Tag: minute red card

  • Ange’s ‘strange’ gamble pays off in comeback win; Arsenal’s title dream fades: PL Wrap

    Ange’s ‘strange’ gamble pays off in comeback win; Arsenal’s title dream fades: PL Wrap

    On the day Spurs’ fiercest rivals’ title challenge took a significant hit, Ange Postecoglou showed his pragmatic hand to guide Tottenham to a big comeback win.

    Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal were victims of their own ill-discipline once again, although William Saliba wasn’t the only player to see red in a wild night of Premier League football.

    Read about all that and more in our wrap of the overnight Premier League action!

    Auckland FC start A League with win | 01:25

    ANGE’S ‘EYE-RAISING’ SPURS GAMBLE PAYS OFF

    Throughout this Tottenham career, Ange Postecoglou has come under fire often. At times the Australian has been perceived as lacking pragmatism, and the ‘Plan B’ so loved by English football.

    Translation: Instead of taking the safe option, Ange goes for the jugular. He’d rather win 5-4 than 1-0.

    And yet with his side level with West Ham at half-time Ange did something many thought unthinkable. He made a pragmatic substitution.

    Off went attacking midfielder James Maddison, at times the creative jewel in Postecoglou’s Spurs crown. On came Pape Matar Sarr, a more conservative and traditional central midfielder.

    Speaking on Optus Sports’ Matchday Live, Premier League legend Emannuel Petit described the move as “strange because he’s (Maddison) a really good player.”

    “So I was quite surprised. It’s quite strange from the manager.”

    Maddison hadn’t been poor by any stretch of the imagination. He’d created Dejan Kulusevski’s equaliser and had five key passes in the opening 45 minutes, but as Ange noted post-game he needed different profiles in midfield.

    “I just felt West Ham ask you certain questions in midfield areas and I just felt Pape’s running power would help us in the second half,” he explained.

    “They obviously worked hard in the first half and I thought he could give us some real energy.

    “I thought he did really well and he gave us a platform to be really threatening every time we went forward and clinical in our football.”

    Former Brighton striker Glenn Murray described it as an “eye-raiser” but conceded the decision ultimately worked.

    “Hindsight proves it was the right decision,” Murray said.

    As Murray noted, Ange’s gamble paid off. Spurs scored three times in eight minutes to win and climb to seventh on the ladder. Sarr too was strong, dispossessing Jarrod Bowen as he moved towards Tottenham’s goal and finding Heung-Min Son with a beautiful assist for his 60th minute goal.

    Spurs could’ve scored more too. Son hit the post in the 61st minute while the free-flowing attack continued throughout the second half, forcing West Ham keeper Alphonse Areola into three saves.

    “When they are good they are nearly irresistible, Tottenham,” Connor McNamara said on commentary.

    Former Spurs manager Tim Sherwood heralded the character Spurs showed during the win.

    “To go behind and then come out with that character in the second half, after what happened at Brighton before the international break, I think not only the ability of his side, but the character of his side, really shone through,” he said.

    Writing in The Guardian, Jacob Steinberg described Tottenham as ‘exhilarating,’ while noting ‘Ange Postecoglou was there to see another defensive implosion, but this time he would not be the coach who will have to deal with the fallout.’

    Indeed the post-mortem will centralise on West Ham and new manager Julen Lopetegui, who has failed to inspire the tactical shifts expected of him in pre-season. Their second half capitulation means they sit 15th.

    For Postecoglou though the win alleviates some of the pressure on his shoulders following Spurs’ bitter loss to Brighton in their last Premier League outing.

    That game that overshadowed a five game winning streak and inspired further doubts about Postecoglou’s Premier League suitability.

    For now at least those pressures are alleviated.

    James Maddison’s half-time substitution was a turning point in Spurs’ 4-1 comeback win over West Ham.Source: AFP

    ARSENAL’S CHARGE TAKES SIGNIFICANT HIT

    At the end of the season if Arsenal fail to break their Premier League title drought, Mikel Arteta will reflect on this loss as the moment the title slipped through his side’s fingers.

    Arsenal were unbeaten heading into the weekend, with their defence the envy of the Premier League and their attacking improving weekly.

    Bournemouth are a good side, coached well by Andoni Iraola, but their start to the season had been indifferent.

    Few would have predicted the game to unfold as it did.

    Arteta, and Arsenal fans, will argue William Saliba’s controversial 30th minute red card, awarded after the Frenchman brought down Bournemouth striker Evanilson just beyond the halfway line.

    There was no Arsenal defender between the Brazilian and goal, a factor that ultimately led VAR Jarred Gillett to instruct referee Rob Jones, who initially awarded a yellow card, to send the Arsenal defender off.

    For the third time this season Arsenal would need to see out a game with a man down.

