Do Tottenham, West Ham, Nottingham Forest or Leeds have the best run-in?

Spurs are looking to avoid a shock Premier League relegation, while Leeds are trying not to go straight back down, Nottingham Forest want to steer clear of European distraction and West Ham are aiming to pull off a great escape

Do Tottenham, West Ham, Nottingham Forest or Leeds have the best run-in?
Do Tottenham, West Ham, Nottingham Forest or Leeds have the best run-in? Photo: The Independent

Spurs are looking to avoid a shock Premier League relegation, while Leeds are trying not to go straight back down, Nottingham Forest want to steer clear of European distraction and West Ham are aiming to pull off a great escape
The Premier League relegation battle looks set to go right down to the wire with four clubs seemingly battling to avoid the one remaining spot in the drop zone.

Perhaps Wolves or Burnley could still pull off the greatest of escapes but, in all likelihood, they will crash into the Championship and then be joined by one of Tottenham , West Ham , Nottingham Forest and Leeds .

Relegation for a Spurs side that won the Europa League last season , reached the Champions League knockout stage this term and has spent just one season outside the top flight since 1950 would go down as one of the biggest shocks in Premier League history but their chastening 3-0 defeat to Forest in their final game before the March international break and Igor Tudor’s catastrophic spell in charge has made that a real possibility.

Roberto De Zerbi is now the man tasked with engineering an escape and avoiding disasters
Friday night saw the north Londoners drop into the relegation zone for the first time after West Ham thumped Wolves 4-0 to leapfrog their bitter rivals into 17th.

Forest and Leeds are just above the Hammers but with six or seven games remaining for each, there will be plenty of twists and turns still to come.

Here’s how the crucial relegation run-in is shaping up.

Tricky contests?

Their first game after the international break, away to high-flying Manchester United, is their toughest remaining fixture on paper and leaving Old Trafford with anything would be hugely impressive.

That is their only game against a team currently above 10th in the standings but a trip to Bournemouth in April and hosting European football-chasing Brighton in their penultimate fixture won’t be easy.

Will an FA Cup quarter-final against West Ham straight after the international break prove to be a welcome distraction or a hindrance?

Final straight?

Leeds will be desperate to have secured safety by the time they travel to West Ham on the final day but if not, that could be a high-octane shootout for survival.

Games against Brighton and Spurs immediately preceding that are too unfriendly as finales go.

Tricky contests?

Games against three of the current top six still await Forest with trips to Man United and Chelsea on the docket as well as Aston Villa heading to the City Ground just three days after Forest travel to Porto for the first leg of their Europa League quarter-final.

A trip to Wearside to face this season’s surprise package Sunderland at the end of April is also a tough ask.

Where to pick up points?

Their impressive form since hugely damaging back-to-back defeats to Wolves and Nottingham Forest at the start of the year have seen West Ham go from doomed to having a genuine chance of survival – even climbing out of the bottom three by thumping Wolves 4-0 straight after the international break.

They may well be questioning exactly where the form that has seen them claim five wins and three draws from their last 11 league games was earlier in the season but a trip to struggling Crystal Palace next suddenly looks like a golden chance to keep the momentum going.

Welcoming Leeds to the London Stadium on the final day also looms incredibly large.

Tricky contests?

The Everton (H), Brentford (A), Arsenal (H) run from late April to early May does not look very friendly.

The games before and after that run appear to be much better chances to pick up the points the Hammers need to pull off an impressive escape.

Where to pick up points?

At the moment, Spurs can’t pick up points from anywhere...

They haven’t won for 14 league matches, with their last Premier League triumph coming against Crystal Palace back in December and their most recent attempt being a 3-0 hammering by relegation rivals Nottingham Forest.

On paper, a game away to Wolves at the end of April is a good opportunity for three points, as is a potentially pivotal clash with Leeds at the Tottenham Hotspur stadium three matches from the end of the campaign, but every clash is tough currently.

Roberto De Zerbi is now in charge and his first game is away to Sunderland on Sunday.

Can he get off to a flying start?

This could genuinely go in any direction and you’d have to be a brave person to predict the outcome with any confidence.

It will surely all come down to the final day when West Ham host Leeds in a showdown for the ages, Spurs play Everton and Nottingham Forest host Bournemouth.

Leeds generally have the kindest fixtures and although the goals have dried up for them recently, they should have enough to survive given the current cushion.

Forest could be adversely affected by their Europa League run and will probably need to have survival wrapped up going into the final couple of games, while West Ham’s boosted their chances with that Wolves win.

Meanwhile, Spurs are desperate to get a new manager bounce under De Zerbi.

At this stage, we’ll say they won’t get one and condemn Tottenham to the Championship for next season.

But everything will change week by week.

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Source: This article was originally published by The Independent

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