Arsenal took the Premier League’s thrilling title fight to another level with a crushing victory, while Ange Postecoglou’s Spurs have a massive clash with top-four rival Aston Villa ahead this weekend.
Here are the biggest Premier League talking points from another wild weekend!
If Arsenal are feeling the pressure of a Premier League title race, they sure aren’t showing it.
In the last two rounds, they have played their matches after rivals Liverpool and Manchester City had both played – and won – their matches.
Last week it was a 4-1 win over Newcastle, this time a 6-0 rout of dismal Sheffield United. Indeed, since beating Liverpool 3-1 in early February, they have won 6-0, 5-0, 4-1, and 6-0. It’s a terrifying run of form and has rocketed them into having the best attacking and defensive record in the league.
In Brentford this weekend they face a team severely undermanned and looking ill-equipped to handle the threat posed by the Gunners.
A slip-up from Arsenal appears unlikely. But they certainly can’t afford one.
Midfielder Declan Rice said: “I think if you look at the two other teams at the top, they don’t look like they are going to slip up anytime soon.
“It is the Premier League, you need to be on it every single game. You can’t have any slip-ups.
“Obviously we were the last to play this time, so it is always on our mind that we have to win if we want to stay in it. There is such a long way to go, anything can happen.
“Eleven games of football is a really long way. Hopefully we can keep winning matches, but it is one game at a time.
“We have been in this position before and I think it is just stay humble. Wait for the games to come and attack them when the day arrives.”
They have been in this position before. Last year they led by as many as eight points over City before three straight draws, a loss to City, and a couple of losses ended the title race with three games to spare.
Arsenal have the hunger, but their rivals have the experience of closing out the season and bringing home the silverware.
So far, they’ve held their nerve. Will they be able to keep it up until the end of the season? Against their relentless rivals, they might just need to win all 11 games.
“They were in a different league to us,” Sheffield United boss Chris Wilder said after his team’s brutal 6-0 thrashing at the hands of Arsenal.
That is figuratively already the case, but by next season it appears certain to be reality. The Blades are going down to the Championship – and they’ll do it as one of the worst teams ever to feature in the Premier League.
Sure, they’ve surpassed Derby County’s 2007-08 record of one win and 11 points in total – the Premier League record-worst season – but they’re truly fighting in the wrong weight class this campaign.
That Derby team conceded 89 goals, the record for a 38-game PL season. Swindon Town in 1993/94 conceded a whopping 100 goals, which is the all-time record (but in 42 games).
Sheffield have shipped 72 goals so far this season at a rate of 2.67 per game. That puts them on track to concede over 100 this season, and you wouldn’t bet against it.
Three times in the last five games they’ve conceded five goals or more. It happened three times earlier in the season, including that horror 8-0 to Newcastle.
It’s been a disastrous season from Sheffield.Source: Getty Images
“That first half from Sheffield United was a disgrace,” Liverpool great Jamie Carragher said on Sky Sports. “It’s one of the most one-sided games of football I’ve ever seen.
“To consider you come into this game on the back of losing two Premier League home games 5-0, that’s shocking – it really is. It’s probably one of the worst performances I’ve ever seen.
“I can’t think of anything worse I’ve ever seen in a half of football than that.”
Fans started leaving after just a quarter of an hour – of course, the team were already down three goals by that point.
In a staggering statistic, Sheffield had 19 per cent possession – less than the number of shots (22) that Arsenal took.
In the second half, Wilder turned to the kids. 20-year-old trio Oliver Luke Arblaster, William Osula, and Andre Brooks all came off the bench. Wilder is already preparing for the team’s future in the second tier. Now it’s just a matter of time, and how bad things will get before then.
EPL Wrap: Reds clinch last-gasp winner! | 02:53
‘SEASON OF HIS LIFE’ FROM VILLA STAR DRIVING CHARGE
The race for top spot is still firmly a three-way tussle. But sitting pretty in fourth spot, for now at least, is Aston Villa. They are five points clear of fifth-placed Tottenham, though Ange Postecoglou’s men have a game in hand.
Driving the success of the Villans is Ollie Watkins, who has 21 goals and 10 assists in all competitions this season (16 and 10 in the PL). He’s the only player to hit double-digits in both categories. It puts him top of the charts for goal involvements, and equal-first for assists (alongside Newcastle’s Kieran Trippier and Brighton’s Pascal Gross).
Iconic England striker Alan Shearer said: “He’s having the season of his life. With the form he is in, he is not hoping to score, but expecting to score.”
Darren Bent told TalkSport that he believes Watkins is the player of the season so far.
“He’d certainly be mine, I think he’s been outstanding,” he said.
“I think the goals that he’s got, the assists as well. I think he’s been dangerous. He’s getting better and better … He’d be my player of the year.”
Is Ollie Watkins the player of the season?Source: Getty Images
Aston Villa manager Unai Emery deserves plenty of praise for getting his striker to already deliver his best-ever league goal tally for a season.
But Emery lavished praise on his star man for his commitment and mentality.
“He’s fantastic. But he needs his teammates as well to help him. We are a team. We have to try to get our performances through the team. With the commitment he’s showing, for everyone he is an example.
“For mentality, it’s difficult to find a player better than him. But his skill is also a high level.”
Villa, meanwhile, announced a £119.6 million loss for the period covering last season. While they’re still within the league’s strict Profit and Sustainability (PSR) regulations, it means qualifying for next season’s Champions League will be vital to funding any big splash in the off-season transfer window.
If Watkins keeps his current rich vein of form, you’d back them in.
Spurs score 3 late to pump Palace! | 00:53
‘NO CEILING’ FOR SPURS STAR AHEAD OF MASSIVE CLASH
Ange Postecoglou bet 40 million pounds on Micky van de Ven being a superstar. So far, the 22-year-old is quickly repaying the faith shown in him. And when we say quickly, we mean at 37.38 km/h – the top speed he reached against Brentford a month ago, which is the fastest recorded since the data started being collected in the Premier League 2020/21.
The young centre-back has been a standout for Spurs this season – not just their best signing but arguably their best player overall.
He was outstanding in Spurs’ 3-1 comeback win Crystal Palace on the weekend, completing 95 out of a whopping 101 attempted passes and stifling Palace striker Jean-Philippe Mateta.
Afterwards, Postecoglou said (per Spurs’ website): “Micky has been outstanding all year, and he’s growing all the time, we see it in training. The growth in him, his maturity, his physical capacity, there is just no ceiling for that guy.
“He was important today. We didn’t have to defend deep, they were going to try to play on the counter attack and there was going to be a lot of space, and that suits him because of his speed and ability to track people down. I thought he was really important today.”
Micky van de Ven of Tottenham Hotspur holds off Jean-Philippe Mateta.Source: Getty Images
Van de Ven has started and played 16 full matches – the only time he didn’t was when he suffered a hamstring injury and was taken off at halftime against Chelsea in early November.
Including that match, Spurs have lost just twice in van de Ven’s 17 league appearances. When he was sidelined with the injury, they lost four out of nine matches. Sure, other injuries were a key factor in that poor run, but there’s no doubting his impressive performances all season long.
They face fourth-placed Aston Villa on Sunday night, and van de Ven will face one of the toughest tests of the season against in-form Ollie Watkins. The outcome of that battle could go a long way to deciding the match – and fourth place in the league.
Liverpool shrugged off the absence of Mohamed Salah to move five points clear at the top of the Premier League as Diogo Jota and Darwin Nunez struck twice in a 4-0 win at Bournemouth.
The Reds’ title credentials will be tested while their star man is away with Egypt at the Africa Cup of Nations.
But Jota and Nunez stood up to be counted to secure a vital win at one of the form sides in the Premier League.
Bournemouth had lost just once in their previous nine games to climb comfortably clear of the relegation zone.
However, the Cherries were held at arm’s length in the first half before Jurgen Klopp’s men turned on the style after the break.
The visitors were restricted to pot shots in a first period devoid of clear chances.
Alexis Mac Allister and Nunez tested Neto from long range.
But the game turned on one moment of quality from Liverpool to break the deadlock on 49 minutes.
Jota’s first time pass put Nunez in the clear and the Uruguayan showed the poise he has often lacked in his Liverpool career to date to slot into the far corner.
Substitute Cody Gakpo then teed up Jota to fire in at the near post 20 minutes from time to end the game as a contest.
Jota was more fortunate for his second as the Portuguese fluffed his initial effort from Conor Bradley’s cross only for the ball to sit up for a second attempt which he drilled low and hard across Neto.
Nunez had scored just once in his previous 16 Liverpool appearances since scoring the winner against Bournemouth in the League Cup in early November.
The confidence he gained from finding the net earlier in the half showed as he slid in perfectly to meet Joe Gomez’s cross and round off a fine afternoon for Liverpool in stoppage time.
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Darwin Nunez of Liverpool celebrates. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
Manchester City have a game in hand on their title rivals to be able to shave Liverpool’s advantage at the top down to two points.
But after a season in the doldrums saw Klopp’s men slip to fifth last year, there is little doubt that they are once again the biggest threat to City’s crown as champions.
DEBATE OVER ‘RUGBY TACKLE’ AFTER NO-CALL IN CHAOTIC DRAW
Oli McBurnie scored a penalty 12 minutes into stoppage time to salvage a 2-2 draw for Sheffield United against West Ham in chaotic climax at Bramall Lane.
Both sides were also shown red cards in injury time as West Ham threw away the chance to close to within six points of the top four.
Twice David Moyes’ men led through Maxwel Cornet and James Ward-Prowse’s penalty.
But Ben Brereton Diaz’s strike on his Premier League debut for the Blades and McBurnie’s late spot-kick edged them to within seven points of safety.
The visitors were without the injured Lucas Paqueta and Michail Antonio, suspended Said Benrahma and Mohammed Kudus, who is representing Ghana at the Africa Cup of Nations.
Their absence was felt as West Ham failed to gain control of the game in blustery conditions.
But they went in front when Cornet smashed home his first goal for the club after Danny Ings’ deflected shot looped up at the back post.
Sheffield United scored a late goal. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
Diaz failed to score a single goal during his six-month spell at Villarreal, but has made an quick impact on his return to English football.
