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How Tottenham Hotspur would have fared if every Premier League season ended after 29 games

Sports Mole looks at how Tottenham Hotspur would have fared if every Premier League season ended after 29 matches.

After four-successive top-four finishes in the Premier League, Tottenham Hotspur look set to miss out on qualifying for the Champions League next season.

The Lilywhites made a slow start to the season, culminating in the departure of Mauricio Pochettino in November, and have struggled to push on under Jose Mourinho.

Spurs have punched above their weight in recent times and have even flirted with winning the Premier League and Champions League, but with 29 games of this season played they have little left to play for on the face of it.

At the time of the coronavirus-enforced break to the 2019-20 campaign, Spurs find themselves eighth in the table and seven points adrift of Chelsea in fourth.

There is still a chance that the English top-flight season will not be concluded, though Premier League chiefs are desperate for that not to be the case.

Here, Sports Mole looks at how Tottenham would have fared down the years if every season had ended after 29 matches.


Gareth Bale pictured for Tottenham in 2013© Reuters

If the 2012-13 season had been halted nine matches short, Tottenham would have finished third instead of their eventual position of fifth.

That would have meant automatic qualification for the following season's Champions League, at the expense of bitter rivals Arsenal.

As it turned out, though, the Lilywhites once again finished below their North London neighbours and had to settle for a place in the Europa League playoffs.

It was a familiar story three years later, meanwhile, as Tottenham faded in the closing weeks of a campaign made famous by Leicester City's title win to slip from second to third, again allowing Arsenal to leapfrog them.

Spurs boss Mauricio Pochettino pictured on October 1, 2019© Reuters

It has worked the opposite way, too, given that they would have finished seventh in 2014-15, rather than securing fifth place and automatically qualifying for the Europa League group stage.

Going further back, in 2006-07 Tottenham found themselves eighth after 29 matches. Fast forward a couple of months, however, and they were fifth - the difference between mid-table mediocrity and European football.

The biggest positive leap made by Spurs over the last nine games of a Premier League season is a tie between 2006-07 and 1997-98, climbing three spaces in both of those campaigns.

History very much indicates, then, that the Lilywhites are unlikely to make up the ground on the top four even if the current campaign does resume.


Full list:

1992-93 season
Position after 29 games: 9th
Final position: 8th

1993-94 season
Position after 29 games: 16th
Final position: 15th

1994-95 season
Position after 29 games: 6th
Final position: 7th

1995-96 season
Position after 29 games: 6th
Final position: 8th

1996-97 season
Position after 29 games: 10th
Final position: 10th

1997-98 season
Position after 29 games: 17th
Final position: 14th

1998-99 season
Position after 29 games: 10th
Final position: 11th

1999-2000 season
Position after 29 games: 7th
Final position: 10th

2000-01 season
Position after 29 games: 13th
Final position: 12th

2001-02 season
Position after 29 games: 9th
Final position: 9th

2002-03 season
Position after 29 games: 9th
Final position: 10th

2003-04 season
Position after 29 games: 11th
Final position: 14th

2004-05 season
Position after 29 games: 9th
Final position: 9th

2005-06 season
Position after 29 games: 4th
Final position: 5th

2006-07 season
Position after 29 games: 8th
Final position: 5th

2007-08 season
Position after 29 games: 11th
Final position: 11th

2008-09 season
Position after 29 games: 11th
Final position: 8th

2009-10 season
Position after 29 games: 4th
Final position: 4th

2010-11 season
Position after 29 games: 5th
Final position: 5th

2011-12 season
Position after 29 games: 4th
Final position: 4th

2012-13 season
Position after 29 games: 3rd
Final position: 5th

2013-14 season
Position after 29 games: 5th
Final position: 6th

2014-15 season
Position after 29 games: 7th
Final position: 5th

2015-16 season
Position after 29 games: 2nd
Final position: 3rd

2016-17 season
Position after 29 games: 2nd
Final position: 2nd

2017-18 season
Position after 29 games: 4th
Final position: 3rd

2018-19 season
Position after 29 games: 3rd
Final position: 4th

2019-20 season
Position after 29 games: 8th
Final position: N/A

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Spurs boss Jose Mourinho on February 19, 2020
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TeamPWDLFAGDPTS
1Liverpool29271166214582
2Manchester CityMan City28183768313757
3Leicester CityLeicester29165858283053
4Chelsea29146951391248
5Manchester UnitedMan Utd29129844301445
6Wolverhampton WanderersWolves29101364134743
7Sheffield UnitedSheff Utd28111073025543
8Tottenham HotspurSpurs29118104740741
9Arsenal2891364036440
10Burnley29116123440-639
11Crystal Palace29109102632-639
12Everton29107123746-937
13Newcastle UnitedNewcastle2998122541-1635
14Southampton29104153552-1734
15Brighton & Hove AlbionBrighton29611123240-829
16West Ham UnitedWest Ham2976163550-1527
17Watford2969142744-1727
18Bournemouth2976162947-1827
19Aston Villa2874173456-2225
20Norwich CityNorwich2956182552-2721

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