The English Premier League is back with a full slate of games again this week, with many teams playing their third league match in the space of eight or nine days.
How will teams fare with the short turnaround? How will our Bleacher Report writers fare in the short turnaround to get their tipping skills up and running once more?
Read on to see who the guys think will be the winners and losers of Week 15 in the EPL. And I guarantee you, there's bound to be a surprise or two in there as well.
MANCHESTER, United Kingdom - Roberto Mancini,
the Manchester City manager, believes Chelsea could still have a say in
the Premier League title race despite the club's problems and change of
management.
Rafael Benitez has taken charge at
Stamford Bridge, starting his reign with successive goalless draws,
including one against Mancini's defending champions.
The appointment of the Spaniard has also been met by disapproval from
large sections of Chelsea supporters and the mid-week fixtures saw their
club fall seven points behind current league leaders Manchester United.
However, Mancini, whose side go into the weekend fixtures with a
six-point cushion over third-place Chelsea, is not yet ready to count
them out of the title race.
"I don't think it is a two-horse race," said Mancini.
"Because also we are near the top, but it is difficult to say this
because the season is long and in February, when we start the Champions
League, everything can change. I think Chelsea could win the league.
"At this moment, I think there are three teams. But I repeat we have another 25, 26 games. It is too long to say.
"Last year, in six games we recover eight points. Teams like Tottenham
and Arsenal can recover these points in the next 25 games, but it is
difficult to say this now."
Meanwhile, Mancini
has admitted that he fears losing three of his first-team squad to
international duty for the Africa Cup of Nations, which takes place in
South Africa from January 19 to February 10.
The Ivory Coast are expected to call up brothers Kolo and Yaya Toure, plus City fringe player Abdul Razak, for the tournament.
"If we lost Yaya and Kolo and maybe Abdul -- who has not played a lot
of games here, but maybe in January could be important -- if we have two
or three players injured and we don't have other players, I hope that
they don't go to this competition," he said.
"We talk and we need to talk more with their (international) manager, but it is difficult."
Mancini has been impressed by his club's recent defensive form,
following a run that has seen them concede just one goal in their last
six league games.
The sequence has coincided
with young Serbian defender Matija Nastasic performing so well at
centre-back that he has kept England's Joleon Lescott out of the
line-up.
"When people said you concede a lot of goals, we concede a lot in the Champions League, maybe," said Mancini.
"In the Premier League, after six or seven games we conceded maybe two goals more than last year, not 10.
"But it's clear, at this moment, we are working better but this is because all the team is working in the defensive phase.
"I am happy because Nastasic is young. He needs to work hard because it is not enough to play 10 games in Premier League.
"He needs more games but I think he has a fantastic quality. For the
future of Man City, I think that he will be an important player because
he is young."
Mancini also revealed that England
midfielder James Milner faces a race to be fit in time to play a part
in the much-awaited Manchester derby, which takes place at the Etihad
Stadium a week on Sunday.
Milner was injured
after scoring a goal in the mid-week victory at Wigan Athletic and is
already considered a doubt for the meeting with United.
"We try to recover him for next Sunday but we don't know," said Mancini. "He was upset on Wednesday, but that is normal.