As the Premier League resumes, here is a recap of what has happened so far

As the Premier League resumes, here is a recap of what has happened so far

Three months of football fans waiting patiently are nearly at an end as the Premier League is set to resume next Wednesday with Aston Villa versus Sheffield United and Manchester City taking on Arsenal.

Considering the coronavirus-enforced hiatus, it may be difficult to recall how the 2019-20 season was unfolding – although Liverpool’s domination should still be fresh in the memory.

Here, the PA news agency gives a month-by-month breakdown of what was happening up until the pandemic led to the break.

August

VAR proved a controversial implementation in the top-flight (Martin Rickett/PA)
VAR proved a controversial implementation in the top-flight (Martin Rickett/PA)

September

A few months on from leading Watford to the FA Cup final, Javi Gracia was sacked with the Hornets bottom of the embryonic standings. Quique Sanchez Flores was reappointed but just a couple of weeks into his tenure, Watford were thumped 8-0 at Manchester City, who by the end of the month were five points adrift of Liverpool at the top. Jurgen Klopp’s side, by this stage, were still to drop a point as they saw off struggling Newcastle at home before impressive wins at Chelsea and Sheffield United.

October

Leicester equalled a Premier League record in thumping Southampton (Andrew Matthews/PA)
Leicester equalled a Premier League record in thumping Southampton (Andrew Matthews/PA)

November

This was a month of significant upheaval in north London. First, with Tottenham sitting in 14th, Mauricio Pochettino was sacked after five years in charge and only a few months on from leading them to the Champions League final. Twenty-four hours later marked the return of the ‘Special One’ as Jose Mourinho was named Pochettino’s successor. Unai Emery was replaced by Mikel Arteta at Arsenal, while Liverpool beat Manchester City and ended the month 11 points clear atop the pyramid.

December

Sanchez Flores was ousted just three months into his second stint with Watford, who appointed Nigel Pearson in a bid to lead them off the foot of the pile. Everton and West Ham would make managerial changes as they languished near the bottom, with Marco Silva and Manuel Pellegrini replaced by Carlo Ancelotti and David Moyes respectively. The switches would reap some rewards as all three clubs were out of the bottom three before the campaign was shelved.

January

Frank Lampard is in his first season as Chelsea manager (Mike Egerton/PA)
Frank Lampard is in his first season as Chelsea manager (Mike Egerton/PA)

February

March

By this point, the public health crisis was starting to lead to real fears the football season would first have to be played behind closed doors, while matters were taken even further on Friday, March 13, when the season was suspended. After beating Bournemouth 2-1, Liverpool sat a mammoth 25 points clear of Manchester City and need just another two wins to guarantee the title. Norwich prop up the table with Aston Villa second bottom, while Bournemouth are in the bottom three on goal difference, as they sit level on points with Watford and West Ham.

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