Given that the title and relegation are already decided, this won’t be an all-time epic but there is enough on the line to make the Premier League finale an intriguing proposition
Your support helps us to tell the story
Support Now
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.
If the 2024-25 season won’t exactly stand out in history, it will finish with one genuinely unique element. There have never been so many clubs going for Champions League qualification on the final day. It has admittedly become a bit more than "the battle for fifth”, as has occasionally been derided. Instead, five clubs are going for three places, with two of them – Nottingham Forest and Chelsea – directly facing off.
The elements are there for an exciting last day, if not quite an epic one.
The Champions League is obviously hugely important for clubs, and the mere chance to win that great trophy is inspiring but it isn’t quite what pushes players to the very limits of their will.
Improved revenue projections don't bring the emotional abandon that characterises title races or survival battles. You’re unlikely to see the most vintage vignettes matching those iconic days, where players intensely sprint for a throw-in, while pushing a teammate out of the way to try and get anything going.
These aren't the extreme ends of the table, so they don’t quite cause anyone to go to extremes.
The Champions League chase has even been a little tempered by the primary theme of this season, which has been the ending of trophy droughts. The euphoric victories of Crystal Palace, Newcastle United and now Tottenham Hotspur were timely reminders of what the sport is supposed to be about, as well as grand ripostes to the “financialisation” that the Champions League itself has most directly caused.
The ending of trophy droughts has been a theme of this season, slightly tempering the excitement of the race for the Champions League spotsopen image in gallery
The ending of trophy droughts has been a theme of this season, slightly tempering the excitement of the race for the Champions League spots (PA Wire)
Neither the Carabao Cup or FA Cup are worth anything close to top-tier European qualification in terms of money, but the last few weeks have necessarily reminded everyone they are worth so much more in terms of meaning for the fans and the history of a club.
This is what people really remember.
That isn’t to completely downplay the race for the top five, though. It's not like it's confected drama, like some of the Champions League's own league phase. Qualification matters, and even the idea of playing on those big European nights is exhilarating. That’s especially so for Forest, while the excitement of Newcastle and Aston Villa has been whetted in recent years by temporarily touching that sky.
You’ve got to be there. It especially matters to players.
A finish like this coming in the first season of the Champions League’s expansion still represents quite a symmetry. Europe's elite competition has bloated and so has the race to get into it.
After Spurs' win in the Europa League, six English teams are going to be there. That's nearly a third of the Premier League. It looks a little absurd, and almost antithetical to what European football is supposed to be about.
Whatever happens, the six will be a mix of the old big six and the nouveau powerful. That is progress, in some ways, even if it involves owners that aren't exactly about the game's best interests.
How to watch logo
Get 3 months free with ExpressVPN
Servers in 105 Countries
Superior Speeds
Works on all your devices
Try for free
ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.
How to watch logo
Get 3 months free with ExpressVPN
Servers in 105 Countries
Superior Speeds
Works on all your devices
Try for free
ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.
Spurs’s Europa League win means a record six Premier League teams will be in next year’s Champions Leagueopen image in gallery
Spurs’s Europa League win means a record six Premier League teams will be in next year’s Champions League (Getty Images)
The day won’t really involve any of the Premier League’s burgeoning middle class, mind. That theme of the season ended up petering out. Palace were left flying the flag in the FA Cup. In the league, only Brighton and Brentford are still someway involved, but mostly just looking on.
They both need Chelsea to finish in seventh and then win Wednesday's Europa Conference League final, to open up that place in that very competition. Brighton would subsequently only need a draw at a partying Spurs, in order to keep Brentford at bay even if they win at Wolves.
Chelsea of course have far grander aspirations. Most of the day’s focus is going to be on their trip to Forest. That fixture could be billed as a Champions League play-off... except it’s not quite.
There is a fairly reasonable possibility that both clubs could end the day outside those places. All it would take is a draw, and both Newcastle and Villa to win.
The latter scenarios aren’t quite certainties, but they are likely. St James’ Park has had that taste of Champions League football again and it is going to be rocking. Even if Everton are awkward opposition for a match where you need something, David Moyes' side might have their own emotional hangover after the last game at Goodison Park. “Emotional hangover" meanwhile doesn't even begin to describe what state Manchester United might be in for Villa’s visit. There is a chance Ruben Amorim's side rally, but it's hard not to feel Villa just steamroll them for one final humiliation.
Nottingham Forest will try to upset the odds and give their fans unlikely Champions League nightsopen image in gallery
Nottingham Forest will try to upset the odds and give their fans unlikely Champions League nights (Getty Images)
Where the day might get really interesting is if those two matches, in particular, get tense. City’s midweek win over Bournemouth means they are probably too insulated, unless they lose at Fulham and all of Newcastle, Chelsea and Villa win. Like facing Everton, a visit to Fulham isn’t an ideal fixture but City probably just have enough.
Either way, both Chelsea and Forest have to play to win. Nuno Espirito Santo’s side have no chance otherwise. Chelsea can't take the risk. That might bring something close to the kind of abandon that can really make a final day great.
Much of that is dictated by desire; by desperation. You’re never quite going to want a Champions League place as much as you do the title or the survival. It's intrinsic.
Finance still frames too much. Chelsea and Villa badly need this for PSR reasons. Newcastle need it to try and reach the next stage. City need it for their sense of self, especially as Liverpool's own long party culminates with the Premier League trophy lift. City also need to save their season. Forest have already considerably overachieved, but won’t be able to help feeling a little underwhelmed if they miss out, given where they were.
This final day is certainly much better than it looked like it might have been. It’s one of a kind, in its own way, even if it's five trying to go into three.