Chelsea’s top four hopes face OT test

LONDON. Manchester United are already basking in the glow of the Premier League title but if anything is likely to put the summer holiday planning on hold it is a visit from Chelsea.

Friday, May 03, 2013
Chelsea striker Demba Ba battles with Manchester United defender Chris Smalling during the FA Cup with Budweiser Sixth Round Replayat Stamford Bridge, which Chelsea won 1-0. Net photo

SaturdayFulham      vs      Reading     16:00    Norwich City      vs      Aston Villa         Swansea City      vs      Man City         Tottenham      vs      Southampton         West Brom     vs      Wigan     West Ham      vs      Newcastle     QPR     vs      Arsenal     18:30    SundayLiverpool      vs      Everton     14:30    Man United      vs      Chelsea     17:00    MondaySunderland      vs      Stoke City     21:00    LONDON. Manchester United are already basking in the glow of the Premier League title but if anything is likely to put the summer holiday planning on hold it is a visit from Chelsea.Hurt by Capital One (League) Cup and FA Cup exits at the hands of the west London club this season, United have the chance to put a huge dent in Chelsea’s hopes of finishing in the top four.That is bad news for Chelsea, for whom the fixtures have been piling up in recent weeks courtesy of their exploits in the Europa League - a competition they are determined to avoid playing in next season.With the title race done and dusted, Manchester City odds on to be runners-up and Reading and Queens Park Rangers already relegated, the battle for third and fourth spots has taken centre stage with Chelsea vying with Arsenal, Tottenham Hotspur and Everton for a place in the Champions League.Chelsea are third in the final automatic Champions League spot with 65 points, one ahead of Arsenal who have one game less to play and three ahead of Spurs, who have the toughest run-in on paper as they visit Stamford Bridge on Wednesday in what could prove a decisive fixture.Fourth is worth a Champions League playoff spot.By the time Chelsea’s interim manager Rafa Benitez locks horns again with old adversary Alex Ferguson on Sunday, the pressure could have been ratcheted up a notch.Spurs, who like Chelsea have four games to play, are the first of the contenders in action this weekend with a home match against Southampton on Saturday (15:00 p.m.).Fourth-placed Arsenal kick off a few hours later at Queens Park Rangers while sixth-placed Everton, who have doggedly refused to give up the chase for a top-four berth, must beat Merseyside rivals Liverpool at Anfield for the first time in 14 years on Sunday if they are to stay in the hunt.Chelsea will be playing their 12th game in little more than 30 days at Old Trafford on Sunday and will be looking for a third win of the season over Ferguson’s side, following a 5-4 League Cup win when Roberto Di Matteo was still in charge and a 1-0 FA Cup replay win masterminded by Benitez last month.Benitez, who will leave Stamford Bridge later this month, has been forced to juggle his squad as a long campaign draws to a conclusion and will be asking his side to dig deep again at United, and then again against Spurs on Wednesday.Spurs missed a trick with a 2-2 draw at lowly Wigan Athletic last weekend, but will aim to steal a march on their London rivals and move level on points with Chelsea, if only temporarily, with victory over Southampton.Gareth Bale, who joined Tottenham from Southampton in 2007 and has since become one of the most sought-after players in Europe, believes the north London club can make up for last season’s heartache when, despite finishing fourth, they were denied a Champions League chance because Chelsea won the trophy."We all need to stick together now and give one final push to get where we want to be,” Bale said. "We have four games to go and we want to finish the job off.”EASIEST TASKWith games at QPR, at home to Wigan and away to Newcastle United left, Arsenal look to have the easiest task as they seek a 16th consecutive appearance in the Champions League.Midfielder Mikel Arteta said he expects the battle for third and fourth to go to the wire. "It will be about who is the most clinical at the right moments,” he told Arsenal’s website (www.arsenal.com)"When it gets to the last games the teams who are the most clinical win the games. We have seen that over the last few weeks. It will be a difficult battle for everyone.”Everton have two motivations at Liverpool. Victory would mean they would finish above their rivals for successive seasons for the first time since 1937 and would also maintain their quest for a place in the top four."We’re five points above them at the minute and a win would certainly be great for us,” said midfielder Leon Osman. "But we’re still on the coat-tails of the teams above us and we’re trying to win for that reason as well.”At the other end of the table, FA Cup finalists Wigan are staring relegation in the face after several Houdini-like escapes.Spurs’ late equaliser last week left Roberto Martinez’s side five points behind Newcastle with a game in hand.Victory at West Bromwich Albion on Saturday combined with defeats for Newcastle, who visit West Ham United, or Aston Villa at Norwich City would raise hopes of another great escape.