The Chile international reacted quickest to fire home the rebound after Alphonse Areola denied William Osula.
Diaz missed a great chance at the start of the second period to turn the game around.
But Sheffield United looked destined for a 16th defeat in 21 Premier League games this season when Gustavo Hamer’s ill-timed challenge on Ings conceded a penalty 12 minutes from time and Ward-Prowse coolly slotted home the spot-kick.
The home side’s hopes appeared to have gone when Rhian Brewster was shown a straight red card for a wild challenge on Emerson Palmieri after a VAR review.
However, Vladmir Coufal was booked due to West Ham’s protests that the referee only initially showed a yellow card for that challenge and the Czech was then sent-off for a second booking moments later.
Chris Wilder (L) and David Moyes (R) react to a late penalty decision. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)Source: AFP
From the resulting free-kick, Areola was penalised for colliding with McBurnie as he rushed off his line to try and punch the ball to safety.
The French goalkeeper then had to be replaced by Lukasz Fabianski leading to a lengthy delay.
McBurnie, though, kept his nerve to drill the penalty low and hard into the corner.
The drama was not over as West Ham appeals for another penalty were controversially waived away when Jarrod Bowen was hauled over in the box by Anel Ahmedhodzic.
“The West Ham bench are fuming,” Sky Sports reporter Peter Smith said.
Former West Ham players Joe Cole and Rio Ferdinand, meanwhile, both agreed a penalty should have been awarded while giving their take on the drama for TNT Sports.
“Absolutely [a] penalty,” Cole said.
“In the last minute of a game, [defenders] have got to keep [their] composure.
“Robinson realises at that moment, and then the panic kicks in. He puts his arms on arm; he’s not looking at the ball. I can’t see how they’ve not looked at that. That’s a rugby tackle.
“The referee has made three massive decisions that have lit this place up. The atmosphere was white hot. He probably just lost his nerve at that time. You need to be a brave referee in situations like that and just referee the game.”
Anel Ahmedhodzic wasn’t penalised for this move on Jarrod Bowen. (Photo by Clive Mason/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
“[Robinson] is not looking at the ball — he’s not even looking at Bowen,” Ferdinand added.
“He’s got his hands on him. His back is to play, and we can see his number with the ball coming from the opposite side. I don’t know how they haven’t looked at that and gone, ‘that’s a stonewall penalty’. If they called that [a penalty], this place would have erupted.”
West Ham manager Moyes was clearly frustrated post-game but avoided getting himself in trouble by saying too much about the decision.
“I’m certainly not going to talk about any referees. I don’t want to get myself in trouble,” he said.
“You should ask the referee [about these decisions]. We’ve got to a stage now where we are settling for a level of officiating where we are all shrugging our shoulders and saying: ‘OK.’ I’m shrugging my shoulders again, we don’t know what they are going to do.”
The frustrated Hammers had to settle for a point that edges them three points clear of Manchester United in sixth.
Football’s biggest transfer saga has taken a massive twist with a bombshell report claiming Real Madrid has pulled out of the race for French superstar Kylian Mbappe.
The 24-year-old, who finished third in the voting for the Ballon d’Or – football’s highest individual honour – has long been linked with a move to the Santiago Bernabeau.
But CadenaSER reports that the Spanish giants have now ruled out a bid for the talismanic Paris Saint-Germain forward at the end of the season – even if he is available on a free transfer.
That would put Premier League clubs on red alert over a bombshell transfer swoop for one of the world’s finest players.
Mbappe has been Madrid’s number one transfer target for the last two seasons, and appeared close to a move in 2022 and again this year.
PSG this week suffered their first Champions League defeat of the season, losing 2-1 to AC Milan.Source: AFP
The Paris star had a monumental fallout with the French champions in the off-season after refusing to sign a contract extension on his current deal, which expires at the end of the present season and would see PSG lose the star player in June 2024 without receiving a transfer fee.
Mbappe’s refusal to extend his contract was widely seen as the player pushing for a move to Madrid. Indeed, PSG insiders revealed that the club believed he already had an agreement in place to move to the Spanish club on a free transfer in 2024.
PSG responded by dropping him from all first-team duties – forcing him to train with other unwanted players or juniors, leaving him out of the pre-season trip to Japan, and exiling him from the senior squad’s dressing room. He was also removed from the list of first-team players on the club website and banners featuring his face taken down from the exterior of the stadium.
They were suddenly willing to sell their star man (rather than lose him for free 12 months later) – and even accepted a world-record fee of £259m from Saudi Arabian club Al-Hilal. Mbappe rejected that move, seemingly hoping Madrid would move up their timeline and sign him immediately.
Madrid were unwilling to make a move – though they had a figure around £100 million set aside – unless the player publicly declared his intention to leave PSG for Madrid.
Mbappe refused, and his icy standoff with PSG thawed when Neymar left for Saudi Arabia and Mbappe’s good friend Ousmane Dembele signed from Barcelona.
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Madrid – and particularly manager Carlo Ancelotti – were reportedly furious at what they viewed as a backflip from the French superstar.
Nevertheless, Mbappe moving to Madrid in 2024 was viewed as a near-certainty.
The player was expected to sign a one-year contract extension with PSG with a guarantee that he would be sold in 2024. Other reports stated that Mbappe would not sign a new contract, but would instead waive a massive loyalty bonus included in his PSG contract.
90min claimed that Mbappe would give up an €80 million (£68m) bonus he is owed over the course of the season (before tax, that would be a saving of €100m (£85m) for PSG).
In the past fortnight, there were widespread reports that Madrid were already in negotiations over a contract with Mbappe.
But Madrid shut down those reports in a strongly-worded statement that read: “Given information in the media about negotiations between the player Kylian Mbappe and our club, Real Madrid state that this information is categorically false. Negotiations have not taken place with a player who belongs to PSG.”
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And today, a bombshell report from CadenaSER claimed that Madrid have totally ruled out a move for Mbappe due to three main reasons.
The first is Mbappe’s massive wage demands, with the Frenchman demanding a reported salary of €20 million per year – more than double the €9m per season that Madrid’s new star signing Jude Bellingham earns (per the report).
With Mbappe turning 25 next month, he would also be a departure from their transfer policy that priorities younger signings.
That includes an already-finalised deal for Brazil’s superstar teenager Endrick, who will sign in June 2024 for a reported transfer fee of 35 million euros plus another 25 million euros in add-ons.
Look at the major transfers Real Madrid has landed recently: 20-year-old Jude Bellingham and 19-year-old Arda Guler this transfer window, Aurelien Tchouameni (then 22) last year, and Eduardo Camavinga (then 18) the season before.
Mbappe – who turn 26 midway through next season – would be a major departure from a clear long-term squad-building approach.
The third reason that Madrid has walked away from a move, per CadenaSER, is that signing Mbappe would cause division with fans and inside the club, given the controversy and drama that has surrounded his drawn-out transfer saga – particularly his perceived backflips on a move to Madrid in both 2022 and this recently-closed transfer window.
While Mbappe’s frosty relationship with the PSG hierarchy has thawed in recent months, for the star to commit his long-term future to the Parisians would still come as a major shock.
His stats this season are typically outstanding: 10 goals and an assist in 10 league games so far, on the back of a stellar 2022 World Cup showing as he led France to the final, where he scored a hat-trick in the defeat to then-PSG-teammate Lionel Messi’s Argentina.
Mbappe walks past the 2022 World Cup trophy in Qatar.Source: Getty Images
It seems likely Mbappe will still look for a fresh challenge at season’s end – and Premier League clubs are now in pole position to swoop.
According to Italian outlet La Gazzetta dello Sport, Chelsea and Liverpool are keenly interested. Cashed-up Chelsea have embarked on a remarkable spending spree in the last year but could finance a move by offloading talent, while Liverpool could look to cash in on Mohamed Salah, who is a top target of Saudi clubs and would fetch a hefty transfer fee.
The biggest issue will be Mbappe’s monster wage demands, with only Saudi Pro League teams able to comfortably match his desired salary given they operate without financial fair play restrictions.
With Barcelona strapped for cash and unlikely to make an attempt for his services given his Madrid links, and Bayern Munich having gone all-out to sign Harry Kane, it looks like Premier League heavyweights are the most likely destination – unless Mbappe pulls yet another U-turn and remains at PSG after all.
While the Madrid transfer saga appears to be over, Mbappe’s future will almost certainly be one of the biggest storylines of the season and the transfer window that follows.
On a searingly sunny day in 1978, Brazil football superstar Rivelino stepped off a Concorde aeroplane in Riyadh to a massive roar from thousands of fans waving the flag of Saudi Arabian club Al-Hilal.
He was ushered to a Rolls Royce and taken to a luxurious royal palace, where he was treated to a banquet hosted by members of the Saudi royal family.
The Brazil legend was, alongside Pele, a standout of the 1970 World Cup-winning side that is widely viewed as the greatest national team in history. When Saudi Arabia came calling in ‘78, he boasted 100 caps for the national team and wore the captain’s armband.
On that evening in Riyadh, he inked his signature on a multimillion-dollar contract that came with lavish bonuses: a brand-new Mercedes, a $10,000-a-month living allowance, and a royal’s palace in which to live.
One of the world’s finest and most well-known players had been wooed by money and luxury.
Forty-five years later the parallels are clear. Saudi Arabia is again embarking upon a transformational project to boost its local sporting industry and shake up the established global order, and football is at its core.
Instead of Rivelino, it’s Ronaldo. Cristiano, one of the greatest players of all time and one of the most famous figures in world sport, began an exodus of top players to Saudi Arabia when he signed for state-owned Al-Nassr in January for a reported €200 million ($A330 million) per year.
Like Rivelino, Ronaldo was the first drop in what has quickly become a flood – one that some believe poses an ‘existential threat’ to the traditional leagues of Europe including the Premier League.
Indeed, in the just-concluded transfer window, only the Premier League spent more money on transfer fees than the Saudi league’s combined $1 billion-plus USD outlay.
It’s a staggering figure, especially since the overwhelming majority came straight from government coffers – and it doesn’t include the staggering world-record wages being doled out. Wages included, Saudi Arabian teams may have even spent more than the Premier League this year.
