🤖 AI vs Humans: Predicting the results of Premier League Matchday 31
Last week, we pitted our special guest - Only The Poets frontman Tommy Longhurst - against an AI to see who could most accurately predict the results of Premier League matchday 30.
Tommy correctly called six correct results over the course of the matchday, but was out of luck when it came to correct score predictions.
Meanwhile, the AI correctly predicted Arsenal's 2-1 win over Fulham and Newcastle's 2-1 win over Brentford, plus two correct results.
That leaves the scores (three points for a correct score and one point for a correct result) at 206-180 in the AI's favour after 30 rounds of games this season.
Let's see if this week's special guest, Liverpool fan and virtuoso pianist Brad Kella, can get the human race caught up.
Watch the video to find out what Brad and the AI went for in the three biggest matches of the weekend; Everton v Arsenal, Fulham v Liverpool and Manchester United v Manchester City.
'Journey's End' by Brad Kella is out now. His debut album 'Phoebe's Melody' is set for release on June 6th through Modern Sky UK.
Follow him on Instagram
Here are the matchday 31 predictions in full...AI 🤖 1-2
Brad Kella 🎹 1-0AI 🤖 1-1
Brad Kella 🎹 2-2AI 🤖 0-2
Brad Kella 🎹 2-1AI 🤖 2-1
Brad Kella 🎹 0-2AI 🤖 2-0
Brad Kella 🎹 2-2AI 🤖 1-3
Brad Kella 🎹 0-2AI 🤖 1-3
Brad Kella 🎹 0-3AI 🤖 3-1
Brad Kella 🎹 3-0AI 🤖 1-2
Brad Kella 🎹 0-3AI 🤖 1-2
Brad Kella 🎹 1-2
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Newcastle issues ruthless Alexander Isak response after statement totally blindsides club
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New York Times
14 minutes ago
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Alexander Isak's statement has set fire to Newcastle – drawing fury but little sign of success
There is no sugar-coating it now. There can be no more claim or counter-claim about what Alexander Isak might be thinking and it blows apart Newcastle United's policy of containment this summer. They have attempted to tough it out, to see through a testing transfer window with the aim of keeping their best player, tip-toeing around the fact that he is refusing to play for them. They have not attacked him. Advertisement In Eddie Howe's words, they have kept the door 'well and truly open.' Isak has shown Newcastle — his team-mates, staff and fans — what he thinks of that door, slamming it in Howe's face and setting fire to the entire building while he is at it. Although he has not yet submitted an official transfer request, he has done the next worst thing. By going public the intention is to force through a move to Liverpool. The result is a ratcheting up of pressure and a further souring of relations before the two clubs play on Monday night. 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Behind the diplomacy of Isak remaining 'part of our family and will be welcomed back when he is ready to rejoin his teammates,' there is also fury. And, yes, before anybody points this out, a comparable situation has been taking place in reverse at Brentford with Yoane Wissa, a longstanding Newcastle target who is engaged in his own guerrilla warfare against his present employers, flying home early from a training camp, not playing for the club in pre-season and most recently removing all links to Brentford on social media. In football, you will find the moral high ground balancing on a pinhead. How the next few days play out is unknown — Liverpool will surely return with an improved bid for Isak after their recent £110 million offer was rejected out of hand — but it will no longer be played out in a neutral tone. All through the close-season and beyond, Howe has been careful not to inflame a damaging situation further, always hoping that Isak could yet be reintegrated. There has been no public, personal criticism. Advertisement He has done that knowing he must tread a delicate line. Hang Isak out to dry and then how do you bring him back, which is ultimately what Newcastle have wanted, knowing that there is nobody better out there? Pander to him and what message does that send to the other players in his dressing-room? Is it OK to behave badly? By making him train alone but offering him a path to return, Howe has attempted to play fair by everybody. Newcastle refute Isak's claims about 'promises' being made and the suggestion that he (or his people) had informed them that 2024-25 would be his final season at St James' Park. 'We are clear in response that Alex remains under contract and that no commitment has ever been made by a club official that Alex can leave Newcastle United this summer,' they said. 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