Leicester, Leeds relegated as Everton survive

Soccer

Leicester City and Leeds United have been relegated from the Premier League on the final day of the season after Everton ensured their own survival with a narrow victory on Sunday.

Leicester put together one of the all-time underdog sports stories when they lifted the Premier League title in 2016 but now face life in the Championship despite a 2-1 victory on Sunday over West Ham United.

Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)

Leeds will join them in England’s second-tier after suffering a 4-1 defeat to Tottenham Hotspur. The club led a difficult season that saw the club sack managers Jesse Marsch and Javi Gracia before hiring Sam Allardyce with four games remaining.

Meanwhile, a superb strike from Abdoulaye Doucoure helped Everton to a 1-0 win over Bournemouth, maintaining the club’s record of never having been relegated from the Premier League as they enter their final season at long time home Goodison Park.

Since winning the Premier League, Leicester had enjoyed two fifth place finishes and won the FA Cup in 2021. However, a summer transfer window in which the club signed just one outfield player, followed by failing to win any of their opening six league games meant the club faced a fight to stay up this season.

Manager Brendan Rodgers looked to have steadied the ship soon after, with the club in 13th place when the Premier League paused for the 2022 World Cup. But a run of five losses in six matches led to Rodgers’ dismissal on April 2 and the appointment of Dean Smith on an interim basis.

Leicester entered Sunday two points behind Everton, needing Sean Dyche’s side to drop points, and things looked to be heading in the right direction for Smith with goals from Harvey Barnes and Wout Faes enough to secure three points.

However, Dourcoure’s thunderous strike from the edge of the box on 57 minutes proved crucial and meant Everton stayed up on 36 points, two ahead of Leicester and five more than Leeds.

Southampton are the third side losing their Premier League status having finished bottom of the table.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Fritz to play for ATP title in U.S. first since 2006
CFP Anger Index: Better call Paul — the committee is disrespecting the SEC
‘Raw emotion’ on display from Curry after late flurry
Browns’ Wills: ‘Business decision’ to sit backfired
‘This process is hard, bro’: Why Tyreek Hill is having his worst season since 2016

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *