Liverpool drew 1-1 with Crystal Palace at Anfield on Sunday as Arne Slot's champions ended the Premier League season on 84 points - but where does that rank among the competition's 32 previous winners?
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Man City: 100 points [2017-18]
The only team to reach the 100-point mark, Pep Guardiola's Manchester City side did so in their final game at Southampton, racking up a league-record 106 goals in the process en route to winning the title by an incredible 19-point margin over second-placed Manchester United.
Liverpool: 99 points [2019-20]
The Reds' first top-flight title in 30 years was secured on the back of a remarkable campaign that saw Jurgen Klopp's side remain unbeaten until February in a season interrupted by the Covid outbreak.
Man City: 98 points [2018-19]
Man City needed every one of those 98 points to see off the challenge of Klopp's Liverpool, who lost just one game that season while amassing 97 points, as the two rivals battled it out until the final day of the season.
Chelsea: 95 points [2004-05]
Jose Mourinho's debut season in charge at Chelsea ended with a first top-flight title in 50 years for the west London club, who lost just one match all campaign and conceded a paltry 15 goals.
Man City: 93 points [2021-22]
Another classic ding-dong battle between Man City and Liverpool that once again went all the way down to the final day of the season as Guardiola's side came back from 2-0 down at home to Aston Villa to get the win they needed to win the title by just a point from the Reds.
Chelsea: 93 points [2016-17]
Like Arne Slot, Antonio Conte led Chelsea to the title in his first season at the helm at Stamford Bridge, playing a 3-5-2 system that was so successful, the Blues won 30 league games in total.
Man Utd: 92 points [1993/94*]
Alex Ferguson's second Premier League title as Manchester United manager came just 12 months after his first as the Scot's eye-catching Red Devils team finished eight points ahead of Blackburn Rovers.
Man City: 91 points [2023-24]
A fourth 90-plus points total for Guardiola and co in the Premier League era as Man City made it a record-breaking fourth top-flight title in a row by beating West Ham at the Etihad on the final day of the season to edge out Arsenal by two points.
Chelsea: 91 points [2005-06]
Back-to-back titles in 'The Special One's' first two campaigns as Chelsea manager, with the Blues recording an impressive 29 wins that season, confirming the title with a 3-0 win over runners-up Man Utd at Stamford Bridge.
Man Utd: 91 points [1999-00]
A sixth Premier League crown for the Red Devils as Fergie's side retained their title by a whopping 18 points from second-placed Arsenal, while losing just three matches all season long.
Man Utd: 90 points [2008-09]
United made it a hat-trick of Premier League titles after overhauling arch-rivals Liverpool in the second half of the campaign, eventually finishing four points clear of Rafa Benitez's team, despite losing two more games than the Reds that season.
Arsenal: 90 points [2003-04]
Arsene Wenger's 'Invincibles' made history by becoming the first side ever to go a whole top-flight campaign unbeaten in a 38-game season, winning the title by 11 points from Claudio Ranieri's Chelsea.
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Blackburn Rovers: 89 points [1994-95*]
A classic campaign that went down to the final seconds of the season as Kenny Dalglish's Rovers held off champions Man Utd to win a first Premier League title, despite losing their final game at Liverpool thanks to United failing to win at West Ham.
Man Utd: 89 points [2006-07]
Mourinho's grip on the Premier League came to an end as Man Utd won the title for the first time since 2003, finishing six points ahead of Chelsea, despite suffering two more defeats than the Blues that season.
Man City: 89 points [2011-12]
One of the all-time great Premier League campaigns went all the way down to the final day of the season as Man City won the title on goal difference from city rivals Man Utd by scoring two late goals to beat Queens Park Rangers at the Etihad, including Sergio Aguero's last-gasp winner.
Man Utd: 89 points [2012-13]
Ferguson's last title win as Man Utd boss came 12 months on from the agony of being pipped to the championship by Man City, although this time they finished 11 points ahead of Roberto Mancini's team.
Man City: 89 points [2022-23]
Man City and Arsenal went head to head for the title, with Guardiola's team making it three Premier Leagues in a row - ending the campaign just five points clear of Mikel Arteta's men - on their way to winning the treble.
Arsenal: 87 points [2001-02]
A second Premier League title for Wenger, with the Gunners losing only three matches all season, although nine draws meant they did not pass the 90-point mark in ending the campaign seven points clear of Gerard Houllier's Liverpool.
Man Utd: 87 points [2007-08]
Consecutive Premier League titles for Man Utd, although they were made to work hard for it by Chelsea, with the title not being decided until the final game of the season as the Red Devils won at Wigan.
Chelsea: 87 points [2014-15]
A third Premier League title for Mourinho as Chelsea boss, nine years after his second, was secured with three games to spare as the Blues lost just three matches in finishing eight points ahead of champions Man City.
Chelsea: 86 points [2009-10]
A brilliant debut campaign in charge of Chelsea for Carlo Ancelotti climaxed in a final-day 8-0 thrashing of Wigan to win the title by a point from Man Utd to end the Red Devils' hopes of making it four Premier Leagues in a row, with the free-scoring Blues netting 103 goals along the way.
Man City: 86 points [2013-14]
Another season that went all the way to the last round of games as Liverpool were caught by Manuel Pellegrini's Man City in the final stretch to edge out the Reds by just two points after beating West Ham 2-0 at the Etihad.
Man City: 86 points [2020-21]
This season will forever be remembered as the Covid campaign as Guardiola's side got their hands back on the Premier League trophy after defending champions Liverpool faltered, eventually cruising to the title by 12 points from Man Utd.
Liverpool: 84 points [2024-25]
Slot won the Premier League in his debut campaign as Liverpool head coach, having taken on the unenviable task of replacing the iconic Klopp in the Anfield dugout, with the Reds' unlikely title win being confirmed with a 5-1 thumping of Tottenham Hotspur on April 27 with still four games left to play.
Man Utd: 84 points [1992-93*]
A first Premier League crown for Man Utd as Ferguson's team finished 10 points ahead of second-placed Aston Villa after stumbling when in sight of the line 12 months earlier.
Man Utd: 83 points [2002-03]
Despite trailing defending champions Arsenal by eight points in March, Man Utd somehow managed to catch the Gunners to claim an eighth title in just 11 years, eventually ending the season five points ahead of Wenger's team.
Other champions' points totals:
Man Utd: 82 [1995-96]; Leicester City: 81 points [2015-16]; Man Utd: 80 points [2000-01 & 2010-11]; Man Utd: 79 points [1998-99]; Arsenal: 78 points [1997-98]; Man Utd: 75 points [1996-97]
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