The story of Saudi Arabia’s sporting investment began in 1978, but it’s just getting started. And it’s already having a massive impact on the world of sport.
HOW MUCH IS SAUDI ARABIA SPENDING … AND ON WHAT?
From January 2021 to July 2023, the country spent at least $6.3bn USD ($A9.74bn) on sports, according to data from The Guardian. It represents an exponential growth on the estimated $1.5bn the nation spent on the industry between 2014 and early 2021, based on analysis from Grant Liberty.
It’s a mind-blowing outlay, but the real figure of their recent spending is likely even higher given a shroud of secrecy surrounds the investment activities of the nation’s Public Investment Fund and its reported $620 billion USD in assets.
But what is evident is that the nation isn’t just targeting one sport, but investing in almost every code you can imagine – from motorsports to horseracing, boxing to handball, tennis to chess.
WWE wrestling events have been held in the nation since 2014, while the desert nation has even turned its attention to winter sports, reviving the Asian Winter Games that have not been held since 2017 with a successful bid to host the games in 2029.
That’s despite the winter temperatures at the proposed hosting location going down to minimums of just three degrees – hardly ideal for snow sports.
But when money is no object, even the weather isn’t a problem.
A general view over the F1 circuit in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.Source: Getty Images
Even Esports are in the sights of the Saudis. The Guardian’s $6.3bn USD appraisal of Saudi Arabian sports spending didn’t include the billion dollars PIF invested in video game company Embracer Group, or the eight per cent stake they picked up in Nintendo, as well as multiple major events being held in the nation.
All this is to show the sweeping breadth of Saudi Arabia’s stratagem – one as calculated as it is audacious.
“This is a sports strategy that is as comprehensive and more detailed than any other in the world,” a sporting executive told The Guardian under the condition of anonymity. “It is not a fad, this is not just some rich man’s whim.”
The first major disruption of the global sporting landscape came in October 2021 when the PIF founded LIV Golf, a rival to the PGA Tour that quickly handed out astronomical pay cheques to convince players to defect.
Phil Mickelson was paid a reported $200 million USD in guaranteed money and Dustin Johnson $125m, with Forbes claiming half of each player’s figure was paid upfront. Tiger Woods was offered around $700-800 million. All up, LIV cost an estimated $2 billion USD to found.
It sparked a golfing civil war, with verbal barbs and lawsuits being fired back and forth like archers’ volleys. But the Saudis would not relent, and the bitter dispute appears headed to a civil conclusion that will see a new organisation formed to unite golf under one banner – with Saudi Arabia to gain at least a minority stake to the tune of at least another billion dollars.
The long-running and high-stakes LIV saga explains much of Saudi Arabia’s strategy to reshape the sports world: to disrupt the established order with spending that cannot be matched by the traditional authorities, forcing them to make major concessions – and to cede a significant degree of influence and power to the Middle Eastern monarchy.
LIV Golf’s Phil Mickelson.Source: AFP
That approach has now also been taken towards boxing and mixed martial arts, with the Saudis reportedly investing $100 million USD into a UFC rival in the Professional Fighters League, the body which has recently signed superstar fighters Francis Ngannou and Jake Paul. Saudi Arabia is expected to host multiple PFL pay-per-view events in 2024.
In other cases, Saudi Arabia is happy to use its money to operate within the established structures, rather than seeking to create or back opposing competitions.
In December, the ATP’s Next Gen finals will be held in Jeddah after a four-year deal to host the year-end tennis tournament.
In Formula One, another key focus of Saudi Arabia’s sporting investment, Saudi Arabia pays a reported $65 million USD to host a grand prix in Jeddah each year. But it also sponsors Formula One to the tune of $40-45m annually, as well as the Aston Martin team, both through the Saudi state-owned company Aramco. Aramco is the world’s largest oil company and the world’s second-largest company by revenue, with an annual revenue over half a trillion USD.
That funding also isn’t included in the Guardian’s estimate of $6.3bn USD spent by Saudi Arabia on sports since early 2021. Nor is their deal with the International Cricket Council that makes Aramco title sponsors of every ICC event including the upcoming Cricket World Cup. Aramco also has a partnership with Chinese basketball and is the backer of a fledgling women’s golf tour.
It’s not just the PIF that is pouring money into sports – the nation is using every financial arm at its disposal to grow its stake in the world of sport.
For all the sports the nation has invested in, there’s no doubt that football remains at the core of their strategy.
The primary reason is simple: it’s the most popular sport in Saudi Arabia – and the world.
WHAT HAPPENED IN FOOTBALL?
Saudi Arabia really announced themselves in the world of football when they purchased Premier League club Newcastle in October 2021 for around £300m, having strongly considered a takeover of Manchester United in the months before that deal was confirmed.
The nation had brought some major football events to Saudi soil before then – the Spanish Super Cup has been played in Jeddah since 2019 – but this was a major step forward.
The PIF then signed sponsorship deals with Saudi Pro League clubs worth a reported £1.8bn, before taking full control of four of the largest teams, paving the way for an unprecedented spending spree.
Cristiano Ronaldo joined Al-Nassr in January for a reported €200 million per season plus a €100m signing bonus.
It kickstarted a stunning assault on the transfer market by the four state-owned clubs in the recent transfer window that closed earlier this month.
This window, Premier League clubs splashed out a record €2.8 billion on players, with a net spend of €1.278bn. Saudi Pro League clubs were second, spending €956.88m with a net spend of €892m.
The spending is an exponential increase from last season, when the Saudi Pro League’s expenditure was the 20th highest in the world with a net spend of just €34.15m.
This year, they blew that figure out of the water – and their €892m net spend doesn’t even include the extraordinary wages being handed out.
94 foreign players arrived, and the list of high-profile players who joined the four state-owned clubs is immensely impressive.
Al-Nassr: Sadio Mane (Bayern Munich), Otavio (Porto), Aymeric Laporte (Manchester City), Alex Telles (Manchester United), Marcelo Brozovic (Inter Milan).
In this handout picture release by the Saudi Pro League on June 6, 2023, French football player Karim Benzema holds the jersey of Saudi Arabia’s Al-Ittihad club, in Madrid. Real Madrid’s Ballon d’Or winner Karim Benzema will join Cristiano Ronaldo in Saudi Arabia after signing a three-year deal with Al-Ittihad, the Jeddah-based club confirmed on June 6. (Photo by jorge ferrari / Saudi Pro League / AFP)Source: AFPIn this handout picture release by the Saudi Al-Hilal football club on August 15, 2023, Brazilian forward Neymar (L) poses for a picture with Hilal President Fahad bin Nafel at the Al-Hilal stadium in Riyadh. Brazil forward Neymar has signed for Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal from Paris Saint-Germain, the clubs announced today, joining Cristiano Ronaldo and Karim Benzema as the latest big name lured to the oil-rich Gulf state. (Photo by Saudi Pro League / AFP)Source: AFP
In fact, more than 90 per cent of Saudi Pro League spending came from the four clubs owned by the PIF.
Al Hilal’s €351.72m net spend was more than any other club in the world, while Al-Ahli was second with €195.75m – just above Chelsea.
Meanwhile, four rival Saudi clubs broke even or made money. Another four had a net spend less than €2m.
Sure, a couple of the privately-owned clubs did spend money. Al Ettifaq signed Jordan Henderson, Georginio Wijnaldum, Moussa Dembele and Demarai Gray, as well as the legendary Steven Gerrard as coach. But their net spend was still just €36m.
Al Shabab spent around €15m, signing the likes of Habib Diallo and Yannick Carrasco.
Outside of that, you’d need to be something of a football nerd to recognise any other names who joined the Saudi league.
Effectively, four clubs are spending like Premier League giants, and another two like minnows from the top five leagues. The rest are still operating on a relatively minuscule budget. This isn’t an entire league outspending the rest of Europe, but rather a handful of clubs with almost unlimited funding – and no financial fair play rules to follow.
ARE THEY JUST BUYING HAS-BEENS?
There was another key trend in the biggest clubs’ spending – age. The majority of signings were players in their late 20s or their 30s, ones with prestige and popularity and plenty of skill to boot.
Ronaldo is 38, reigning Ballon d’Or winner Karim Benzema 35, Jordan Henderson 33, and so on.
Many of the players remain in the prime of their careers, however, and Saudi clubs fought off interest from even Premier League clubs or heavyweights like Barcelona to sign them.
That was the case for players like Aleksandar Mitrovic, Ruben Neves, and Sergej Milinkovic-Savic.
But if you look at younger players, Saudi Arabia is not an attractive destination – yet.
According to the player grading system from Twenty First Group consultancy, Saudi clubs signed just two of the 100 best players under 26 years old that moved this transfer window.
That’s compared to the SPL signing 15 of the top 100 players overall that moved this window (second to the Premier League’s 28).
Aleksander Ceferin, the head of European football’s organising body UEFA, took aim at the Saudi transfers by saying they were only landing “players at the end of their careers and others who aren’t ambitious enough to aspire to the ‘top’ competitions.”
“As far as I know, [Kylian] Mbappe and [Erling] Haaland don’t dream of Saudi Arabia,” he added.
“I don’t believe that the best players at the pinnacle of their careers would go to Saudi Arabia.
“When people talk to me about the players who went there, nobody knows where they’re playing.”
Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal had a world-record €300m bid rejected for Mbappe – plus a one-year contract with a basic wage worth €200m alongside up to €700m in commercial and image rights.
The 24-year-old’s refusal to even talk with Al-Hilal shows that for elite young players, Saudi Arabia isn’t an attractive footballing proposition. And all the money in the world isn’t enough to convince players to give up on playing for the world’s biggest clubs.
For now, the majority of players that Saudi Arabia has signed are high-profile ageing stars. But as the quality of the competition grows – and it certainly has already – European leagues will become increasingly fearful that young talent will be lured by money as well as the chance to play alongside the likes of Ronaldo or Neymar.
There are two core reasons: to diversify Saudi Arabia’s economy, and to improve the nation’s global reputation and influence.
Saudi Arabia has long relied on oil as the basis of its economy. It is the world’s second-largest producer of oil, and the industry currently contributes around 40 per cent of the nation’s GDP.
