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City held by Bournemouth as Kroupi strike and late Haaland goal hand Arsenal the title

City drew 1-1 with Bournemouth; Kroupi scored and Haaland’s late goal was merely consolation & title.

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Manchester City needed a win to keep the Premier League race alive but settled for a 1-1 draw with Bournemouth on Tuesday, a result that handed the title to Arsenal. Eli Junior Kroupi curled home in the 39th minute to put Bournemouth ahead. City pressed after the interval but could not find the end product required. Erling Haaland scored deep into stoppage time, but the goal proved only a consolation.

Pep Guardiola’s side finished four points behind league leaders Arsenal with one game remaining. Reports emerged before the match that Guardiola is on his way out at the end of the season after a decade in charge. The manager has already won six league titles with City, and this season his team also lifted the Carabao Cup and FA Cup, but Tuesday’s draw will leave a stain on the final campaign.

The performance was criticised for lacking urgency and for being one-dimensional, even when two goals were required to keep the title race alive. Guardiola was animated on the touchline and in the technical area as the seconds ticked down.

Individual ratings reflected a mixed display. Rodri was one of the few to emerge with credit, rated 8.3: “Bossed the game from the midfield, hit the woodwork and had 112 touches, the most in the game.” Gianluigi Donnarumma received a 7.0 and needed the woodwork to help keep Bournemouth to one goal. Erling Haaland was marked 7.9 for his stoppage-time strike after a quiet first half. Matheus Nunes (7.3) and Abdukodir Khusanov (6.9) struggled at different stages; Khusanov was described as being caught in no man’s land for the opener. Several substitutes made brief impacts: Savinho (7.0) won all his duels, Phil Foden (6.4) kept play alive for Haaland’s eventual strike, while others saw limited minutes.

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The match statistics underlined a close game. Bournemouth had 45% possession to City’s 55%. Expected goals were Bournemouth 1.99, Man City 1.67. Total shots were 10 for Bournemouth and 14 for City, with shots on target 2 and 5 respectively. Big chances favored Bournemouth 3-1, passing accuracy was 80% for Bournemouth and 87% for City, and fouls committed were 16 to 7.

Aston Villa

Villa’s Europa League victory can hand a Champions League place to sixth

Villa’s Europa League win could hand a Champions League place to the Premier League’s sixth by Sunday

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Aston Villa’s 3–0 Europa League final win over Freiburg in Istanbul on Wednesday night has ripple effects beyond the club and its supporters. It wasn’t just Aston Villa supporters who celebrated, with fans of several other Premier League sides cheering on “Unai Emery’s men”.

As the Premier League season reaches its final round on Sunday, Villa’s triumph creates a scenario in which the team finishing sixth could qualify for next season’s Champions League. Under the current arrangement, England’s top five will enter Europe’s premier competition next season, but Villa’s Europa League success alters how the available berths would be allocated.

Four of those five places are already confirmed. Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United and Villa have all booked their spot. They will be joined by either Liverpool or Bournemouth, almost certainly the former. England’s UEFA coefficient has earned the country an extra Champions League slot for 2026–27, and that additional place is currently being taken up by Liverpool in fifth.

The Europa League winner is also guaranteed a Champions League berth. That means if Villa finish fifth in the Premier League, the extra place tied to their continental victory would cascade down and be taken up by the team that finishes sixth, because Villa have already secured an extra performance slot through winning the Europa League.

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For Villa to end the campaign fifth they must lose their final match away at Man City, while Liverpool would need to beat Brentford at Anfield. The Reds’ superior goal difference would see them leapfrog Villa into fourth in that scenario. If that sequence happens, the team who finishes sixth, currently Bournemouth, would qualify for the Champions League.

Bournemouth know a draw away at Nottingham Forest would be enough to clinch sixth. There is also a very slight chance of them finishing fifth with victory at the City Ground.

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Arsenal

Eight Young Player of the Season Nominees Ranked by Impact and Minutes

Eight Young Player of the Season nominees ranked by impact, consistency and minutes played. Updated.

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The Premier League remains fiercely competitive, and that intensity can make sustained development for teenagers difficult. Still, eight players aged 21 or under when the campaign began have stood out and earned nominations for Young Player of the Season. This piece ranks them on merit, consistency and involvement.

Kobbie Mainoo (Appearances: 26, Goals: 1, Assists: 2). Mainoo has made an enormous impact for Manchester United since returning from exile under Michael Carrick. His form alongside Casemiro has been instrumental to his side’s ascent up the standings, serving as a damning indictment of Ruben Amorim’s managerial ability. Despite impressive moments, he has started just 14 matches and it is only since the turn of the year that he has earned regular minutes. Mainoo should not really be included in the conversation this year.

