2015–16 Premier League

Premier League
Season 2015–16
Champions Leicester City
1st Premier League title
1st English title
Relegated Aston Villa
Champions League Leicester City
Tottenham Hotspur
Matches played 356
Goals scored 946 (2.66 per match)
Top goalscorer Harry Kane (25 goals)[1]
Best goalkeeper Petr Čech
Joe Hart
Kasper Schmeichel
(15 clean sheets)[2]
Biggest home win Manchester City 6–1 Newcastle United
(3 October 2015)[3]
Biggest away win Aston Villa 0–6 Liverpool
(14 February 2016)[3]
Highest scoring Norwich City 4–5 Liverpool
(23 January 2016)[3]
Longest winning run 6 matches[4]
Tottenham Hotspur
Longest unbeaten run 15 matches[4]
Chelsea
Longest winless run 19 matches[4]
Aston Villa
Longest losing run 11 matches[4]
Aston Villa
Highest attendance 75,415[5]
Manchester United 2–1 Swansea City
(2 January 2016)
Lowest attendance 10,863[5]
AFC Bournemouth 1–3 Stoke City
(13 February 2016)
Total attendance 12,966,411[5]
Average attendance 36,422[5]

All statistics correct as of 2 May 2016.

The 2015–16 Premier League is the 24th season of the Premier League, the top English professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1992. The fixtures were announced on 17 June 2015.[6] The season began on 8 August 2015, and is scheduled to conclude on 15 May 2016.[7]

Chelsea came into the season as defending champions of the 2014–15 season. AFC Bournemouth, Watford, and Norwich City entered as the three promoted teams from the 2014–15 Football League Championship.

Leicester City became champions for the first time in their 132-year history, after narrowly avoiding relegation the previous season.

Summary

Leicester City were the surprise of the season. Following their narrow escape from relegation in the previous season many pundits had predicted that they would be relegated[8] and bookmakers gave 5000-1 odds on them winning the title.[9] After the dismissal of manager Nigel Pearson, they began the new season with Italian Claudio Ranieri in charge. Pearson had been known for his short temper with the press, while Ranieri has a reputation for good humour.[10] The appointment was met with scepticism by pundits, including Leicester fan and former player Gary Lineker, as Ranieri had been sacked from his previous post as manager of the Greek national team after losing to the Faroe Islands.[10][11]

Despite winning their opening game against Sunderland and topping the table, they dropped back following a 5–2 defeat by Arsenal in September.[12] However, aided by Jamie Vardy's record of scoring in eleven consecutive Premier League games, they then remained unbeaten – and returned to the top of the table – until 26 December, when a 1–0 defeat by Liverpool dropped them to second place. They returned to the top after a 1–1 draw with Aston Villa on 16 January and remained there for the rest of the season.[12] Following a 2–2 draw between Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur on 2 May 2016, Leicester City were confirmed champions, their first title in the top flight of English football, eclipsing the runners-up spot they reached in 1929.[9]

Meanwhile, defending champions Chelsea had a torrid season, sacking manager José Mourinho in December while in 16th place and failing to qualify for European football for the first time in two decades. Their midfielder Eden Hazard, the previous season's PFA Players' Player of the Year, did not score a league goal until late April.[13]

Arsenal were looking for their first title since 2004. Following a poor start their form improved and they took the top spot from Leicester in early January. However, a poor run of results, including draws with Liverpool,[14] Stoke [15] and Southampton,[16] and a loss to Chelsea[17] saw them drop to fourth by mid-February. They remained in contention, but draws with West Ham,[18] Sunderland [19] and Crystal Palace[20] in April saw their title hopes vanish. Meanwhile, London rivals Tottenham Hotspur won six matches in a row, and when Arsenal lost to Manchester United at the end of February, they leapfrogged them into second place.[21] They remained in second place for the rest of the season but draws with West Bromwich Albion[22] and Chelsea stopped them winning their first title since 1961. The match in which Tottenham's title challenge ended, their 2–2 draw at Chelsea on 2 May, saw them receive a league record nine yellow cards.[23] If they finish in the runner's-up spot it will be their best finish since 1990, when they finished third.[24]

Aston Villa, a presence in the Premier League since the league's foundation in 1992, were the first team relegated this season, after a 1–0 loss at Manchester United on 16 April.[25] The other relegation places will likely be filled by two of Sunderland, Norwich City, and Newcastle United[26]; the only other team that could possibly be relegated at this point is Crystal Palace.