That reliance leaves the country vulnerable to fluctuations in the oil price and especially the world’s anticipated reduction in oil usage in response to climate change.
As Simon Chadwick, professor of sport and geopolitical economy at the Skema Business School in Paris, told AFP: “Saudi Arabia is up against the clock.
“Saudi Arabia has 20 years to diversify. In the meantime they’re being exposed to oil-price fluctuations.
“They’ve got to move fast, they’ve got to move strategically, they’ve got to move effectively.”
In response to this pressing need, Saudi Arabia in 2016 launched a plan for long-term reform called Vision 2030, a programme of sweeping reforms to diversify the economy and reduce its dependence on oil revenue.
The modernisation project is immensely broad-reaching and ambitious – it aims for radical economic development by increasing foreign investment and growing new industries such as transportation and entertainment – including sport.
There’s also government-funded mega-projects like NEOM, a futuristic megacity which includes a 160km-long skyscraper and is estimated to cost over $500 billion USD.
In this broader context, sport is just one aspect in an all-encompassing restructuring of the economy.
But sport is an industry with massive potential for growth and can drive domestic and foreign tourism – especially if they host major events like the FIFA World Cup, which they are hoping — and appear likely — to land in 2034.
And it has a social impact too – making the nation a more appealing place to live, especially since almost two-thirds of the population is aged under 30.
At the same time as this crucial economic restructuring, Saudi Arabia is also seeking to enhance its global reputation – something which can encourage foreign investment, tourism, and boost the nation’s influence on the world stage through so-called ‘soft power’.
The country has been broadly condemned for its poor human rights record, such as its routine use of the death penalty, with global human rights organisation Amnesty International reporting 196 people were executed in 2022.
Migrant workers have suffered exploitation and abuse – including in the building of government megaprojects like NEOM – while immigrants have also allegedly faced torture and death in detention centres.
Human rights activists have faced exceptionally long jail terms, including Salma al-Shehab, a PhD student who in August 2022 imprisoned last year for 34 years for tweeting in support of women’s rights.
The country has taken some steps forwards in terms of women’s rights since 2019, including reducing strict dress codes and gender segregation in the workforce. But the entrenched system of male guardianship still poses major problems with regards to gender-based discrimination in domestic life, activists say.
Same-sex activity also remains outlawed.
Man United sink lower with loss in UCL | 00:36
And one of the defining incidents when it comes to Saudi Arabia’s human rights record remains the murder and dismemberment of US-based journalist Jamal Khashoggi in October 2018, who had been critical of the Saudi government. It caused an international scandal, and US media reported the CIA concluded with “medium to high confidence” that the killing had been ordered by the nation’s leader Mohammed Bin Salman himself.
The country has sometimes been made a global pariah due to its human rights record, which has obvious impacts on a range of economic factors too – such as limiting tourism and foreign investment from both private companies and foreign governments.
By investing heavily in sport, Saudi Arabia can associate itself with the positive characteristics of sport and divert attention from their poor human rights record – a tactic known as ‘sportswashing’.
The approach has been widely used by other countries in the past, from nations such as Nazi-era Germany, or Russia and China in more recent times. But Saudi Arabia’s spending is unprecedented in scale.
When Premier League club Newcastle United was bought out by the PIF for 300m pounds in 2021, Amnesty UK’s chief executive, Sacha Deshmukh, said the deal was “a clear attempt by the Saudi authorities to sportswash their appalling human rights record with the glamour of top-flight football”.
But some experts believe that sportswashing isn’t the primary point at all, and instead believe the Saudis are almost completely focused on their economic goals.
Princeton professor Bernard Haykel, author of a book on Saudi Arabia’s economic transformation under the Vision 2030 plan, recently spoke on The Afikra Podcast.
He rejected claims that Saudi Arabia was sportswashing, saying: “I think it’s a crock of you know what”.
Ali Khalid, sports editor of Riyadh-based Arab News, told AFP that: “Cynics will say what are the reasons behind it,” referring to sportswashing.
“But a lot of it is they’re bringing to their people, who for a long time had no access to any entertainment of that level, they’re bringing the best of it.”
And Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman this week delivered a rare television interview with Fox News where he played down accusations of sportswashing.
Bin Salman said: “If sportswashing is going to increase my GDP by one per cent, then we’ll continue sportswashing.
“I don’t care. I have one per cent growth in GDP from sport and I am aiming for another 1.5 per cent.
“Call it whatever you want – we are going to get that 1.5 per cent.”
WHAT IS THE LEAGUE LIKE – AND HOW ARE THINGS CHANGING?
Last month star signing Neymar made a staggering appraisal.
“For the names that went to Saudi Arabia, I wouldn’t be surprised if the Saudi league is better than the French,” Neymar declared.
That’s right – already better than one of the top five leagues in the world, which began back in 1932-33 as a professional competition.
There’s no doubt that the Saudi league has come a long way since the days when Rivelino joined in 1978, just two years after the competition was founded.
“It was almost amateur football at the time as football was really just starting there,” Rivelino said in an interview with Brazilian television in 2019.
“We trained at the same stadium in which we played the games. There were three teams in Riyadh and so we trained from 6 to 7pm, the next team from 7 to 8 and then the third from 8 to 9.”
Then there was the heat – the Brazilian famously played with a wet cloth in his mouth for his first few games to counteract the oppressive conditions. Not that that stopped him from showing his immense skills on the field, leading the team to a league title with just one defeat in his debut season, before winning the King’s Cup in his second year and scoring 23 times before retiring.
These days, the league is fully professional – though it reached that milestone just 16 years ago, a drop in the ocean of time compared to historic European football competitions.
But the league has been highly successful when compared to Asia – in the Asian Champions League, only South Korea and Japan have won more titles than teams from Saudi Arabia. Al-Hilal’s four titles and five runners-up finishes are both records.
That said, the competition is a world away from the likes of the Premier League. Last year, crowd sizes averaged around 10,000 per game. Compare that to the Premier League or the Bundesliga, both averaging over 40,000 fans per game last season. Italy, Spain, France, and even Mexico all had over 20,000 fans per game.
JEDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA – SEPTEMBER 30: Jordan Henderson of Al Ettifaq claps after Saudi Pro League match between Al Ahli and Al Ettifaq at Prince Abdullah Al Faisal Stadium on September 30, 2023 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Yasser Bakhsh/Getty Images)Source: Getty ImagesJEDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA – SEPTEMBER 30: Steven Gerrard coach of Al Ettifaq claps after Saudi Pro League match between Al Ahli and Al Ettifaq at Prince Abdullah Al Faisal Stadium on September 30, 2023 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Yasser Bakhsh/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
But there’s no doubt that the arrivals of the star names have increased interest in the competition.
In the 21/22 campaign Al Nassr averaged 8,121 fans. Last season – where Cristiano Ronaldo joined halfway through – they averaged 17,638 fans. A full season of Ronaldo and his new supporting cast is likely to improve that figure significantly.
There’s also greatly expanded interest overseas, with more nations around the world broadcasting the competition – including regional rivals Iran for the first time ever.
The competition is growing. Fast.
WILL IT LAST?
The biggest question is whether the Saudi spending spree is sustainable or a flash in the pan, a short-lived tactic destined for failure.
After all, this isn’t the first time that nations have splashed the cash in an attempt to muscle in on a slice of the rich footballing pie.
Go back to the 1970s, when the North American Soccer League (NASL) exploded in popularity after Brazil legend Pele signed for the New York Cosmos (owned by Warner Media) in what author Gavin Newsham called “the transfer coup of the century”.
That team later signed Franz Beckenbauer and Carlos Alberto and averaged over 40,000 fans a game for three seasons! Other NASL teams landed the likes of Johann Cruyff and George Best. But by 1985, the league was dead and buried – once Pele retired, the league died a slow death as popularity waned and economic recession struck.
There was a similar story in China over the last decade or so, after the government announced a desire for the nation to become a global powerhouse in the sport. From 2011 onwards, Chinese business magnates bought teams like Guangzhou Evergrande and spent millions on superstar signings.
Chelsea legend Didier Drogba was one of the first to go, before things peaked in 2016-17’s winter transfer window when Chinese Super League teams spent a world-leading €388 million on players. That included the December 2016 signing of Chelsea’s Brazilian midfield gun Oscar for over €60 million by Shanghai SIPG. Like Saudi Arabia, and like the NASL before it, China convinced players to sign on simply by offering them massive pay packets.
Then-Chelsea coach Antonio Conte warned that the rise of China was a “danger for all teams in the world” – something that’s been said almost word-for-word about the Saudi Pro League this year.
But the priorities of the Chinese government turned. Concerned about the massive amounts of money going to foreign teams around the world (as well as foreign players and agents), the Chinese government in 2018 introduced transfer taxes and salary caps. The league quickly nosedived.
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Billions of dollars of transfer spending had little long-term impact. And China’s men’s national team is currently ranked just 80th in the world – worse than in 2011 when the project began.
For Saudi Arabia, there are plenty of lessons to be learned from all the way back in the 1970s and the days of Rivelino.
Back then, it was members of the royalty who owned clubs and bankrolled the spending – also signing the likes of Zico, Hristo Stoichkov or iconic coach Mario Zagallo. There was no government plan or support. And when the oil prices tumbled and crippled Saudi Arabia’s economy, football quickly became a casualty.
So is this time any different?
Firstly, it’s backed by the seemingly endless coffers of the PIF and the Saudi government, not by individual members of the royalty owning clubs.
Saleh al-Khalif, Al-Riyadiah newspaper’s deputy editor-in-chief, told AFP: “Rivo (Rivelino) came and some other Tunisian players who played well in World Cup 1978. But the experience was eventually a failure.”
“It depended on the honour members of the clubs (royal owners), not a government plan or spending,” he added.
“It was not sustainable so it didn’t survive. This is totally different from the current push.”
Secondly, it’s just part of a much broader strategy. The nation is not just seeking to pour money into the domestic league, but to boost youth development all the way through to the national team – the Green Falcons who stunned eventual champions Argentina at last year’s World Cup.
