Winners
Mohamed
Salah
The most pleasing aspect of Liverpool’s season is how players have stepped up their performance level at exactly the time their club has needed them most. That’s neither accident nor coincidence. Football fanatics from around the world can obtain Premier League Tickets online to enjoy its stunning performances.
The most pleasing aspect of Liverpool’s season is how players have stepped up their performance level at exactly the time their club has needed them most. That’s neither accident nor coincidence. Football fanatics from around the world can obtain Premier League Tickets online to enjoy its stunning performances.
It speaks to the
harmony and competition for places that Jurgen Klopp has established within the
first-team squad. Everyone knows their responsibilities and is motivated to
match up to them as and when required.
Between September
and November, Salah played second fiddle to Sadio Mane simply because Mane’s
form demanded it. Salah was not playing poorly – no Liverpool player has been
guilty of that but the Egyptian was snatching at chances and losing possession
by running down blind alleys.
Klopp had always
decided that he would start rotating at the beginning of December, and that
meant asking more from Salah when he started during that month.
And so, by magic
in Liverpool’s last three matches Salah has scored four goals and assisted
another. His right-footed finish in Salzburg demonstrated extraordinary
composure, and he matched that with the opening goal against Watford.
That takes him to
19 goals and assists in the Premier League and Champions League this season. As
with Harry Kane, if that’s one of your fallow seasons…
Kevin de Bruyne
I think my favourite thing about De Bruyne, amid some competition, is the way in which everything seems to be done at the same speed. ‘One-paced’ should be an insult, but it’s a compliment here. Whether De Bruyne is pushing forward from midfield, getting back to close down an opponent, preparing to take a shot or eyeing up a Crossfield pass, it’s all the same. He does things quickly, but rarely rushes and never seems panicked.
I think my favourite thing about De Bruyne, amid some competition, is the way in which everything seems to be done at the same speed. ‘One-paced’ should be an insult, but it’s a compliment here. Whether De Bruyne is pushing forward from midfield, getting back to close down an opponent, preparing to take a shot or eyeing up a Crossfield pass, it’s all the same. He does things quickly, but rarely rushes and never seems panicked.
It is De Bruyne’s
technique that tricks the mind; it buys him time. The first touch always pushes
the ball half a yard ahead of him so he can pass or shoot in the next movement
if he wishes. The body positioning means he is in the perfect shape to give and
receive possession at whichever moment he chooses.
In a sport
dominated by pace, power and strength, De Bruyne does not rank at the very top
for any of those three measures. He is a touch player. The passing through the
lines reminds of Michael Laud up, the greatest passer in the game’s history.
Manchester City’s
form has tailed off badly, and surely cost them a chance of a third straight
league title, but De Bruyne still has a reasonable claim to be recognised as
the country’s best attacking player. His contribution on Sunday took him to 16
goals and assists in the league this season; only Jamie Vardy can beat that.
John Fleck
and Sheffield United’s second-chance heroes
In the summer of 2016, John Fleck’s career had reached a crossroads. About to turn 25, he had been named Coventry City’s Player of the Season but the club had missed out on the League One play-offs again.
In the summer of 2016, John Fleck’s career had reached a crossroads. About to turn 25, he had been named Coventry City’s Player of the Season but the club had missed out on the League One play-offs again.
After 18 league
starts in five seasons for Rangers, Fleck had refused the transfer of his
contract to the new company after their reformation in favour of trying to make
the grade in England. But four years of third-tier football had followed. A
move to Sheffield United was his shot to nothing.
Three-and-a-half
years later, Fleck is established as a Premier League player and on Saturday
scored more than once in a match for the first time in his professional career.
Before the end of the year he will double his previous top-flight league
appearances over the course of four glorious months.
If there is a
ceiling to the potential of a limited team that is coached, managed and
prepared brilliantly, that ceiling is far higher than we thought in August.
After 45% of the season, Wilder’s team are four points off the top four.
Bournemouth,
despite the injuries
Bournemouth’s tendency to lurch between runs of good and poor form is nothing new. That has been the constant theme of their Premier League life, the reason Eddie Howe has been unable to consolidate them in the top half. But for the first time, the latest slump has brought with its criticism of the manager.
Bournemouth’s tendency to lurch between runs of good and poor form is nothing new. That has been the constant theme of their Premier League life, the reason Eddie Howe has been unable to consolidate them in the top half. But for the first time, the latest slump has brought with its criticism of the manager.
