Monday, October 31, 2016

Stoke City 1-1 Swansea City: Live score and goal updates as Wayne Routledge cancels out Wilfried Bony

Good evening and welcome to Mirror Football's live blog ahead of this evening's Premier League clash between Stoke City and Swansea City.

Here, we'll have all the build-up to the game as well as analysis of the weekend's action from Jamie Carragher and Thierry Henry, courtesy of Sky Sports' Monday Night Football, and, of course, minute-by-minute updates from the match itself.

Stay tuned!

Key Events So Far

  • GOOOALLLL!!! SWANSEA ARE LEVEL! What a start at the Britanni...
  • GOOOOAAALLLLLL!! BONY PUTS STOKE AHEAD! Well, it just had to...
  • Mark Hughes speaks ahead of the match
  • Bob Bradley speaks ahead of tonight's match
  • Starting XIs confirmed
Load the latest update Load the latest update
46 mins Minute by minute

We’re off! Stoke have got proceedings up and running in the second half.

Minute by minute

A lively affair then so far at the Britannia, but both sides have just lacked that little bit of extra quality in the final third so far to make the most of their chances.

Minute by minute

HALF-TIME! We’re level at the interval, then, as Wayne Routledge’s 7th-minute header cancelled out Wilfired Bony’s first Stoke goal. Swansea have looked threatening since restoring parity, though it is the hosts who should have re-taken the lead - Charlie Adam having hit the post twice before Marko Arnautovic also rattled the woodwork. 

45+3 mins Minute by minute

A final chance for Stoke as Adam floats in a free-kick, but it comes to nothing as Mawson hacks the cross clear.

Stats

Overall Possession Ratio

  • StokeKey color for Stoke
  • SwanseaKey color for Swansea

Possession

Live update
Stoke City's Ramadan Sobhi comes on as a substitute to replace Xherdan Shaqiri
45+1 mins Minute by minute

We’re into the first minute of three added on now at the Britannia.

43 mins Minute by minute

GREAT SAVE! Top-class play from Llorente, who tees Routledge up with a fantastic knock-down. Boosted by his earlier goal, the winger tries his luck with a venomous half-volley, but Grant reacts instinctively to tip it wide.

41 mins Substitution

Swansea are forced into a change now, as Kyle Naughton has to make way after picking up a knock. His replacement is Angel Rangel.

39 mins Minute by minute

STOKE HIT THE POST AGAIN! How close can you get!? For a third time this evening, the hosts have rattled the woodwork. It’s a brilliant move from Hughes’ side - Sobhi playing in Allen, who in turn slides a delightful pass into Arnautovic. The Austria winger does almost everything right, taking it round Fabianksi before drilling a strike goalwards, but he is denied by the foot of the post.

37 mins Minute by minute

A hefty collision leaves Barrow temporarily winded, but the Swansea winger returns to his feet quickly enough. Moments later, Bony scythes Fer down with a late challenge, though he escapes a booking.

34 mins Minute by minute

ADAM HITS THE POST! Again, the Stoke midfielder goes agonisingly close to restoring the home side’s advantage, this time clattering a curling effort against the top of the left-hand upright. So unlucky!

Live update
Marko Arnautovic controls the ball as Kyle Naughton watches on
32 mins Minute by minute

STAT - Stoke have never lost at home to Swansea City in the Premier League (W3 D2), and the Welsh side’s only top-flight victory at Stoke came in October 1981.

Stats

Overall Possession Ratio

  • StokeKey color for Stoke
  • SwanseaKey color for Swansea

Possession

30 mins Minute by minute

Swansea are in control at the moment, and again carve open Stoke's midfield with a neat passing move. The ball is eventually worked into Sigurdsson, but his effort drops kindly into the arms of Grant.

28 mins Minute by minute

Although Shaqiri had been on the fringes of this game so far, his departure will represent a boost to Swansea, though of course their defence now has the somewhat unknown quantity of Sobhi to deal with.

26 mins Substitution

Indeed, the hosts have now made that enforced change. Shaqiri goes off, and is replaced by promising Egyptian youngster Ramadan Sobhi.

25 mins Minute by minute

A real blow now for Stoke, as it appears that Shaqiri - who has already matched his three-goal haul from last season this term - will not be able to carry on. As I type, Sigurdsson’s strike is deflected wide by Martins-Indi.

24 mins Minute by minute

Taylor is fortunate to escape a yellow card, here, after he dived in late on Bardsley. Michael Oliver has done the Wales defender a favour there.

