The Premier League is back.
Which of course suggests that it ever really went away. The best and worst thing about it is that it’s
always there, hovering over us at all times like a commercially mega successful
Death Star looming over Alderaan. This
year more than most. We’ve already had a Premier League flavoured World Cup (in
the early stages anyway) and the now traditional Premier League summer world
tour. Now at least the proper stuff
starts again.
Given that last season was the most unpredictable in living
memory it’s unlikely to quite reach those heights this again time. When you’re still marketing yourself as the
best league in the world this is impossible to ignore. The richest?
Yes. The most unpredictable major
league? Probably. But the best?
Luis Suarez’s departure has further underlined it can no longer claim to
be the home of the best players, the most exciting is their current mission
statement. And there’s truth in
this. The money pouring in from TV has
enabled the clubs from the middle down to strengthen. And mercifully, last season at least, the top
teams all had something wrong with them.
Realistically though there won’t be any surprises finishers in the top
seven.
At the top Chelsea look the most like they’ve fixed last
season’s mistakes with their summer transfers, bringing in Fabregas and Diego
Costa to bring goals to last season’s best defensive record. Mourinho finally has the type of striker he
believes in, leaving a manager used to bringing in trophies little excuse not
to do so. No wonder they’re
favourites. Their closest challengers
will be Man City, who’ve reacted to conceding too many last season by spending most
of their UEFA mandated FFP limit on Eliaquim Mangala. They’ll never have a problem scoring goals
with the strike-force they have. Much will
rest on the fitness of Aguero. If he
stays fit for the season they should win.
After their first trophy in nine years Arsenal will be confident of
adding to it. Decent summer business is
headlined by Alexis Sanchez arriving. Their
failing last season was against the other members of the top four. Sanchez up front offers a far more mobile
option than Giroud (for all his strengths) does. This should be enough for them to offer a
better bet away from home in the biggest games. The likelihood is they’ll fall
just short again.
Liverpool will hope that they haven’t done a Spurs and
wasted their Suarez windfall on average players (although it’s worth remembering
that before the start of last season most experts were praising the way they’d
spent the Bale money). It’s tough to
think of even one example of a club selling their best player and
improving. Add in the added demands of
Champions League football and it could be struggle for them to maintain their place
in the top four. With pretty much the
same team Everton will be nice to watch but fall just short. Pochettino trying to make Spurs start
performing anything other than Spurs will likely take longer than a season to
take hold.
Man Utd under Van Gaal have been gifted an easyish set of opening
fixtures (in contrast to their ones from last season, David Moyes’ conspiracy
theorists, if there are any, must be livid).
Van Gaal’s revolutions elsewhere have tended to take their time settling
in though. With a new 3-4-1-2 formation
to bed in and players for the Iron Tulip to fall out it’s likely to be a
transitional season. Unless any major
transfers are brought in before the deadline passes a top four place will be
the best they can hope for.
At the other end of the table Crystal Palace post-Pulis must
surely have entered the relegation conversation, something you wouldn’t have
claimed if Tony had stayed. With no
money for signings, an owner looking for anyone to sell to and a seventeenth
place finish last season Villa look doomed.
Unless new assistant manager Roy Keane can get a response out of them
they could finally do what they’ve been threatening to do for the last few
seasons and drop down a division. If a
newly progressive West Ham decide that Big Sam isn’t fulfilling his mandate to
provide attacking football and sack him you could make an argument for them
doing the same. West Brom are another
that might be sleepwalking towards the drop.
Stoke have bought well. Joining them
in mid-table should be the north east clubs who disappointingly look more
stable than they have in years. Whether
that remains the case at the end of the season is harder to predict.
Out of the promoted teams Burnley provide the most fairytale
of the stories (lacking either a Thai billionaire or Harry Redknapp). They are sensibly run, have stuck with the
players that got them promoted and already look down. QPR
look better equipped to survive, just that bit more streetwise. Their summer transfers have brought in
valuable experience, and not just with Rio Ferdinand either, Mauricio Isla
should be an excellent signing. It used
to be said that winning the play offs was the worst preparation for a season in
the division above. For the last three
years the play off winners have stayed up while the champions have gone
down. Leicester look well equipped to
try and stop this stat continuing. They
have pace throughout their team and almost more importantly money to spend in
January if needed to try and buy their way out of trouble.
No comments:
Post a Comment