Arsenal title hopes hammered, Villa all but down

Monday, 11 April 2016 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

West Ham United v Arsenal - Barclays Premier League

Andy Carroll celebrates scoring the second goal for West Ham against Arsenal - Reuters 

 

Aston Villa v AFC Bournemouth - Barclays Premier League

Joshua King celebrates scoring the second goal for Bournemouth in the match against Aston Villa on Saturday - Action Images via Reuters

 

Reuters: Arsenal’s title hopes were virtually extinguished by a 3-3 draw at West Ham United and Aston Villa’s top-flight status is merely mathematical after an eighth successive defeat all but sealed their fate on Saturday.

Needing a barnstorming finish to the Premier League season and a Leicester City wobble to have any chance of finishing top for the first time since 2004, Arsenal seemed on course for a third consecutive win when they led 2-0.

Arsene Wenger’s team were then rocked by Andy Carroll’s quickfire hat-trick for the Hammers.

Laurent Koscielny’s equaliser spared third-placed Arsenal a defeat in a pulsating last London derby at Upton Park before West Ham uproot to the Olympic Stadium but they remained 10 points adrift of Leicester with six games left.

“We have to keep going no matter what, and hope. You never know what can happen,” said manager Wenger although his priority now seems to be sealing a 19th straight season in the Champions League by finishing in the top four.

Slaven Bilic praised his sixth-placed West Ham team after the game.

“I’m proud of everything. We were spectacular. The only thing I’m not happy about is the result,” said Bilic after a second consecutive draw dented his dreams of a top-four finish.

Manchester City, who are fourth, secured back-to-back league wins for the first time since October, a 2-1 home defeat of West Bromwich Albion putting pressure on fifth-placed Manchester United in the battle to qualify for next season’s Champions League.

Villa marooned

The relegation trapdoor is not completely nailed down on bottom club Villa but after an eighth consecutive league defeat, 2-1 at home to Bournemouth, they can start making plans for life in the Championship after 28 years in the top flight.

Villa are marooned on 16 points with five games left and the most they can now attain is 31, the haul that fourth from bottom Norwich City have after they went down 1-0 at Crystal Palace.

The former European champions also have a minus-41 goal difference compared to Norwich’s minus-22 so only a surreal set of circumstances can save them and the fans that waved white handkerchiefs are not expecting miracles.

“It’s a sombre mood, as you would imagine,” said stand-in manager Eric Black. “We’re not relegated yet but we’re not far off.”

Newcastle still retain a modicum of hope but it is fading fast after they lost 3-1 at Southampton to leave Rafa Benitez’s side second from bottom, six points behind Norwich and two adrift of Sunderland who host Leicester on Sunday.

Goals from Shane Long, Graziano Pelle and Victor Wanyama put Southampton clear and Andros Townsend’s reply was scant consolation for the visiting fans who travelled south as Newcastle crashed to a ninth successive away defeat.

Leaders Leicester close in on title with win at Sunderland

Reuters: Premier League leaders Leicester City moved even closer to the title by winning 2-0 at relegation-threatened Sunderland on Sunday.

England international Jamie Vardy put them ahead in the 66th minute and he added his second -- and 21st of the season -- in added time.

That left them 10 points ahead of second-placed Tottenham Hotspur, who play Manchester United later on Sunday.

With five games left, Claudio Ranieri’s unfashionable side need a maximum of nine more points to become English champions for the first time.

Sunderland remain in the bottom three, four points behind Norwich City, who they play next Saturday.

Understrength Liverpool romp to victory over Stoke

Reuters: Liverpool romped to an easy victory over Stoke City on Sunday despite manager Juergen Klopp resting a number of players ahead of Thursday’s second leg of the Europa League quarter-final against his former club Borussia Dortmund.

Klopp made seven changes from the side that had drawn 1-1 in Germany, giving first Premier League starts to youngsters Kevin Stewart and Sheyi Ojo.

The victory sent Liverpool above Stoke into eighth position, one point ahead of them but nine short of the Champions League places.

 

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