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Live Reporting

Harry De Cosemo and Tasnim Chowdhury

All times stated are UK

  1. Thanks and bye!

    That's all from us today, thank you for joining us as we covered Brighton sealing their Europa League spot next season, the ongoing Spurs manager chase and the latest in the WSL.

    Here's some of the top reads from today:

    You can also keep across the action from Man Utd v Chelsea on the BBC Sport website and Radio 5 Live later. See you soon!

  2. Get Involved

    What has been your club's most memorable final day?

    You've heard from our Premier League fan community, but what is your most memorable final day of a Premier League season?

    Let us know your picks in the comments section of the article

    One big question
  3. What has been your club's most memorable final day?

    Every supporter has one final day of the season that stands out above all others in their memory, so we asked our Premier League fan community to share theirs.

    Southampton: Ray Hunt, In That Number

    The final day of 2011-12 comes to the forefront of my mind. After facing two relegations in five years, Saints forced themselves back to the top flight with back-to-back promotions following their final-day heroics against Coventry City in front of a record attendance at St. Mary's. The memorable moment was marked with a pitch invasion.

    Tottenham Hotspur: John Wenham, Lilywhite Rose

    On the 14 May 2017, Spurs signed off from their White Hart Lane home in style beating Manchester United 2-1. This victory was a 14th consecutive home win in league competition - equalling a club record set in 1987 - and ensured Tottenham ended the season with a record of played 19, won 17, drew two. They were unbeaten at White Hart Lane for the first time in 52 years.

    West Ham United: Mia Claydon, Green Street Hammers

    Although recent, qualifying for the Europa League group stages is the best last day of the season in my memory. The roar of the crowd, the togetherness of the team - it'll always be remembered. Getting to dream of travelling the continent with West Ham is a feeling many never thought they'd have.

    Wolverhampton Wanderers: Dazzling Dave, Always Wolves Fan TV

    Blackburn Rovers in 2011 was a memorable final day for drama and a rollercoaster of emotions. At half-time Wolves were staring relegation to the Championship in the face. I remember Jamie O'Hara pulling a goal back followed by "we only need one goal" ringing out from the Molineux faithful. The players got the message and Stephen Hunt obliged in the 87th minute. Pandemonium ensued.

    Have a look at some of the other most memorable final days here

  4. What has been your club's most memorable final day?

    One big question graphic

    Every supporter has one final day of the season that stands out above all others in their memory, so we asked our Premier League fan community to share theirs.

    Manchester City: Ger Deegan, formerly of Maine Road Ramble

    13th May 2012 - City 3-2 QPR. Also known as the day City won their first Premier League trophy and fondly remembered to all of the blue persuasion simply as '93:20'.

    Almost a decade on from this day and I still struggle with my emotions any time I see it back.

    To win your first Premier League, snatching it from the clutches of your closest rivals and biggest enemies, in that fashion that just doesn't happen to us. It will never be bettered.

    Manchester United: Dale O'Donnell, Stretty News

    The decisive day of the 1998-99 Premier League season kickstarted the most iconic two weeks in English football history. Arsenal were just a point worse off as United came from behind against Tottenham to capture the first leg of the Treble.

    Newcastle United: Pete Davey, LoadedMag NUFC

    There is only one for me - sitting in the East Stand watching Dwight Gayle hammer home number four against Barnsley and all of a sudden a huge roar from the Strawberry Corner as we learn Jack Grealish has scored elsewhere. Ecstasy in the stands - we've won the league.

    Nottingham Forest: Ben Dore, Dore On Tour

    Forest needed a win to secure our Championship status against Ipswich on the final day in 2017. Nerves were on edge and Ipswich had an early shot deflected, forcing Jordan Smith into a magnificent save. A first-half penalty saw the Reds lead 1-0 and the second half was all Forest, running out 3-0 winners.

    Take a look at some of the other memorable final Premier League days here

  5. Post update

    Manchester United Fans at the Leigh Sports Village

    Manchester United's head of women's football Polly Bancroft says decisions still have to be made about hosting women's European games at Old Trafford.

    "We're still looking at that actually," she said.

    "We don't have the men's or women's fixtures out yet. Once they've been drawn, we'll start to look at where we can place women's matches at Old Trafford next season."

    Listen to BBC Sounds' 'How To Buy A Football Club' podcast here.

