The Saints were a goal behind when Ryan Bertrand was dismissed in the 12th minute, and they shipped eight more in a landslide at St Mary’s, suffering the joint-heaviest defeat in Premier League history.
Saturday brings a rematch and Southampton have displayed good humour in the build-up, muting Twitter terms related to the last encounter.
But with a five-game undefeated streak behind them and a European place remarkably not out of reach, a team formerly deemed destined for the drop are on the up.
A review of history with help from Opta data puts the turnaround in clear context, positioning Southampton as potentially the best of the clubs who diced with double-digit defeats.
Bouncing back the easy bit
Hasenhuttl expressed bewilderment in the aftermath of the crushing October result, claiming he had “never seen a team act like this” as he criticised the complete lack of fight.
His words drew a reasonable response as Southampton next recorded 2-1 defeats to Manchester City and Everton respectively, before a 2-2 draw at Arsenal that would have been a win if not for Alexandre Lacazette’s equaliser deep into stoppage time.
Home wins over Watford and Norwich City followed to provide further proof that psychological scars can be erased in a relatively short period in the Premier League.
In 1999, Sheffield Wednesday sandwiched a single defeat to Sunderland between an 8-0 loss to Newcastle United and a 5-1 win over Wimbledon.
The Black Cats themselves took the same length of time in 2014 to move past an 8-0 mauling at the hands of none other than Southampton, with one game – an away loss at Arsenal – wedged between that and a 3-1 win at Crystal Palace.
Lessons can clearly be learned in the short term, but for most these results augur an eventual battle for survival.
Saints sustain top-half tilt
The loss to Leicester left Southampton in the relegation zone, exactly where they began when Hasenhuttl took over in December 2018.
Skip forward 11 top-flight fixtures to the cusp of this weekend’s schedule and the Saints are now a mere five points adrift of sixth-placed Tottenham.
That might mean less with the table congested as it is but, sitting 12th after 21 games, Southampton are poised to set a new standard for teams scolded by defeats of eight goals or more.
Two of the five teams previously beaten by such margins limped on to relegation: the Ipswich Town side of 1994-95, who were in a mess by their time of their then outright-record 9-0 loss to Manchester United, and 19th-placed Wednesday in 1999-2000.
Wigan Athletic suffered two eight-goal losses in 2009-10 and still survived after they finished 16th, which is where Sunderland ended in 2014-15.
Aston Villa, 8-0 losers against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge in December 2012, found their way to 15th that season, a high mark that Southampton have the opportunity to exceed as they look ahead to winnable home meetings with Wolves, Burnley and Villa over their next six fixtures.
Watford help chart way forward
Southampton’s game against Leicester occurred less than a month after Manchester City’s ruthless 8-0 demolition of Watford, and the Hornets are also a team righting their earlier wrongs.
New boss Nigel Pearson’s arrival at Vicarage Road has coincided with an upturn that could conceivably have the Hornets out of the bottom three with a win over Bournemouth this weekend.
Never before have two different teams suffered Premier League losses of an eight-goal magnitude or greater in the same campaign.
Together, however, Southampton and Watford are setting about showing how humiliating results need only be regarded as a footnote to the season.
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