Best fightback
Or should that be most unlikely fightback as Everton, and don't ask them how they managed it, took three points away from Manchester City who had dominated most of their match?
Trailing from a first-half Yaya Toure goal, David Moyes's side somehow got to the 65th minute having not conceded another, City having missed four excellent chances.
Then, much to the surprise of City and their manager Roberto Mancini, Sylvain Distin hurt his former club with an equaliser and then Leon Osman popped up with a winner.
City should still finish in fourth place and access to the Champions League. However, if they are to maintain a title challenge next season they really need to stop allowing games such as this one to slip away from them.
Worst miss
All Robbie Keane had to do was tap the ball home from a few yards out and West Ham United would have beaten Blackburn Rovers to climb off the bottom of the league.
It was in the last minute so there was no way back for Rovers and this is a guy who has scored 106 Premier League goals and 46 at international level for the Republic of Ireland. How could he miss?
He almost missed the ball entirely.
The game finished 1-1. Not good enough for Avram Grant, the under-pressure West Ham manager who can at least take comfort that it will all be over soon enough.
Keane is not the prolific striker he used to be and this appalling blunder left him looking just a little red-faced. The Hammers remain bottom of the table and look set for relegation, yet so thin is the line between success and failure, had the experienced on-loan striker taken one of the easiest chances of his career; West Ham would have had a chance of survival.
As it is, with a trip to fellow strugglers Wigan Athletic next before West Ham's season ends with already safe Sunderland going to Upton Park, it is not looking good for the London club. It rarely does.
Best nerve
Anyone can miss a penalty. Be it Roberto Baggio in a World Cup final, or Denis Bergkamp in the 90th minute of an FA Cup semi-final.
So Charlie Adam, the Blackpool captain, should not have felt too down after his 75th-minute penalty was saved by Heurelho Gomes, the Tottenham Hotspur keeper, although with the score 0-0 and his side desperate for the points, it was a spot-kick he needed to convert.
And then 60 seconds later, the gormless Gomes fouled Blackpool's Gary Taylor-Fletcher inside the box and another penalty was awarded. While nobody pointed the finger at Adam for his miss, equally not one supporter would have blamed him for allowing someone else the opportunity to be a hero from 12-yards. However, up stepped the Scot again and this time he scored.
Blackpool conceded an equaliser with a minute remaining but they and Adam are still fighting. You can't help but admire them.
Worst sportsmanship
Emile Heskey has put up with a lot of flak over his career. To be fair, most of it justified.
But while words like bungling, misfiring and useless have been aimed at him by his own supporters, even as big a guy as the Aston Villa forward has never been accused of being dirty or hot-tempered. So only he could explain why he lost the plot at Mike Jones, the referee who, correctly it must be said, awarded Wigan Athletic a foul in the 1-1 draw at Villa Park. Jones did not like what Heskey had to say and brandished a yellow card.
The former England international in turn didn't like that, squared up to the official and just would not back down, clearly barging into him at one point.
That is, at least, a second yellow, yet Jones let off the player who stayed inside at half time to stop him being sent off. You would think Heskey would have learnt by now to keep his temper.
Mind you, if he hasn't learnt how to trap a ball after 15 years as a professional, perhaps not.
Worst defending
West Bromwich Albion put in a good challenge for this award, with a particularly poor effort in the 3-1 defeat at Wolverhampton Wanderers yesterday, but Arsenal took the biscuit with some ridiculous lapses against Stoke City later in the day, as they lost by the same score.
For Stoke's first, they allowed Kenwyne Jones to knock the ball into the net with his tummy from a set piece.
For the second, Aaron Ramsay, the Arsenal midfielder, played the perfect through pass to Jermaine Pennant, who netted from the edge of the box. And, just when Arsenal thought they were back in it at 2-1, Johan Djourou produced the worst clearance of the season, poking the ball to the feet of Jonathan Walters in the penalty area. He did not waste the gift-wrapped opportunity.

