# Spurs Hit Rock Bottom While Arsenal Drop Points in Wild Weekend Across Europe
Tottenham's 3-0 home humiliation against Nottingham Forest wasn't just bad. It was historically embarrassing. Forest hadn't won at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium since it opened, and they picked Sunday to score three without reply. Brennan Johnson grabbed two, and Chris Wood added a third in the 78th minute to cap off Spurs' worst home performance of the season.
Here's the thing: this wasn't a fluke. Tottenham have now lost four of their last six in the Premier League, and their top-four hopes are evaporating faster than their fans leaving at halftime. The defense looked lost, the midfield was nonexistent, and up front? Nothing. Forest's press completely suffocated them.
Meanwhile, Arsenal threw away two points at Molineux in a 2-2 draw that felt like a loss. The Gunners led twice through Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Martinelli, but Wolves clawed back both times. Matheus Cunha's equalizer in the 83rd minute might've just handed the title race to someone else. Arsenal are still in it, but dropping points to a Wolves side fighting relegation? That stings.
## Chelsea's Goodison Nightmare Gets Worse
Everton 3-0 Chelsea. Read that again.
The Toffees absolutely battered Chelsea at Goodison Park, with Dominic Calvert-Lewin scoring twice and Abdoulaye Doucouré adding a third. Chelsea's defense was Swiss cheese, and their attack couldn't muster a single shot on target in the second half. This is a team that spent £600 million in the last two transfer windows, and they got schooled by a side that's been fighting relegation battles for three straight seasons.
Real talk: Chelsea's season is a disaster. They're sitting eighth in the table with no European football in sight, and the fans are getting restless. The Mauricio Pochettino experiment isn't working, and every week brings new questions about who's actually running the show at Stamford Bridge.
Brighton pulled off the weekend's biggest upset, beating Liverpool 2-1 at the Amex. Kaoru Mitoma's winner in the 67th minute sent the home crowd into delirium and dealt a serious blow to Liverpool's Champions League qualification hopes. The Reds have now won just twice in their last seven league matches, and Jürgen Klopp's final season is threatening to end in mediocrity.
## Manchester United Can't Find a Win Anywhere
United's 2-2 draw at Bournemouth extended their winless run to four matches. Marcus Rashford scored twice, but the defense gave up two soft goals, including Dominic Solanke's 89th-minute equalizer. Erik ten Hag's side are stuck in sixth place, seven points off the top four, and their form is getting worse by the week.
The Sunderland-Newcastle derby delivered drama, with the Black Cats winning 2-1 at St. James' Park in a massive upset. Jack Clarke's brace silenced the home crowd and gave Sunderland bragging rights in the northeast. Newcastle's Champions League push took a hit, and the loss will sting for weeks.
## Barcelona Cruising While Bayern Extend Their Lead
Over in La Liga, Barcelona sit seven points clear at the top with 76 points. Real Madrid are second on 69, but they've got a game in hand that could cut the gap to four. Villarreal are having a quietly excellent season in third with 58 points, while Atlético Madrid trail them by just one.
The Bundesliga title race is basically over. Bayern München have 73 points, nine clear of Borussia Dortmund in second. RB Leipzig and VfB Stuttgart are tied on 53 points, battling for that third Champions League spot. Hoffenheim and Leverkusen round out the top six, separated by just one point.
Serie A is where things get interesting. Inter Milan lead with 72 points, but AC Milan (63) and Napoli (62) are both within striking distance. Como's surprise season continues—they're fourth with 57 points, ahead of both Juventus and Roma on 54. That's a team that was in Serie B two years ago now pushing for Champions League football.
## The Verdict
Tottenham are in freefall, Arsenal are wobbling, and Chelsea are a complete mess. Liverpool's top-four hopes are hanging by a thread, and Manchester United can't string together consecutive wins. The Premier League's traditional powerhouses are all struggling, and it's making for one of the most unpredictable seasons in recent memory.
Barcelona will win La Liga unless they completely collapse. Bayern will cruise to another Bundesliga title. But Serie A? That's anyone's race, and Inter better not get comfortable with that nine-point cushion. Milan and Napoli are coming, and they've got momentum.
Bold prediction: Arsenal won't win the league, and Tottenham won't finish in the top six. Book it.