From Top to Flop: Tumbling Down the League in 2021

Source: Statista

While all attention is currently on Liverpool’s fall from grace at the elite end of English football, there is another club in the midst of an even more dramatic change of fortune.

Carlisle United have picked up just one point in their last six games and, even accounting for games in hand, you wouldn’t think the Cumbrians had been sitting pretty at the top of League Two as recently as 2 January. The momentum the club had built up to that point ebbed away in drastic fashion as a series of Covid-related postponements appear to have taken the wind out of their sails, likely ending what had been a genuine title push for a club stuck in the fourth tier since 2014-15. They are currently in 12th position.

Back to Liverpool though, and a club enduring a perhaps unprecedented injury crisis. The Reds had also been at the top of the league at the end of 2020 but what started as a draw against West Brom on 27 December extended to a run of five games without a win, leaving them in fourth place and looking upwards to their two bitter Manchester-based rivals fighting over the top spot which had once been theirs. Fast forward to 5 March and Liverpool have picked up just 11 points since that draw, leaving them languishing in 7th place with manager Klopp having already admitted that his team’s title defence is over.

Both clubs can at least take some solace from knowing that similar, albeit less dramatic, scenarios have also been playing out across Europe. Probably the most bitter of which being the plight of Bayer Leverkusen. Momentarily breaking Bayern Munich’s long-term grip on German football, Leverkusen were top of the table going into their 19 December match against Bayern – only to lose to a goal scored in the third minute of injury time. A look at the club’s more recent games, and the manner in which some of them were lost, tells the rest of the story of their frustrating journey from first to sixth.

Football Promotion Infographic

The Nations Dominating Ladies’ Golf

Source: Statista

Female golfers from South Korea have been a major success on the international stage for many years. A look at Ladies Professional Golf Association career earnings shows that South Korea is in fact the only country which can give the U.S. a run for its money on its home turf. Being based in the U.S., the LPGA Tour is the international home of women’s professional golfing, giving U.S. players a home advantage.

While female U.S. golfers racked up combined career earnings of more than $550 million, Korean players achieved $224 million, ahead of third-placed Sweden with only $73.6 million. Japan and Thailand are two more Asian nations in the top 8 of the most successful countries for Ladies’ golf.

Womensgolf.com credits the setting off of a women’s golfing craze in South Korea to Se Ri Pak, the Korean who won the U.S. Women’s Open in her rookie year in 1998. It therefore took South Korean female golfers less than 25 years to achieve 50 percent of the earning of their U.S. counterparts, who started the LPGA Tour in 1950. In the past 10 years, female Korean golfers won the LPGA Player of the Year award four times and Rookie of the Year award seven times. Golfing legend Se Ri Pak appears in rank 9 of the all-time most successful players on the tour with career earnings of $12.6 million. Inbee Park, who started on the tour in 2007, ranks fourth with $16.7 million earned.

The Nations Dominating Ladies' Golf