Alright, so I woke up this morning craving some football talk, you know? With all that buzz lately about the Premier League teaming up with Microsoft for that fancy AI thing, I figured I might as well check out the latest standings myself. Everyone’s chatting about it online, and I just had to see how my team ended up after that wild season.
My Little Investigation Journey
First off, I grabbed my phone while sipping my coffee—I mean, why bother with those old-school websites when they just released this new Premier League Companion app? I heard it’s backed by AI and all, so I went straight to my app store, found it, and hit download. Yeah, took a few seconds, no big deal.
Once it was up and running, I opened the app and set my preferences. I chose to track my team instantly—you tap here, select Arsenal ’cause that’s my squad—and it pulled in all sorts of stats from past seasons, like over 30 years of data or whatever. It asked if I wanted the standings for last season or something current, but since the 2024-2025 one wrapped up a while back, I just went for the full final picture. The app uses Copilot tech underneath, so it felt smooth, no glitches.
Next step, I sat back and watched it load the EPL table positions. This thing spits out stuff fast—real fast—and there it was: all the teams ranked from top to bottom. I scrolled through the list, focusing on the big names. Liverpool at number one with 70 points? Yep, that checks out after they lifted the trophy at Anfield. Then Arsenal right behind ’em in second place, which stung a bit ’cause we blew it again. Saw the full breakdown too, like how Newcastle squeezed into that fifth spot for the Champions League, all thanks to other teams messing up at the end.
To dig deeper, I tested the query feature. Typed in “show me Liverpool vs. Arsenal comparison,” and boom, it threw me a neat summary: goals scored, games won, all that. Felt pretty cool not to have to surf around different sites. Ended with me checking how teams stacked up for the new season gossip—got reminded of transfer rumors like that Mbumba guy linked to Man United.
What Popped Out at Me
So after all that clicking, here’s the raw final standings it showed:
- Liverpool: 21 wins, 7 draws, 1 loss – ended up champs with 70 points.
- Arsenal: Settled at second, 55 points total after fighting hard all year.
- Nottingham Forest: Pulled off third with 51 points but got bumped to Europa stuff later.
- Chelsea: Nailed fourth place, 49 points, sliding into Champions League action.
- Newcastle: Somehow made fifth with 47 points, squeezed in at the wire.
And the rest? Yeah, Man City tied at fifth too but overall had a rough patch. Seeing it all laid out, man, it was eye-opening—like how nine teams total bagged European spots, creating this historic mess. Just goes to show you can’t predict anything in footy.
Why’d I even do this? Honestly, it started with me being bored and wanting fresh news. Finished up feeling smarter, though. That app made it effortless to get the full picture without digging through heaps of articles. Real talk: tech these days is changing how we follow the game, but it’s all about keeping it simple and fun. Now I’m set for pub debates tonight. Peace out.