A two-horse race
Ryan Giggs scored two penalties as reigning champions Manchester United returned to the top of the English Premier League with a 3-1 win over Tottenham Hotspur at Old Trafford on Saturday.
Victory moved United two points in front of Chelsea with two games to play as they once again scored important late goals, this time in a match which was all square at 1-1 with 10 minutes left.
However, Chelsea will regain top spot if they win at home to Stoke City on Sunday.
United's joy was tempered by fears England striker Wayne Rooney, who sat out the Spurs match, may miss the end of the season with a groin injury.
"I think it will probably take two or three weeks," said United manager Sir Alex Ferguson.
"We have beaten probably the form team of the league which says a lot for us," Ferguson said. "We played well, that was important, but most important was we kept our nerve."
Spurs stayed fourth in the table, and in the final Champions League qualifying spot on offer to English clubs, after arch-rivals Arsenal did them a favour by holding Manchester City to a goalless draw at the Emirates in Saturday's late kick-off.
City closed to within a point of Spurs but will be without Shay Given for the rest of the season after the Irish goalkeeper dislocated his shoulder while making a save.
"Shay's injury will be a problem," City manager Roberto Mancini told the club's official website.
At the other end of the table, West Ham moved six points clear of the relegation zone with a come from behind 3-2 home win over Wigan.
The Hammers were 1-0 down in just the fourth minute after Jonathan Spector's own-goal but were back on level terms when in-form striker Araujo Ilan turned in Carlton Cole's cross in the 31st minute.
And the east Londoners took the lead when Radoslav Kovac followed-up on the stroke of half-time after Mark Noble's 25-yard free-kick was clawed away by Chris Kirkland.
Wigan saw Hugo Rodallega equalise from an early second half corner.
However, Scott Parker eased the pressure on Hammers boss Gianfranco Zola with a 25-yard drive in the 77th minute.
Hull were all but relegated after Sunderland won 1-0 at the KC Stadium thanks to Darren Bent's seventh minute tap-in, his 25th goal of the season.
The Tigers, six points adrift with two games to play and a hugely inferior goal difference, could have equalised before half-time but Jimmy Bullard's penalty hit the post.
Both sides received a red card late in the first half after Hull's US striker Jozy Altidore and Sunderland's Alan Hutton clashed.
Aruna Dindane scored twice as already relegated Portsmouth came from 2-0 down to draw 2-2 away to Bolton Wanderers while Wolves, still not mathematically safe, and Blackburn Rovers drew 1-1 at Molineux.
RESULTS
Arsenal 0 Man City 0
Bolton 2 (Klasnic 26, Davies 28) Portsmouth 2 (Dindane 54, 68)
Hull 0 Sunderland 1 (Bent 7)
Man Utd 3 (Giggs 58-pen, 86-pen, Nani 81) Tottenham 1 (King 70)
West Ham 3 (Ilan 31, Kovac 45, Parker 77) Wigan 2 (Spector 4-og, Rodallega 52)
Wolves 1 (Ebanks-Blake 81) Blackburn 1 (Nelsen 28)
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