Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Premier League fixtures 2019/20: Five key matches that could decide the season of Liverpool, Manchester United, Arsenal and more

The full list of fixtures have been announced for the upcoming season

Tom Kershaw
Thursday 13 June 2019 09:54 BST
Comments
Premier League season in numbers

After one of the tightest Premier League title races in history, the new season is already just around the corner as the full list of fixtures were revealed today.

Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City are aiming to become just the second team in the Premier League era to win three times in a row; a feat achieved twice by Sir Alex Ferguson.

Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool are looking to carry their European ecstasy over into domestic triumph, while Tottenham, Chelsea, Arsenal and Manchester United all wrestle with ambitions that extend beyond a top-four finish.

Norwich City, Sheffield United and Aston Villa all ended their top-tier exiles and hope to seal a better fate than a swift nosedive in return as experienced by Fulham and Cardiff last year.

Here are five pivotal fixtures that could decide and define the 2019/20 season:

Liverpool v Man City, November 9

Pep Guardiola’s back-to-back Premier League champions renew their rivalry with Jurgen Klopp’s European champions in their first meeting since landing their latest respective silverware.

Liverpool pushed City all the way in an epic title race last season and have home advantage as they bid to draw first blood in pursuit of their first domestic crown in 30 years.

Guardiola’s side will be equally determined to maintain the edge after beating the Reds 2-1 in their previous encounter in January as they bid for a domestic league hat-trick.

Liverpool v Tottenham, October 26

Liverpool were crowned European champions for a sixth time after beating Tottenham in Madrid 12 days ago and the north London side will want revenge.

The pair are sure to challenge for a top-four finish in the 2019-20 campaign and this Anfield clash will be an indicator of their title credentials.

The Reds won both league matches 2-1 last season and have 10 wins and only one defeat in their last 15 meetings in all competitions.

Liverpool and Tottenham face each other in a Champions League final rematch on October 26 (Getty)

Arsenal vs Chelsea, December 28

Chelsea secured a comprehensive 4-1 victory against Arsenal in this summer’s other all-English European final to lift the Europa League trophy for a second time.

If the Gunners can avenge their painful defeat in Baku in their first meeting since, it might go a little way to appeasing those fans who are growing ever louder in their criticism of the club’s inability to compete with the top four.

Champions League qualification is a minimum requirement for both clubs, who each won their respective home game in this fixture last season.

Chelsea face Arsenal on December 28 in a repeat of the Europa League final (EPA)

Sheff Utd v Man Utd, November 23

Sheffield United boss Chris Wilder joined an exclusive group of managers to have won promotion to each of the top four divisions in England when his side pipped Leeds to a second-placed finish in the Sky Bet Championship.

Without a Yorkshire derby next season – the Blades’ first in the top flight since 2006-07 – their fans will relish the visit of Manchester United, who were their opponents at Bramall Lane in both clubs’ first Premier League fixture on the opening day of the 1992-93 season.

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer enters the defining season of his managerial career (PA)

Aston Villa v Bournemouth, August 17

Villa Park is expected to be sold out for the club’s first home game back in the top flight, although some fans may have preferred more illustrious opponents to mark the occasion.

Dean Smith’s side sat 13th in the Championship at the start of March, but stormed to promotion via their play-off final win against Derby after ending the regular season with 11 wins in their last 12 matches including 10 in a row.

Villa spent three seasons in the second tier after finishing rock-bottom of the Premier League, with just 17 points, at the end of 2015-16, but lifelong fan Smith guided them back after just over seven months in charge.

Additional reporting by PA

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in