    Raheem Sterling initially shifted to right back, with Ben White moving into the heart of defence in Saliba’s place. However, Antoine Semenyo breezed by the pair twice, prompting Arteta to introduce Jakub Kiwior and return White to right back.

    Arsenal, who were without Martin Odegaard and Bukayo Saka, their two most important creators, held Bournemouth scoreless until the 70th minute, when a lovely corner move resulted in Ryan Christie’s strike breaking the deadlock.

    The Premier League’s set-piece masters were breached by a set-piece.

    Seven minutes later Evanilson was again involved. Fouled by David Raya in the box the Brazilian won a penalty, converted by Justin Kluivert to secure a big win for Bournemouth, a monumental loss for Arsenal.

    William Saliba was initially shown a yellow card against Bournemouth. VAR intervened and changed it to a red card, leaving Arsenal to play with 10 men for much of the match.Source: Getty Images

    The Gunners were not without their chances. Gabriel Martinelli had a great chance to score moments before Bournemouth’s opener, but missed the target, while Mikel Merino pushed a shot wide earlier in the game.

    Speaking post-game, Arteta described the task set for Arsenal following Saliba’s send off as “impossible.”

    “We are very disappointed with the result and gutted because we had to play in that context again,” he said.

    Discussing Saliba’s red card, the Spaniard conceded he’s not expecting it to be overturned during the week.

    “It was a decision made on the pitch. The decision was changed. I don’t think it will change twice. The decision has been made,” he said.

    Auckland FC start A League with win | 01:25

    ETH SAFE FOR ANOTHER DAY

    Boos rang around Old Trafford at halftime, though perhaps not the kind of boos some may have expected after the last fortnight at Manchester United.

    Brentford’s Ethan Pinnock had just scored an injury time header from a corner to lift his side into the lead at the interval.

    The strike didn’t come without controversy after United’s Dutch central defender Matthijs De Ligt was forced to leave the pitch and have some blood cleaned from his face.

    Instead of waiting for De Ligt to return, referee Sam Barrott allowed play to continue, ultimately resulting in Brentford’s opener.

    United’s bench erupted after the ball rifled into the back of the net. Erik Ten Hag, arguably the manager under the most pressure in world football, was booked for his protests of the decision to allow play to continue while De Ligt was sidelined.

    Given the storm surrounding the future of the Dutchman’s managerial tenure, Ten Hag’s frustration was justified. In a must-win game his side entered the interval behind against a difficult to break down Brentford side.

    Writing in The Athletic, Mark Critchley said Pinnock’s goal ‘felt like the end. The chances of a second half fightback appeared remote.’

    At the break United, who were without six first team players, were yet to create a big chance. By full-time they’d created three, scoring two, to record a big win both in the context of their season and their manager’s future.

    Alejandro Garnacho got the ball rolling in the 47th minute, meeting a sublime Marcus Rashford cross to score his first goal of the season, before a delightful Bruno Fernandes flick set Rasmus Hojlund up in the 62nd minute.

    Even more impressive was the way United managed their lead in the dying stages of the contest, something Critchley noted.

    ‘Not only did (United) turn this game on its head, but once in front, they managed the final stages relatively well – something which has not often been said of this side in the past,’ he wrote.

    Post-game Ten Hag insisted the victory “showed we are together.”

    “We showed determination and scored two beautiful goals.”

    Erik Ten Hag wasn’t happy with the decision to allow play to continue while Matthijs De Ligt was off the field receiving treatment.Source: AFP

    Goals have been a major problem to United in what has been their worst-ever start to a Premier League season. Prior to their Brentford win they’d scored just five. That figure is now seven, two less than 19th placed Wolves.

    Ten Hag will be hoping goals to Garnacho and Hojlund, as well as Rashford’s creative output, will kick his side into attacking gear as they look to kick their season into life.

    “This team has the capacity to score very good goals,” he stated post-game.

    “Today the two goals we scored were high quality and when you score and win you add confidence.

    “At the start of the season we had some good performances but didn’t score enough, then everyone is negative.

    “This result can help us, but it is only one win and we must build on it.”

    LATE DRAMA SEALS FOXES COMEBACK

    After half an hour Southampton were 2-0 up against Leicester, courtesy of goals to Cameron Archer and Joe Aribo, and seemingly on their way to a first win of the season.

    Their lead remained after an hour, before Facundo Buoanotte’s fortunate strike found the back of the net, giving Leicester a way back into the game.

    10 minutes later they were level, courtesy of a Jamie Vardy penalty that came after the striker’s shirt was pulled by Saints winger Ryan Fraser as he attempted to sweep the ball into the back of the net from close range.

    Jordan Ayew’s late strike sealed Leicester’s comeback win over Southampton.Source: Getty Images

    Fraser was sent off, the fifth player to see the red in the Premier League overnight, and Vardy converted the penalty, drawing the Foxes level with plenty of time to play.

