Premier League Matches: 10 Final-Day Games Live on Sky Sports as Tottenham Host Everton

Sky Sports will show all 10 premier league matches live at 4pm on the final day; Tottenham host Everton with their top-flight status hanging on the result.

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will show all 10 Premier League final-day games live on Sunday, with every match kicking off at 4pm and goals fed across its Soccer Special coverage as they happen. The headline fixture sees host on Sky Sports Main Event, and Tottenham's Premier League status is on the line.

There are nine different final-day outcomes that could affect the relegation picture for the clubs involved, but the equation for Tottenham is strikingly simple: the only scenario that sends them down is a home defeat to Everton combined with a win over . Tottenham sit two points above 18th-placed West Ham ahead of the final day, meaning a point at home will guarantee their safety.

If Tottenham win, they will be safe. If West Ham win, they still need Tottenham to lose to overturn the table. A draw would almost certainly be enough for Tottenham because they hold a superior goal difference; it would not be enough for West Ham. And in the unlikely but tidy outcome where both teams lose, Tottenham will stay up regardless.

The live, synchronized nature of the day — 10 games all at 4pm, every goal tracked on Soccer Special — sharpens that simplicity into a tense, public drama. Sky Sports' decision to show every final-day game means fans can watch the fates of multiple clubs unfold in real time, rather than following a single stream. That breadth turns a local club fight into a global television event.

For Tottenham, however, the television spotlight does not alter the facts that have produced this moment. Home form has been presented as the principle source of anxiety: Tottenham are winless in their last 10 home league matches and have managed just two home league wins all season. Those numbers are the clearest explanation for why a club that once beat Everton 3-0 in late October and sat third — five points behind leaders Arsenal after that game — now faces the risk of a first relegation in 49 years.

The collapse has been dramatic. Over the seven months since that October meeting, Tottenham have had three different head coaches, suffered a club-record six successive defeats, and drifted into a 15-match winless league run. The sequence of results and managerial changes has left form and morale fragile as Sunday arrives.

The tension of the day is not only mathematical. Tottenham's earlier 3-0 victory over Everton, at the , shows how quickly fortunes can reverse; a side that looked like a title contender is suddenly fighting for survival. The same fixtures that lifted them months ago now carry the potential to consign them to the Championship for the first time since the 1970s.

For West Ham and Leeds, the final-day stakes are entwined with Tottenham's fate but remain separate contests. West Ham can salvage survival only if they win and Tottenham fail to take a point. For Everton, the role is straightforward: a win at Tottenham can decide the destination of one of the country's historic clubs. For neutral viewers, the synchronized 4pm kickoffs across all 10 guarantee a day of near-constant drama.

Sunday's schedule simplifies the possible outcomes into clear, watchable moments: Tottenham need one point to be sure, and every minute will be shown live across Sky Sports' coverage. The question is not whether the permutations can be listed — nine different outcomes exist for Spurs and West Ham — but whether Tottenham's long slide ends with a point earned on home turf or a collapse that completes a 49-year arc into the second tier. That will be settled, in full public view, at 4pm.

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