Premier League 2025/26 awards including best player, moment, signing and team of the season

Arsenal are Premier League champions and kick-started the celebrations at Selhurst Park after victory over Crystal Palace to conclude the season.

At the other end of the table, Tottenham avoided relegation, but West Ham dropped down to the Championship with Burnley and Wolves.

Man City, Man United, Aston Villa and Liverpool qualified for next season’s Champions League, while Bournemouth and Sunderland reached the Europa League, and Brighton will play in next season’s Conference League. Here are the Independent Sport’s awards from the 2025/26 season:

Player of the season

Miguel Delaney: Declan Rice – I have also gone back and forth on David Raya and Bruno Fernandes a few times but, now that the title is secured, I’d pick Rice for pushing through under immense pressure.

Richard Jolly: Rice – I actually voted for Bernardo Silva for Footballer of the Year but it was when it looked like Manchester City could do the treble. So I will switch to Rice, who has been Arsenal’s outstanding individual.

Lawrence Ostlere: Fernandes – His ability to create chances was a world apart from every other player in the league and made a huge contribution off the ball too (he completed the same number of tackles as Rice).

Kieran Jackson: Rice – Those with short memories quickly forget how talismanic he was for Arsenal as they built a top-of-the-table lead in the first half of the season which, ultimately, proved insurmountable. Faded towards the end of the season, sure, but has been back to his monstrous self in the past few weeks. A proper leader.

Will Castle: Fernandes – You can easily give this to Rice and I’d have no complaints, but for me, Fernandes’ ability to remain a constant light for Manchester United even through the dark final days of Ruben Amorim makes him the league’s individual best this term. He was integral to their resurgence under Michael Carrick and his title of all-time assist king makes his season one for the books.

Manchester United's Bruno Fernandes celebrates scoring against Brighton
Manchester United’s Bruno Fernandes celebrates scoring against Brighton (Reuters)

Manager of the season

MD: Mikel Arteta – I could easily have Keith Andrews, Andoni Iraola or Unai Emery here, but I think the scale of Arsenal’s long-term overperformance is being overlooked. And Arteta did show true management – especially dispelling doubts – at key moments.

RJ: Emery – At the start of the season, Aston Villa looked like they could go into decline. They end the campaign having qualified for the Champions League twice and won their first trophy in 30 years, and a first in Europe in 44 years. At the risk of recency bias, John McGinn’s strike against Liverpool might be my goal of the season.

LO: Regis Le Bris – Sunderland’s newly compiled team quickly gelled and racked up points via Le Bris’s gameplan built on defensive solidity. To finish in the top half of the Premier League is a phenomenal achievement, but qualifying for the Europa League, and delivering European football to the Black Cats for the first time in more than 50 years is incredible.

KJ: Andrews – The Irishman has made a mockery of the “most likely to be sacked” tag at the start of the season, steering Brentford so close to Europe. As the antics at Arsenal will attest to, perhaps the “set-piece coach” really is the way forward.

WC: Arteta – You just can’t give it to anyone else, can you? Yes, Arsenal aren’t the most enjoyable team to watch, hence Arteta-ball regularly being the subject of resentment. But his philosophy has been justified; Arsenal are Premier League champions for the first time in 22 years. It’s not come without its real tests of fortitude, either – Manchester City’s fightback threatened to bring about a four-peat of second-place finishes. Arteta managed to drag his side out of the darkness; now he’s potentially 90 minutes away from the best double in football.

Keith Andrews, Manager of Brentford, applauds the fans after keeping the Bees in the Premier League
Keith Andrews, Manager of Brentford, applauds the fans after keeping the Bees in the Premier League (Getty)

Moment of the season

MD: “After review…” Very far from the best football moment, but the theatre around Chris Kavanagh’s VAR review of Callum Wilson’s goal was among the most exquisite tension I’ve experienced in the Premier League, and decided so much. There’s also a symbolism in how the fact it was a VAR review of a set-piece also summed up so much. Not necessarily for good.

RJ: It may be off the field, albeit about 30 yards from it – Mohamed Salah’s remarkable interview at Leeds. It feels like quite a bit of the drama has come off the field, whether Ruben Amorim’s press conference at Elland Road or Pep Guardiola standing down.

LO: Declan Rice’s “It’s not over” at full-time in Arsenal’s defeat by Manchester City. He was mocked for showing supposed weakness, but in truth it was a glimpse of a defiant mentality that proved so integral to Arsenal’s season. That phrase will be repeated for years to come.

KJ: Max Dowman’s goal against Everton. The 16-year-old came on, conjured a key assist late on, before gliding sumptuously through desperate defenders to score into an empty net, becoming the Premier League’s youngest-ever goalscorer in a statement victory for Arsenal. Of course, understandable given his age, but it’s felt like a shame we’ve barely seen him since.

WC: “After review…” Stockley Park shenanigans take the cake on this one; you truly hate to see it. But the magnitude and significance of this sole moment in the title race – and the relegation race – cannot be denied.

