Opta’s Premier League supercomputer has refreshed its season-end projections, and the updated numbers paint a detailed picture for Leeds United. According to the latest simulation, which models all remaining fixtures across the division and accounts for current form, fixture difficulty, and expected outcomes, Leeds are forecast to finish 15th with a total of 42 points. Critically, the model assigns them only a 7.93% relegation probability, putting Leeds well clear of the relegation zone across most simulated outcomes.
Opta Supercomputer: Leeds United Projected for 15th Place With 42 Points and Near-Certain Survival
Those figures represent a step down from the previous forecast. Opta had earlier placed Leeds on 45 points, but consecutive defeats against Sunderland and Manchester City trimmed that projection with nine league games still to play. The defeats look less damaging once you factor in what is happening elsewhere.
Opta projects Burnley and Wolves as the two clubs most likely to drop, while West Ham sit 18th with a projected 37.6 points; a gap Leeds fans should find reassuring. Tottenham and Nottingham Forest, both active in European competition, face heavy fixture schedules through the final weeks of the season. Leeds have no such distraction as the run-in approaches.
Can Farke’s Tactical Discipline Secure Premier League Status Where The Numbers Already Favour Leeds?

At 49, the German head coach has built a solid reputation in English football, first at Norwich City, where he delivered Championship titles through disciplined, well-organised football, and subsequently at Leeds, where he inherited a fractured dressing room and rebuilt it with patience. What makes the current situation worth examining closely is the psychological dimension. This Leeds squad faces a different kind of pressure than a promotion push; staying up in the top flight tests a group in ways that chasing titles simply does not, and the back-to-back defeats have done nothing to ease that.
The Sunderland loss stung more than the City result. Dropping points to a fellow newly-promoted side hurts the head-to-head picture and hands confidence to a direct rival at the wrong moment. However, the numbers still sit firmly in Leeds’ favour, and West Ham’s ongoing struggles give Farke’s side a cushion they cannot afford to take lightly. Recent fixtures show Leeds’ expected-goals figures are far closer to respectability than two straight defeats suggest. The goals are not far away.
Nine games give Leeds more than enough time. If Farke gets his squad right during the international break, Leeds should see this over the line without too much drama.