22 mins Minute by minute

POST! That’s so close to a second for Stoke. Naughton falls asleep down the right, allowing Arnautovic to nip in and tee up Adam. The Scotsman’s strike is superb, but it rattles off the outside of the woodwork.

Live update
Wayne Routledge scored the equaliser for the visitors
Wayne Routledge celebrates scoring
20 mins Minute by minute

That early goal seems to have revitalised Bony, who has put in a dynamic and energetic display so far. However, the game has just settled into a bit of a lull now following that whirlwind start.

Live update
Swansea City manager Bob Bradley looks on
18 mins Minute by minute

Again, Sigurdsson gets free in the final third and, once more, he attempts to pick out a teammate with a looping cross. This time, however, the delivery is a poor one, and Grant is able to gather it in.

16 mins Minute by minute

Great work from Allen who - after initially conceding possession with an unusually slack pass - recovers excellently to prevent Swansea countering.

Stats

Overall Possession Ratio

  • StokeKey color for Stoke
  • SwanseaKey color for Swansea

Possession

14 mins Minute by minute

STAT - Since leaving Swansea, Bony has scored more PL goals against his former club - more than he has against any other side (3).

12 mins Minute by minute

Stoke have reacted well to Swansea’s equaliser, but the visitors look a real threat on the counter, with Barrow’s pace causing the home side some issues down the right. 

Live update
Wilfried Bony scored Stoke's opening goal

Stoke boss Mark Hughes admits he feared Joe Allen would sign for Swansea over the Potters

Mark Hughes admits he feared Joe Allen might have been lining up for Swansea on Monday night rather than Stoke.

Hughes was worried Allen might let his heart rule his head when Stoke were battling Swansea to sign him in the summer.

Swansea made the early running in the race to sign Allen from Liverpool and Hughes was concerned he would want to return to his former club because he is from South Wales.

But Allen opted for Stoke once Liverpool accepted their 13million offer and Hughes feels he was impressed when he faced the Potters in last season’s Capital One Cup semi-finals.

“We were in the mix with, I think Swansea were flagged up as one of the main ones,” said the Stoke boss.

The Welshman has made a flying start to life at the Britannia
Stoke City manager Mark Hughes
Hughes admits he feared Allen would join Swansea over the summer

“They came out clearly and said they were interested in taking Joe back. We were a little bit worried about that emotional tie that he might have had with his previous club because he had a great time there.

“But I sensed very quickly once we had the opportunity to speak to Joe that his motivation was to get back to playing week in, week out and he had seen us first hand in terms of an opposition team.

“We had impressed him, certainly in the League Cup semi-final, which was one of the few games he played under Jurgen Klopp initially, although he came back into his thinking towards the end of the season.

“He saw how well we played at Anfield when we beat them - although we went out of the competition on penalties - and he saw the quality of the players we had.

“When we had the conversation and we made it known that we would love him to come and be part of what we were doing, he remembered that night and could see how he could fit in.”

Swansea City manager Bob Bradley
Bob Bradley will take charge of his third Swansea game against Stoke

Hughes could not be more pleased with Allen and his compatriot is Stoke’s top scorer with four in his nine Premier League games.

“We’ve been delighted with what he’s produced,” said Hughes. “He’s not only a technically gifted and very talented player, he’s added goals.

“That’s a bonus because we didn’t anticipate that, and his demeanour and his personality have added to the group as well.

“We feel very fortunate that he decided we were the right option for him. Sometimes with transfers, you’re the right club at the right time for the right player and I think that’s what happened with Joe.

“He could have maybe taken an easier option to go back to Swansea because it’s an area you know and a club he knows, but he took a leap of faith with us and I think he’s benefited from that decision - and so are we.”

Sunday, October 30, 2016

Why Alexis Sanchez's Arsenal goal against Sunderland was OFFICIALLY the best team goal of the season

Break out the bubbly, Arsenal fans. We can confirm you are top of the Premier League table.

Not the ACTUAL Premier League table, granted (pesky goal difference). But while the table that is based purely on points has you in second, we can reveal you are top when it comes to the next most important thing.

Scoring pretty goals.

Everyone knows Arsene Wenger's Arsenal have always put great importance on goals built on passing football. That's why the build-up to Alexis Sanchez's opener in the 4-1 __win at Sunderland will have brought a big smile to the Frenchman's face.

Arsenal celebrate some seriously sexy team play

Arsenal played a massive 22 passes in the move that led to Sanchez heading them in front at the Stadium of Light.

And that is the most for a Premier League goal this season - meaning the Sanchez goal had the longest, most patient build-up of any goal in the 2016/17 top flight.