West Ham are contacting PGMO over their concerns regarding the decision to disallow a Callum Wilson equaliser against Arsenal
West Ham are contacting PGMO over their concerns regarding the decision to disallow a Callum Wilson equaliser against Arsenal (PA Wire)

Game of the season

MD: Newcastle United 2-3 Liverpool – It feels like it was almost from a different campaign, not least in how it touched football levels that the season didn’t always reach.

RJ: Newcastle 2-3 Liverpool – Astonishing drama, plenty of plotlines and a 100th-minute winner from a 16-year-old Rio Ngumoha.

LO: Manchester United 2-0 Manchester City – Michael Carrick’s first game in charge was a masterclass, and it sparked a transformation of the team’s season.

KJ: Liverpool 1-2 Manchester City – One stunning free-kick from Dominik Szoboszlai and a City fightback which extended the title race by two months. Farcical VAR scenes at the end were, perhaps, a sign of things to come.

WC: Fulham 4-5 Manchester City – Do not assume anything as given in this league. This had the look of a classic City rout when they went 3-0 up before half-time, then 5-1 by 53 minutes. By 77 minutes, Fulham had reduced their deficit by three and looked on a collision course for one of the greatest comebacks this league has ever seen. Alas, it didn’t happen, but those minutes of edge-of-your-seat action were unmatched.

Rio Ngumoha has signed his first professional contract with Liverpool
Rio Ngumoha has signed his first professional contract with Liverpool (PA Wire)

Signing of the season

MD: Senne Lammens – A personification of Manchester United’s recently-found stability.

RJ: Dominic Calvert-Lewin – Plenty of clubs spent a fortune on strikers last summer. Leeds got a free transfer who kept them up.

LO: Calvert-Lewin. A free signing who scored the goals (15) that kept Leeds in the Premier League.

KJ: Granit Xhaka. The Swiss midfielder, signed for £13m, was quickly named captain by Regis Le Bris and has been the key cog in Sunderland’s remarkable season, as they push for Europe on the final day. At 33, he’s still got it.

WC: Antoine Semenyo – Who knows how much earlier Arsenal would’ve won the league if not for City’s January business, signing the two most sought-after players in the league. Semenyo was on fire at Bournemouth and only got hotter under Pep Guardiola.

Dominic Calvert-Lewin of Leeds United celebrates victory against Brighton & Hove Albion
Dominic Calvert-Lewin of Leeds United celebrates victory against Brighton & Hove Albion (Getty)

Surprise of the season

MD: Brentford – To think there was expectation Keith Andrews could be sacked in a nosedive.

RJ: How well (two of) the promoted teams have done. It has been a welcome surprise, too, to see Sunderland and Leeds excel. It wasn’t healthy if the same three teams that came up went down. But with Sunderland and Leeds doing well, it rather caught out Wolves, West Ham and Tottenham.

LO: I genuinely thought this would be the season when VAR clicked and began to become the smooth background operation it was meant to be. Somehow, it got worse.

KJ: Tottenham. Thomas Frank was highly rated and seemed a shrewd pick in the early weeks. How rapidly did that optimism plummet? Their battle against relegation was the story of the campaign.

WC: Brentford – The Bees lost their manager, captain and two best attackers last summer. Predicting the drop for them was hardly a hot take. Shows how much we know.

What are you looking forward to next season?

MD: More open football, hopefully from some rule changes.

RJ: Some managerial changes are confirmed (Xabi Alonso at Chelsea, Marco Rose at Bournemouth), some very likely (Enzo Maresca to Manchester City) and some remain to be determined (Crystal Palace). It will be interesting to see how they get on and how that changes the Premier League pecking order.

LO: Alonso at Chelsea is a great storyline and it will be fun to see how he gets on in the Premier League.

KJ: Manchester City. End of an era with Pep Guardiola leaving – how will Maresca (we assume) fare? It’s some figure to follow.

WC: Alonso to Chelsea is very intriguing – partly because of how unbothered a lot of Blues fans are at the appointment. A quick reminder that ‘failing’ at this Real Madrid team is not the be-all and end-all. What he did at Bayer Leverkusen was truly remarkable – this looks like a coup.

Xabi Alonso's appointment as Chelsea manager has been confirmed
Xabi Alonso’s appointment as Chelsea manager has been confirmed (PA)

Team of the season

MD: Raya; Timber, Senesi, Gabriel, O’Reilly; Rice, Scott; Semenyo, Fernandes, Rogers, Thiago

RJ: Raya; Timber, Lacroix, Gabriel, O’Reilly; Silva, Rice; Szoboszlai, Fernandes, Doku; Thiago

LO: Lammens; Timber, Senesi, Gabriel, Kadioglu; Rice, Garner; Wilson, Fernandes, Semenyo; Haaland

KJ: Raya; Timber, Guehi, Gabriel, O’Reilly; Rice, Xhaka, Fernandes; Semenyo, Rogers, Thiago

WC: Raya; Timber, Guehi, Gabriel, O’Reilly; Rice, Fernandes, Rogers; Semenyo, Thiago, Kroupi

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *