Leeds United
How the next five fixtures shape the relegation fight for Spurs, Leeds, Forest and West Ham
Spurs, Leeds, Nottingham Forest and West Ham enter decisive five-game stretches after the March break
The relegation picture shifted sharply immediately before the March international break, with Tottenham Hotspur now staring down a run of results that has left the club in serious trouble. Tottenham haven’t won in the league since December and have lost six of their last seven. There’s no other way around it, the ‘Big Six’ club’s form screams relegation.
West Ham United also suffered a damaging defeat to Aston Villa and sit one point behind Tottenham in the current standings. Leeds United earned a draw at home to Brentford, which moved them four points clear of the relegation zone and gave them some breathing room. Nottingham Forest will be looking to build on their thumping win against Spurs as the schedule tightens.
Points before the upcoming run: Tottenham 30, Leeds 33, Nottingham Forest 32, West Ham 29.
Tottenham
– Sunderland (A) – April 12
– Brighton (H) – April 18
– Wolves (A) – April 25
– Aston Villa (A) – May 2
– Leeds (H) – May 9
Spurs travel to Sunderland after the break, welcome Brighton the following weekend and finish April with a trip to Wolves. May opens with a visit to Aston Villa, then a home game against Leeds that could carry major consequences in the battle to stay up.
Leeds United
– Wolves (H) – April 10
– Man Utd (A) – April 13
– Burnley (H) – April 18
– Bournemouth (A) – April 25
– Tottenham (A) – May 9
Leeds face a Manchester United fixture next, with a late-April trip to Bournemouth framed by home matches against Wolves and Burnley that represent chances to consolidate their position.
Nottingham Forest
– Sunderland (A) – April 24
– Everton (H) – April 25
– Aston Villa (H) – after the break
– Europa League quarterfinal vs Porto between those two league matches
– Burnley (H) – after the break
Forest host Aston Villa and Burnley after the break and have a Europa League quarterfinal with Porto scheduled between those fixtures.
West Ham United
– Brentford (A) – May 2
– Leeds (H) – May 9
– Tottenham (A) – May 9
– Newcastle (H) – May 9
– Arsenal (H) – May 9
West Ham remain in and around the drop zone and will need points from a run that includes Brentford and a pivotal sequence in May.
With margins this fine, the outcomes across these five-game runs could define the relegation battle going into the final weeks of the 2025/26 season.
AC Milan
Wright’s Promotion, Aaronson’s Momentum and Pulisic’s Worrying Run Ahead of World Cup Deadline
Wright’s promotion boosts his World Cup case; Aaronson and Richards rise while Pulisic’s form falls.
With national teams required to submit World Cup squads to FIFA by May 30, every appearance now carries added weight for American players. The past week produced clear positives and growing concerns for the USMNT pool.
Haji Wright played 28 minutes for Coventry City in a 1–1 draw with Blackburn Rovers as his club secured promotion to the English top flight for the first time in 25 years. Wright entered in the 62nd minute and registered a single shot in that match. Across the Championship campaign he has 16 goals and an assist in 29 games, placing him second in the Golden Boot race behind Žan Vipotnik. That goalscoring return and the prospect of remaining with Coventry for the Premier League step up have strengthened his appeal for a World Cup roster spot, even if he is not a guaranteed starter.
Brenden Aaronson is enjoying one of his best seasons with Leeds United. He played 86 minutes in Monday’s Premier League fixture against Manchester United, creating an assist on a day Noah Okafor netted a brace in a 2–1 victory at Old Trafford. Aaronson now has four goals and four assists in 31 Premier League matches this season and is pushing to make his second World Cup after debuting in Qatar. While Leeds remain concerned about relegation, the club also prepares for an FA Cup semifinal against Chelsea after ousting West Ham United. “The biggest thing was the Premier League, staying up and just having a great season, which I think we’ve done and we’ve put ourselves in a great position,” Aaronson told ESPN . “And then the cherry on top is being in the FA Cup and getting to the semifinals … It’s going to be a massive game for this club and for this team.”
Chris Richards continued his rise with Crystal Palace, producing 10 defensive actions and nine clearances in Conference League action against Fiorentina as Palace advanced 4–2 on aggregate despite a 2–1 loss. He also delivered nine defensive contributions in a league win over Newcastle, a match settled by Jean-Philippe Mateta’s 94th-minute penalty.
By contrast, Christian Pulisic’s form remains a concern. The 27-year-old has gone 17 goalless games for AC Milan after a 3–0 loss to Udinese in which he recorded three attempts but no shot on target. Since his last goal he has one assist, versus Torino in March, and he struggled for the USMNT against Portugal and Belgium. Tim Ream’s veteran presence still matters, but recent showings with Charlotte FC raise questions about his level against top attackers.
