Even manager Steve Bruce has been surprised by Hull Cityâs fine start on their return to the Premier League. But can they stay there? Richard Sutcliffe has the facts which suggest they will. HISTORY is on the side of Hull City in their quest to stay in the Premier League. Steve Bruceâs Tigers have, with the possible exception of Champions League hopefuls Southampton, been the standout surprise package of this seasonâs top flight. Priced as short as 6-4 on to be relegated by the bookmakers before a ball had been kicked, City have confounded their critics to claim 14 points from their opening 10 games. Tenth place is their reward and with the season moving into its second quarter traditionally being a time to take stock, the Yorkshire Post has taken a look back through history to compare how Hull are shaping up. The findings make encouraging reading for Tigers fans with only six of the 64 teams demoted from the top-flight since the advent of the Premier League in 1992 having been in the top half of the table after 10 games. Blackpool are the most recent, with Ian Hollowayâs side sitting ninth at the corresponding stage of the 2010-11 campaign before crashing down the table to finish second bottom. Two years earlier, Middlesbrough suffered an identical slide but then we have to go back to 2000-01 for another relegated side to be found in the top half after 10 games. âWe are making a fist of this league,â said Bruce, who in 10 previous seasons as a Premier League manager has suffered just one relegation, in 2005-06 when at the helm of Birmingham City. âIt was a huge win for us (over Sunderland on Saturday). We have got to get as many points as we can against the teams that will be in and around us at the bottom because the most important thing is staying in this league. âAt the moment, we are sitting in the top 10, which I didnât think would be possible.â Hullâs encouraging start has been built on rock solid home form, with their five outings at the KC Stadium having yielded three victories and two draws. Better still, City have conceded just once â Cardiff Cityâs Peter Whittingham netting for Cardiff City in Septemberâs 1-1 draw â in the East Riding this term. Such a performance is not only admirable but also potentially season-defining with all five of the Premier League teams that have visited Yorkshire this season being ones that Bruceâs men were always going to be jostling with in the fight to stay out of trouble. That trend will continue in Hullâs next home game against Crystal Palace, the only team ranked at a shorter price by bookmakers to be relegated â at 8-15 â than Bruceâs men when the season got under way. Another three points, therefore, would be most welcome for Tigers fans, who have first-hand experience of how badly a once promising campaign can tail off in the depths of winter. In the clubâs first season at this level in 2008-09, Phil Brownâs men took 20 points from the opening 10 games to sit fifth in the table. Once the clocks changed, however, Cityâs season collapsed with just two more victories being claimed and relegation only avoided thanks to the failings of others, most notably Newcastle United. Mind, as exciting as Hullâs start to life among the elite proved, Brownâs squad rarely boasted the balance or quality of the current crop. Saturdayâs victory over Sunderland means City have now been a permanent fixture in the top 10 since winning at Newcastle more than six weeks ago. For Paul McShane, the only survivor from the Yorkshire clubâs previous stint in the Premier League, this can be put down to Bruceâs influence. He said: âThe manager has brought some brilliant players in who are also great characters and have a very good attitude. Those players deserve to be doing well because they are doing the right things around the place. âMost of all, they are performing out on the pitch and so the amount of points we have got doesnât surprise me. âI could see something like this happening when the manager signed these players but it is still great that we are picking up points. Things are going well at the moment.â McShaneâs addition of the words âat the momentâ is a reminder that fortunes can change quickly in the Premier League. On Saturday, for instance, City needed a Steve Harper save to deny Adam Johnson at the death to claim all three points against a Black Cats side who had played the entire second half with nine men. Even so, this morningâs table does make for encouraging reading for Tigers fans â especially when it is noted that more than half of the 64 teams relegated since 1992-93 had been in the bottom three after 10 games. http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/spor...-top-10-tigers-to-beat-premier-drop-1-6214755
You need a striker, but even failing that there are at least 3 worse sides that yourselves. You'll be fine, see you next season.
We do and we will. I have to say that I've been impressed with Leicester this season, but I'm obviously hoping for a second half of the season crash as NP is so much more entertaining in his post match interviews when he's pissed off
Currently, there are 10 worse teams than City. Also, when you take into consideration we have had away matches at Chelski, Man Citeh, Spurs, Everton & Newcastle, we are sitting very pretty.
Don't know what its called, but does anyone have an update on that table which gives you extra points for where you finished last year, and we looked on to win the league?