To that end, the nation has now signed Italian mastermind Roberto Mancini, who stunned his home nation by quitting the national team job to take up the same gig for Saudi Arabia – with a pay cheque worth 25 million euro per year after tax.
The Saudi national team is coming from a much stronger starting point than China, for example, with a current ranking of 57th and a historic best of 21st in the world.
Saudi football president Yasser al-Misehal said: “Roberto believes in Saudi football and our desire to develop top competitive players and take them to new heights on the world stage – including the Asian Cup in Qatar and qualification for the 2026 World Cup … We’re a footballing nation and we [are] continuing to invest at every level in our journey to compete with the best in the world.”
The strategy – and Vision 2030 itself – is long term – especially if you include a potential FIFA World Cup on Saudi soil in 2034.
Just as in the 1980s, Saudi Arabia remains vulnerable to fluctuations in the global oil price, and a major downturn could potentially force the nation to pull back on its football spending. Or there could simply be a change in the government’s approach – like happened in China.
But if Saudi Arabia commits to its current path for the long term, the implications could be immense. Right now, all signs are pointing to this transfer window being just the start.
And when it comes to the players they missed out on, the PIF almost certainly will be back.
Take Liverpool’s talismanic attacker Mohamed Salah, with Al-Ittihad offering a transfer fee valued at £100m rising to £150m with add-ons. Liverpool rejected a move for their star man out of hand, holding firm despite rumours Al-Ittihad would return with a bid potentially valued as high as £200m. The player himself was reportedly offered a salary around £1.5 million a week – four times his current salary which is a Liverpool club record.
Al-Ittihad will almost certainly make another attempt in January’s transfer window, but a move at season’s end is more likely. Salah will then be 32 years old with one season left on his Liverpool contract – making the Reds far more likely to cash in on their star man rather than lose him for free a year later.
HOW BIG IS THE THREAT TO THE CURRENT ORDER?
For all of Saudi Arabia’s spending, it’s worth remembering that many of the traditional leagues were probably the biggest benefactors this transfer window. Clubs that were struggling to meet their financial fair play obligations were more than happy to offload players in return for trumped-up transfer fees – especially the likes of Wolves in the Premier League or even big-spending Chelsea.
That was especially the case with selling ageing players or those with one year remaining on their contracts – the kinds of players that don’t typically attract big transfer fees.
By signing so many Premier League players, Saudi Arabia’s deep coffers essentially helped to fund the Premier League’s record spending spree.
But it’s other leagues that will feel most threatened by the aggressive Saudi transfer strategy, given those clubs have significantly less income – and therefore a greatly reduced ability to compete financially with the spending power of Premier League clubs and Saudi clubs.
Making the battle more one-sided is that Saudi Arabian teams have no financial fair play restrictions – meaning they can spend as much as they want and not have to worry about balancing their books.
UEFA’s financial restrictions and those of the individual European leagues mean the vast majority of European clubs cannot match the wages or the transfer fees offered by Saudi Arabian teams.
Consider this: the four major European leagues behind the Premier League (the German Bundesliga, Italian Serie A, Spanish LaLiga and France’s Ligue 1) ended this transfer window with more income than expenditure – a combined net total of €620.41m!
So while Premier League and Saudi clubs were spending big, the rest of Europe’s big five leagues were far more restricted by financial constraints.
But should the Premier League itself be worried?
Jason Burt wrote in The Times: “Of course players from all around the world come to the Premier League because it is such a well-organised, well-run competition and life is good in England.
“But no-one should kid themselves that they do not mainly come here for the money. And if the money is better in Saudi Arabia and enough of their teammates, countrymen and stars are already there then they will follow.
“Make no mistake what the Saudis are doing represents one of the greatest existential threats European football, and certainly the Premier League, has ever faced.”
Audio released from controversial VAR | 01:43
However, Premier League chief executive Richard Masters recently said he was not worried about the threat of the Saudi league, saying they could not match the history, fan engagement, and professionalism of the English game.
“I have been asked if I’m concerned by that and you know the answer – it’s something we have to keep an eye on … We are way off worrying about that at the minute,” he said.
For now, the Premier League is benefiting from big transfer fees for players to leave to Saudi Arabia, while simultaneously facing pressure to increase player wages to stop their best players from taking a Middle East payday.
It’s a delicate balance – but there’s no doubt that the Premier League is better poised than European rivals operating on a fraction of the budget of English clubs.
Perhaps the key to the future will lie in the ability of Saudi clubs to convince younger players – those still on the rise or in the peak of their career – to join the competition.
So far, Saudi clubs have mostly signed ageing stars rather than young guns or those in the peak of their careers.
But with every high-profile player that signs on, the allure for younger players grows stronger – especially when the financial incentive is overwhelming.
21-year-old Gabri Veiga was one of the most gifted young guns in Spain’s La Liga, having developed through the Celta Vigo academy to reach the first team. He had been set for a €36m transfer to Italian side Napoli this window – only for Al-Ahli to pip them by paying his €40m release clause and offering him a wage reportedly FIVE times higher than the Italians.
If Saudi Arabia is not just a pre-retirement league but a genuine destination for world-class talent of all ages, it then well and truly threatens the traditional football hierarchy.
And if, as Neymar says, the league is already higher quality than the likes of France’s Ligue 1, a seismic shift has already begun.
But maybe that’s just how football works.
New Saudi national team coach Roberto Mancini said: “The same thing happened in Italy many years ago, lots of big foreign players came to Italy and we improved a lot. It’s good for the Saudi players.”
Former Nigeria international and ex-Chelsea technical director Michael Emenalo was named as the SPL’s inaugural director of football in July. He argued that the league should also be viewed in the same way as the European competitions.
“What Saudi football is doing, is no different from what the Premier League have done. There was a time when it was all about Italy. There was a time when it was all about Spain. What we’re looking for in the industry is an opportunity to compete, and to compete on an even scale and to improve upon whatever exists in the industry,” Emenalo claimed.
“I think the Saudi League offers a new opportunity first and foremost for the entire industry, and I think it will create avenues for good competition and for more development of young talent.
“The world can’t have enough of good footballers, the world can’t have enough of good football, the world can’t have enough competition between rival clubs, between countries, between rival leagues.”
The Premier League transfer window closed on Saturday morning after 28 signings on deadline day, bringing to a close a record-breaking window with a total spending over £2 billion ($AUD3.8 billion) for the first time.
Chelsea went on a spending spree once again, and they weren’t the only team to make big moves in the market. But other clubs lost some of their biggest stars and struggled to replace them – and others made barely any transfers at all.
Foxsports.com.au rates every Premier League team’s summer dealings in our Transfer Report Card!
Biggest signing: Declan Rice ($195m from West Ham United)
Biggest exit: Folarin Balogun ($50m to Monaco)
Total spent: $395m
Having come agonisingly close to winning the Premier League last season, Arsenal have loosened the pursestrings and then some this summer.
The biggest of the four arrivals at the Emirates is undoubtedly former West Ham United captain Declan Rice, who joined for a staggering $195 million.
Rice has played in each of Arsenal’s three Premier League games as their holding midfielder in a unit of three alongside fellow summer signing Kai Havertz and captain Martin Odegaard.
The arrival of Rice addressed the glaring issue of depth in the defensive midfield given the over-reliance on Thomas Partey last season.
Havertz’s signing was a curious one given he has often flattered to deceive throughout his time at Chelsea, as was goalkeeper David Raya who moved on loan from Brentford.
Jurrien Timber’s move from Ajax was seen as a smart piece of business but he suffered a serious injury in the Gunners’ season opener against Nottingham Forest and faces a lengthy stint on the sidelines.
Arsenal have also done well to move on a number of players, recouping reasonable fees for Folarin Balogun and Granit Xhaka while American duo Matt Turner and Auston Trusty also departed.
Whether these additions will prove to be the tonic Arsenal needs to go one better in the title race remains to be seen, but they’ve certainly given themselves a significant chance.
Grade: A
Rice was the big signing Arsenal wanted. (Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
Aston Villa
Biggest signing: Moussa Diaby ($92.5m from Bayer Leverkusen)
Biggest exit: Cameron Archer ($35m to Sheffield United)
Total spent: $156m
Aston Villa manager Unai Emery was clear in his instructions to his recruitment team: bring him players with European pedigree.
After all, the Midlands outfit have brought European nights back to Villa Park for the first time since the 2010/11 season after an impressive 7th-place finish last season.
Villa have certainly delivered on Emery’s request, bringing in Youri Tielemans and Pau Torres as well as Nicolo Zaniolo and Clement Lenglet on season-long loan deals.
But the most impressive piece of business has been the signing of winger Moussa Diaby, with his $92.5m fee breaking the club’s transfer record.
The tricky Frenchman has already dazzled in Villa’s opening games and has linked up well with Ollie Watkins up front.
Villa have also eased the burden of FFP by selling academy products Aaron Ramsey and Cameron Archer to Burnley and Sheffield United respectively.
The only fear among Villa fans is the worrying lack of depth in the squad, with Emery naming two goalkeepers on the bench for his side’s Premier League fixtures.
Grade: B+
Bournemouth
Biggest signing: Tyler Adams ($45m from Leeds United)
Biggest exit: Ben Pearson ($2.5m to Stoke City)
Total spent: $213m
Talk about flexing a newfound financial muscle.
Bournemouth were taken over by American businessman Bill Foley last December and held off significant spending until they had Premier League safety secured.
With that objective achieved and a new manager at the helm in Andoni Iraola, the Cherries have been incredibly active this summer and have brought in eight players all 26 or younger.
Alex Scott, nicknamed the ‘Guernsey Grealish’ and had plenty of admirers among the Premier League, is one of those eight but is yet to feature due to injury.
Bournemouth have also done well not to lose many players of value, although Jefferson Lerma’s switch to Crystal Palace on a free deal is a blow.
If there was to be any criticism of Bournemouth’s dealings it would be not adding competition for star striker Dominic Solanke, with Kieffer Moore not exactly the best backup option.
Whether their youth-heavy approach pays off or blows up in their face remains to be seen, but there can be no question Bournemouth have a better team than they did last season.
