2015–16 Premier League


The 2015–16 Premier League was the 24th season of the Premier League, the top English professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1992. The season began on 8 August 2015, and was scheduled to conclude on 15 May 2016. However, the Manchester United vs Bournemouth fixture was postponed to 17 May 2016 on the final day due to a suspicious package inside Old Trafford.
Chelsea began the season as defending champions of the 2014–15 season. Bournemouth, Watford and Norwich City entered as the three promoted teams from the 2014–15 Football League Championship.
Leicester City won the championship for the first time in their 132-year history, becoming the 24th club to become English football champions, and the sixth club to win the Premier League. Many commentators consider this to be one of the greatest sporting shocks in history, especially considering that Leicester spent half of the previous season at the bottom of the table before finishing 14th.

Summary

Leicester City were the surprise of the season. Following their late escape from relegation in the previous season many pundits had predicted that they would be relegated and bookmakers gave 5,000–1 odds on them winning the title. 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. The appointment was met with scepticism by pundits, including Leicester fan and former player Gary Lineker, as Ranieri had recently been sacked from his previous post as manager of the Greek national team after suffering a humiliating defeat to the Faroe Islands in his last game in charge.
Despite winning their opening game against Sunderland and topping the table, they dropped back following a 5–2 defeat by Arsenal in September. However, aided by Jamie Vardy's record feat 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. Following the Stamford Bridge 2–2 draw between Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur on 2 May 2016, and having two more games to play, Leicester City were confirmed champions, their first title in the top flight of English football, eclipsing the runners-up spot they reached in 1929.
Defending champions Chelsea sacked manager José Mourinho in December while in 16th place and eventually failed to qualify for European football for the first time in two decades. Eden Hazard, the previous season's PFA Players' Player of the Year, did not score a league goal until late April. They eventually finished 10th, set a then-record lowest finish for a Premier League title holders. They broke the joint-record of 7th set by Blackburn Rovers in 1995–96 and Manchester United in 2013–14. This record only stood for one year, as Leicester City finished 12th the following season.
Arsenal, looking for their first title since 2004 and following a poor start, improved and in early January took the top spot from Leicester. However, a poor run of results, including draws with Liverpool, Stoke and Southampton, and a loss to Chelsea saw them drop to fourth by mid-February. They remained in contention, but draws with West Ham, Sunderland and Crystal Palace in April saw their title hopes vanish.
Meanwhile, their London rivals, Tottenham Hotspur, won six matches in a row, and when Arsenal lost to Manchester United at the end of February, Tottenham leapfrogged them into second place, where they remained until the final weekend of the season. Draws with West Bromwich Albion and Chelsea stopped them winning their first title since 1961. The game in which Tottenham's title challenge ended was their 2–2 draw at Chelsea on 2 May, with many altercations between players and benches on and off the field, especially after Eden Hazard scored the equalizing and final goal. Mark Clattenburg, who refereed the game, subsequently stated that he could have "sent three players off from Tottenham" but chose instead to allow them to play on, giving the team a total of nine yellow cards, so as to allow them to "self destruct" and have no one else to blame but themselves.
After a 2–1 home loss to Southampton and a 5–1 defeat away to Newcastle United in their final two matches, Tottenham ended the season in third place, one point behind Arsenal.
Aston Villa, a presence in the Premier League since the league's foundation in 1992 and present in the top division since the 1988–89 season, were the first team to be mathematically relegated, after a 1–0 loss at Manchester United on 16 April. On 11 May, Sunderland won 3–0 against Everton, a result which relegated Newcastle United and Norwich City with one game remaining.
All of the final fixtures of the season were scheduled for 15 May, and to kick off at the same time. However, Manchester United's home game against Bournemouth was postponed for a future date after Old Trafford was evacuated because of the discovery of a suspicious device, which was destroyed in a controlled explosion. It was confirmed to be an accidental leftover from a training exercise.

