suggests, took Klopp's men three points
clear at the top and five ahead of City and Arsenal.
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The experienced core of goalkeeper Alisson Becker, captain
Virgil van Dijk and top scorer Mohamed Salah have all found their best form
once again.
But Liverpool must cope without Salah for up to a month now
as he departs to lead Egypt at the Africa Cup of Nations 2023.
City still the team to beat
Prior to jetting off to win the Club World Cup last month,
City had won just one of their previous six league games to give the contenders
to their throne hope.
However, Pep Guardiola's men enjoyed the best festive season
as they added a fifth trophy of 2023 to their haul in Saudi Arabia and then
watched all of their title rivals drop points.
City have a game in hand to cut their five-point deficit to
Liverpool and look set to come on strong like they did last season to reel in
Arsenal at the top of the table.
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Kevin De Bruyne is nearing a return from a hamstring injury
that has kept him out since the opening game of the season and Erling Haaland
should also be fit by the time City return to Premier League action in
mid-January at Newcastle.
The fixture list is also kind for City to build momentum. Pep
Guardiola's men will not face another side currently in the top six until they
travel to Liverpool on March 9.
Fortress Villa Park
Villa's stunning rise under Unai Emery has been built on a
phenomenal home record.
Only bottom-of-the-table Sheffield United have escaped with
a point from 10 games at Villa Park this season, which has included notable
scalps over City and Arsenal.
Many doubt Villa's ability to last the course in the title
race, but they are at the very least well in the running to qualify for the
Champions League for the first time.
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Miserable Man Utd
After a positive first season under Erik ten Hag, United
were hoping to kick on and challenge for their first league title in over a
decade.
Instead, they lost 14 times in all competitions before the
turn of the year - the most the Red Devils have suffered since the 1930/31
season.
Ten Hag's men sit eighth, 14 points off the top and nine
adrift of even the top four.
A lengthy injury list has played its part, but United's
persistent lack of value for money in the transfer market has been a bigger
issue.
Rasmus Hojlund has scored just one league goal since his £72
million arrival from Atalanta, £55 million midfielder Mason Mount has rarely
featured and a series of mistakes from goalkeeper Andre Onana, who cost £47
million, saw United dumped out the Champions League group stages.
A new era has just begun at Old Trafford with British
billionaire Jim Ratcliffe taking a 25 percent stake in the club and control of
sporting operations.
But a huge amount of work lies ahead of Ratcliffe's INEOS
group to lead United back to the promised land at the top of the Premier
League.
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Chelsea's billion-pound flop
Yet, United are arguably not even the biggest flops of the
season as Chelsea sit three points further back and 10th in the table despite a
world record spend in the transfer market.
The Blues have splashed out over £1 billion on new players
in just three transfer windows under the ownership of American Todd Boehly's
consortium.
In that time Chelsea have spiralled down the table under
four different managers.
Mauricio Pochettino hinted after a 2-0 defeat at Everton
last month that he could be forced into the transfer market again in January to
add some much-needed goal threat.
And there is widespread disquiet among the Chelsea fanbase
that academy graduate Conor Gallagher could be sold to rivals Tottenham to help
balance the books in January and comply with financial fair play rules.