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What happens if Arsenal and Man City finish exactly level? How tiebreakers could decide EPL title race originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Manchester City faced Arsenal on April 19 in the kind of Premier League title showdown fans have craved for years.
The home side's 2-1 victory was their most significant of the campaign, as it allowed them to close the gap at the top before beating Burnley saw them overtake the Gunners on goal difference. It also felt like a massive moment in the context of an intriguing title race — the sort of decisive match that we haven't seen for more than a decade.
Back in 2012, City hosted Manchester United on the third-to-last matchday in a game billed at the time as the biggest in the league's 20-year history. Their 1-0 victory at the Etihad Stadium set them on course to become English champions for the first time since the late 1960s as they finished top of the standings on goal difference.
Since then, this sort of late-season meeting between the main title rivals with so much still at stake has been a rarity. Three others spring to mind, all involving City.
They lost 3-2 at Liverpool in April 2014 but won all their remaining six games to clinch the league ahead of the Reds, whose infamous home defeat to Chelsea and draw at Crystal Palace proved costly. Eight years later, City's 2-2 draw at home to Jurgen Klopp's team helped them to keep their noses in front in the race over the final seven matchdays. And in 2023, City's 4-1 thrashing of Arsenal, also with seven games to follow, meant they closed to within two points of the top but with two games in hand, taking the title race out of the Gunners' hands.
But the latest City-Arsenal meeting felt much more in the mould of that Manchester derby of 14 years ago, decided by a towering Vincent Kompany header. There is so little to split the top two in the standings that this match had the feeling of a winner-takes-all contest.
And just like in 2012, we could see the race decided by tiebreakers.
EPL TITLE RACE:
- Arsenal's schedule and results for April and May
- Man City fixture schedule as they chase down the Gunners
Premier League tiebreaker rules, explained
As per official league regulations, the Premier League standings are ordered by points. The team with the most finishes tops, and the team with the fewest finishes bottom.
If two or more teams are level on points, the first tiebreaker used to separate them is goal difference (goals conceded subtracted from goals scored). The 2011/12 season was the first in which the title was decided in this way: Man City and Man United both finished on 89 points, but City were eight goals better off, so they came first and won the league.
If goal difference is also equal, the team with the most goals scored finishes higher. If points, goal difference and goals scored are all the same, then those level teams are judged to have finished in the same position, unless the teams concerned are competing for the title, European qualification, or to avoid relegation.
This is where things get really interesting for Arsenal and Man City.
What happens if Arsenal and Man City finish exactly level?
If Arsenal and Man City are level on points, goal difference and goals scored after 38 games, their positions in the table will be decided by the following criteria:
- Points earned in head-to-head matches
- Away goals scored in head-to-head matches.
Based on these criteria, Man City would win the league if they and Arsenal ended up with the same points, goal difference, and goals scored. That's because they had the better of the two head-to-head games: the match at Emirates Stadium finished 1-1, and City won the Etihad fixture 2-1, so they accrued four points from those games to Arsenal's one.
City's 2-1 win also robbed us of the opportunity of a unique championship-deciding fixture. Had that game finished 1-1 (as the reverse fixture did), it would have presented the intriguing possibility that Arsenal and City could end the season exactly equal in terms of points, goal difference, goals scored, head-to-head points and away goals scored in head-to-head matches.
In that scenario, a playoff game at a neutral stadium would have been used to decide who wins the league, with the "format, timing and venue" determined by the Premier League board.
When and where would a title playoff take place?
This is all moot now, of course, as a playoff is no longer possible, but it's worth reviewing exactly how it could have played out — particularly if these close title races are to continue.
The league's board would have to decide on the logistics of such a game, but there are a few factors to consider.
First, it is assumed that the playoff would be treated like a cup final, meaning that extra time and penalties would be used to decide the winner if the scores are level at the end of 90 minutes. However, it's possible that a replay could be used if the game finishes as a draw.
Then, there is the matter of when and where to stage the game. Wembley Stadium might feel the obvious choice as England's national arena, but this season, for example, City might have objected to the idea of playing at a location that would involve less travel for Arsenal. Somewhere more equidistant between the clubs, such as Villa Park in Birmingham, could be a better option.
There is also the issue of how to fit the game in. Again, to use the imagined scenario of this season, the FA Cup final (May 16) takes place before the league finishes (the final matchday is May 24), but there is the possibility that Arsenal will be in the Champions League final on May 30. The Gunners may have been against the idea of an EPL title playoff being scheduled in the six days between the last round of league matches and the biggest game in European club football in Budapest, so they might have requested a slot in early June.
The trouble with that idea is that many national teams will begin pre-World Cup warm-up camps in that final week in May, with some — including the United States, Mexico, Switzerland, Germany and Brazil — all scheduled to play friendlies on May 31. There will be several more such games in the first 10 days of June before the World Cup begins on June 11, and those national teams will be eager to have their full contingent of players as early as possible in order to make the most of their limited preparation time. A Premier League title playoff would have been a big inconvenience, given Arsenal and City would obviously not have wanted to let their best players leave for World Cup training camps beforehand.
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Has there ever been a Premier League title playoff before?
It is, of course, extremely unlikely that a playoff will be needed. Not only is it required for the top two to share an equal head-to-head record, but we'd also need the implausible scenario that both end up with the same points, goal difference and goals scored.
As such, it's understandable that this sort of scenario has never happened before, either in the Premier League or the modern iterations of Europe's big-five leagues.
There was the possibility of a playoff to decide last season's Serie A title race, with Napoli heading into the final matchday leading the standings by a point ahead of Inter Milan. Both title challengers won their last games, though, so Napoli finished a point clear at the top.
There is a good chance that a Scudetto playoff will happen eventually. A new rule was introduced in 2022 that means a one-off deciding game must take place between the top two if they finish the season level on points, regardless of goal difference or head-to-head results.
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