Arsenal beating Burnley on Monday night, combined with Manchester City’s failure to win at Bournemouth 24 hours later, saw the north London side end a 22-year wait for the Premier League title, laying to rest the ghosts of 2022-23 and 2023-24, when Pep Guardiola’s side overhauled them on the run-in. This time, Mikel Arteta’s men got their noses in front and held on until the finish line.But while matters at the very top of the table are now settled, Premier League survival for two other London clubs will go down to the final matchday tomorrow (Sunday), when all 20 sides kick off at the same time (4pm BST, 11am ET). Tottenham have their fate in their own hands and need only avoid defeat. West Ham need Spurs to lose and must win themselves to stand any chance of staying up.In mid-table, it is congested and scrappy. Liverpool sit fifth, Fulham are 13th, and every side between them is mathematically alive for a European place. Among them, Sunderland host Chelsea in what looks like a straight knockout to decide one of those UEFA spots.We look at the numbers behind these three games.West Ham vs Leeds; London StadiumDespite his omission from Thomas Tuchel’s World Cup squad, Dominic Calvert-Lewin has scored 14 Premier League goals for Leeds this season, joint-most by any English player.In May alone, he’s taken every big chance he has had, going three from three, including a 96th-minute winner at home to Brighton last weekend. Over the same stretch, by contrast, only Crystal Palace’s Ismaila Sarr (four) has been more wasteful with big chances than West Ham’s Taty Castellanos (three).Behind Castellanos, his team-mate Callum Wilson’s two goals in 2026 have both come in 2-1 wins: at home to Everton and away at Tottenham, the two clubs contesting the day’s other match with relegation hanging on it.
Premier League matchweek 38: The numbers to know
The Premier League title may have been sealed, but there are still relegation and European places up for grabs on the final day













