By Martin Graham
The sight of two scoreless encounters over a single weekend has reignited debate about entertainment levels in the Premier League. With 16 matchdays still remaining, the campaign has already produced more 0-0 results than the entirety of the previous season, reaching a total of 17.
That figure has fuelled claims that spectacle is being sacrificed, even though scoring rates remain relatively strong. Goals are still arriving at an average of 2.74 per match, which places the current season above the long-term norm when viewed against the league’s history since 1992-93.
The criticism, then, appears less about the volume of goals and more about perception. A growing number of tight, cagey contests has left fans questioning whether risk-taking has been replaced by restraint.
Former Manchester City and England goalkeeper Joe Hart believes that economic realities are shaping behaviour. Speaking on BBC Radio 5 Live’s Monday Night Club, he argued that avoiding defeat has become a priority because the cost of relegation is simply too high.
Historical context and the return of defensive balance
Although goalless draws are more common this year than in the previous two campaigns, similar patterns have emerged before. At the same stage of the 2022-23 season, there had actually been one more 0-0 result.
Looking further back, the current trend still falls well short of historic highs. The 1994-95 season, won by Blackburn Rovers, produced 51 scoreless games, a record that seems unlikely to be threatened given the remaining fixtures.
Several seasons in the 1990s saw more than 40 matches end without a goal, aided in part by a larger league format. At that time, 22 clubs meant 462 total fixtures rather than today’s 380.
The proportion of matches finishing 0-0 peaked in 1998-99, when nearly 13% of games failed to produce a goal. Since 2018, however, the overall direction had been downward, reaching a low of just 11 such results two seasons ago before climbing again.
Financial pressure and evolving match strategies
Hart, who recorded 127 clean sheets across 340 Premier League appearances, has noticed a shift in collective mindset. He suggests that teams are now encouraged to establish stability first, rather than embracing open contests that could expose them to costly defeats.
According to the former goalkeeper, earlier cycles saw promoted sides willing to engage in direct battles, accepting losses as part of development. That approach, he says, is now viewed as reckless by decision-makers focused on long-term survival.
This cautious philosophy is no longer confined to teams near the bottom. Hart notes that leading clubs have also adopted measured approaches, relying on discipline and patience rather than constant aggression.
Improved conditioning and squad depth have reinforced this trend. Players are capable of sustaining high performance levels deep into matches, reducing errors and limiting opportunities created through chaos or fatigue.
Set-plays, fine margins and creative challenges
An increased emphasis on dead-ball situations has accompanied this tactical evolution. Only 64.5% of goals this season have come from open play, a figure surpassed in rarity only by the 2009-10 campaign.
Observer correspondent Rory Smith argues that parity across squads has pushed teams toward marginal advantages. With opponents evenly matched, success often hinges on corners, free kicks, and rehearsed routines rather than flowing attacks.
Arsenal exemplifies this approach. Sitting seven points clear at the summit, they have registered 14 goals from set pieces, excluding penalties, more than any other side. Their recruitment of specialist coach Thomas Gronnemark underlines how seriously such details are taken.
Newcastle United have also benefited from dead-ball efficiency, yet their recent 0-0 draw with bottom club Wolverhampton Wanderers highlighted the drawbacks. Despite completing 94% of passes in the first half, they failed to test the goalkeeper, prompting Eddie Howe to question his team’s sharpness.
Similar frustrations have surfaced elsewhere. After a run of four consecutive defeats earlier in the season, Liverpool head coach Arne Slot admitted his side was struggling to dismantle defensive setups, acknowledging that opponents’ cautious game plans had proved effective.






















