Okay, let me tell you about how I went about finding the English Premier League table for the 2016 to 2017 season. It wasn’t anything too complicated, just a bit of digging around online.

Starting the Search
First off, I knew I wanted that specific season’s table. Sometimes you just get curious about how things finished up a few years back, right? So, I popped open my computer, fired up my usual web browser. Nothing fancy.
My first step was pretty straightforward. I went to my favorite search engine. I typed in something simple like “english premier league table 2016 to 2017”. Just needed the basic info to get started.
Sifting Through Results
Got a bunch of results back, as you’d expect. Lots of sports sites, news articles from that time, statistic pages. I clicked on a couple of the top ones that looked reliable – you know, the big sports news outlets or official-looking league sites.
I wasn’t just looking for any table, I wanted the final one, the one showing how everything ended after all 38 games. Some sites showed tables midway through the season, which wasn’t what I needed. I had to make sure it said “Final Standings” or something similar.
- Checked the first link: It had the table, looked right. Showed Chelsea at the top.
- Checked a second link: Compared it to the first one. Yep, same order, same points for the top teams like Chelsea, Tottenham, Man City, Liverpool.
- Looked down the bottom: Noticed Sunderland, Middlesbrough, and Hull City were in the relegation spots. That matched what I vaguely remembered.
Confirming the Details
Seeing the same information on a couple of different, reputable sites made me feel confident I had the right table. It’s always good to double-check, you know? Sometimes data can be weird online.

I spent a few minutes just looking over the final standings. Saw who qualified for the Champions League, who got into the Europa League, and who unfortunately went down. Chelsea really ran away with it that year under Conte, if I remember correctly. Tottenham had a great season too, finishing second.
Wrapping Up
So, yeah, that was pretty much it. Started with a simple search query, clicked a few likely links, compared the information to make sure it was consistent, and boom – had the 2016-2017 Premier League table right there. It was just a matter of spending maybe five or ten minutes searching and verifying. Found exactly what I was looking for. Simple process, really.