Some have had a memorable season, others had one they would rather forget.
Liverpool ended their 30-year wait for a top flight trophy, while Manchester City went worryingly off the boil.
Chelsea and Manchester United appear to have refound some form, while Spurs and Arsenal have lost theirs.
Bournemouth, Norwich and Watford have to say goodbye while Aston Villa, West Ham and Brighton live to fight another day.
At the end of the strangest Premier League season in history, here is i‘s verdict on every team including our players of the year, manager ratings and a look back at some high and low points.
1st: Liverpool
Player of the season – Trent Alexander-Arnold: The homegrown full-back just shades it.
Manager’s mark – 10/10: Hard not to award top marks to Jurgen Klopp given the season’s achievement.
Season high point: Jordan Henderson lifting the Premier League trophy on the Kop.
Low point: Lifting the Premier League trophy on the Kop without fans.
2nd: Man City
Player of the season – Kevin De Bruyne: The best Premier League player.
Manager’s mark – 7/10: Pep Guardiola should have replaced Vincent Kompany.
Season high point: Bernabeu victory proved City can produce the goods on the big stage.
Low point: The 3-1 Anfield defeat in November that signalled a changing of the guard.
3rd: Man Utd
Player of the season – Bruno Fernandes: Transformed the side since his arrival in January.
Manager’s mark – 7.5/10: Ole Gunnar Solskjaer proved the doubters wrong by steering United into the Champions League.
Season high point: Academy forward Mason Greenwood, 18, breaking through.
Low point: Their two main rivals, Liverpool and Man City, streaking ahead.
4th: Chelsea
Player of the season – Mason Mount: Valiant job partially filling the Eden Hazard-sized hole.
Manager’s mark – 8/10: Frank Lampard adapted well to a huge job with his investment in youth paying off.
Season high point: The 2-0 FA Cup win over Liverpool. The template for next season.
Low point: Post-lockdown defeat at Sheff Utd. No personality or character shown.
5th: Leicester City
Player of the season – Jamie Vardy: Premier League top scorer at 33 years old.
Manager’s mark – 7/10: Rodgers kept his side punching above their weight.
Season high point: Challenging at the top end of the table for much of the season.
Low point: The worrying decline in form after the post-lockdown restart.
6th: Tottenham
Player of the season – Son Heung-min: So often the driving force of the team.
Manager’s mark – 7/10: Steering the club into Europe lays foundations for next season.
Season high point: Hopes of top-four finish were high after February win over Man City.
Low point: Shambolic Cup defeats to Colchester, Norwich and Bayern Munich.
7th: Wolves
Player of the season – Raul Jimenez: 17 goals in a defensive system says it all.
Manager’s mark – 8/10: Nuno overachieved for second year running and Europa glory is still possible.
Season high point: 3-2 win at Spurs in March. Serious performance from a serious side.
Low point: 2-0 home defeat to Arsenal in early July to stall top-four momentum.
8th: Arsenal
Player of the season – Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang: Consistently excellent.
Manager’s mark – 7/10: Arteta’s revolution has undoubtedly begun.
Season high point: Beating Liverpool and Manchester City in the space of a week.
Low point: The near-mutiny that occurred during the last days of Unai Emery.
9th: Sheffield Utd
Player of the season – John Egan: The Irishman has been rock solid in a three-man defence.
Manager’s mark – 8/10: A dip in form should not detract from Wilder’s magnificent season.
Season high point: 3-0 victory over Chelsea is perhaps the pick of the 15 league wins.
Low point: 2-1 home defeat to Arsenal in the FA Cup quarter-final last month.
10th: Burnley
Player of the season – James Tarkowski: Perhaps the best current English centre-half.
Manager’s mark – 9/10: No manager gets more out of less, year after year, than Dyche.
Season high point: 2-0 win at Manchester United in January, the first victory there since 1962.
Low point: 2-1 home loss to Villa on New Year’s Day.
11th: Southampton
Player of the season – Danny Ings: The first Saint to score 20 league goals since James Beattie.
Manager’s mark – 8/10: Hasenhüttl’s resurrection after a disastrous start has been amazing.
Season high point: 2-0 win at Chelsea was bettered only by home win against Man City.
Low point: The record-shattering 9-0 defeat at home to Leicester in October.
12th: Everton
Player of the season – Dominic Calvert-Lewin: Scored a career-best 15 goals.
Manager’s mark – 6/10: Good start but Ancelotti couldn’t maintain the momentum.
Season high point: Rousing win over Chelsea during Duncan Ferguson’s caretaker spell.
Low point: The abject FA Cup third round humiliation by Liverpool’s kids.
13th: Newcastle
Player of the season – Allan Saint-Maximin: Head and shoulders above his team-mates.
Manager’s mark – 6/10: Steve Bruce has usurped Marmite as the go-to metaphor for love/hate.
Season high point: Breaking news: ‘Newcastle takeover set to be confirmed.’
Low point: The 105 days since ‘Newcastle takeover set to be confirmed’.
14th: Crystal Palace
Player of the season – Jordan Ayew: Nine league goals is best return in English football.
Manager’s mark – 7/10: Pre-lockdown, Palace were Europa League possibles.
Season high point: Either winning at Old Trafford or beating Brighton away.
Low point: Post-restart seven successive defeats before Sunday’s draw with Spurs.
15th: Brighton
Player of the season – Lewis Dunk: Graham Potter’s style of play has brought out the best in him.
Manager’s mark – 8/10: Potter handled lockdown well and kept the Seagulls up comfortably.
Season high point: Doing the double over Arsenal, achieved with a last-gasp winner.
Low point: Loss at home to rivals Palace in the last game in front of their fans.
16th: West Ham
Player of the season: Declan Rice has not missed a minute of league football.
Manager’s mark – 5/10: Moyes won two of his first 12 but arrested team’s slide just in time.
Season high point: Completing the double over Chelsea with a thrilling 3-2 win.
Low point: Bundled out of the League Cup 4-0 by Oxford United.
17th: Aston Villa
Player of the season – Jack Grealish: Who else? Top scorer, captain, leader, legend.
Manager’s mark – 7/10: Smith failed to answer questions in attack but crucially stayed up.
Season high point: Beating Arsenal to keep top-flight survival in their own hands.
Low point: Twice sacrificing lead to lose to 10-man Gunners at Emirates.
18th: Bournemouth
Player of the season – Aaron Ramsdale: Great year for the young keeper despite relegation.
Manager’s mark – 4/10: Howe hasn’t been able to sort out historic defensive problems.
Season high point: November’s win over Manchester United lifted them to seventh.
Low point: Failing to beat the drop after five seasons in top flight.
19th: Watford
Player of the season – Troy Deeney: Gave his last ounce of energy to try to keep them up.
Manager’s mark – 3/10: Of the three, Nigel Pearson surely stood a chance of keeping them up
Season high point: Beating Man Utd and thrashing Liverpool in Pearson’s early days.
Low point: Sacking Pearson with two games to go – and waving white flag.
20th: Norwich
Player of season – Emiliano Buendia: Fourth in the list for chances created.
Manager’s mark – 4/10: Took big scalps, but vulnerable defensively.
Season high point: Win over Man City got pulses racing but was as good as it got.
Low point: Finishing season on 5-0 defeat and 10 successive losses.
Disagree with our decisions, or couldn’t agree more? We’d love to hear from you on Twitter, Facebook or on email via sport@inews.co.uk
Contributors: Sam Cunningham, Kevin Garside, James Gray, Pete Hall, Robert O’Connor, Ian Whittell, Ian Winrow, Richard Tanner, Jason Mellor and Tom Prentki.
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