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.
Premier League chairman Richard Scudamore described it as "biggest story we've ever had" in English football. Former Leicester manager Martin O'Neill described it as the "greatest achievement of this century". 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. After they won the title, he did indeed present the show clad only in boxer shorts. 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'". 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."
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."
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, having wagered £20 at the original 5,000–1 odds; the largest payout was £200,000 to an anonymous bettor who wagered £100 on the team in October when the odds were improved to 2,000–1.
Superstitious claims of phenomena helping Leicester win the league include the club's Thai owners employing Buddhist monks to bless the players, and the reburial of King Richard III in the city's cathedral in March 2015.

Teams

Twenty teams competed in the league – the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the Championship. The promoted teams were Bournemouth, Watford and Norwich City. They replaced Hull City, Burnley and Queens Park Rangers.

Stadiums and locations

TeamLocationStadiumCapacity
ArsenalLondon Emirates Stadium
Aston VillaBirminghamVilla Park
BournemouthBournemouthDean Court
ChelseaLondon Stamford Bridge
Crystal PalaceLondon Selhurst Park
EvertonLiverpool Goodison Park
Leicester CityLeicesterKing Power Stadium
LiverpoolLiverpool Anfield
Manchester CityManchesterCity of Manchester Stadium
Manchester UnitedOld TraffordOld Trafford
Newcastle UnitedNewcastle upon TyneSt James' Park
Norwich CityNorwichCarrow Road
SouthamptonSouthamptonSt Mary's Stadium
Stoke CityStoke-on-TrentBritannia Stadium
SunderlandSunderlandStadium of Light
Swansea CitySwanseaLiberty Stadium
Tottenham HotspurLondon White Hart Lane
WatfordWatfordVicarage Road
West Bromwich AlbionWest BromwichThe Hawthorns
West Ham UnitedLondon Boleyn Ground

Personnel and kits

League table

Results

Season statistics

Scoring

Top scorers

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Harry KaneTottenham Hotspur25
2 Sergio AgüeroManchester City24
2 Jamie VardyLeicester City24
4 Romelu LukakuEverton18
5 Riyad MahrezLeicester City17
6 Olivier GiroudArsenal16
7 Jermain DefoeSunderland15
7 Odion IghaloWatford15
9 Troy DeeneyWatford13
9 Alexis SánchezArsenal13

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDateRef
BournemouthWest Ham United4–3 22 08 2015
EvertonChelsea3–1 12 09 2015
ArsenalLeicester City5–2 26 09 2015
5Manchester CityNewcastle United6–1 03 10 2015
Manchester CityBournemouth5–1 17 10 2015
4Newcastle UnitedNorwich City6–2 18 10 2015
Tottenham HotspurBournemouth5–1 25 10 2015
EvertonSunderland6–2 01 11 2015
Leicester CitySwansea City3–0 05 12 2015
SunderlandSwansea City4–2 13 01 2016
West Ham UnitedArsenal3–3 09 04 2016
Manchester CityChelsea3–0 16 04 2016
SouthamptonManchester City4–2 01 05 2016
ArsenalAston Villa4–0 15 05 2016

;Notes
4 Player scored 4 goals
5 Player scored 5 goals
– Home team
– Away team

Top assists

RankPlayerClubAssists
1 Mesut ÖzilArsenal19
2 Christian EriksenTottenham Hotspur13
3 Dimitri PayetWest Ham United12
3 Dušan TadićSouthampton12
5 Riyad MahrezLeicester City11
5 James MilnerLiverpool11
5 David SilvaManchester City11
8 Dele AlliTottenham Hotspur9
8 Kevin De BruyneManchester City9
8 Erik LamelaTottenham Hotspur9

Clean sheets

RankPlayerClubClean
sheets
1 Petr ČechArsenal16
2 David de GeaManchester United15
2 Joe HartManchester City15
2 Kasper SchmeichelLeicester City15
5 Hugo LlorisTottenham Hotspur13
6 Heurelho GomesWatford11
6 Simon MignoletLiverpool11
8 Jack ButlandStoke City10
9 AdriánWest Ham United9
9 Łukasz FabiańskiSwansea City9

Discipline

Player

Monthly awards

Annual awards