It’s hard to look
beyond the injury crisis. The list of players missing for Bournemouth’s trip to
Stamford Bridge on Saturday included Callum Wilson, Harry Wilson, Steve Cook,
Nathan Ake, Lloyd Kelly, David Brooks, Adam Smith, Charlie Daniels and Arnaut
Groeneveld, while Josh King and Junior Stanislas were in the matchday squad
having just recovered from issues.
Saturday was
therefore the perfect response to criticism while also evaporating any serious
concerns that Bournemouth would be dragged deep into the relegation mire. It
was their first away win since September, and only their third away at a Big
Six team since their promotion to the Premier League.
Perhaps we should
not be surprised. Bournemouth have held an odd curse over Chelsea in the recent
past. They have beaten them without conceding in three of their last four
meetings, including the 3-0 win at Stamford Bridge last season. Now to take
this fillip into home fixtures against Burnley and Arsenal and shoot back up
into their natural habitat of the Premier League’s midtable.
Manuel
Pellegrini’s purgatory
A classic West Ham week. After the home defeat by Arsenal and loss at Wolves, West Ham’s owners opted for anti-leadership by making it clear that Pellegrini had one game to save his job. Either you think the manager is right for his position or not. Putting everything on the result of one game is patently ridiculous. But also, entirely unsurprising at this club.
A classic West Ham week. After the home defeat by Arsenal and loss at Wolves, West Ham’s owners opted for anti-leadership by making it clear that Pellegrini had one game to save his job. Either you think the manager is right for his position or not. Putting everything on the result of one game is patently ridiculous. But also, entirely unsurprising at this club.
But it worked. As
against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge, West Ham’s players proved that they have
not given up on their manager and produced a battling if not sparkling display
to ward off the talk of crisis.
Pellegrini now
lives in constant purgatory. West Ham will lose their next match at Selhurst
Park on Boxing Day and at home to Leicester, leading to another ultimatum from
the board. They will then beat Bournemouth at home and scrape through against
Gillingham in the FA Cup to earn some breathing room. Cue defeat at Bramall
Lane to cause further headaches. At some point it might strike those in charge
to seize control of the situation.
Everton’s
resilience
In their two matches under Duncan Ferguson, Everton have allowed their opponents to have 39 shots, 22% of their season total. That probably isn’t sustainable.
In their two matches under Duncan Ferguson, Everton have allowed their opponents to have 39 shots, 22% of their season total. That probably isn’t sustainable.
But Everton have
made it work because of the determination – as instructed by their temporary
manager to fight for the cause and squeeze everything out of each performance.
As well as conceding a significant percentage of their season shots in two
matches, Everton have also made 17% of their tackles and 25% of their blocked
shots. If the task of a caretaker manager is to re-energise the squad in
preparation for the permanent replacement, Ferguson has done the perfect job.
Losers
Chelsea,
waiting for January but
The only positive
aspect of Chelsea’s recent run of four defeats in five matches and I’m reaching
here – is that it makes the decision to spend money in January an easier sell
to supporters and players. Youthful exuberance and enthusiasm have warped
slightly into the naivety of youth. As ever, it’s a thin line.
But that problem
was covered by Chelsea’s attacking prowess, led by Tammy Abraham, Mason Mount
and Christian Pulisic. Chelsea became The Entertainers, winning matches 3-2,
4-2, 5-2 and drawing 4-4. The question was whether the defence could improve
without the attack becoming blunt.
Instead,
something worse has happened. Chelsea have kept one clean sheet in their last
12 matches in all competitions, but have only scored more than once in one of
their last five in the league. Against Bournemouth on Saturday, they failed to
score for the second time in three home league games. Those three opponents –
Aston Villa, Bournemouth and West Ham – have some of the least resolute
defences in the division.
The obvious
answer is for Chelsea to spend in January. They could buy an experienced
central defender, a first-choice left-back and even another striker or wide
forward if current fringe players can be sold or loaned out.
Arsenal
It’s not that Freddie Ljungberg saw the blueprint for beating Manchester City, defending with a low block and hitting them on the counter attack, and chose to try almost the exact opposite.
It’s not that Freddie Ljungberg saw the blueprint for beating Manchester City, defending with a low block and hitting them on the counter attack, and chose to try almost the exact opposite.
It’s not that
they gave Kevin de Bruyne an embarrassing amount of space to concede within 90
seconds of kick-off, and then proceeded to give him the same amount of space
six or seven times thereafter. This is a team determined not to learn their
lessons.