  6. "Leigh Sports Village is a fantastic stadium" - Polly Bancroft

    BBC Sounds

    Leigh Sport Village

    Manchester United's head of women's football Polly Bancroft discusses the club's stadium on BBC Sounds' 'How to Buy a Football Club': "Leigh Sports Village is a fantastic stadium. It's got all the facilities that a Women's Super League team require and the staff there are excellent.

    "[It] is probably not in the ideal location in terms of public transport and those things, and we're working with the council on that to improve the matchday experience.

    "If you were to look at the other mini stadia across the WSL, it's certainly up there in terms of the capacity and the fact that we've sold out there twice this season already shows we're doing a great job of getting to 11 or 12,000."

    Listen to the podcast here.

  7. 'The women's side are very much dependent on the men's side'

    BBC Sounds

    Speaking on the 'How to Buy a Football Club' podcast, Manchester United's head of women's football Polly Bancroft mentions increasing ticket prices: "We've also started to slightly increase our ticket prices.

    We're mindful that it still needs to be accessible so charging a price that values the product but is also accessible is where we are at.

    "We know the economics aren't there yet. We've had a new TV deal through the WSL the season before last.

    "We know the trajectory of the revenue and the broadcast is on the way up.

    Clearly, the women are very much dependent on the men's side.

    So we understand the economics. [But] there is certainly an increasing profile within the club."

    Listen to the podcast on BBC Sounds here.

  8. Man Utd could host Women's Champions League games at Old Trafford

    Simon Stone

    BBC Sport

    Manchester United could host Women's Champions League games at Old Trafford when the club makes its debut in the competition next season.

    Marc Skinner's side played at Old Trafford twice in the current Super League campaign, attracting crowds of 30,000 and almost 28,000 for games against Aston Villa and West Ham.

    United are committed to using Leigh Sports Village as their main ground for the foreseeable future and want to build on an encouraging season that included two sell-outs at the venue.

    But Uefa regulations allow them to nominate a maximum of two home stadiums in the Champions League.

    Read more here.

  9. What has been your club's most memorable final day?

    One big question

    Every supporter has one final day of the season that stands out above all others in their memory, so we asked our Premier League fan community to share theirs.

    Fulham: Dan Crawford, Hammy End

    Fifteen years ago Danny Murphy secured Fulham's Premier League survival with a legendary late header on the final day at Fratton Park. The great escape was scarcely believable. Roy Hodgson rescued the Whites from certain relegation with three consecutive wins and laid the platform for a remarkable Europa League run.

    Leeds United: Jess Furness, Her Game Too

    When we achieved promotion to the Championship in May 2010. What a day, Leeds took 11-year-old me on an emotional rollercoaster in that match against Bristol Rovers. Despite a red card and a one-goal deficit, we turned things around eventually thanks to goals from Jonny Howson and Jermaine Beckford - both of whom are Leeds through and through.

    Leicester City: Sam Holloway, LeicesterFanTV

    The most memorable final day of the season has got to be the 1-1 draw with Chelsea in 2016. Yes, a draw sounds bleak but this was our greatest season ever, winning the Premier League. Everyone in Leicester had non-stop parties for weeks and we also had a stellar Champions League run to follow!

    Liverpool: Josh Sexton, The Anfield Wrap

    Liverpool's most memorable final day of the season was their 3-0 win over Middlesbrough in 2017. It was the win that cemented a first campaign of Champions League football for Jurgen Klopp's team, a feat which would be followed across the next two years by two finals and their sixth European Cup win.

    Read about other memorable final days here

  10. Sutton's predictions: Man Utd v Chelsea

    Chris Sutton's prediction:1-0

    This could be a dreary old game. Will Chelsea get a goal? I'm not convinced they will.

    Manchester United have hardly been in free-scoring form either so I am expecting a pretty drab affair all round.

    Erik ten Hag's side need a point to be certain of a top-four finish and I think they will get over the line here.

    Marcus Rashford is back in training after missing the past two matches so we might see him at some point but I doubt United will rush him back, because they have next week's FA Cup final to think about.

    As for Chelsea, well they are just thinking about next season now. Every time I see them, they seem to really lack an identity, and their results under Frank Lampard have been wretched.

