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Party on the streets of London.

Been getting a few emails through about how Arsenal fans spent their Tuesday night. Check out this gallery of some of the best snaps from the red-side of North London’s night of celebrations.

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Updated at 06.42 EDT

There’s still plenty of time before kick-off.

Find all ten previews ahead of the league-wide 4pm start here.

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And while we’re at it, can anyone help out Sunderland fan Steve?

“I haven’t degree in applied maths. Any chance you could explain what has to happen for Sunderland to get into Europe. Probably best if it doesn’t happen, but it would be the second time in my life. I have sworn for decades I would go to the first away leg which of course will be either Azerbaijan or Connahs Quay.”

I also do not have a degree in applied maths. But I think given Sunderland play Chelsea, all they need to do is win their fixture, and hope Brentford draw or lose to Liverpool, which would mean the Mackems would hop to eighth from tenth and find themselves in Europe! Please, however – someone, anyone, correct me if I’m wrong.

Enzo Le Fée and Sunderland could yet be bound for Europe, somehow. Photograph: David Klein/ReutersShare

Updated at 06.32 EDT

Simone’s holiday lives on:

“Thank goodness Arsenal won the league on Tuesday as my husband, unconsciously trying to avoid deep disappointment, booked flights at the PRECISE time we will be playing today. He is a Gooner since birth. CHAMPIONES!”

This is an excellent point Simone. There I was thinking about all the great places Arsenal fans might have been celebrating, but I hadn’t stopped to consider some of the worst. There must be some catastrophic absences, missed title wins and dreary celebrations that fans have had over the years. Keep the emails coming.

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Arsenal fans, how did you celebrate on Tuesday?

And did you have as good a night as Gunners fan Daniel Bull, who sipped champagne with Ian Wright and ended up in the same Mayfair nightclub as the entire squad.

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Adam Griffiths has an important point to make:

“While Spurs getting relegated would be the funniest of the outcomes, I would prefer them to stay up because I would still get to say “it’s ze De Zerbi derbi” when they play Brighton. Cheers.”

Hard to argue, really. Keep your emails on all things football coming in.

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Keep your World Cup feelings coming in:

This just in from Kári Tulinius.

“On the one hand, this is a bloated World Cup where the first gazillion games will only lead to a handful of eliminations, but on the other my son is ten and is already excited. I’ll be swept up in the whole thing, I know, despite my reservations.”

We’ve also had a few emails expressing reservations about the competition citing hiked up ticket prices, Trump’s relationship with Infantino and the potential presence of ICE agents at matches. “Can’t help feeling hopelessly compromised,” emails in Michael Knuppell. Before adding: “Go Socceroos.”

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A message from Joshua Keeling:

“Don’t support either team, but want Spurs to go down. Come on West Ham/Everton.”

I also, as a supporter of neither team, want Spurs to go down. For no good reason other than I’d find it funny.

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David, please can we have that favour again?

David Moyes saved West Ham from relegation twice, and delivered a first major trophy in 43 years, but was nevertheless let go for a second time in May 2024.

Now, the Hammers need David Moyes’ Everton side to do the business against Tottenham for them to have any chance of staying up.

Read Sam Cunningham’s preview of West Ham’s final day here.

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Updated at 05.32 EDT

Spurs first, as Robert De Zerbi reaffirmed his commitment to Tottenham even if the club go down.

“It’s still an honour to be a coach for Tottenham, even if on Sunday we play for the relegation fight, it’s not a problem,” he said in his pre-match presser.

Injured captain Cristian Romero had attracted criticism for choosing to attend a fixture in Argentina rather than being present for Spurs’ final fixture, although reports on social media from Alasdair Gold, Tottenham’s correspondent for football.london, are now suggesting the Argentinian is back in the capital for the match.

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Updated at 05.26 EDT

Right. Let’s focus on the bottom end of the Premier League table and who, out of Tottenham and West Ham, will survive.

Spurs have not been relegated since 1977 but are favourites to stay up with a draw against Everton all they should need to stay in the Premier League.

West Ham, however, need to beat Leeds, and cross their fingers that David Moyes’ Everton side does them a favour. The same David Moyes of course, who West Ham fired in 2024.

West Ham players are hovering above the trapdoor to the Championship. Photograph: Scott Heppell/ReutersShare

Updated at 05.14 EDT

Comment from hubbahubba:

“I want to say I’m excited for World Cup to start, but this time…I’m just not feeling it.”

I’ve been hearing this a lot recently and intrigued to other people’s thoughts. Personally, I know as soon as the World Cup starts I’ll be swept up in it. Qatar v Switzerland, Canada v Bosnia and Herzegovina, Australia v Turkey. Give me the lot.

Do get in touch via email or in the comments section below about how you’re feeling about the World Cup.

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Make sure to read Jonathan Liew on Arsenal’s title celebrations.

