10.12.2024

Stoke and Southampton still have reasons for hope as relegation looms, Barry Glendenning

Like the hapless Brian Stimpson, so splendidly portrayed by John Cleese in the 1980s farce Clockwise, most football fans can take the despair; it’s the hope they cannot stand. With only three or four fixtures left to play in this season’s Premier League, fans of West Bromwich Albion, Stoke City and Southampton can almost certainly feel the headmaster’s anguish.

Most are perfectly well equipped to deal with the trauma of relegation to the Championship but it is the possibility of avoiding it that drives them to the brink of madness.

For West Brom fans, the agony is almost over. Almost but not quite. It is still mathematically possible for them to stay in the top flight but their mini-rage against the dying of the light almost certainly constitutes too little too late. Nothing less than successive wins in their final three matches will suffice and even that will be good enough only in the unlikely event Swansea fail to take more than one point from 12 available.

It is a scenario so implausible that all West Brom players and supporters seem to have resigned themselves to their fate and are at peace with it. All but those dreamy optimists who remember Swansea lost four league games on the spin once before this season and are not so great that it is beyond them do it again.

Supporters of Stoke and Southampton have more reasons for optimism. Four points adrift with three and four matches to play respectively, there is enough recent precedent to suggest they have every chance of clinging on to their top-tier status. Few would argue Sunderland are the most poorly run club in the English league but before a slide into League One that has been as ignominious as it was inexorable, they did claw their way to safety in successive seasons from some pretty dire situations.

Seven points adrift with six games to play under Gus Poyet in 2014, Sunderland looked doomed only to win four of their final five matches to drag themselves from the foot of the table and send Norwich down instead. It was the club’s third consecutive flirtation with the drop and Poyet was adamant it was an experience he had no wish to repeat the following season.

Promotion and relegation in England: how they stand

Premier League

Champions: Manchester City

Champions League: Manchester United, Liverpool and Tottenham are favourites for the top four with Chelsea five points behind Spurs in fifth.

Europa League: Arsenal
 are guaranteed a top-seven finish but could still reach the Champions League by winning the Europa League. Burnley are one win away from their first European campaign since 1967.

Relegation: West Brom
 are still eight points from safety after their draw with Liverpool. Stoke and Southampton both still have games against Swansea, five points clear of the bottom three. One more win should be enough for Crystal Palace, West Ham, Huddersfield and Brighton to avoid relegation.

Championship

Champions: Wolves

Automatic promotion: Cardiff‘s defeat to Derby leaves them in a race with Fulham, one point behind them – while Aston Villa still have an outside chance of finishing second.

Play-offs: Middlesbrough (72) and Derby (71)  lead the race for the other two spots in the top six. Below them, Millwall, Brentford, Preston, Bristol City and Sheffield United are all still in with a chance.

Relegation: Sunderland are down after their defeat to Burton, who could leapfrog Bolton with victory on Saturday. Barnsley are sandwiched between those two and host Brentford this weekend. will look to take advantage whatever the result there as they host Brentford.

League One

Automatic promotion: Wigan and Blackburn (pictured) have sealed automatic promotion and will now battle for the title.

Play-offs: Shrewsbury and Rotherham, plus two from Charlton, Scunthorpe, Plymouth, Portsmouth and Bradford City.

Relegation: Bury are down while MK Dons have only a mathematical chance of survival. Northampton and Oldham are in the bottom two with WalsallRochdale and Wimbledon still in trouble.

League Two

Automatic promotion: Accrington Stanley and Luton Town are going up, with Stanley needing one more point to secure the title. Wycombe are third with Exeter City, Notts County and Lincoln fighting to overtake them.

Play-offs: The three who miss out will be joined by either Coventry or Mansfield; the Sky Blues have a three-point cushion.

Relegation: Chesterfield‘s 97-year Football League stay is over. Barnet are five points behind Grimsby and Morecambe and play the latter on Saturday.

National League: Macclesfield Town have secured the only automatic promotion spot, with one other team set to come up via the six-team play-offs. Tranmere, Sutton and Aldershot have all sealed their places.

“I don’t want another seven months like this,” he said, hailing what he labelled as one of his greatest achievements in football. He need not have worried – sacked the following March, he was replaced by Dick Advocaat, who went on to mastermind another escape despite his side being down among the dead men with four matches to go.

In the past 20 Premier League seasons, teams in the relegation places around this time of year have managed to extricate themselves on seven different occasions. Those precariously perched above the drop zone will need little reminding that Wigan stayed up at the expense of Birmingham in 2011, despite trailing them by four points with as many games to go. With the same number of matches left three years previously, Bolton and Fulham were also adrift but had enough about them to rally and survive.

A year before, in 2007, West Ham performed the most unlikely of Houdini acts with Carlos Tevez in the unlikely role of glamorous assistant. Their survival, courtesy of four consecutive wins culminating in a final-day victory at Old Trafford, prompted the disappearance of Sheffield United from the top flight and would ultimately cost them £25.5m in fines and compensation. Chump change which would have been cheap at twice the price compared with the money on offer for staying in the Premier League.

Before West Ham’s heroics, Bradford had pulled off one of the most impressive feats of football escapology, ending a run of 10 matches without a win in 2000 to prevail in three of their last four – the final one against Liverpool – to send Wimbledon plummeting through the trapdoor. A season previously, Southampton stayed up courtesy of the kind of late-season rally – two draws followed by three wins – in which they and Coventry famously specialised at the time. If they are to pull off a similar feat this time around, their players could do worse than summon the spirit of Matt Le Tissier, Claus Lundekvam and Jason Dodd.

If recent history is anything to go by it is probably as safe to assume West Brom have left it too late to resist the gravitational pull of the Championship as it would be foolish to rule out Stoke or Southampton’s chances of mounting late dashes towards the safety of the Premier League’s foothills. To stay up, they must start winning and winning fast and hope those above them stall. Away to Swansea in their final fixture, we can but hope Stoke at the very least tee up a winner-stays-up finale. Hope; the very thing that makes football-going fools of us all. We can all take the despair.

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