Grade: A-
West Ham continue impressive start | 01:20
Brentford
Biggest signing: Nathan Collins ($45m from Wolves)
Biggest exit: David Raya (loan to Arsenal)
Total spent: $107m
Brentford’s summer window has been dominated by the will-he-won’t-he saga of goalkeeper David Raya.
He was heavily linked with a move to Tottenham but it failed to materialise as Brentford refused to budge on their £40m valuation.
In the end, the Spaniard moved to Arsenal where he will battle it out with Aaron Ramsdale for the starting role.
Brentford prepared for Raya’s departure with the signing of Dutch goalkeeper Mark Flekken from Freiburg and he has looked the goods so far.
Thomas Frank’s side also addressed the club’s glaring need for a new centre-back, signing Nathan Collins from Wolves, and added a talented winger in Kevin Schade before a deadline-day loan move for Everton forward Neal Maupay.
A solid yet unspectacular transfer window from Brentford.
Grade: B
Brighton
Biggest signing: Joao Pedro ($57m from Watford)
Biggest exit: Moises Caicedo ($195m to Chelsea)
Total spent: $169m
Once billed as Barcelona’s replacement for Lionel Messi, Brighton made one of the more intriguing deals before the deadline by signing 20-year-old Spain international Ansu Fati on a loan move.
A string of injuries have played a role in Fati not being able to live up to his sky-high potential, but at just 20 years old the best is still ahead of him and now the versatile youngster will have a chance to revitalise his career at Brighton.
Tottenham was said to also have shown interest in Fati but the fact he opted to sign with Brighton says a lot about the club’s rising standing in the football world, having secured their first campaign in European football next season.
“This is a great deal for all of us,” Brighton boss Roberto De Zerbi said.
“I am sure Ansu will help us to reach a new target and we can help him get back to the level he deserves to be.”
The signing of Ansu was not the only coup this transfer window for Brighton though, who have undergone quite the roster upheaval with Caicedo, Alexis Mac Allister and Robert Sanchez all departing.
What Brighton got in return for the trio though is quite staggering, receiving £175 million ($A341m) for the trio after paying just £11 million ($A21m) to sign them in the first place.
Just another shrewd piece of business from a team that clearly has a plan as it builds towards the future.
Fati headlines a long list of signings for Brighton, with Joao Pedro, Mahmoud Dahoud, Bart Verbruggen, Igor Julio, Carlos Baleba, Jacob Slater and James Milner all joining the Seagulls.
And they did all that while making a $144m profit.
Grade: A
Joao Pedro was snapped up by Brighton early in the window. (Photo by Harriet Lander/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
Burnley
Biggest signing: Zeki Amdouni ($30m from Basel)
Biggest exit: Wout Weghorst (loan to Hoffenheim)
Total spent: $186m
The Premier League newcomers didn’t waste any time splashing the cash in their bid to survive. They brought in Sheffield’s impressive midfielder Sander Berge and poached former Southampton player Nathan Redmond on a free transfer from Besiktas. Of the ten players they spent fees signing, the oldest was 25-year-old Berge, showing their focus on the long-term development of the squad. 22-year-old striker Zeki Amdouni was their biggest outlay, while 21-year-old playmaker Aaron Ramsey is a hugely talented midfielder from Aston Villa. Crucially, they held onto all of their key players from the promotion campaign, making just a couple of sales. They might not have gone for big names or superstars, but they recruited exceptionally and didn’t hold back in the transfer market, spending plenty of money on a balanced variety of players.
Grade: A-
Chelsea
Biggest signing: Moises Caicedo ($195m from Brighton)
Biggest exit: Kai Havertz ($126m to Arsenal)
Total spent: $775m
In three transfer windows, Chelsea have splurged one billion pounds. It’s a staggering amount of money, but this window was a little different to the last. Sure, they bought eight players who each cost over £20m, with their total outlay around £419m – more than coach Mauricio Pochettino spent in five whole years at Spurs. That included breaking the British transfer record for the second time in seven months to sign Moises Caicedo for a fee up to £115 million.
But equally crucial was offloading a number of stars – racking up £295m or $575m AUD in sales and loan fees. Besides Havertz, the long list of outgoing names included Mason Mount, Kepa, Mendy, Lukaku, Kante, Azpilicueta, Kovacic and Pulisic, helping them to balance their books and make room for a sweeping overhaul.
In Pochettino they have a coach with a very strong record of developing young players, and their focus on signing next-generation stars has seen the squad’s average age drop drastically in the last year (the oldest of their 11 signings is just 25). They beat Liverpool to the signings of Caicedo and Romeo Lavia, two extremely talented young guns, and there’s no doubt that their raft of signings have immense potential.
But for a club desperate to right the wrongs of last season, their focus on youth comes with significant risk. Inexperience at the top level and a fresh-faced side will mean it takes time to gel. Injuries to their attacking signings forced them back into the market late on, but in Manchester City’s Cole Palmer they landed another dangerous forward. They also kept a hold of Conor Gallagher, Trevoh Chalobah and Ian Maatsen despite plenty of interest.
It capped off a very good window for Chelsea in both directions – but one that might take a season or two to truly pay off.
Grade: A
Moises Caicedo arrived in a big money deal from Brighton. (Photo by Eddie Keogh/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
Crystal Palace
Biggest signing: Matheus Franca ($33m from Flamengo)
Biggest exit: Wilfried Zaha (free to Galatasaray)
Total spent: $65m
The exit of talismanic Wilfried Zaha was a major blow, especially since he departed for free. You get the feeling Palace didn’t quite manage to replace him in what was a quiet window for the club. Teen playmaker Matheus Franca is a promising signing, while Jefferson Lerma adds value on a free deal from Bournemouth. Dean Henderson (from Man Utd) is a major upgrade between the sticks and was in hot demand, while Rob Holding from Arsenal was a deadline-day deal to bolster their defensive stocks. After Zaha’s exit, keeping a hold of Eberechi Eze and Michael Olise was vital, and they managed to see off the interest from around the league for both players. But coach Roy Hodgson said the squad was about three players lighter than he wanted – and he didn’t get the clinical striker or the fullback he wanted.
Grade: C
Everton
Biggest signing: Beto ($42m from Udinese)
Biggest exit: Moise Kean ($50m to Juventus)
Total spent: $68m
It’s hard to think of this window as anything other than a disaster. After scraping survival last season – again – it was clear that Everton needed reinforcements. That’s especially true after losing Anthony Gordon and Richarlison in back-to-back windows.
They got the striker they desperately needed, landing Beto from Udinese. But elsewhere? Crickets. Their only other permanent signing was a 19-year-old striker Chermiti for $21m, while they added Ashley Young on a free transfer and Arnaut Danjuma and Jack Harrison on loans.
The list of players they were linked to but couldn’t buy was damning. Wilfried Gnonto from Leeds, Harrison Reed, Kamaldeen Sulemana and Maxwell Cornet – all players that had reported Everton bids rejected on deadline day.
Meanwhile, they sold Alex Iwobi (Fulham) and Tom Cannon (Leicester) for a combined total nearing £30m on the final day, but didn’t spend a cent as the hours ticked by and the window slammed shut. Neal Maupay also went back to Brentford on a loan with an option to buy, while Everton couldn’t find a buyer for midfielder Jean-Philippe Gbamin for even £5m, so ended up terminating his contract on deadline day. Meanwhile, Demarai Gray could still leave to Saudi Arabia this week.
They needed depth in defence and midfield. They got none of it. With a squad that’s weaker than last season, avoiding relegation will be extremely difficult. At least they’re spending money on their new stadium, since it’s clearly not going towards transfers.
Grade: E
Everton boss Sean Dyche didn’t’ get the signings he would have wanted. (Photo by George Wood/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
Fulham
Biggest signing: Alex Iwobi ($43m from Everton)
Biggest exit: Aleksandar Mitrovic ($87m to Al Hilal)
Total spent: $115m
It was a big overhaul for Fulham this window, though they made just one confirmed sale – star striker Mitrovic opting for a payday in Saudi Arabia. But they also made six free transfers, clearing plenty of space for arrivals. They opted to sign players with plenty of top-flight experience: Alex Iwobi from Everton on deadline day, Raul Jimenez and Adama Traore from Wolves, Timothy Castagne from Leicester. A gifted left-back in Fodé Ballo-Touré arrived extremely late on deadline day on loan from AC Milan with no option to buy. Effectively, Fulham upgraded the quality of their starting line-up, though they didn’t manage to add much depth. But their inability to sign a striker outside of Jimenez, who hasn’t got back to his best after a serious head injury, is a major concern. They’ll hope he can find his shooting boots again, and that their other forwards can pitch in with goals to help them stay up. Defender Tosin Adarabioyo had a move to Monaco fall through, while Joao Palhina had a deal with Bayern Munich collapse after he had travelled to Germany for a medical and even took photos with his new jersey!
Grade: C
Liverpool
Biggest signing: Dominik Szoboszlai ($117m from RB Leipzig)
Biggest exit: Fabinho ($79m to Al Ittihad)
Total spent: $287m
Liverpool was always expected to target midfield reinforcements this summer, although ahead of the transfer deadline it quickly became clear just how big a priority it would be.
That is what losing Jordan Henderson, James Milner, Naby Keita, Fabinho and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain does to you.
There were a few missed targets along the way, headlined by the failed pursuit for Caicedo as Chelsea broke the British transfer record to sign the 21-year-old from Brighton.
In the end though, Liverpool did end up addressing its glaring need in the midfield after signing Alexis Mac Allister and Dominik Szoboszlai, who Andy Robertson described as seamless fits at the club.
While Liverpool may have lost Fabinho after struggling to match the spending powers of Saudi Arabian club Al-Ittihad, the Reds may have picked up a bargain in Wataru Endo.
“He is a late bloomer,” Klopp said of the 30-year-old, who Liverpool signed from Stuttgart for around 19 million euros.
He is a late bloomer in his career and he was definitely underestimated for a long time,” Klopp said.
“It is clear he has improved every year since he was on the proper football screen. On the pitch, he turns into a real monster.”
Klopp tipped Endo to have a “similar impact” to Milner, who joined Brighton as a free agent.