As a recently new resident of Finsbury Park myself. Can attest to the presence of several thousand Lime bikes outside the station. Flags in windows remain everywhere. The title parade next Sunday is going to be a remarkable event.

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Updated at 05.25 EDT

Over in Germany, Harry Kane scored a hat-trick in the DFB-Pokal Cup as Bayern Munich completed the double.

Kane has played 147 games for Bayern, and scored 146 goals. Remarkable.

Harry Kane in among the celebrations. Photograph: Christopher Neundorf/EPAShare

Updated at 05.04 EDT

The Premier League may end today. But football never really does as the World Cup looms ever closer.

Read Jonathan Wilson’s column on Brazil and Carlo Ancelotti’s selection of Neymar in their World Cup squad.

Lionel Messi was 35 when he lifted the World Cup. Neymar is now 34. Can Brazil’s talisman have his own fairytale finish?

Neymar gets the call. Photograph: Ricardo Moraes/ReutersShare

Updated at 04.35 EDT

It’s been a hell of a season. We asked our fans’ network to review each and every teams season including the highs, the lows, and what they need from the summer ahead.

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Brighton for the Champions League?

I’ve enjoyed this a lot from David Howell who has been in touch.

“There is a way Brighton can get into the Champions League, hinging on a sequence of four results.

“As mentioned, wins for City (against Villa) and Liverpool will put Villa fifth and cascade the European Performance Spot down to sixth; wins for Forest (against Bournemouth) and Brighton will mean the Seagulls swoop into that spot.

“That would have seemed unthinkable four months ago, let alone back in the club’s infamous Gillingham groundshare days…”

ShareOn the ball – guess the footballer

The Guardian has kicked off a new chapter in puzzles with the launch of its first daily football game, On the ball. It is now live in the app for both iOS and Android … so what are you waiting for?

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And later today, Bolton take on Stockport County in the League One playoff final.

At the beginning of May, Dominic Booth sat down with Stockport manager Dave Challinor and it includes one of the more remarkable sporting stats I’ve come across. In Challinor’s 16 years as a manager, his team has finished in a playoff spot or higher in 15 of them!

Are you also that good at your job? Let us know in the comments.

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Updated at 04.05 EDT

It’s not just the Premier League on today. The final weekend of May is always fun as the weekend of playoff finals continues. Yesterday, Hull nabbed a dramatic win against Middlesbrough to win a final that had the shadow of spygate hanging over it. Read Jonathan Wilson’s piece from Wembley here.

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Hull celebrate after beating Boro. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The GuardianShare

Updated at 03.53 EDT

A question from Albert Birkicht:

“With Aston Villa winning the Europa League, isn’t there a sixth guaranteed spot for England in the Champions League? Greetings from Switzerland.”

Albert, I’m glad you asked. So in a quirk of various rules, England could have six teams in next years Champions League, but only if Aston Villa finish fifth.

This is because, as Europa League winners, Villa won’t need the European Performance Spot that is awarded to the fifth-placed team, so it would drop down to sixth. Unai Emery’s side are currently fourth, so would need to lose today and for Liverpool to win for this to happen.

Aston Villa have been rather enjoying their week. Photograph: David Klein/ReutersShare

Updated at 04.02 EDT

What to look out for on the final day

Our writers have done the rounds on the ten things to keep an eye on during the final day of the season. Many things to keep an eye out for (ten, to be precise) but I’m with Will Unwin that the real jeopardy is to be found at Turf Moor where Burnley and Wolves will duke it out to see who finishes rock bottom of the table.

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Updated at 03.31 EDT

Today’s Premier League fixtures

Brighton v Manchester United

Burnley v Wolves

Crystal Palace v Arsenal

Fulham v Newcastle

Liverpool v Brentford

Manchester City v Aston Villa

Nottingham Forest v Bournemouth

Tottenham v Everton

Sunderland v Chelsea

West Ham v Leeds

SharePreamble

Hello, good morning and good day. We’re back with another Matchday live for the final day of the Premier League season!

After Arsenal wrapped up the title on Tuesday after Manchester City drew with Bournemouth, eyes turn to the bottom of the table where we’ll finally discover who survives out of West Ham and Tottenham. There’s also the small matter of who pinches the final Champions League spot between Liverpool and Bournemouth. All 10 matches start at 4pm BST so set your watches.

We’ll also be covering the major stories of yesterday, including Hull’s dramatic injury-time winner to seal promotion to the Premier League, as well as Celtic securing the domestic double, and Charlton beating Leicester on penalties to gain promotion to the WSL.

And finally, if you weren’t happy with England’s World Cup squad, I’ve got good news. Pep Guardiola hasn’t ruled out one day managing the national side. Stick with us for the latest updates and news from around the football world and send me an email with your thoughts.

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Updated at 03.51 EDT