    Despite their man advantage, Leicester’s winner came with essentially the final kick of the game after Jordan Ayew swept the ball home from a corner in the 98th minute.

    The win lifts Leicester to 14th, six points clear of the relegation zone – although both Palace and Wolves have a game in hand.

    For Southampton, losing from such a winnable position has turned the pressure up on manager Russell Martin, who has constantly been accused of playing beautiful, possession-based football without getting results.

    VILLA’S MARCH CONTINUES AS NEWCASTLE FALTER

    Aston Villa’s towards the top of the Premier League table continued against Fulham overnight.

    Unai Emery’s side fell behind to an early Raul Jimenez strike but scored three times before full-time to seal a crucial three points.

    Morgan Rogers and Ollie Watkins both scored, continuing their fine seasons, before an Issa Diop own goal sealed the win after 70 minutes. Emi Martinez saved an Andreas Pereira penalty with the scores locked at 1-1.

    Fulham lost central defender Joachim Andersen to a red card six minutes before Diop found the back of his own net.

    The win leaves Villa fourth on 17 points, two clear of fifth-placed Brighton, who narrowly beat Newcastle overnight.

    Danny Welbeck’s fifth goal of the season proved the difference between the two sides

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  • EPL Wrap: Chelsea’s new $228m recruit in ‘nightmare’ debut and injury drama as Everton crumbles

    EPL Wrap: Chelsea’s new $228m recruit in ‘nightmare’ debut and injury drama as Everton crumbles

    Mauricio Pochettino urged Chelsea to “believe in the process” after Michail Antonio’s superb strike and Enzo Fernandez’s penalty miss condemned the Blues to a 3-1 loss against West Ham.

    After last weekend’s 1-1 draw against Liverpool, Pochettino’s side wasted a lively performance as they paid the price for sloppy defending and wasteful finishing at the London Stadium.

    Antonio blasted West Ham’s decisive second goal after half-time and Lucas Paqueta added a late penalty to leave Pochettino still waiting for his first Premier League win since taking charge in the close-season.

    OTHER EPL GAMES

    Spurs’ statement in ‘landmark’ win over ‘embarrassing’ United

    Liverpool star’s reaction says it all after ‘shocking’ red card drama

    Impressive Hammers keep Chelsea winless | 00:55

    Chelsea teenager Carney Chukwuemeka had scored an eye-catching first half equaliser to cancel Nayef Aguerd’s early opener for West Ham.

    But the turning point came when Fernandez’s penalty was saved by Alphonse Areola just before the break.

    Antonio netted soon after the interval and Chelsea couldn’t respond despite Aguerd’s dismissal for a second booking midway through the half.

    Paqueta, reportedly the subject of an FA probe into betting breaches, applied the knockout blow in the final seconds.

    “Teams like us, we need to get the right balance. I think there were a few actions we didn’t manage well and we conceded,” Pochettino said.

    “We create many chances and should have won the game with our first half. It was the frustration when we miss the penalty. We were playing well and we didn’t get the reward.

    “Disappointed but this is only the beginning. We need to believe in the process.”

    Dating back to last season, Chelsea have won just five times in 31 league matches, while their only victory in their last 14 top-flight games came at Bournemouth in May.

    They have also lost four successive top-flight London derbies for the first time since 1990.

    Much of the blame for those dismal statistics lies with Pochettino’s predecessors Graham Potter and Frank Lampard, who struggled through a turbulent campaign that ended with Chelsea’s lowest finish since 1996.

    West Ham United’s players celebrate their third goal. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP)Source: AFP

    Pochettino has been tasked with cleaning up the mess, but despite recent signings of Moises Caicedo and Romeo Lavia taking Chelsea’s total spending under owner Todd Boehly to more than £850 million ($A1.69 billion), the squad remains a work in progress.

    Putting his faith in a largely youthful team is a gamble from Pochettino, whose side’s lack of experience was exposed in the seventh minute.

    James Ward-Prowse’s corner was whipped to the far post, where Morocco defender Aguerd easily evaded Conor Gallagher and Chukwuemeka to nod home from six yards.

    Dominating possession after that setback, Chelsea deservedly drew level in the 28th minute.

    Kurt Zouma miscued a weak clearance and Chukwuemeka cleverly shifted the ball away from Tomas Soucek before smashing a fine finish into the far corner from 12 yards.

    Chelsea were in command and Raheem Sterling’s driving run won them a 42nd minute penalty after the winger was sent tumbling by Soucek’s clumsy tackle.

    But Areola plunged to his right to make a superb save from Fernandez’s tentative spot-kick, denying the Argentine midfielder his first goal for Chelsea.

    Ange claims first EPL win against United | 02:46

    Antonio had just five touches in the first half but the West Ham striker made the most of a rare involvement in the 53rd minute.