  11. 'Hope will be rekindled in the hearts of the supporters once again'

    Will Faulks, Chelsea News

    At long last, we're into the final week of Chelsea's season.

    It's a moment most fans have been waiting for since at least February, and some have had the sinking feeling for even longer. In fact, the strange atmosphere at the club was notable all the way back in late July, long before the season started, when we were beaten 4-0 by Arsenal in a friendly.

    Thomas Tuchel looked unhappy, the squad looked unbalanced, and the new owners were given a bloody nose in their own backyard as an introduction to owning their very first soccer team.

    The season that has followed has reached unimaginably dreadful depths since then, to the point that even the most positive Blue has been broken by this team and is waiting patiently for the pain to be over.

    The arrival of a new manager will give everyone a lift, and hope will be rekindled in the hearts of the supporters once again. Part of the magic of football is that each summer, fans everywhere can start to think that their team is the one ready to take a big step forward next season.

    It's not until the action starts that most of them are brought back to reality.

  12. Lampard addresses Sterling's England omission

    Man Utd v Chelsea (20:00 BST)

    Chelsea

    Chelsea manager Frank Lampard and Raheem Sterling

    Raheem Sterling will have found the "best outcome" for himself and for England, believes interim boss Frank Lampard after the Chelsea forward was omitted from Gareth Southgate's squad.

    Sterling has 82 caps for his country, scoring 20 times, but has shown only glimpses of his best form since moving to the Blues from Manchester City last summer.

    While admitting he "does not know the exact details", Lampard insisted this could be a good outcome for the 28-year-old.

    "What I do know is that Raheem is obviously a top level player who has played for England for a long time," he said.

    "Sometimes these games at the end of the season for players who have played a lot, are different challenges.

    "If there has been a mutual conversation between himself and Gareth, I am sure they will find the right outcome that is best for England and best for Raheem."

  13. Lampard on Mount's future, Badiashile's 'big blow' and doing the basics right

    Man Utd v Chelsea (20:00 BST)

    Joe Bradshaw

    BBC Sport

    Chelsea interim manager Frank Lampard

    Frank Lampard speaking to the media before Chelsea’s game at Manchester United tonight.

    Here are the key lines from his news conference:

    • Benoit Badiashile will be out for "months, rather than weeks" with his hamstring injury picked up in training. Lampard said it was "a big blow".
    • Reece James, Ben Chilwell and Mason Mount remain sidelined but Joao Felix returns after missing the defeat at Manchester City.
    • Lampard would not comment on Mount’s future amid growing speculation he will leave in the summer: "That’s between Mason and the club."
    • There are many reasons why Chelsea have dipped below form this season: "There is a lot to go over to get to the bottom of it. The club has to explore every factor and make sure it does not happen again. It could be a long process – from my experience, when you switch something off, it isn’t easy to switch on again."
    • He expects his players to "do the basics right" at Old Trafford and added: "They have to show there is something resting on this game in terms of their personal and collective approach. We have to go with a very good mentality against a good team who are fighting for something we have had for many years - and now we don’t have it."
  14. Could Ten Hag's first season get more successful?

    Man Utd v Chelsea (20:00 BST)

    Alex Turk, Stretford Paddock

    Erik ten Hag is Manchester United's fifth permanent manager since Sir Alex Ferguson's retirement in 2013. He is also three wins away from recording the club's best season in the following decade at the first time of asking.

    United will secure a third-place Premier League finish by beating Chelsea and Fulham at Old Trafford this week. Two wins would also confirm United's second-best points tally since 2013 after the 81 Jose Mourinho picked up in 2017-18.

    Before the season, a Champions League return felt like enough to consider the start of the Ten Hag era a success. Finishing in the top three with a trophy, ending a six-year drought at Old Trafford, would be superb.

    But, finishing in the top three with the club's first-ever domestic cup double to boot? Now wouldn't that be something?

    The only roadblocks in United's way are planet's greatest side, manager and most-prolific striker. And that side just so happens to be hunting the second of three trophies that would match their city rivals' 1999 treble success.

    A top-three finish with the club's first-ever domestic cup double, protecting that precious piece of history in the process? I'd personally fund Ten Hag's statue myself.

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  15. 'We win one trophy but we want more trophies' - Ten Hag

    Manchester United v Chelsea (20:00 BST)

    Manchester United

    Manchester United boss Erik Ten Hag

    Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag says he wants his side to "compete with the best" as they to look to secure their place in the Champions League next season.