Reactions

The unlikely nature of Leicester's title led to a flood of coverage from across the globe. Prime Minister David Cameron tweeted his congratulations, saying it was "An extraordinary, thoroughly deserved, Premier League title." Congratulations were also sent by the Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, who praised his compatriot Ranieri.[27]

Premier League chairman Richard Scudamore described it as "biggest story we've ever had" in English football.[28] Former Leicester manager Martin O'Neill described it as the "greatest achievement of this century".[28] Gary Lineker, the former Leicester striker who led a consortium that saved the club from administration in 2002, had said he would host the BBC football show Match of the Day in his underwear if Leicester won the title.[29] After they won the title he said: "There were no odds that I would have taken at the start of the season. No odds. You could have given me 10 million to one and I’d have said ‘Nah, it’s a waste of a quid’".[30] José Mourinho, manager of 2015 champions Chelsea and Ranieri's replacement at the same team eleven years earlier, sent his congratulations, saying: "I lost my title to Claudio Ranieri and it is with incredible emotion that I live this magic moment in his career."[31] Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri said after winning his first title at the age of 64 that he wouldn't have appreciated it as a young man: "Now I am an old man I can feel it much better."[31][32]

The long odds bookmakers had given Leicester at the start of the season led to them incurring losses of up to £25 million, with one punter winning over £100,000.[33]

Superstitious claims of phenomena helping Leicester win the league include the club's Thai owners employing Buddhist monks to bless the players,[27] and the reburial of King Richard III in the city's cathedral in March 2015.[34]

Teams

Greater London Premier League football clubs

A total of 20 teams compete in the league, including 17 sides from the 2014–15 season and three promoted from the 2014–15 Football League Championship. On 25 April 2015, Watford became the first Championship side to be promoted following their 2–0 win over Brighton & Hove Albion.[35] On the final day of the season AFC Bournemouth won the Championship title and their first-ever promotion to the top flight, with a 3–0 victory over Charlton Athletic.[36] Norwich City became the third and final team to be promoted after beating Middlesbrough 2–0 in the Championship play-off final, bouncing back from relegation from the Premier League following the 2013–14 season.[37]

The three promoted clubs replaced Burnley, Queens Park Rangers and Hull City. Burnley were relegated despite a 1–0 victory at Hull City, and Queens Park Rangers suffered the same fate after a 6–0 defeat by Manchester City.[38][39] Hull City became the third team to be relegated after a 0–0 draw with Manchester United on the final day of the 2014–15 season.[40]

Stadia

Note: Table lists in alphabetical order.
Team Stadium Capacity[41]
AFC Bournemouth Dean Court 11,464
Arsenal Emirates Stadium 60,260
Aston Villa Villa Park 42,660
Chelsea Stamford Bridge 41,798
Crystal Palace Selhurst Park 25,073
Everton Goodison Park 39,571
Leicester City King Power Stadium 32,312
Liverpool Anfield 44,742
Manchester City Etihad Stadium 55,097
Manchester United Old Trafford 75,653
Newcastle United St James' Park 52,338
Norwich City Carrow Road 27,010
Southampton St Mary's Stadium 32,505
Stoke City Britannia Stadium 27,740
Sunderland Stadium of Light 48,707
Swansea City Liberty Stadium 20,909
Tottenham Hotspur White Hart Lane 36,284
Watford Vicarage Road 21,500
West Bromwich Albion The Hawthorns 26,850
West Ham United Boleyn Ground 35,345

