Five Things We Learned From The English Premier League
22nd April 2019
Liverpool and Manchester City refuse to cede ground in statistically the greatest Premier League title race of all-time

- Liverpool's 2-0 win at Cardiff took their tally to 88 points, a club record in the Premier League era, with three games still to play
- After the emotional rollercoaster of a Champions League classic that saw Spurs end City's European dreams for another year in midweek, any nerves left at the Etihad were also shredded on Saturday
- Brighton did not manage a shot on target, but a 0-0 draw away to Wolves felt like a win according to goalkeeper Mat Ryan believes after a disastrous week threatened to cost the Seagulls their place in the Premier League
LONDON, United Kingdom- Liverpool and Manchester City refuse to cede ground in statistically
the greatest Premier League title race of all-time.
However, behind the
top two posting huge points tallies, the fallibilities of the four chasers for
the remaining two Champions League places means that race is just as close as
Tottenham, Manchester United and Arsenal all suffered defeats.
Here, AFP Sports
looks at five things we learned from the Premier League weekend.
United need a revolution
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer
began the weekend with talk of a rebuild and reality check for some of his
players.
However, even the
Norwegian seemed taken aback by the scale of the job on his hands after a 4-0
thrashing at Everton to condemn United to a sixth defeat in eight games.
"If you want to
play at this club, it has to mean more," said a scathing Solskjaer of his
side's display at Goodison Park.
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"We can't
change the whole squad, it has to be one step at a time but I said all along,
I'm going to be successful here and there are players who won't be part of that
successful team."
Liverpool hit new heights
Liverpool's 2-0 win
at Cardiff took their tally to 88 points, a club record in the Premier League
era, with three games still to play.
"We have the
best Liverpool ever, and one of the best sides I have played against,"
claimed City boss Pep Guardiola of his title rivals.
Neither side can
match City's record 100 points tally from last season, but both are likely to
pass the previous record of 95 set by Chelsea under Jose Mourinho in 2004-05.
Therefore, even the
third highest points tally English football has ever seen might not be enough
to win the league.
"I can't see us
ever getting another two teams like these two," said Cardiff boss Neil
Warnock. "Thank God we haven't got to play them again."
City show their bottle
After the emotional
rollercoaster of a Champions League classic that saw Spurs end City's European
dreams for another year in midweek, any nerves left at the Etihad were also
shredded on Saturday.
However, in the
third act against Tottenham over the past 10 days, City held onto a fifth
minute lead given to them by Phil Foden's first Premier League goal to grind
out a 1-0 win.
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City were far from
their best and Spurs boss Mauricio Pochettino claimed the hosts' goalkeeper
Ederson was man-of-the-match.
But with four games
left to Liverpool's three, the title and the chance of an unprecedented domestic
treble remains in City's hands.
Same old Arsenal
For much of the
dying days of Arsene Wenger's reign at Arsenal, it was his team's defensive
deficiencies that hampered his hopes of restoring the club to its former
glories.
Fast forward nine
months and Wenger's successor Unai Emery is wrestling with exactly the same
problem -- as Arsenal's shock 3-2 defeat against Crystal Palace underlined with
disastrous consequences.
A win would have
strengthened the Gunners hold on a top four finish.
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Instead Christian
Benteke scored his first goal for a year as Shkodran Mustafi and Konstantinos
Mavropanos stood statuesque when the Palace striker headed home.
There was worse to
come for Mustafi as the German centre-back bizarrely allowed Wilfried Zaha to
run past him to score Palace's second in a slapstick piece of defending that
recalled the worst moments of Wenger's reign.
By the time James
McArthur headed Palace's killer third goal after more sloppy defending, Emery's
problems had been laid bare for all to see.
No shots 'win' for Brighton
Brighton did not
manage a shot on target, but a 0-0 draw away to Wolves felt like a win
according to goalkeeper Mat Ryan believes after a disastrous week threatened to
cost the Seagulls their place in the Premier League.
A 5-0 thrashing by
Bournemouth was followed by a 2-0 defeat at home to Cardiff, that allowed Neil
Warnock's men to close to within two points of safety.
That gap is now
three and Brighton may well need it with Tottenham, Arsenal and City to come in
their final four games.
"The point
means a lot in the context of things, it almost feels like we've won the
game," said Ryan.
"With our
superior goal difference, it could prove to be big come the end of the
season."