    The Red Devils needs just one more point from their remaining two games to confirm their place in the top four and will be looking to achieve that against under performing Chelsea tonight.

    In what has been a positive first season in charge for Ten Hag, United have ended a six-year trophy drought, look set to return to the Champions League and have a chance for a second trophy in the FA Cup final against rivals Manchester City.

    "It's about judgement from others if it's a good, bad or normal performance," said the Dutchman.

    "We are in a project, we want to go back and win trophies, we win one trophy but we want more trophies, compete with the best.

    "We are still in a journey but we think we are in the right direction but it can always be better. Because good is not good enough.

    "We want to compete with the best, then you have to be in the Champions League.

    "We want to compete with the best and be in the Champions League. In the Premier League, you have to be one of the first four, that's not easy, many are competing for it, many think they should be in and we are one of them."

  16. Ten Hag on Champions League, Rashford latest and Neymar rumours

    Man Utd v Chelsea (20:00 BST)

    Simon Stone

    BBC Sport

    Erik ten Hag spoke to the media before Man United's Premier League game against Chelsea.

    Here are the main lines from his news conference:

    • On the importance of getting the point needed for Champions League qualification: "If you make that question you already have your answer. If we want to compete with the best, then we have to be in the Champions League."
    • When asked if United are ahead of schedule, he said: "First, we have to win the game tomorrow and get the job done. Then it's about judgement from others if it's a good, bad or normal performance."
    • He rejected suggestions Anthony Martial is on his way out this summer: "No. If you are not available, you can't score. When he was available we played better."
    • He gave a fitness update on Marcus Rashford: "Yesterday, he returned to training, he looks quite fit but we have to see today what is the outcome of the training."
    • He gave a strange answer to a question about reported interest in Neymar: "When we have news we will tell you."
  17. Post update

    Right then, last hour.

    Build up to Man Utd’s clash with Chelsea, which could confirm their Champions League spot, later before we close up.

  18. Levy in the spotlight

    Simon Stone

    BBC Sport

    Harry Kane

    Levy and Tottenham's ultimate owners ENIC have been the subject of more adverse reaction than ever before this season.

    Their home campaign ended in defeat against Brentford last week and few fans will travel to Leeds with any hope of victory even though the home side are fighting for their Premier League lives.

    And then there is Harry Kane.

    The England skipper has one year left on his contract and is again attracting attention from all Europe's leading clubs, including Manchester United.

    Levy is faced with the balance of either cashing in on the forward or risk losing him for nothing in 12 months' time in the hope something positive can emerge to persuade him to commit the remaining years of his career to Spurs.

    Finding an alternative to Slot won't be hard for Spurs. Finding the right alternative is another question entirely.

  19. Get Involved - Your thoughts on Spurs

    #BBCFootball

    Roberto Colombi: The Spurs saga/debacle is symbolic of all the badly run clubs (include Everton, Chelsea) and the awful season they’ve had - whereas organised, stable owners/management clubs like Man City, Newcastle, Brighton have prospered - lesson there?!

  20. Who else is there?

    Simon Stone

    BBC Sport

    Luis Enrique

    Well placed sources have suggested Tottenham retain an interest in former Spain and Barcelona coach Luis Enrique, who is without a job since standing down after the World Cup.

    But there are other options.

    Another former Spain coach, Julen Lopetegui, is in an uncertain situation at Wolves after discovering Financial Fair Play restrictions will be a major impediment to his summer squad building plans.

    Like Slot, former Manchester United striker Ruud van Nistelrooy has done an impressive job in the Netherlands. The 46-year-old is now on the market after leaving PSV Eindhoven over a failure to agree a forward path.

    Graham Potter built his reputation at Brighton and is still highly regarded despite lasting a matter of months at Chelsea amid an admittedly chaotic owner-inspired recruitment campaign.

    At one point, Brendan Rodgers was linked strongly with Tottenham. He didn't seem to be enjoying himself at Leicester long before his dismissal and does have the FA Cup on his CV from his time at the King Power.

    Celtic's Ange Postecoglou has won back-to-back Scottish titles and is on the brink of a domestic treble. Given his progressive tactical approach he must also come into consideration.