Bournemouth
FPL Gameweek 33: Double-Gameweek Targets and Budget Options
Key FPL options for Gameweek 33: double-duty players, cheap defenders and forwards to target picks..
Gameweek 33 brings both headaches and opportunities for FPL managers as several teams play twice. The double fixtures make prioritising players from the right squads crucial, with Bournemouth, Brighton & Hove Albion, Burnley, Chelsea, Leeds United and Manchester City all on double duty.
Goalkeepers
Karl Darlow (£3.9m) stands out because of his low price and fixtures against Wolverhampton Wanderers (H) and Bournemouth (A). He has scored 16 points across his last three fixtures and looks nailed on for the remainder of the season. Gianluigi Donnarumma (£5.6m) also offers two fixtures, Arsenal (H) and Burnley (A), but his inclusion uses one of three Man City slots managers may prefer to spend on midfield and forward assets. Đorđe Petrović (£4.6m) is a Bournemouth alternative after three clean sheets in his last six outings versus Newcastle United (A) and Leeds (H).
Defenders
Bournemouth defenders Marcos Senesi (£5.2m) and James Hill (£4.2m) present clean sheet potential and solid defensive contribution totals, while Adrien Truffert (£4.7m) provides more attacking upside via assists. Leeds options Pascal Struijk (£4.3m), Jayden Bogle (£4.4m) and Gabriel Gudmundsson (£3.8m) offer differing mixes of defensive reliability and attacking threat. Marc Cucurella (£6.0m) is the main Chelsea defender to consider despite matches with Manchester United (H) and Brighton (A) being tough for clean sheets. Nico O’Reilly (£5.0m) would be an obvious pick after a 14-point weekend and 52 points in six gameweeks, but he is an injury concern; Marc Guéhi (£5.1m) is a viable alternative if O’Reilly is ruled out.
Midfield and attack
Antoine Semenyo (£8.2m) remains an attractive midfield option despite high ownership. Rayan Cherki (£6.3m) offers a differential and Jérémy Doku (£6.4m) provides explosive potential. Cole Palmer (£10.5m) will start both Chelsea games and is on spot kicks. Bournemouth’s Marcus Tavernier (£5.4m) is notable for set-piece and penalty responsibility versus Rayan (£5.5m) and Alex Scott (£5.0m). Pascal Groß (£5.5m) and Yankuba Minteh (£5.5m) could be short-term Brighton values.
Forwards
Erling Haaland (£14.4m) is the obvious captaincy candidate across two fixtures, with particular promise in the Burnley match. João Pedro (£7.7m) is a reliable pick given Chelsea’s double and his 82 points since Liam Rosenior took charge; he faces little competition for his starting role.
Analytics & Stats
How the Premier League Slows the Game: A Ranking of Time-Wasting When Leading
Leeds are the slowest to restart when protecting leads; Arsenal also rank highly in delays. 2025/26.
Professional football demands entertainment but also rewards results, and that tension is most visible in how teams manage dead-ball restarts when protecting a lead. The Times has produced a detailed breakdown of how long each Premier League club takes across corners, direct free-kicks, indirect free-kicks, goal kicks and throw-ins while winning. The analysis ranks Leeds United as the club that, on average, takes the most time to restart when defending a lead.
Leeds are particularly deliberate over throw-ins and direct free-kicks. Managers have noticed: Daniel Farke has famously complained about opponents’ time-wasting, most notably after both games against Manchester City. At Leeds, long launches from Ethan Ampadu are a frequent sight in the final third, and Anton Stach has already rattled in three set-piece goals this season.
Promoted Burnley also feature near the top of the list for slowdown when protecting a lead, a pattern that fits with clubs trying to preserve scarce advantages. Arsenal’s presence among the higher-ranked teams will attract scrutiny given their position at the top of the table. The Gunners are unusually slow across several restart types and are the only team to sit in the top half of the division for time spent on all five restart categories.
Fabian Hürzeler captured the frustration felt by rivals after a tight loss to Arsenal. “Only one team tried to play football,” the young German coach sighed.
“I ask you one question,” Hürzeler posed to assembled media. “Did you see in a Premier League game a goalkeeper going down three times? You can’t control these kind of things … therefore the Premier League has to find a rule.”
Arsenal’s restart ranks while leading read: Corner 2nd, Direct Free-Kick 6th, Indirect Free-Kick 9th, Goal Kick 4th, Throw-In 8th. By contrast Manchester City rank: Corner 17th, Direct Free-Kick 2nd, Indirect Free-Kick 20th, Goal Kick 10th, Throw-In 18th. City, Liverpool and Chelsea are among the five quickest clubs at getting the ball back into play, alongside Brighton. “No one recognizes it,” Hürzeler seethed, “but when Arsenal have a corner and they are leading, sometimes they spend over a minute just to take a corner.”
The issue has drawn attention at club level and from governing bodies, with broader rule changes under consideration ahead of the summer World Cup.
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