Personnel and kits

Team Manager1 Captain Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
AFC Bournemouth England Eddie Howe England Tommy Elphick[42] JD Sports[43] Mansion Group[44]
Arsenal France Arsène Wenger Spain Mikel Arteta[45] Puma[46] Emirates[47]
Aston Villa Scotland Eric Black (caretaker) England Micah Richards[48] Macron[49] Intuit QuickBooks[50]
Chelsea Netherlands Guus Hiddink (caretaker) England John Terry[51] Adidas[52] Yokohama[53]
Crystal Palace England Alan Pardew Australia Mile Jedinak[54] Macron[55] Mansion Group[56]
Everton Spain Roberto Martínez England Phil Jagielka[57] Umbro[58] Chang[59]
Leicester City Italy Claudio Ranieri Jamaica Wes Morgan[60] Puma[61] King Power[62]
Liverpool Germany Jürgen Klopp England Jordan Henderson[63] New Balance[64] Standard Chartered[65]
Manchester City Chile Manuel Pellegrini Belgium Vincent Kompany[66] Nike[67] Etihad Airways[68]
Manchester United Netherlands Louis van Gaal England Wayne Rooney[69] Adidas[70] Chevrolet[71]
Newcastle United Spain Rafael Benítez Argentina Fabricio Coloccini[72] Puma[73] Wonga[74]
Norwich City Scotland Alex Neil Scotland Russell Martin[75] Erreà[76] Aviva[76]
Southampton Netherlands Ronald Koeman Portugal José Fonte[77] Adidas[78] Veho[79]
Stoke City Wales Mark Hughes England Ryan Shawcross[80] New Balance[81] Bet365[82]
Sunderland England Sam Allardyce Republic of Ireland John O'Shea[83] Adidas[84] Dafabet[85]
Swansea City Italy Francesco Guidolin Wales Ashley Williams[86] Adidas[87] GWFX[88]
Tottenham Hotspur Argentina Mauricio Pochettino France Hugo Lloris[89] Under Armour[90] AIA[91]
Watford Spain Quique Flores England Troy Deeney[92] Puma[93] 138.com[94]
West Bromwich Albion Wales Tony Pulis Scotland Darren Fletcher[95] Adidas[96] Tlcbet[97]
West Ham United Croatia Slaven Bilić England Mark Noble[98] Umbro[99] Betway[100]

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing manager Manner of
departure
Date of vacancy Position
in table
Incoming manager Date of
appointment
West Ham United England Sam Allardyce End of contract 24 May 2015[101] Pre-season Croatia Slaven Bilić 9 June 2015[102]
Watford Serbia Slaviša Jokanović 5 June 2015[103] Spain Quique Flores 5 June 2015[103]
Newcastle United England John Carver Sacked 9 June 2015[104] England Steve McClaren 10 June 2015[105]
Leicester City England Nigel Pearson 30 June 2015[106] Italy Claudio Ranieri 13 July 2015[107]
Sunderland Netherlands Dick Advocaat Resigned 4 October 2015[108] 19th England Sam Allardyce 9 October 2015[109]
Liverpool Northern Ireland Brendan Rodgers Sacked 4 October 2015[110] 10th Germany Jürgen Klopp 8 October 2015[111]
Aston Villa England Tim Sherwood 25 October 2015[112] 19th France Rémi Garde 2 November 2015[113]
Swansea City England Garry Monk 9 December 2015[114] 15th Wales Alan Curtis 7 January 2016[115]
Chelsea Portugal José Mourinho Mutual consent[116] 17 December 2015[117] 16th Netherlands Guus Hiddink 19 December 2015[118]
Swansea City Wales Alan Curtis End of caretaker spell 18 January 2016[119] 18th Italy Francesco Guidolin 18 January 2016[119]
Newcastle United England Steve McClaren Sacked 11 March 2016[120] 19th Spain Rafael Benítez 11 March 2016[121]
Aston Villa France Rémi Garde Mutual consent 29 March 2016[122] 20th

