Hawke's Bay Today

Canaries going back to Championsh­ip

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Norwich finally succumbed to relegation, a fate their own manager and many others expected at the start of the English Premier League.

Fewer, though, would have predicted Liverpool losing their perfect home record against Burnley.

With two weeks remaining in the longest-ever English season, issues at both ends of the standings are close to being finalised.

Certainly, the relegation picture looked a lot clearer yesterday, with Norwich guaranteed to return to the second-tier Championsh­ip after one season after losing to West Ham 4-0 at home.

“From the first day after promotion, our chances to survive were perhaps 5 per cent,” Norwich manager Daniel Farke said, “so in 19 out of 20 cases you will go down.”

That win for West Ham — achieved thanks to four goals by makeshift striker Michail Antonio — and Watford’s comefrom-behind 2-1 victory over Newcastle pushed those two victorious teams six points clear of the relegation zone with three games left.

Bournemout­h and Aston Villa, the teams in 18th and 19th place respective­ly, will need three wins from their remaining four matches to survive. A tough ask, considerin­g neither has won since the resumption of the Premier League last month.

At the other end of the table, Liverpool have just records to chase after clinching a first league title in 30 years, and one of them fell by the wayside yesterday.

The Reds will not become the first team in the Premier League era (since 1992) to win all of their home games in a single campaign, after drawing with Burnley 1-1. They won their previous 17 games at Anfield, and had just Chelsea left to play there.

Given Chelsea lost at Sheffield United 3-0 yesterday in a surprising­ly one-side match, Liverpool likely wouldn’t have been too perturbed.

The heavy defeat meant third-placed Chelsea could get overtaken by both Leicester and Manchester United in the coming days in the race for Champions League qualificat­ion.

Fifth place will still secure a place in next season’s Champions League if second-placed Manchester City fail in their bid to get a two-year European ban overturned in the courts.

City will discover the result of their appeal tomorrow.

City won at Brighton 5-0 in the late game, with Raheem Sterling scoring a hat-trick.

Players wore black armbands as games started with a minute’s silence in a tribute to England’s 1966 World Cup winner, Jack Charlton, who died on Saturday aged 85.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? A dejected Max Aarons of Norwich City after the big loss to West Ham.
Photo / AP A dejected Max Aarons of Norwich City after the big loss to West Ham.

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