Analyzing football comebacks
I'm going over the Premier League's comebacks since the 2015-16 season. I remember that in 2013-14, Manchester City trailed at Christmas but still won the title. I’ve counted four significant comebacks: 2013-14, 2018-19, 2020-21, and 2023-24. Then I try to tally up Christmas leaders. Five times, the leader at Christmas won the title. Oops, there’s a discrepancy; I should clarify how many times City overturned the standings.Counting Premier League comebacks

I’m looking at the Premier League seasons from 2014-15 to 2023-24. I note the Christmas leaders and champions: in 2014-15 and 2016-17, Chelsea led and won the title. Leicester did the same in 2015-16. City came back in 2018-19, 2020-21, and 2022-23 after trailing at Christmas. Finally, in 2023-24, Arsenal led again, but City won. So, I have 10 seasons total, with six leaders keeping their position and four comebacks from City.Recounting Premier League stats
Let me recount the stats clearly. For the seasons from 2014-15 to 2023-24, I have six cases where the Christmas leaders kept their position: 2014-15 Chelsea, 2015-16 Leicester, 2016-17 Chelsea, 2017-18 City, 2019-20 Liverpool, and 2021-22 City. The four comebacks by City were in 2018-19, 2020-21, 2022-23, and 2023-24. This aligns with the user's claim of a nine-season window from 2015-16 to 2023-24. Their assertion makes sense!Crafting a concise reply
I’ll keep it simple and to the point. First, I’ll confirm that the stat about the last nine seasons up to 2023-24 is accurate. Here’s how I’ll structure it:
I could add a note about different sources possibly defining the "Christmas leader" differently. Would they like a chart or source links?
大致属实(以2015-16到2023-24这9季为窗口)。

曼城逆转的4次

圣诞榜首最终夺冠的5次

注:不同统计对“圣诞榜首”(圣诞当日或圣诞前最后一轮)口径略有差别,但上述结论不变。需要我做一张对照表或附上来源吗?