Premier League’s Biggest Winning Margins
Although we’re not that close to its end, the 2024/25 Premier League title race is already in the bag for the leading team following a series of shocking results on matchday 26.
The first stunner came at the Emirates when West Ham United derailed injury-hit Arsenal’s already faltering title bid.
Jarrod Bowen’s first-half goal, coupled with Myles Lewis-Skelly’s second red card in the space of a month, was enough to give the Hammers a 1-0 win.
The following day, Liverpool headed to the Etihad to face reigning champions Manchester City as a sports betting favourite.
Top online crypto sports betting sites made the Reds a 2.00 frontrunner to get the victory, a win that would stretch their lead at the top of the table to a whopping 11 points with just a handful of games remaining.
With superstar striker Erling Haaland nowhere to be seen in the matchday squad, the table-topping Reds raced into a two-goal lead thanks to first-half goals from Mohamed Salah and Dominik Szoboszlai, a lead they never surrendered.
That 2-0 win has given Liverpool an unassailable 11-point league at the summit of the top flight, and the question now becomes not whether they will win the title but by how many points.
They could be on course for a record-breaking margin of victory, but what are the biggest existing margins right now? Let’s take a look.
Manchester City
It wasn’t merely a title-winning campaign—it was a revolution in how football was played. Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City didn’t just win the Premier League in 2018; they obliterated the competition.
They finished the season with a mighty 100 points, the highest total ever recorded. By season’s end, The Blues were a staggering 19 points clear of cross-city rivals Manchester United, winning the title race – if you can even call it that – in dominant fashion.
Kevin De Bruyne orchestrated everything, with the ball being given to him at will, and he then duly created opportunity after opportunity for attackers such as Sergio Aguero, Raheem Sterling, and Gabriel Jesus.
The latter of that trio scored a memorable last-minute winner against Southampton on the final day of the season to take The Blues’ points total to triple digits, proving the relentless nature of this city side.
Even with the title already wrapped up, Guardiola’s side wouldn’t let up, pressing for 90 full minutes every week and ultimately getting their just reward on that famous day at St. Mary’s.
Liverpool
Unstoppable. Ruthless. Relentless.
After losing out on the title on the final day of the previous season to the aforementioned City despite amassing some 97 points – the largest runners-up total in history and the fourth biggest total ever posted.
Liverpool knew that they had to be perfect if they were to dethrone Guardiola’s unstoppable winning machine in 2019/20. In the end, that is exactly what they were.
Jurgen Klopp’s Reds won 26 of their first 27 games and refused to let up in their pursuit of the title. Their bid for an undefeated season came to an end on matchday 28 when they were shockingly beaten 3-0 away at relegation-threatened Watford, and while opposition supporters enjoyed revelling in that bitter defeat, a first title in some 30 years was already wrapped up with bows on it.
Global events threatened to derail the championship bid, with the season having to be suspended for three months. When Liverpool returned to action in front of empty stadiums, the Reds set about sealing the deal, winning five of their final nine games. They finished the year with 99 points, 18 clear of Manchester City, the second-biggest winning margin of all time.
Manchester United
Much has been made of Manchester United’s 1998/99 team, and quite rightfully so. Sir Alex Ferguson famously led that version of the Red Devils to a first-ever treble in the history of English football, winning the Premier League, the FA Cup, and the UEFA Champions League – the latter of which required two injury-time goals from Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.
But when it came to that year’s league triumph, United were hardly dominant. The title race went down to the final day of the season, and they very nearly threw the championship away when Tottenham took a shock lead at Old Trafford.
Of course, they turned that around thanks to strikes from David Beckham and Andy Cole, but in the campaign that followed, they weren’t about to allow anyone to derail their hopes.
In 1999/2000, United romped to the trophy, finishing 18 points clear of an Arsenal side that had been reborn just a couple of years prior under Arsene Wenger.
The striking double act of Dwight Yorke and Andy Cole was perhaps the finest the Premier League had ever seen, working in tandem to amass some 39 league goals between them.
Captain Roy Keane was also a fearsome presence in midfield, winning the ball back and driving his team forward to victory after victory.
In the end, the Irishman would get his hands on the trophy for the fifth time, helping his side to 91 points in the process.