Liverpool was not finished there either, later signing Netherlands midfielder Ryan Gravenberch from Bayern Munich before the deadline.
Speaking ahead of the deadline, Klopp said the team’s midfield is “completely new” after the summer signings which totalled £150 million.
“I think we have much more goal threat in midfield now but the workrate these guys put in, the stability they gave us was second-to-none and that is what we have to create as well,” Klopp added.
The Reds rejected a monster £150 million offer for Mohamed Salah to move to Saudi Arabia, but that country’s transfer window is still open for another few days. Al-Ittihad will reportedly return with a £200m bid – a staggering amount of money for anyone, let alone a 31-year-old – which will test Liverpool’s mettle. If they want to achieve a top four finish, they’ll need to keep the Egyptian superstar, especially with no chance to replace him with new signings now the Premier League window has slammed shut. Losing him could prove disastrous.
But with four new midfielders, Liverpool got the overhaul they badly needed – though it was 12 months too late.
Grade: A-
Szoboszlai is the big midfield signing Liverpool needed to make. (Photo by Matthias Hangst/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
Luton Town
Biggest signing: Ryan Giles ($10m from Wolves)
Biggest exit: Luke Freeman (released)
Total spent: $38m
Luton’s remarkable rise throughout he divisions in recent years has been founded on a sustainable transfer policy founded on young and affordable players who can develop at the club (and potentially earn large fees if sold on). They didn’t throw that strategy out despite having more cash to play with after their promotion to the top flight. The six signings with disclosed transfer fees each cost less than six million euros. Ryan Giles from Wolves is one of the steals of the season at just €5.85m, while they brought back Marvelous Nakamba after a season on loan from Aston Villa – his permanent deal a very smart piece of business at just €2.9m. They added experience in the form of veteran keeper Tim Krul, and former Everton and Chelsea player Ross Barkley on a free transfer. There’s plenty of potential in their young signings, particularly former Manchester United academy product Tahith Chong. But their midfield stocks at times haven’t looked up to Premier League standard, and Luton were keen to add another, only for a loan move for Newcastle midfielder Isaac Hayden to collapse. The newcomers spent pennies compared to plenty of their rivals, and quite simply might not have the quality to stay up. You have to respect their dedication to the squad-building approach that has served them well for so long – but they might come to regret not splashing just a little more cash.
Grade: C
Manchester City
Biggest signing: Josko Gvardiol ($151m from RB Leipzig)
Biggest exit: Riyad Mahrez ($59m to Al Ahli)
Total spent: $403m
The champions have done it again. Pep Guardiola was sad to lose Mahrez to Saudi Arabia, the winger having been a key member of his multiple title-winning team. But they replaced him well with 21-year-old Jeremy Doku from Stade Rennais in France – a sensational dribbler with a particular ability to get to the byline and cut the ball back, which seems a perfect fit for Erling Haaland. They added Josko Gvardiol in a bid-money deal to boost their centre defence, allowing them to offload Aymeric Laporte to Saudi Arabia. Mateo Kovacic came from Chelsea to boost their midfield after Ilkay Gundogan’s exit, but when superstar Kevin de Bruyne went down with a serious injury they responded swiftly to poach 25-year-old Matheus Nunes from Wolves. Their elite squad didn’t need too much, but City opted for quality over quantity and were happy to let players go as well – with Cole Palmer off to Chelsea for a more than handy €47m, and Joao Cancelo (Barcelona, loan) and Benjamin Mendy (Lorient) also out the door.
Grade: A+
Manchester United
Biggest signing: Rasmus Hojlund ($126m from Atalanta)
Biggest exit: Anthony Elanga ($29m to Nottingham Forest)
Total spent: $345m
It was a solid window for United after a rocky start. There was chaos as veteran keeper David de Gea was not handed a new contract – despite all indications pointing to a new deal for the Spaniard. He departed and Andre Onana was brought in, before United made a big statement by bringing in Chelsea midfielder Mason Mount and striker Atalanta striker Rasmus Hojlund for big money. Then they finally got the ball-playing midfielder they desperately needed by landing Fiorentina’s Sofyan Amrabat on deadline day – one of FOUR signings before the window closed. Amrabat starred for Morocco at the 2022 World Cup and should stop the Red Devils from being cut apart by opposition teams through the midfield channels. They added goalkeeper Altay Bayindir from Fenerbache, Tottenham left-back Sergio Reguilon on loan and free agent Jonny Evans on the final day, making it seven transfers in total and adding depth across the park.
Grade: B
Will Rasmus Hojlund be the Red Devils’ saviour up front? (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)Source: AFP
Newcastle United
Biggest signing: Sandro Tonali ($107m from AC Milan)
Biggest exit: Allan Saint-Maximin ($45m to Al Ahli)
Total spent: $257m
Midfielder Sandro Tonali arrived early in the window from AC Milan for a club-record £55m, and Newcastle didn’t slow down there. They picked up winger Harvey Barnes (£39m from Leicester), and a pair of fullbacks in Tino Livramento (£36m from Southampton) and Lewis Hall (loan from Chelsea). There’s plenty of depth in the squad now, which will be needed as they return to the Champions League for the first time in two decades. A brutal group draw in that competition will sorely test them. There are big questions, however, over their lack of a clinical striker – it burned them badly against Liverpool and could prove costly this campaign. Callum Wilson has plenty of experience in the top flight and Alexander Isak lots of promise, but Eddie Howe will need one or both to show more cutting edge in the box if Newcastle is to push on this season. Teen winger Yakuba Minteh is one for the future, but Newcastle could have done with some more depth in their back line. And they also saw a deal collapse for exiled player Isaac Hayden to leave on loan to Luton Town.
Grade: B
Nottingham Forest
Biggest signing: Ibrahim Sangare ($59m from PSV)
Biggest exit: Brennan Johnson ($93m to Tottenham)
Total spent: $203m
Forest went wild on deadline day, signing a whopping seven players – including plenty that were announced after the 11pm closing of the transfer window. The highlight was Chelsea winger Callum Hudson-Odoi for an absolute bargain fee under £5m – especially when you consider the Blues once rejected a £70m offer for the 22-year-old.
Selling Brennan Johnson was never what Forest wanted, but they held out for a sizeable fee nearing £50m and used that cash very wisely to overhaul the squad and provide plenty of depth and balance around the park.
Former Liverpool striker Divock Origi returns to the Premier League on loan with an option to buy from AC Milan, while their deadline day moves included a fullback, a midfielder, and a strong keeper, in addition to their earlier signings. Anthony Elanga at 21 years old is another gifted attacker that could easily rise in re-sell value, like Hudson-Odoi, while they picked up a veteran attacker in Chris Wood who has already delivered in the scoring department. With a balance of youth and experience in their signings, they made the most of the money they received and traded one extremely good player for a host of valuable signings.
One to watch will definitely be Ibrahim Sangare, a defensive midfielder who always looks for a long ball – which could be perfect to feed their quick new wingers on the counter-attack. He was linked to Bayern Munich earlier in the window and is a massive deadline-day coup for Forest.
Grade: A+
Steve Cooper has overseen yet another big transfer window at Nottingham Forest. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)Source: AFP
Sheffield United
Biggest signing: Cameron Archer ($35m from Aston Villa)
Biggest exit: Iliman Ndiaye ($28m to Marseille)
Total spent: $107m
The Blades always deliver solid signings for reasonable prices – and this time they went fishing across Europe for bargains. They picked up players from Sweden, Denmark, and Belgium, before bagging a big name in Villa’s gifted striker Cameron Archer. Losing Iliman Ndiaye and Sander Berge was a blow, especially the latter’s grit in the midfield, but Sheffield United did well to add Gustavo Hamer from Coventry City in the Championship. The 26-year-old is a defensive-minded midfield warrior but has already delivered a Premier League goal and has started the new season well. They’ll need 21-year-old Archer to find his feet, as well as their other young signings (average age 22.6). But there’s plenty of room for optimism, and the Blades did it all on a shoestring budget.
Grade: B
Tottenham Hotspur
Biggest signing: Brennan Johnson ($92m from Nottingham Forest)
Biggest exit: Harry Kane ($168m to Bayern Munich)
Total spent: $415m.
James Maddison might have seemed expensive at $77m, but his creativity in midfield has revolutionised Spurs and he might just end up being one of the signings of the season. Spurs have undergone a rebuild under Ange Postecoglou, but by far the biggest move was the departure of England captain Harry Kane – the will-he-won’t-he drama finally coming to an end this year. It pocketed Spurs a heap of cash, which they spread around on a number of players, with nine arrivals in all. Brennan Johnson came in late, the Nottingham Forest attacker perfectly fitting the mould of a versatile Postecoglou forward that can play anywhere across the front line. There are some areas where Spurs are lacking, though. Postecoglou wanted another centre-back or two after the arrival of Micky van de Ven but didn’t get them, especially with the club unable to offload a couple of defenders. And there’s a lack of creative depth if Maddison cops an injury – besides Giovani Lo Celso, there’s not much playmaking or creative incision. And there was also a failure to ship out Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg, who rejected a move to Fulham. It looked like a move could happen on deadline day, but Spanish side Atletico Madrid was only looking for a loan deal while Spurs wanted a permanent buyer. Their failure to sell may have stopped them from sealing a move for Chelsea’s Conor Gallagher. Spurs reportedly tabled an offer of £40m for the midfielder, but couldn’t convince the Blues to sell. Nevertheless, a new back-line, more depth in midfield, and an attacker is a solid return – though it doesn’t quite mask the hole in attack left by Kane’s exit.
Grade: B+
James Maddison has adapted quickly to life at Tottenham. (Photo by Luke Walker/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images
West Ham United
Biggest signing: Mohammed Kudus ($72m from Ajax)
Biggest exit: Declan Rice ($195m to Arsenal)
Total spent: $230m
Manager David Moyes called it a ‘difficult’ transfer window, which sums things up nicely. They were always going to lose Declan Rice, but got plenty of money for their star man. The problem was signing the players that they wanted!
It started well as they brought in Edson Alvarez and James Ward-Prowse as well as the exceptional Kudus, but were frustrated in their attempts to sign a striker after selling Gianluca Scamacca to Atalanta.
