In a season that will end with a new club winning the title (this has only happen five times in 20 seasons), one of the Premier Leagueโs few previous winners will go down. Not that this hasnโt happened before. None of Manchester United, Arsenal or Chelsea have sniffed relegation since finishing atop Skyโs league, but Blackburn Rovers? Theyโll be making their second trip to the Championship since Jack Walker bought the title in 1995.
(Donโt take offense, Blackburn fans. All titles are bought.)
That fate was confirmed on Monday. Perhaps you heard about it? The match with the chicken? Well, like all matches, it also ended with a final score: 1-0 in favor of visiting Wigan, with Paraguayan international Antolรญn Alcarazโs 87th minute winner helping Blackburn fill the Premier Leagueโs quota of sending one chaotic mess back into the Football League.
Three years ago, that mess was Newcastle. The clubโs season was sent spinning early when manager Kevin Keegan walked away amidst disagreements with then-maligned owner Mike Ashley. By seasonโs end, Match of the Day face Alan Shearer (also a wildly prolific scorer with Newcastle) was brought in to keep the Toon up, only he couldnโt guide the club to a final day win at home over Aston Villa, a side whose season had long since been decided.
Two years ago, Portsmouth adopted an involuntary ownership rotation scheme, apparently intent on testing the bounds of fit and proper personhood. By March they were on their fifth owner, had been docked nine points, and were relying on Avram Grant to save them (fact: nothing says chaotic ownership like Avram Grant). Two years later, the clubโs been relegated to the third tier, a 10-point deduction dropping them from 18th to 22nd in the Championship. But at least the doors are still open.
Last year, West Ham started the season by looking at Pompeyโs problems and demanding โget us the man who orchestrated that.โ Grant was brought in and didnโt disappoint. The Hammers finished dead last despite an array of enviable talents (by relegation standards): Scott Parker, Robert Green, Matthew Upson, Mark Noble, Carlton Cole, Victor Obinna, Wayne Bridge, Tomas Hitzlsperger, Demba Ba, Pablo Barrera amongst them. They were no match for the power of Avram, nor the powers of Davids Gold and Sullivan, a duo that had previous guided Birmingham City into the Championship.
Blackburn is the latest club to fall beneath the scythe of ownership chaos. Last year, Venkyโs Limited Group (best known for interests in poultry, hence the chicken) bought the team at the behest of agent Jerome Anderson. Quickly, it became known that Swiss sports agency Kentaro (affiliated with Anderson) where the brains behind the Venkyโs soccer operation. Manager Sam Allardyce was let go, presumably for stylistic reasons, yet ownership never replaced interim manager Steve Kean, who proved willing to accept the Kentaro-introduced policies. One year later, downtrodden Rovers supporters are releasing live chickens during matches.
Looking to next season, which club could become the Premier Leagueโs annual inane ownership offering? There arenโt any obvious candidates, but you canโt sleep on a club that made the brilliant decision to hire the manager of a recently-relegated arch rival. Thatโs what Aston Villa did at this seasonโs onset. Now, two years after a string of three consecutive sixth place finishes, Villa could finish 17th. Itโs difficult to see next year being better if Alex McLeish is still in charge.
This season, Blackburn predictably filled the chaos quota. Hopefully next year will see 20 ownership groups appropriately value their clubโs place in the first division.
Elsewhere in England
Saturdayโs results
Arsenal 3-3 Norwich City
Sundayโs results
Newcastle 0-2 Manchester City
Aston Villa 1-1 Tottenham Hotspur
Bolton Wanderers 2-2 West Bromwich Albion
Fulham 2-1 Sunderland
Queens Park Rangers 1-0 Stoke City
Wolverhampton 0-0 Everton
Manchester United 2-0 Swansea City
Mondayโs results
Blackburn Rovers 0-1 Wigan Athletic
Champions League: Manchester City (86 points/37 games), Manchester United (86/36), Arsenal (67/37), Tottenham (66/36)*
Europa League: Newcastle (65/37) (Liverpool has already qualified by virtue of winning the League Cup; Chelsea has qualified by virtue of winning the FA Cup)
Survival (relegation): Aston Villa (38/37), Queens Park Rangers (37/37) Bolton (35/37) (Blackburn and Wolverhampton have already had relegation confirmed)
* โ if Chelsea wins Champions League, they take Spursโ spot in the 2012-13 tournament, relegating Tottenham to Europa.
Stuff that stuck out:
- Steve touched on it on Saturday, but with Sundayโs results, Arsenal got a bit of an undeserved reprieve. Tottenham dominated Aston Villa but couldnโt get more than a point, leaving the Gunners in control of their own destiny ahead of a final round visit to The Hawthornes. That match is far from a foregone conclusion. Arsenalโs winless in four, and if they can stumble at home to Norwich, they certainly can be had in Roy Hodgsonโs last match with West Brom.
- Robin van Persie scored twice on Saturday, giving him a four-goal lead atop the leagueโs scoring charts after Wayne Rooney failed to find the net against Swansea.
- Speaking of scoring charts, Clint Dempseyโs goal against Sunderland (a team that checked out when they were eliminated from the FA Cup) leaves him alone in fourth place amongst Premier League goal scorers. Heโs the only player amongst the chartโs top nine whose total hasnโt been bolstered by a penalty kick.
- Despite their loss to Manchester City, Newcastle can still qualify for Champions League, though they will have to win at Everton. Should they do so, they finish top four with as little as a +8 goal difference. Itโs been seven years since a club finished as high was a worse ratio, Everton remarkably claiming fourth in 2004-05 with a -1.
- Itโs the least Djibril could have done. Since arriving from Lazio in the winter window, QPRโs Djibril Cisse has seen red twice. On Sunday, he may have reclaimed the points heโs cost Rangers, his 89th minute winner giving QPR three from Stoke.
- Mark Hughesโ team is still in dire straits. They have to get a point at the Etihad on Sunday, which isnโt going to happen. Bolton go to the Brittania to face a Stoke side thatโs last in the league in goals scored. One will do for Owen Coyleโs boys.
- If ownership is a hint as to who will and wonโt survive relegation battles, itโs no wonder Wigan keeps pulling off these May escapes. Dave Whelan has kept his small-ish club in that rugby-ish town up for seven straight seasons. The faith heโs shown in Roberto Martรญne, has been admirable. Thereโve been many times over the last three seasons another owner would have changed course. A steady hand with realistic goals, Whelan has the Latics set for an eighth season of Premier League soccer.
Up next: Itโs Survival Sunday, weโre told. Ten matches, all kicking off at the same time (10:00 a.m. Eastern), only a few of which are worth your time:
- Manchester City vs. Queens Park Rangers: City will win and claim the title.
- Sunderland vs. Manchester United: I suppose United could make up their eight-goal disadvantage in difference.
- West Bromwich Albion vs. Arsenal: If Arsenal draws, they can finish no worse than fourth. If they win, they claim third.
- Tottenham vs. Fulham: Spurs win only gives them third if Arsenal stumbles. Anything less opens the door for Newcastle.
- Everton vs. Newcastle:
- Norwich City vs. Aston Villa:
- Stoke City vs. Bolton Wanderers:
The Magpies can only move up with a win. If they get it, they need Arsenal to lose or Fulham to win to climb into (at least) fourth.
Villa would have to lose by at least 16 goals, have QPR get a point from Man City and have Bolton win in order to go down. I donโt know why I bothered to type that out.
The Trotters need a win. If they get it, they should survive (with QPRโs loss at City).