Premier League Round 15 Review: Leicester City, Chelsea Star In ‘Trading Places’

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Dec 7, 2015

It’s official: Chelsea won’t repeat as Premier League champion, and Leicester City won’t suffer relegation.

We predicted at the start of the season that both scenarios would come to pass, but the first 15 weeks of the 2015-16 Premier League campaign have proven how quickly things can change in soccer.

Leicester City overtook Manchester City for the top spot in the Premier League standings this weekend by beating Swansea City 3-0. The win was Leicester City’s sixth in its last eight league games, and Claudio Ranieri’s Foxes now should raise their targets higher than survival.

We don’t expect Leicester City to win the title because inevitable injuries could take a heavy toll on Ranieri’s small squad, and other teams will adjust their tactics to contain the Foxes’ high-powered attack in the back end of the season.

However, Leicester City likely will finish in one of the top six positions and qualify either for next season’s UEFA Champions League or Europa League. Such outcomes will represent a triumph for the ages and fuel the hopes of every other team about what can happen in any given campaign.

Meanwhile, Chelsea’s decline counter-balances the story of Leicester City’s rise. Chelsea lost to Bournemouth on Saturday at Stamford Bridge, hitting a new low in this disaster of a season. The loss, Chelsea’s eighth in 2015-16, weakened Jose Mourinho’s grip on his job as manager.

Chelsea now occupies 14th place and sits just two points above the relegation zone. Following the loss to Bournemouth, Mourinho conceded Chelsea won’t finish in the top four places. A top-six finish is the best the Blues reasonably can hope to achieve this season. A top-10 finish is far more likely than a place in Europe.

Leicester City didn’t cause Chelsea’s fall, and the Blues haven’t orchestrated the Foxes’ climb. The simultaneous events are happening by chance, like in that scene in “Trading Places” when Dan Akroyd’s taxi briefly passes Eddie Murphy’s limousine before momentum carries the vehicles toward their destinations.

The only common denominator we can identify at this point are the managers: Mourinho replaced Ranieri on the Chelsea sideline in 2004. The rest is history, and they’ll face off against each other next Monday.

Sat. Dec. 5
Stoke City 2 – 0 Manchester City

West Brom 1 – 1 Tottenham
The result didn’t help Spurs gain ground on other Champions League hopefuls, but their unbeaten run continues.

Arsenal 3 – 1 Sunderland
Olivier Giroud scored twice. His first — an own goal — put Sunderland back into the game. His second was the game-winner.

Watford 2 – 0 Norwich City
Troy Deeny is scoring, and Watford is earning points from games they expect to against teams it realistically can expect to do well.

Swansea City 0 – 3 Leicester City
Jamie Vardy’s goal-scoring streak ended at 11 games, but he helped sidekick Riyad Mahrez spectacularly fill the void.

Manchester United 0 – 0 West Ham

Southampton 1 – 1 Aston Villa
Aston Villa stopped its two-game losing streak, but it didn’t win. Again.

Chelsea 0 – 1 Bournemouth

Sun. Dec. 6
Newcastle 2 – 0 Liverpool
Read about Liverpool’s disappointing loss in our wrap and what the defeat means for the Reds in our verdict.

Mon. Dec. 7
Everton 1 – 1 Crystal Palace

Thumbnail photo via Twitter/@SkyFootball

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