Day of reckoning looms in Premier League survival race
Soccer Football - Premier League - Wolverhampton Wanderers v Everton - Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, Britain - May 20, 2023 Everton's Yerry Mina and James Garner during the warm up before the match Action Images via Reuters/Andrew Boyers
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Fingernails
will be bitten to the quick on Sunday as Everton, Leicester City and Leeds
United make a dash for the last remaining seat on the Premier League lifeboat.
While the
title and most of the other issues have been resolved ahead of final day, the
relegation survival battle will provide the most absorbing viewing - for
neutrals at least.
For the
clubs, and fans, involved the 90 minutes on Sunday may feel like an eternity.
Southampton
were long ago cast adrift and will already be planning for life in the
second-tier Championship, but the other two relegation places are still to be
decided.
Everton at
least have their destiny in their hands as they seek to extend their unbroken
69-year stay in the top flight.
Victory at
home to Bournemouth on Sunday will render anything Leicester and Leeds manage
at home to West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur redundant and ensure the
Toffees another great escape to rival the two they pulled off in the 1990s.
Everton are
currently on 33 points and with Leicester and Leeds on 31 they could even lose
and still stay up if the other two fail to win - a scenario that would break a
Premier League record for the least points required to ensure safety, currently
the 34 West Bromwich Albion accumulated in 2005.
It may sound
straightforward, but final day survival battles usually have numerous twists
and turns and Everton's task was made more complicated by Leicester hanging on
grimly for a 0-0 draw at Newcastle United on Monday.
That point
lifted Leicester above Leeds on goal difference and meant Everton will begin
against Bournemouth without the cushion of being able to draw to stay up, as
Leicester have a superior goal difference.
"If
somebody had said we'll take it to the last game, I'd have taken that, but I'd
rather us have the say on whether we stay up or not," Leicester's interim
coach Dean Smith said.
"It's
out of our hands but we have to go out to get the win and hope Lady Luck shines
down on us."
Relegation
would have seemed unthinkable just a couple of seasons ago for Leicester when
they won the FA Cup by beating Chelsea, five years after winning the Premier
League title.
Leeds really
do need all the cards to fall in their favour. To avoid a return to the
championship after a three-season stay in the top flight they must beat
Tottenham by any score, then hope Leicester fail to win and Everton lose.
There is
also another survival scenario for Leeds in which they beat Tottenham by at
least three goals, Leicester fail to win and Everton draw, in which case Leeds
would stay up on goal difference, or if that is level, courtesy of having
scored more goals.
Leeds beat
the drop on the final day of last season by winning at Brentford, but even Sam
Allardyce, the renowned escape artist who answered Leeds' SOS call in May,
sounded pessimistic after last weekend's loss at West Ham.
"It was
difficult for him, coming in at this stage with this many games left,"
former Leeds great Eddie Gray said. "You don't get a real opportunity.
It's a difficult situation for everybody. But the club probably had to try
something to try and get us out the situation."

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