Our predictions for the 2007/8 season attempt to forecast the fate of clubs fighting for the title, a place in Europe or to stay in the Premier League. Part two covers the ten remaining sides, from Manchester City to Wigan. Do you agree? Premier League Predictions: Part One Manchester City Stuart Pearce’s uninventive spell ended amidst anger and [...]
Our predictions for the 2007/8 season attempt to forecast the fate of clubs fighting for the title, a place in Europe or to stay in the Premier League. Part two covers the ten remaining sides, from Manchester City to Wigan. Do you agree?
Manchester City
Stuart Pearce’s uninventive spell ended amidst anger and despondency from City’s support but following a hectic summer, the new owners have instilled fresh belief that a sleeping giant can be raised. Sven Goran Eriksson is the high-profile manager so many have craved, and his spending has reached £40m. A host of exotic foreign imports have wetted the appetite, but such extensive changes will take time to bear an impact and hopes of reaching Europe might have to be put on hold for another season.
Prediction: 9th
Manchester United
The great entertainers of last season, most neutrals were backing Sir Alex Ferguson’s side over Chelsea to capture the league title and his close season purchases indicate the battle of style will continue into 2008. Yet Nani and Anderson are unlikely to play regularly and Owen Hargreaves fits perfectly into Michael Carrick’s current role, so Ferguson will attempt to retain the Premier League crown with much the same squad as from the last 12 months. A lot depends on Carlos Tévez scoring with regularity; the hole left by Ruud van Nistelrooy’s exit has yet to be filled, and it is essential to have a 20 goal per season striker. The defence remains a worry and United’s gung-ho approach may not work for a second time against the brutal Chelsea machine.
Prediction: 3rd
| PREDICTION TABLE 1 Chelsea 2 Liverpool 3 Manchester United 4 Arsenal 5 Tottenham 6 Newcastle 7 Portsmouth 8 Everton 9 Manchester City 10 Blackburn 11 West Ham 12 Aston Villa 13 Reading 14 Bolton 15 Fulham 16 Middlesbrough 17 Birmingham 18 Sunderland 19 Wigan 20 Derby |
Middlesbrough
Gareth Southgate found his first season arduous as Middlesbrough flirted with relegation and the departure of Mark Viduka could be critical as the club face another season near the bottom. Jeremie Aliadiere and Tuncay Sanli have arrived on the cheap to cover for the Australian, the purchase of Jonathan Woodgate was a coup, and the squad does have depth – probably enough to avoid demotion, though with an inexperienced manager and discontented players in the squad, Middlesbrough are walking a tightrope.
Prediction: 16th
Newcastle
Glenn Roeder’s magic was short-lived and now it’s down to Sam Allardyce to meet lofty expectations. A marvellous job with Bolton with little money has made Allardyce’s reputation and with a £20m kitty at Newcastle, many anticipate immediate success whether with a top six finish or a piece of silverware. Alan Smith and Mark Viduka have joined an impressive front line that includes Michael Owen, Obafemi Martins and the talented Albert Luque while the often-problematic defence has been boosted by Villarreal’s Jose Enrique and PSG’s David Rozehnal. A strong squad might at last fulfil the hopes of Newcastle’s loyal and ambitious support.
Prediction: 6th
Portsmouth
A hectic summer at Fratton Park has seen more than £20m worth of players come in, though their calibre is subject to scrutiny. David Nugent was much sought-after and has the attributes to succeed in Premier league football, but Sulley Muntari and John Utaka are unknowns and may take some time to adjust to top-flight football. Pompey’s Russian owner might expect more of a return on his spending this season in the form of European football and with such a capable and well-balanced squad, it is up to Harry Redknapp to provide it.
Prediction: 7th
Reading
Perhaps Steve Coppell’s lack of interest in qualifying for the Uefa Cup will be vindicated over the coming ten months as second season syndrome is predicted by the very best in the medical profession. Teams like Ipswich have all suffered from this fatal condition, though the ever down-to-earth Coppell looks to be the right man to steady a ship about to sink despite a dearth of transfer activity. The exit of Steve Sidwell might have more of an affect on the squad than first thought and there is a worrying lack of depth – particularly if injuries strike – as the new campaign approaches.
Prediction: 13th
Sunderland
Roy Keane is a promising manager, but he alone cannot preserve Sunderland’s status as a top-flight club. Sent down in shame at the end of the 2005/6 season, Keane has much work to do if Sunderland are to avoid the drop again and signings like Kieran Richardson, Michael Chopra and Greg Halford do not immediately evoke thoughts of safety come May. Missing out on Leighton Baines and numerous other targets haven’t helped Keane’s plans, and though a good work ethic and team spirit is guaranteed, it isn’t enough to survive in a hugely competitive environment.