Results

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Leicester City (C, Q) 36 22 11 3 64 34 +30 77 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
2 Tottenham Hotspur (T) 36 19 13 4 67 28 +39 70
3 Arsenal (X) 36 19 10 7 59 34 +25 67
4 Manchester City (X) 36 19 7 10 68 38 +30 64 Qualification for the Champions League play-off round
5 Manchester United 35 17 9 9 43 31 +12 60 Qualification for the Europa League group stage
6 West Ham United 35 15 14 6 60 43 +17 59 Qualification for the Europa League third qualifying round[lower-alpha 1]
7 Southampton 36 16 9 11 53 39 +14 57
8 Liverpool 35 15 10 10 59 48 +11 55
9 Chelsea 35 12 12 11 55 48 +7 48
10 Stoke City 36 13 9 14 38 52 14 48
11 Everton 35 10 14 11 55 49 +6 44
12 Watford 35 12 8 15 36 42 6 44
13 Swansea City 36 11 10 15 37 50 13 43
14 West Bromwich Albion 36 10 11 15 32 46 14 41
15 AFC Bournemouth 36 11 8 17 43 63 20 41
16 Crystal Palace 36 10 9 17 36 46 10 39
17 Newcastle United 36 8 9 19 39 64 25 33
18 Sunderland 35 7 11 17 40 58 18 32 Relegation to the Football League Championship
19 Norwich City 35 8 7 20 35 61 26 31
20 Aston Villa (R) 36 3 7 26 27 72 45 16
Updated to match(es) played on 2 May 2016. Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Play-offs (only if needed to decide champion, teams for relegation or teams for UEFA competitions).[123]
(C) Champion; (Q) Qualified to the phase indicated; (R) Relegated; (T) Qualified, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (X) Assured of at least Europa League, but may still qualify for Champions League.
Notes:
  1. Since the winners of 2015–16 Football League Cup, Manchester City, currently qualify for European competition based on their league position, the spot awarded to the League Cup winner (Europa League third qualifying round) would be passed to the next best team in the table not already qualified for European competitions (in this case, the sixth-placed team).

Result table

Home ╲ Away ARS AST BOUCHECRYEVELEILIVMCIMUNNEWNORSOUSTKSUNSWATOTWATWBAWHU
Arsenal 20 01 11 21 21 00 21 30 10 10 00 20 31 12 11 40 20 02
Aston Villa 02 12 04 10 13 11 06 00 01 20 24 01 22 12 02 23 01 11
AFC Bournemouth 02 01 14 00 33 11 12 04 21 01 30 20 13 20 32 15 11 13
Chelsea 20 20 01 12 33 13 03 11 51 10 13 11 31 22 22 22 22 22
Crystal Palace 12 21 12 03 00 01 12 01 00 51 10 10 01 00 13 12 20 13
Everton 02 40 21 31 11 23 11 02 03 30 11 34 62 12 11 22 01 23
Leicester City 25 32 00 21 10 20 00 11 10 10 10 30 42 40 11 21 22 22
Liverpool 33 32 10 12 40 10 30 01 22 11 11 41 22 10 11 22 03
Manchester City 40 51 30 40 00 13 14 01 61 21 31 40 41 21 12 20 21 12
Manchester United 32 10 00 20 10 11 31 00 00 12 01 30 30 21 10 10 20 00
Newcastle United 01 11 13 22 10 01 03 20 11 33 62 22 00 11 30 12 10 21
Norwich City 11 20 31 12 13 11 12 45 00 32 10 11 03 10 03 01 22
Southampton 40 11 20 12 03 22 32 42 23 31 30 01 11 31 02 20 30 10
Stoke City 00 21 21 10 12 03 22 01 20 20 10 31 12 11 22 04 02 01
Sunderland 00 31 11 22 02 01 01 21 30 13 01 20 11 01 01 00 22
Swansea City 03 10 22 10 11 00 03 31 21 20 10 01 01 24 22 10 10 00
Tottenham Hotspur 22 31 30 00 10 00 01 00 41 30 12 30 22 41 21 10 11 41
Watford 03 32 00 00 01 11 01 30 12 12 21 20 00 12 10 12 00 20
West Bromwich Albion 21 00 12 23 32 23 23 03 10 10 01 00 21 10 11 11 01 03
West Ham United 33 20 34 21 22 11 12 20 22 20 22 21 00 10 10 31 11

Updated to games played on 2 May 2016.
Source: Barclays Premier League football scores & results
1 ^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
For coming matches, an a indicates there is an article about the match.

