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Looking at the tables as the end of the season approaches, it might occur to you that, with very few exceptions, no one really knows anything. Passages of play in matches have been described as little more than a series of random events, their final outcome decided by whoever is able to impose a distinct pattern, which more often than not neither side manages to do. This season, the same sense of galumphing randomness has applied to the football predictions business. Never before have the forecasts for how the season will pan out come so badly unstuck – the confident assertions made in tabloid and broadsheet columns and TV discussions may as well be seen in same light as contributions to the astrology page. Of course some forecasts can, without risk, be made at the start of a season. You wouldn’t expect to be hailed as one of the game’s great thinkers if you picked Chelsea, Man Utd, Liverpool and Arsenal to take four of the seven European places available to English clubs, nor if you suggested that at some point both José Mourinho and Sir Alex Ferguson would mutter darkly about conspiracies against their teams from cabals within the English football establishment. For the rest – and no one saw Arsenal struggling at home rather than abroad – it’s as random as the balls called out at bingo. Most predictions for the start of this season confidently placed both Wigan and West Ham in the bottom three. Alan Pardew had been almost run out of Upton Park during the final few month of last season, before being saved by the late burst of form that took the team through the play-offs; the Hammers, none the less, were widely tipped to be heading for one of their worst ever seasons as they endured the inevitable relegation suffered by play-off winners. From WSC 231 May 2006. What was happening this month On the subject...
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