Lewis Hall (Appearances: 28, Goals: 1, Clean Sheets: 3). The 21-year-old left back has missed eight matches through injury and has started 22 of Newcastle United’s 36 games to date. He has been a positive amid a gloomy campaign but has struggled to offer enough consistency or end product. Three clean sheets and two goal involvements are modest returns for a nominee.

Mateus Fernandes (Appearances: 34, Goals: 3, Assists: 3). Fernandes has shone despite West Ham United’s stodgy campaign, which could yet end in relegation. The 21-year-old Portuguese midfielder has registered six goal involvements across the league season and has combined tenacity with artistry. It is increasingly obvious that Fernandes will not be donning claret and blue after an impressive campaign amid the turmoil, and Europe’s elite are lining up for him ahead of a likely big-money move.

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Michael Kayode (Appearances: 35, Goals: 1, Clean Sheets: 8). Kayode’s long throws and powerful launches have become a real weapon for Brentford, but his defensive work has been equally important. The Italian right back has been integral to a strong campaign for the Bees, contributing eight clean sheets and helping the side chase a possible European berth.

Alex Scott (Appearances: 36, Goals: 3, Assists: 1). The 22-year-old midfielder has been central to Bournemouth’s remarkable season under Andoni Iraola. Scott combines a powerful engine with technical craft, shifting between intense pressing and playmaking. There have been calls for his inclusion in England’s World Cup squad after a season of recovery from several nasty injuries.

Junior Kroupi (Appearances: 31, Goals: 12, Assists: 0). The 19-year-old French striker has produced a phenomenal breakout at Bournemouth, with 12 goals and a goal-to-minutes ratio second only to Erling Haaland in the Premier League. Linked with Arsenal, Barcelona and Manchester City, Kroupi can operate as a No.9 or behind Evanilson and appears on an encouraging development path.

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Arsenal

Assessing the Premier League Player of the Season Nominees

A concise evaluation of the Premier League Player of the Season nominees, their numbers and case 1st

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This season’s Player of the Season shortlist presents no obvious front-runner. Arsenal’s collective balance has produced results without a single unmistakable soloist, while Manchester City’s usual talisman has produced a campaign that reads as a relative dip by his own extraordinary standards.

Erling Haaland (Appearances: 34; Goals: 26; Assists: 8) remains a top scorer yet has not matched his personal peak. The 26-goal haul is impressive but is his third-highest Premier League return across four campaigns. Haaland has been candid about expectations: “People are more shocked when I don’t score than when I score.” His run between Christmas Day and mid-April featured just one non-Premier League goal in a 13-game spell.

David Raya (Appearances: 36; Wins: 24; Clean Sheets: 18) complicates the criteria. His high-profile saves in Europe and the observation that his absence from the Carabao Cup final contributed to Arsenal’s limp defeat at Wembley are part of the season narrative. Opta’s shot-quality analysis suggests an average goalkeeper would have conceded about 24 goals; Raya conceded 26. His ball-playing strengths are notable, but his domestic shot-stopping record has not been exceptional.

Morgan Gibbs-White (Appearances: 35; Goals: 13; Assists: 4) began the season shadowed by transfer speculation and an ill fit under Ange Postecoglou. Under Sean Dyche and later Vítor Pereira he has produced strong form. Since the turn of the year he has scored nine non-penalty goals and has driven Nottingham Forest to the seventh-best run in the division, though his full-season record reflects the early disruption.

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Igor Thiago (Appearances: 36; Goals: 22; Assists: 1) has delivered a breakthrough campaign for Brentford after injury setbacks last term. The 24-year-old has been prolific, and with two weeks remaining he has been outscored across Europe’s top five leagues only by Kylian Mbappé, Harry Kane and Erling Haaland.

Gabriel (Appearances: 30; Goals: 3; Clean Sheets: 16) embodies Arsenal’s defensive strength and set-piece threat. His aerial presence is a constant in both boxes. He is the more obvious force in the centre-back pairing, though William Saliba, who was not nominated, has drawn praise.

Antoine Semenyo (Appearances: 35; Goals: 16; Assists: 4) excelled at Bournemouth, contributing to or creating 38% of their Premier League goals in the season’s first half. His mid-season move to Manchester City has seen him become part of their attacking quartet in 2026 and a joint-top scorer for the club in the league since his arrival. Bournemouth have been unbeaten in 15 matches without him.

All nominees present credible cases; the decision will rest on how voters weight sustained season-long contribution against recent form and moments of influence.

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