Negotiations failed over a deal for Corinthians striker Yuri Alberto, as well as Sevilla over Youssef En-Nesyri and Paris Saint-Germain over Hugo Ekitike. They also saw Juventus reject a move for wing-back Filip Kostic, who chose the Italian club over West Ham a year ago but fell down the pecking order.
With hopes high that they would land a striker and Kostic on deadline day, it ended in frustration. But they ended up with a profit, and they’re top of the table with a nice European trophy in their cabinet already this season. It could be worse!
Grade: C+
Wolves
Biggest signing: Matheus Cunha ($84m from Atletico Madrid, loan made permanent)
Biggest exit: Matheus Nunes ($101m to Manchester City)
Total spent: $157m
Wolves were a club in crisis when the window opened, stricken by huge losses (and transfer spending) over the last two seasons that left them desperately needing to sell players to balance their books.
So bad was the situation that manager Julen Lopetegui left the club just days before the start of the season, frustrated that he was blocked from signing any players to add to a squad that he believed was not capable of survival.
It was all about the departures this window – midfield star Ruben Neves to Saudi Arabia, defender Nathan Collins to Brentford, and then midfielder Matheus Nunes to the champions on deadline day for £52m. They also offloaded Conor Coady, Raúl Jiménez and Ryan Giles to name a few.
In one sense, Wolves will be very happy at the money they raked in. But the players they signed as replacements – all for cheap – are clearly a class below the stars they let go.
They made January’s loan arrival Matheus Cunha into a permanent move for €50m, but that deal had already been effectively locked in last window.
Luckily, they managed to pick up a midfielder in Jean-Ricner Bellegarde from Strasbourg on the final day, their second midfield arrival from the French league this window after bagging Boubacar Traoré earlier. Santiago Bueno, a centre-back, arrived from Girona on yet another cut-price deal.
Financially, this window was much-needed for Wolves. But they must feel like they’ve been absolutely gutted of their top talent.
Leandro Trossard inspired Arsenal as the Premier League leaders restored their five-point lead.
Erling Haaland hasn’t given up hope that Manchester City can catch the Gunners, while Liverpool are back to square one after a dismal defeat at Bournemouth.
Meanwhile, Chelsea are bouncing back – and likely saving Graham Potter’s job, while there was plenty of refereeing controversy across the weekend.
Here’s the biggest Premier League Talking Points!
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Gunners go wild at the Cottage | 00:43
TROSSARD ALREADY AN ARSENAL BARGAIN
If Arsenal lift their first Premier League title since 2004, the £21 million ($38m AUD) invested in signing Leandro Trossard will prove one of the bargains of the season.
Trossard already looks a shrewd acquisition by Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta after his three assists inspired Sunday’s 3-0 win at Fulham.
Arsenal only swooped for the Belgium forward after their bid for Shakhtar Donetsk’s Mykhailo Mudryk was usurped by a bigger last-minute offer from Chelsea.
But, while Mudryk is still adapting to the Premier League, Trossard has hit the ground running at Arsenal after four years’ experience of English football with Brighton.
The 28-year-old’s latest display of creativity and intelligence paved the way for the Gunners to record a fifth successive league victory and move them a step closer to the title.
With 11 games left, Arsenal have a five-point lead over second placed Manchester City and Trossard was happy to play his part.
“A perfect win for us. I’m really happy with it. I always try to contribute. Today it went my way,” he said.
“Same as last week. Eleven finals for us. We’ll take it game by game. Today we did a great game.”
Arteta was full of praise for the star man, saying: “He got three assists and could have scored two. I think he was really impressive.
“Not only that, he had an injury three days ago which could have taken a week, or another 10 days, but he was really willing to come back early and the doctors and medical staff did a lot of good work.
“It makes a big difference in the team. We needed him today and his contribution was superb.”
Gabriel Jesus also made a welcome return from injury off the bench, and will play a crucial role in their title bid. But Trossard has helped to lift Arsenal in Jesus’s absence – showing that they won’t be overly reliant on the Brazilian moving forward.
Premier League wrap: Reds stumble | 03:38
‘NOTHING IS DECIDED’: DEFIANT HAALAND EXPECTS CITY CHARGE
Erling Haaland has warned Arsenal that Manchester City still believe they can win a fifth Premier League title in the last six seasons.
Haaland scored the second half penalty that sealed a gritty 1-0 win at Crystal Palace on Saturday, briefly moving the champions within two points of Arsenal.
Although Arsenal reopened their five-point advantage less than 24 hours later, the City striker is convinced there will be more twists before the title race is decided.
Pep Guardiola’s side face a crucial clash with Arsenal at the Etihad Stadium on April 26.
And Haaland is determined to ensure his debut season in English football, which has so far produced 34 goals for the Norwegian in all competitions, ends on a high note.
“With this gap, we just have to focus on ourselves,” he said. “We have them (Arsenal) at home and a lot of games left to play still.
“Nothing is decided yet. This is England. This is what I’ve been watching my entire life.
“I enjoy every single second of it. It’s good to be in the middle of it.”
Bournemouth deliver huge upset over Reds | 01:37
LIVERPOOL’S ‘UNACCEPTABLE’ PROBLEM
Trent Alexander-Arnold admitted Liverpool did not play with enough desire during their miserable 1-0 defeat at lowly Bournemouth on Saturday.
Philip Billing’s first-half goal punished sloppy Liverpool defending as the Reds crashed back down to earth after last weekend’s historic 7-0 rout of arch rivals Manchester United.
Mohamed Salah missed a second-half penalty to compound Liverpool’s frustration against a team who started the day at the bottom of the table.
Jurgen Klopp’s men have dropped to sixth place, six points behind fourth placed Tottenham, and right back Alexander-Arnold was concerned with the lethargic way Liverpool approached a key contest.
“This is the time of the season when everyone knows what they are fighting for and obviously Bournemouth are in a relegation battle,” he said.
“They are fighting for survival. But every team in the league is fighting for something.
“I think looking back on it now, they probably wanted it more than us and that is something that is unacceptable and we need to make sure this kind of thing doesn’t happen again.”
Sam Kerr dinks the keeper with cute chip | 00:33
RELIEF FOR CHELSEA … BUT ‘NOT GETTING CARRIED AWAY’
The pressure is finally easing on Chelsea manager Graham Potter after the club claimed three-straight wins in the space of a week, shaking off a dismal run of just one win in 11 prior matches.
The Blues beat Leicester 3-1 and had another two goals ruled out for off-side, with their finishing the crucial difference over the misfiring Foxes.
Potter said after the team’s Champions League win over Borussia Dortmund midweek: “Has the weight been lifted off my shoulders? Yes, in some ways.”
But, he said, “I’m not getting carried away.”
Chelsea’s top four dream still seems improbable – they are 11 points behind fourth-placed Tottenham, albeit with a game in hand.
But there are plenty of reasons for optimism. Premier League record signing Enzo Fernandez continues to develop into the midfield superstar that Chelsea believed he could be, bagging a brilliant assist for Kai Havertz to score a goal of the season contender.
Mykhailo Mudryk added his first assist against the Foxes, with the Ukrainian winger finally finding his feet after a slow start at the club – and even showing positive signs when shifted to a central striking role.
Potter said: “He’s a young player that hasn’t that much experience, so each game he’ll get better and better. Mykhailo’s attitude is fantastic, I love his approach.”
Mudryk celebrates a goal that was subsequently ruled out for off-side – but his improvement is a very positive sign.Source: Getty Images
In another positive sign, Chelsea showed adaptability during the game, with Potter expertly reshaping the team mid-match. He started with three at the back, then shifted to 5-3-2 at halftime before moving to a back four in the final 20 minutes. The bold decision to bring off Joao Felix at halftime was crucial, with Conor Gallagher helping to stifle James Maddison’s influence in the middle of the park.
There’ll be no getting carried away at Stamford Bridge, but with struggling Everton this weekend, the opportunity for further improvement is clear.
Ten Hag hammers refs over Casemiro red | 01:54
REFEREE DRAMA STRIKES AGAIN AND AGAIN
It was a weekend full of refereeing controversy.
Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag was furious after Casemiro’s yellow card for a wayward tackle on Southampton’s Carlos Alcaraz was upgraded to a red card after a review on the pitch-side VAR monitor.
“Casemiro played over 500 games in Europe and never once got a red card. Now he has two in the Premier League,” United manager Erik ten Hag said. “His absence is not the issue. We will deal with that. This game was influenced by the referee.”
Ten Hag was also upset at missed penalty calls in United’s draw with the bottom-placed Saints.
“Well, what I think is the inconsistency (means) players don’t know any more what is the policy,” Ten Hag said.
“I think it’s all across. I mean, you see yesterday, Leicester-Chelsea, then VAR is not coming on the line.
“Today it’s coming on the line and then it’s two penalty situations, but they don’t come on the line.
“I think especially the first one was for me clear and obvious handball, so what is the policy?”
Slater: Erik ten Hag ‘has a valid point’ | 06:00
Wolves manager Julen Lopetegui was furious after being denied a ‘very clear penalty’ in their 2-1 loss to Newcastle. When the game was still goalless, Newcastle keeper Nick Pope bodychecked Raul Jimenez – but was not given a penalty and red card by referee Andrew Madley, who was a significant distance away. He was not even instructed to review the video footage.
“For me it is a very clear penalty for us,” Lopetegui told Sky Sports.
“We are very unlucky with the referees. We were very unlucky in [the FA Cup match at] Liverpool and today too. It is a pity for us.”
Sky Sports’ Jamie Redknapp said: “Pope is incredibly lucky …
“It’s no doubt it’s a foul. And because he’s not trying to play the ball it would be a penalty, a red card and a ban for him. That’s how important this decision was … What a big mistake.”
Aston Villa coach Unai Emery was also frustrated after his side drew 1-1 with West Ham, with the Hammers rescuing a draw thanks to Said Benrahma’s penalty. West Ham’s Lucas Paqueta went down under minimal contact from Villa’s Leon Bailey.
Emery said: “I watched it and I respect the referees 100 per cent. But my opinion today is that it is a very soft penalty.”
There is always refereeing drama, but this week was simply next level.