Balham
S24SU Seer
With all the noise about our performances and results, the belief in some corners that Watford (11 points back), Boro (12 points) and West Brom (13 points) are going to catch us and that run of games in February and March I thought I'd see how the top sides match up this season. Below the play offs the division is tight but I had to draw a line somewhere so I took the top 10, conveniently Sunderland in 10th is the last team capable of getting into the top 6 in the next round of games without needing a goal difference swing as well as results to go their way.
In that minileague, coincidentally, Watford are out in front with 20 points from 11 games. We are second with 18 from 9, Blackburn third with 18 from 11 and Burnley 4th with 16 from 9. As with the full league table only United and Burnley have a goal difference worthy of the name. We've also only lost once to these teams, against Watford on the opening day with our other defeats coming against midtable (QPR, Coventry) or bottom third (Rotherham, Stoke) teams.
Norwich have changed manager recently but Wagner has his work cut out to turn this around; losing 7 of 11 so far against other top teams suggests they're not good enough for a promotion push.

Millwall will be interesting: they've beaten the only three top 10 sides to visit the Den: Boro (2-0), Watford (3-0) and West Brom (2-1) with the other 6 yet to visit although we obviously won fairly comfortably in the Cup earlier in the month. They have an awful record on the road against the top sides though, losing 6 of 7 so far.
There's still a long way to go. For what it's worth, the fixtures grid looks like this (home sides in the columns, away in the rows).

In that minileague, coincidentally, Watford are out in front with 20 points from 11 games. We are second with 18 from 9, Blackburn third with 18 from 11 and Burnley 4th with 16 from 9. As with the full league table only United and Burnley have a goal difference worthy of the name. We've also only lost once to these teams, against Watford on the opening day with our other defeats coming against midtable (QPR, Coventry) or bottom third (Rotherham, Stoke) teams.
Norwich have changed manager recently but Wagner has his work cut out to turn this around; losing 7 of 11 so far against other top teams suggests they're not good enough for a promotion push.

Millwall will be interesting: they've beaten the only three top 10 sides to visit the Den: Boro (2-0), Watford (3-0) and West Brom (2-1) with the other 6 yet to visit although we obviously won fairly comfortably in the Cup earlier in the month. They have an awful record on the road against the top sides though, losing 6 of 7 so far.
There's still a long way to go. For what it's worth, the fixtures grid looks like this (home sides in the columns, away in the rows).