    Chelsea defender Levi Colwill and Axel Disasi were bullied by Antonio, who took Ward-Prowse’s pass and used his strength to manouevre into position for a ferocious strike that flashed past Sanchez from the edge of the area.

    With an hour gone, Ecuador midfielder Caicedo came on for his Chelsea debut after joining from Brighton for a British record fee of £115 million ($A228 million).

    Caicedo blazed over from distance with one of his first touches in a Chelsea shirt.

    Aguerd’s 67th minute red card, earned for a clumsy second booking when he chopped down Nicolas Jackson, handed Chelsea a potential lifeline.

    But the visitors laboured to mount a response and Caicedo’s debut to forget was complete when he fouled Emerson in stoppage-time, conceding a penalty that Paqueta fired past Sanchez.

    “Caicedo has had a nightmare since coming on. It’s a poor, lazy challenge,” Jamie Carragher said on Sky Sports of the incident.

    While it was an underwhelming showing from Chelsea’s new signing, Jamie Redknapp gave Blues fans a reason to believe the best was yet to come from Caicedo.

    “Caicedo hasn’t had any minutes for 60 days and you can see that rustiness,” Redknapp said on Sky Sports.

    “Only the manager knows whether he was ready and he isn’t quite there yet. He will get better. As it can only get better after giving a penalty on your debut.”

    Moises Caicedo of Chelsea. (Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    INJURIES STRIKE AS EVERTON SLUMP TO NEW LOW

    Meanwhile, Aston Villa won for the first time this season as they routed Everton 4-0 to erase the bitter taste of last weekend’s thrashing at Newcastle.

    Tipped to improve on last season’s strong finish, Villa were hammered 5-1 on Tyneside in a shockingly bad start to their Premier League campaign.

    But Unai Emery’s side got back on track in the Villa Park sunshine as goals from John McGinn, Douglas Luiz, Leon Bailey and Jhon Duran brushed aside woeful Everton.

    Emery will hope Villa’s biggest victory of his reign kick-starts a season in which they will compete in Europe for the first time in 13 years after qualifying for the Europa Conference League.

    “Today we were very, very angry to get our performance at home and to forget last week’s match,” Emery said.

    “We needed to react like we did. We did a lot of things good but there are some moments we can do better.”

    Everton have less lofty ambitions after narrowly avoiding relegation last season and Sean Dyche’s men already look destined for another grim fight for survival.

    Beaten 1-0 at home by Fulham last weekend, Everton have lost their opening two games in tame fashion.

    It is only the third time Everton have been beaten in their first two league matches without scoring a goal and the first since 1956.

    As if that wasn’t bad enough, Dyche also had to contend with the sight of Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Alex Iwobi both coming off injured.

    Aston Villa crush dreadful Everton | 00:30

    “I won’t make any excuses. Really soft goals changed the feel of the stadium and the feel of our performance,” Dyche said.

    “Villa had more edge. They were far better than us. That was not good enough. It was way off where we want to be.”

    Hampered by fitness and form issues, Calvert-Lewin had managed only four goals since August 2021 and scored just two last season.

    Incredibly, the striker’s injury woes resurfaced when he needed lengthy treatment on a facial cut following a collision with Villa keeper Emiliano Martinez early in the first half.

    Calvert-Lewin was able to continue but Everton fell behind in the 18th minute. Bailey sprinted onto Moussa Diaby’s pass and cut the ball back to Scotland midfielder McGinn, who emphatically volleyed home from close-range.

    Philippe Coutinho (C) walks off the pitch after getting injured. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP)Source: AFP
    Dominic Calvert-Lewin receives medical attention. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP)Source: AFP

    Villa doubled their lead six minutes later from the penalty spot after Everton keeper Jordan Pickford caught Ollie Watkins with his out-stretched arm as he tried to punch clear.

    Luiz stepped up to slot the spot-kick past Pickford, who was booked for trying to delay the penalty in an unsuccessful bid to distract the Brazilian.

    Looking tentative whenever the ball came near him, Calvert-Lewin finally came off before half-time with blood still scarring his cheek wound.

    Iwobi limped off to add to Everton’s problems and Villa added insult to injury with a third goal in the 51st minute.

    Mac Allister shown RED on Anfield debut | 00:37

    Dismal defending by Michael Keane allowed Bailey space to plant a powerful drive past Pickford from 12 yards.

    Many of Everton’s travelling fans had seen enough as they streamed towards the exits from Bailey’s goal.

    It proved a wise move as Duran scored 47 seconds after coming on to complete the demolition in the 75th minute.

    Keane was guilty of more sloppy defending, missing his kick to allow Duran to slot home.

    On an otherwise perfect day, the only frustration for Villa was a late injury to Brazilian playmaker Philippe Coutinho.

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