Prediction: 18th
Tottenham
Having spent more than £40m in the summer, Martin Jol can have few excuses for another slow start. Spurs eventually scraped into fifth position for the second year running, but the Champions League tops the objectives list and after splurging the cash while their main rivals for fourth spot, Arsenal, have sold their captain and spent little, this season presents an ideal opportunity to join Europe’s elite. Darren Bent is a proven goalscorer and joins Robbie Keane and Dimitar Berbatov in a strong line of attack and Spurs’ squad looks sufficient to challenge Arsenal and the traditional top-four line-up. Yet questions remain over Jol as a manager and the team’s consistency, and they again might fall short.
Prediction: 5th
West Ham
Fortunate to remain in the Premier League, the Hammers have since lost their saviour, Carlos Tévez, and failed to sign Darren Bent, leaving hopes of breaking into the top six in tatters. Many West Ham fans remain sceptical about Alan Curbishley and the signings of Craig Bellamy and Scott Parker have failed to set the pulses racing. Yet the return of Dean Ashton, a defence that includes Lucas Neill and Matthew Upson, and experience of Freddie Ljungberg will ensure there are no relegation worries. The destructive influences of Nigel Reo-Coker, Marlon Harewood and Teddy Sheringham have gone, though so has the outstanding Yossi Benayoun, meaning 2007/8 is set to be one of regrouping and transition. With Magnusson’s millions though, another bash at the Uefa Cup is on the cards for 2009.
Prediction: 11th
Wigan
Paul Jewell wore his magic hat and achieved the impossible on the final day of the 2006/7 season, but Wigan’s reprieve looks short-lived with greenhorn Chris Hutchings taking over. Short on experience, he doesn’t have much time to adjust to the severity of Premier League management and he inherits a squad short on quality while his summer signings do not inspire confidence, apart from the skilful Jason Koumas. There is no cutting edge about Wigan and Hutchings is favourite to receive the boot first – perhaps only his exit can keep the club up.
Prediction: 19th
Do you agree with our predictions? Share your views by leaving a comment below.
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questions over jol as a manager?? This is the best spurs have been in over a decade!! you really do lick your own elbow don’t you.
typical arsenal dillusionist
Tipping Spurs to finish fifth… maybe (and I’m a Spurs fan). It was only after I saw Man U dropping to third that I started wondering about the author’s sanity/sobriety/combination of the two, and the lack thereof.
essential to have a 20 goal a season scorer is it?
didn’t man united win the league last season without one of those???
I’ll eat my hat if they drop down as low as 3rd.
As for questions over Martin Jol… Prior to his arrival Spurs had finished 14, 9, 14 in the league. Now, the last two years have been 5th - is that not consistency on a higher level???
This year could be the year Spurs break into the top four. The one frustration is the ongoing loss of Ledley King which affects us in the same way as John Terry’s absence affected Chelsea last season
I can lick my elbow and my friend Roy does things to his dog in sunderland.
The song goes….Keano he W*nks his dog Keano…..
Not a Man U fan, but there is no way they will finish 3rd, them and Chelsea are still a cut above Arsenal and Liverpool.
totally agree with the newcastle prediction as iam a toon fan myself
i dont agree with the chealsea winning the league as man u have got a much stronger side than them this season,
derby are defanitly going down as there squad doesent look good enough to face the big boys
i still think sunderland will go down even though i like roy keane and michael chopra what was he thinking going to the mackems hes a born and breed goerdie (come on the toon) WHAT DO YOU THINK!!!!!
Hey Newcastle utd ,we could even end up 4th on log for 2007/08 ,
I have supported Spurs since 1967 and seen 12 Cup Finals - 9 with victories . We have always been a Cup team and I do not care about finishing 4th I want silverware - there is no glory in finishing 4th . Glory is a trophy . The squad on paper is as good as any thus I would look to win the league - but even worry the Spurs mentality I have watched for 40 years will mean we may not even achieve top 6 . The talent is there but it has been before and not delivered in the league so nagging doubts exist . The Cups are a different matter I think we can win one of the 3 we are in but Jol needs to manage the squad wisely he has loads of players and only 11 can play .
Totally , totally wide of the mark . These predictions are unachievable . Based on depth in squad and player development and the fact that I once said you could never win it with kids - this will be the outcome :-
1 / Man Utd
2 / Chelsea
3 / Spurs
4 / Liverpool
5 / Newcastle
6 / Everton
7 / Arsenal
The reason being is that once it becomes apparent that Arsene wenger will not renew his contract Arsenal will drop away from mid march .Trust me - I have inside information !
Its good to have a laugh … but some of the predictions on here are a joke. Same old top four with Spurs, Newcastle, Blackburn, Portsmouth, Villa and West Ham fighting it out for the top eight slots. If West Ham are mid table come January they are the ones to watch … Eggy has the money to go get the big names.