What have been the longest losing runs in Premier League history? Here, we look over the five instance of teams suffering nine or more defeats in a row, as we summarise the longest Premier League losing streaks.
Norwich City’s 2-0 defeat to Everton at Goodison Park on 25 September 2021 saw them suffer a 16th successive Premier League loss, but it fell four games short of breaking the all-time top flight English league record.
Norwich already held second place in the all-time Premier League losing runs list, following a heavy defeat at Man City on 21 August. With that defeat the Canaries overtook Aston Villa’s 11-game losing run from 2016 to hold the unwanted accolade of the second-longest losing run in the Premier League – and also the second-longest all-time English top-flight run of defeats.
It’s still some way off Sunderland’s monumental 20-game losing streak across two different Premier League seasons between January 2003 and September 2005.
The first 15 of those games for the Black Cats came in 2002-03, when they unsurprisingly finished bottom of the league and did enough to feature in our worst Premier League teams list. That 15-match losing streak would be enough to top the longest top-flight losing runs in English history on its own, but to make sure they, presumably to put the record out of sight, decided to start their 2005-06 season as a newly promoted side with another five consecutive defeats. Twenty is a nice round number, after all.
Sunderland’s 20-game Losing Run
Lost 2-1 away at Everton – 18 January 2003
Lost 1-0 at home to Southampton – 28 January 2003
Lost 3-1 at home to Charlton Athletic – 1 February 2003
Lost 4-1 away at Tottenham Hotspur – 8 February 2003
Lost 3-1 at home to Middlesbrough – 22 February 2003
Lost 1-0 away at Fulham – 1 March 2003
Lost 2-0 at home to Bolton Wanderers – 15 March 2003
Lost 2-0 away at West Ham United – 22 March 2003
Lost 2-1 at home to Chelsea – 5 April 2003
Lost 2-0 away to Birmingham City – 12 April 2003
Lost 2-1 at home to West Bromwich Albion – 19 April 2003
Lost 3-0 away at Manchester City – 21 April 2003
Lost 1-0 at home to Newcastle United – 26 April 2003
Lost 1-0 away at Aston Villa – 3 May 2003
Lost 4-0 at home to Arsenal – 11 May 2003
Lost 3-1 at home to Charlton Athletic – 13 August 2005
Lost 1-0 away at Liverpool – 20 August 2005
Lost 2-1 at home to Manchester City – 23 August 2005
Lost 1-0 away at Wigan – 27 August 2005
Lost 2-0 away at Chelsea – 10 September 2005
Those five losses at the start of 2005-06 set the tone for the rest of the season. Sunderland fans probably didn’t think it could get any worse than 2002-03, but it certainly could and did. They finished bottom with just 15 points – the second lowest total in a season since the competition began in 1992. No Premier League football club has ever lost more games in a single season than Sunderland in this campaign (29), while their tally of three wins is the club’s lowest in a top-flight term. Sunderland even managed to record a nine-game losing streak later that season, which comes in as joint-fourth worst in Premier League history alongside a run by Fulham in 2019.
If ever a stat best summed up a club, it’s that no Premier League side lost more home games between the 2002-03 and their next season in the top-flight (2005-06) than Sunderland (28), this despite them being in the second tier for two campaigns in this period (2003-04 and 2005-06).
“But football didn’t begin in 1992” I hear you yell. Fine: Sunderland’s 20-game losing run is not only a Premier League record, but also an all-time English top-flight record.
Norwich had the second-worst losing top-flight run in England just ahead of Manchester United, who endured a 14-game losing streak between April and October 1930, a run that included some wild results: a 5-1 defeat at Old Trafford and later a three-game sequence of defeats by 6-2, 6-0 and 7-4 scorelines. Twelve of those losses came at the start of the 1930-31 Division One campaign, which culminated in one of United’s five relegations from the top flight and unsurprisingly the league season that they lost the most matches overall (27), and suffered the joint-most home defeats (9).
So, what of that Norwich City run? Well, it stretched across their relegation in 2019-20 and further defeats in 2021-22 to Jürgen Klopp’s Liverpool, Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City and then to Leicester and Arsenal before a 3-1 defeat to Watford and the 16th loss in succession away at Everton.
Norwich City’s 16-game Losing Run
Lost 1-0 away at Sheffield United – 7 March 2020
Lost 3-0 at home to Southampton – 19 June 2020
Lost 1-0 at home to Everton – 24 June 2020
Lost 4-0 away at Arsenal – 1 July 2020
Lost 1-0 at home to Brighton & Hove Albion – 4 July 2020
Lost 2-1 away at Watford – 7 July 2020
Lost 4-0 at home to West Ham United – 11 July 2020
Lost 1-0 away at Chelsea – 14 July 2020
Lost 2-0 at home to Burnley – 18 July 2020
Lost 5-0 away at Manchester City – 26 July 2020
Lost 3-0 at home to Liverpool – 14 August 2021
Lost 5-0 away at Manchester City – 21 August 2021
Lost 2-1 at home to Leicester City – 28 August 2021
Lost 1-0 away at Arsenal – 11 September 2021
Lost 3-1 at home to Watford – 18 September 2021
Lost 2-0 away at Everton – 25 September 2021
The day before this 11-game losing streak began, Norwich City were bottom of the Premier League and six points from safety. It was always going to be a difficult task to remain in the top flight, but then the Covid-19 pandemic hit following the first defeat of the losing run on 7 March 2020 against Sheffield United. Maybe Norwich struggled to adapt to no crowds in stadiums more than other sides, but just as likely a scenario was that they’d tacitly accepted demotion and already started thinking about their route back to the big time the following season.