It’s not that
they spent £72m on a luxury wide forward when they desperately needed defenders.
It’s about more
than that. It’s about Arsenal leaving Ljungberg in limbo by asking him to take
control of the team on a temporary basis but refusing to let him bring any of
his own staff in. Ljungberg is a good man being asked to do a difficult job
with one arm tied behind his back.
Arsenal kept
faith in Unai Emery for too long, far beyond the point at which anybody
reasonable believed he could arrest the slump. The only acceptable reason for
that was because the club’s hierarchy were sourcing Emery’s predecessor, and in
doing so ensuring that the transition from one manager to the next would be
smooth.
Watford’s
finishing
Cataclysmically bad, and somehow getting worse. Watford have had 25 shots in their last three matches without scoring. They have scored seven times this season from 195 non-penalty shots. Their shot conversion rate of 4.6% is a full 4% lower than any other team in the league. The gap between them and the next worst is bigger than the gap between 19th and fifth.
Cataclysmically bad, and somehow getting worse. Watford have had 25 shots in their last three matches without scoring. They have scored seven times this season from 195 non-penalty shots. Their shot conversion rate of 4.6% is a full 4% lower than any other team in the league. The gap between them and the next worst is bigger than the gap between 19th and fifth.
Southampton’s
finishing
You can stop laughing at Watford, lads. The only difference between Southampton and Watford is that one of them has Danny Ingas.
You can stop laughing at Watford, lads. The only difference between Southampton and Watford is that one of them has Danny Ingas.
Southampton’s
shot conversion rate is 8.6%, the second lowest in the division. Ingas’ shot
conversion rate is 24.3%. Of all Premier
League
players to have taken more than 20 shots, only Jamie Vardy and Pierre-Emerick
Aubameyang register higher. You’ll forgive me for expecting Ingas to revert
slightly to the mean. And that could mean curtains for Southampton.
Leicester
City
It should not cause any lasting disappointment within Leicester City’s squad or amongst their supporters that they will not win the league. As long as Brendan Rodgers leads them into the top four, he and they will have had a wonderful season.
It should not cause any lasting disappointment within Leicester City’s squad or amongst their supporters that they will not win the league. As long as Brendan Rodgers leads them into the top four, he and they will have had a wonderful season.
But it’s
impossible not to be frustrated when a title challenge, however unlikely, is
extinguished with a sloppy home draw against lesser opposition. Rodgers will now motivate his side for
successive games against the teams directly above and below them in the table.
Avoiding defeat in either would improve their top-four credentials.
Newcastle
without Allan Saint-Maximin
The key to Newcastle’s relative success this season has been their two-pronged counter-attacking approach. With Miguel Almiron and Saint-Maximin both on the pitch, Steve Bruce’s team can unnerve defences who are unable to double-mark both wide players.
The key to Newcastle’s relative success this season has been their two-pronged counter-attacking approach. With Miguel Almiron and Saint-Maximin both on the pitch, Steve Bruce’s team can unnerve defences who are unable to double-mark both wide players.
With only one on
the pitch, they are easy to control and neither Andy Carroll nor Joelinton come
close to Salomon Rondon’s ability to hold up the ball and bring others into
play. Strikers become isolated; wingers crowded out.
Saint-Maximin is
the most mercurial player in the division, but it is easy to see his impact on
Newcastle. In the seven league games in which he hasn’t started, they have
taken two points (at home to Brighton and Watford) and scored four goals. They
average 4.3 shots on target per game with him, and 2.3 without him.
Saint-Maximin is
frequently unreliable, but he is also Newcastle’s difference maker. And he is
out for a month with a hamstring strain, his fourth muscle injury in 2019. That
presents a huge problem for Bruce.
Manchester
United against the ‘rest’
After the strides forward taken against Tottenham and Manchester City, the familiar bump back to earth. Manchester United probably merited victory against Everton and were certainly due their late equaliser, but Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has proven himself incapable of finding a way to break down non-elite opposition.
After the strides forward taken against Tottenham and Manchester City, the familiar bump back to earth. Manchester United probably merited victory against Everton and were certainly due their late equaliser, but Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has proven himself incapable of finding a way to break down non-elite opposition.
After 17 league
games, Manchester United have taken 11 points against Big Six opponents and 14
points from 12 matches against the others. Chelsea in fourth have lost four of
their last five league games and United are still four points behind them.
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