Home EUROPEAN SOCCER Premier League supercomputer doesn’t believe in Tottenham’s hot start to 23-24

Premier League supercomputer doesn’t believe in Tottenham’s hot start to 23-24

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Tottenham are set to miss out on the Champions League after being affected by suspensions and injuries, according to the latest Premier League SuperComputer.

Created by a team of data specialists at King Casino Bonus, the SuperComputer uses previous results, current news and prediction models to create a simulation which predicts every result 1,000 times.

As a result, the model predicted Tottenham’s initial rise up the Premier League table and estimated a fourth place finish was attainable, however they are now predicted to finish SIXTH.

PosTeamMPWDLGFGAGDPtsDiff
1Man City3832241073176980
2Liverpool382963852956930
3Arsenal382675783345850
4Newcastle382297713932750
5Aston Villa382279764630731
6Tottenham38227965481773-1
7Manchester United38181010544311640
8Brighton381581558571530
9Fulham381410144853-5520
10Brentford38147174953-4491
11Crystal Palace381310154550-549-1
12Chelsea381114134549-4470
13West Ham38129175161-10450
14Wolves381110174561-16430
15Everton38813174459-15370
16Bournemouth3889213466-32331
17Nottingham Forest3888223764-2732-1
18Burnley3856273582-47210
19Luton3848263776-39200
20Sheffield Utd3836293094-64150

Manchester City are still predicted to finish at the top of the pile and win a record-breaking fourth consecutive Premier League title, with Liverpool finishing in second.

Tottenham were predicted to finish in the Champions League places, but Newcastle and Aston Villa have since moved above Spurs in the predicted final places – thanks to injuries to key men and back-to-back defeats.

Manchester United are tipped to finish seventh and clinch a Europa Conference League spot after their recent run of good results, which have come in spite of poor performances.

The three promoted Premier League sides are set for instant returns to the Championship, with Sheffield United picking up just 15 points – beating Derby’s total of 2008 by just four points

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