Season statistics

Scoring

Top scorers

As of matches played on 3 May 2016.[1]
Rank Player Club Goals
1 England Harry Kane Tottenham Hotspur 25
2 Argentina Sergio Agüero Manchester City 23
3 England Jamie Vardy Leicester City 22
4 Belgium Romelu Lukaku Everton 18
5 Algeria Riyad Mahrez Leicester City 17
6 England Jermain Defoe Sunderland 14
Nigeria Odion Ighalo Watford
8 Chile Alexis Sánchez Arsenal 12
France Olivier Giroud Arsenal
10 Austria Marko Arnautović Stoke City 11
Spain Diego Costa Chelsea
England Troy Deeney Watford
Iceland Gylfi Sigurðsson Swansea City

Hat-tricks

Player For Against Result Date Ref
England Wilson, CallumCallum Wilson AFC Bournemouth West Ham United 4–3 22 August 2015 [124]
Scotland Naismith, StevenSteven Naismith Everton Chelsea 3–1 12 September 2015 [125]
Chile Sánchez, AlexisAlexis Sánchez Arsenal Leicester City 5–2 26 September 2015 [126]
Argentina Agüero, SergioSergio Agüero5 Manchester City Newcastle United 6–1 3 October 2015 [127]
England Sterling, RaheemRaheem Sterling Manchester City AFC Bournemouth 5–1 17 October 2015 [128]
Netherlands Wijnaldum, GeorginioGeorginio Wijnaldum4 Newcastle United Norwich City 6–2 18 October 2015 [129]
England Kane, HarryHarry Kane Tottenham Hotspur AFC Bournemouth 5–1 25 October 2015 [130]
Ivory Coast Koné, ArounaArouna Koné Everton Sunderland 6–2 1 November 2015 [131]
Algeria Mahrez, RiyadRiyad Mahrez Leicester City Swansea City 3–0 5 December 2015 [132]
England Defoe, JermainJermain Defoe Sunderland Swansea City 4–2 13 January 2016 [133]
England Carroll, AndyAndy Carroll West Ham United Arsenal 3–3 9 April 2016 [134]
Argentina Agüero, SergioSergio Agüero Manchester City Chelsea 3–0 16 April 2016 [135]
Senegal Mané, SadioSadio Mané Southampton Manchester City 4–2 1 May 2016 [136]
Note

4 Player scored 4 goals
5 Player scored 5 goals

Clean sheets

As of matches played on 2 May 2016.[2]
Rank Player Club Clean
sheets
1 England Joe Hart Manchester City 15
Denmark Kasper Schmeichel Leicester City
Czech Republic Petr Čech Arsenal
4 Spain David de Gea Manchester United 14
5 France Hugo Lloris Tottenham Hotspur 13
6 Brazil Heurelho Gomes Watford 11
7 England Jack Butland Stoke City 10
Belgium Simon Mignolet Liverpool
9 Poland Łukasz Fabiański Swansea City 9
Spain Adrián West Ham United

Discipline

As of matches played on 19 April 2016

Player

Club

Awards

Monthly awards

Month Manager of the Month Player of the Month Reference
Manager Club Player Club
August Chile Manuel Pellegrini Manchester City Ghana André Ayew Swansea City [139]
September Argentina Mauricio Pochettino Tottenham Hotspur France Anthony Martial Manchester United [140]
October France Arsène Wenger Arsenal England Jamie Vardy Leicester City [141]
November Italy Claudio Ranieri Leicester City England Jamie Vardy Leicester City [142]
December Spain Quique Sánchez Flores Watford Nigeria Odion Ighalo Watford [143]
January Netherlands Ronald Koeman Southampton Argentina Sergio Agüero Manchester City [144]
February Argentina Mauricio Pochettino Tottenham Hotspur England Fraser Forster Southampton [145]
March Italy Claudio Ranieri Leicester City England Harry Kane Tottenham Hotspur [146]

Annual awards

PFA Player of the Year

The PFA Players' Player of the Year was awarded to Riyad Mahrez.[147]

PFA Team of the Year

The PFA Team of the Year was:[148]

FWA Footballer of the Year

The FWA Footballer of the Year was awarded to Jamie Vardy.[149]

PFA Young Player of the Year

The PFA Young Player of the Year was awarded to Dele Alli.[150]

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