The Citizen (Gauteng)

Premier League

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London – With the Premier League in the thrilling final third of the season, looks at five storylines to watch out for in this weekend’s action: Can anyone catch Chelsea?

With a remarkable 17 wins from their last 20 league games, rarely has the phrase “runaway leaders” been more apt than when describing Chelsea’s seemingly unstoppabl­e march to the championsh­ip.

Antonio Conte’s (above) side, who make the short trip to London rivals West Ham on Monday, sit 10 points clear of Tottenham with just 12 games remaining, raising the possibilit­y that the title race will reach its conclusion well before the final round of matches. Klopp must silence critics

Nothing encapsulat­es the rollercoas­ter existence of a Premier League manager better than the waves of opprobrium crashing down on Juergen Klopp since Liverpool’s 3-1 loss at Leicester on Monday.

Heading into 2017, Liverpool were in such rich form that a period of sustained success appeared on the cards. But just two months later Klopp is under pressure for the first time at Anfield after two wins in 12 games – a dismal sequence that saw the Reds crash out of the FA and League Cups and fall 14 points behind Chelsea. Leicester back on track?

When Jamie Vardy (right) raced onto Marc Albrighton’s precise long pass and drilled a clinical finish beyond Liverpool goalkeeper Simon Mignolet it was as though the previous eight months of pitfalls and personal agendas had never happened to champions Leicester.

In the first match after Claudio Ranieri’s shock sacking, Vardy was back to his best as Leicester, at last displaying the controlled aggression that carried them to that fairytale title triumph, ended a five-game losing streak with a 3-1 win over Liverpool. Cup won’t suffice for Mourinho

Fresh from Manchester United’s thrilling League Cup final success, Jose Mourinho needs the feel-good factor from that 3-2 win against Southampto­n to spark a push to qualify for the Champions League.

Despite becoming the first United manager to win a major trophy in his maiden season, missing out on Europe’s elite club competitio­n would be a huge blow for Mourinho, who knows the same failing triggered the sacking of his predecesso­r Louis van Gaal. Spurs need more than Kane

If title hopefuls Tottenham are to make Chelsea sweat in the closing weeks of the season, Mauricio Pochettino’s side will have to find some support for Harry Kane (above), starting against Everton tomorrow.

Kane underlined his credential­s as the EPL’s most predatory finisher last weekend, netting his third hat-trick in his last nine games in a 4-0 demolition of Stoke. –

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