When football returned from the pandemic-induced break, Norwich lost all nine of their Premier League games and scored just one goal. Scoring one goal was terrible enough but conceding a league-high 23 without keeping a single clean sheet wasn’t helpful either.
With Sunderland’s 20-game losing run coming between two different managers – Mick McCarthy’s 14 games and Howard Wilkinson’s six – Daniel Farke became the first manager in Premier League history to suffer 15 consecutive defeats. The German might be the king of Championship promotion but taking charge of a Premier League club seems a much harder task for him.
When Farke did manage to end the 16-match losing run – with a 3-1 away victory at Brentford on 6 November – he was sacked as Canaries boss; an odd way to congratulate your coach on ending such a dismal run.
Everton’s win over Norwich in September 2021 also piled misery on goalkeeper Tim Krul. In losing that match, Krul suffered his 100th Premier League defeat in what was his 199th Premier League appearance – only three other players have ever suffered 100 defeats in fewer than 200 games in the competition – forward Steven Fletcher (185), defender Paul Robinson (192) and forward Matthew Jarvis (193).
Defeat at Aston Villa on 30 April 2022 eventually saw Norwich relegated from the Premier League for a sixth time – the most of any side since the competition began in 1992-93.
So that’s the English top flight covered, but how do these losing runs compare to the best of the best in the top five European Leagues?
Spain
Las Palmas hold the honour of the longest losing run in La Liga, with an 11-game sequence between December 1959 and February 1960.
The club from the Canary Islands started the losing run in style, with a 6-0 away defeat to Real Sociedad and ended it with classic 8-0 and 6-2 defeats against Barcelona and Real Zaragoza. Those two defeats were the second and third in Luis Molowny’s reign as manager following the dismissal of Marcel Domingo as coach following the eighth match of the sequence. Game four of Molowny’s spell ended the losing run however, as they thrashed Real Valladolid 4-0 at home.
It’ll come as little surprise that Las Palmas were relegated that season, but they somehow didn’t finish bottom – Osasuna had that honour.
Italy
Brescia lost 16 Serie A matches in a row between February 1995 and August 1997, with 15 of these games at the tailend of the 1994-95 season that ended in relegation to Serie B.
A 1-0 defeat to Internazionale started the run and another defeat at the San Siro to Inter by a single goal (2-1) on the opening weekend of the 1997-98 season was the final loss in the sequence.
That loss on the opening matchday of 1997-98 was particularly hard to stomach for Brescia, as they led 1-0 until the 80th minute when Álvaro Recoba scored an equaliser, before firing the winner just five minutes later. To say both of his strikes were wonder goals wouldn’t be an understatement. Had these ancients never heard of xG?
Germany
In 2021-22, SpVgg Greuther Fürth broke the Bundesliga record for the most consecutive losses, with 12 successive defeats between 28 August and 4 December. During that run, they conceded 40 goals, including a 7-1 defeat to Bayer Leverkusen to beat the previous record of 11 defeats in a row, set by FC Nürnberg.
Just like Brescia’s losing run in Serie A, Nürnberg’s losing streak – the previous record holder – both started and finished against the same opposition. A 2-0 loss to VfL Bochum in March 1984 was the first of 11 successive losses in the German top flight, with 10 coming at the end of 1983-84 and the final defeat to Bochum (1-0) coming on the opening weekend of the 1985-86 campaign.
France
The 2022-23 was a record-breaking season for Angers, and given the topic on this page, you won’t be surprised to hear they won’t have been too happy about the record they broke. Before this campaign, the record run of defeats in Ligue 1 stood at 12 in a row – a record held by four different teams: Dijon in 2020-21, Grenoble across the 2008-09 and 2009-10 seasons, Strasbourg across 2007-08 and 2017-18 (after relegation in 2008), and CA Paris way back in 1933-34.
Then Angers, following six consecutive seasons of mid-table finishes following promotion to the top flight in 2015, capitulated in dramatic style in September 2022. They had started the season with two draws followed by four straight defeats, but then fans would have hoped a corner had been turned when they recorded back-to-back wins over Montpellier and Nice. It wasn’t to be, though, as Angers then fell apart, losing 13 games in a row from September through to February. They recovered with two draws, but then went on not one, but two five-game losing streaks. They were – obviously – eventually relegated, but not until late April with just five games of the season left.
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