Here's the top five for passing build-ups…

Alexis Sanchez vs Sunderland, 29 October - 22 passes

Romelu Lukaku vs Sunderland, 12 September - 21 passes

Philippe Coutinho vs Arsenal, 14 August - 19 passes

Philippe Coutinho of Liverpool celebrates scoring his free kick

Juan Mata vs Leicester, 24 September - 18 passes

Junior Stanislas vs Hull, 15 October - 17 passes

Bournemouth

Unfortunately for Arsenal fans, the build-up to the Sanchez goal was some way off top spot on the all-time Premier League list…

…a list headed by a TOTTENHAM goal. Nacer Chadli's goal against QPR on 24 August 2014 saw Spurs string together 48 passes before the finish.

Nacer Chadli scores his sides first goal agasint QPR
Nacer Chadli scores his sides first goal agasint QPR

FORTY-EIGHT!

Sorry, Gooners…

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Sunderland are suffering 'death by a thousand cuts', says former Black Cats chairman Niall Quinn

Niall Quinn has launched a scathing attack on David Moyes’ Sunderland claimed the club is suffering “death by a thousand cuts”.

The former striker and club chairman criticised Moyes’ tactics, defence and the lack of leadership in his side, admitting they “look doomed”.

The defeat to Arsenal means the Wearsiders have the worst start in Premier League history beating the Manchester City side of 1995/96 – two points and a goal difference of minus 13.

Three Arsenal goals in under seven minutes in the second half finished Sunderland – to leave Moyes in despair, and Quinn scathing in his verdict.

“The way this team is going now it feels like death by a thousand cuts the way they’re playing,” Quinn raged.

Alexis Sanchez celebrates scoring his side
Alexis Sanchez scored a brace against Sunderland on Saturday...
Olivier Giroud of Arsenal heads to score his team
...as did Olivier Giroud

“Most people would think they’re doomed. There’s a lot of soul-searching for them to do.

“I think they need to revert to the sort of game that Sam Allardyce had going on here, where they had a more direct game that the players were comfortable with.

“They looked lost at times trying to do the pass and movement.

“They’ve got to something radical and different now.

“I just don’t think they’re confident enough to play the passing game that David Moyes wants them to play.”

In pictures: Sunderland 1-4 Arsenal

VIEW GALLERY

Moyes only took over in the summer but already his reign looks in serious danger, but he vowed to fight on, saying: “I am experienced. I’ve not quite had this before, but I will keep doing what I do.

“I’m really disappointed. We are disappointed to lose four goals. I don’t think we didn’t deserve that. The mood is disappointing.

“I didn’t think we collapsed. We lost to quality goals. The ability to bring Giroud off the bench. Arsenal are good at cutting through you.”

Goals from sub Olivier Giroud with his first two touches and two from Alexis Sanchez demolished the home side who were briefly level after Jermain Defoe’s penalty.

Quinn also laid into the attitiude of the Black Cats players.

Watch in full: Arsene Wenger speaks after 4-1   over Sunderland
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Moyes is under increasing pressure on Wearside

He added: “There was a curious incident in my mind (when the goal went in) Jermain celebrated, Watmore tapped him but they all went back to the half-way line sheepishly, the other players went back sheepishly.

“I’m looking for leadership there, I’m looking for other players doing that. I’m looking for the two centre-halves to say ‘Right, you lot we’re pushing on here, we’re looking for the winner.

"What happens? Giroud comes on and scores because there is no leadership and nothing there to suggest they can play the type of football David Moyes wants them to play.”

Quinn hammered the defence of Lamine Kone and Papy Djilobodji, saying: “They had no sense of danger and worse than that, they had no pride in their leadership.

“David Moyes will get criticism. There will be lots of criticism flying about but without that spirit that Sunderland teams have had, they are nothing.”

I was worried missed chances would cost us – Wenger

Arsene Wenger Arsenal

Arsene Wenger hailed Arsenal’s victory over Sunderland as an “important result” but was worried they were going to lose after missing a host of chances.

The Gunners eased past the Black Cats 4-1 thanks to braces from Alexis Sanchez and substitute Oliver Giroud but they did suffer a scare when Jermain Defoe had leveled __with 25 minutes left on the clock.

But two quick-fire goals from Giroud and another from Sanchez rescued Arsenal and Wenger was relieved to leave the Stadium of Light __with all three points.

“It was a mental test when we were at 1-1. We missed so many chances, so many opportunities and I was worried we could lose, but we have shown great strength to bounce back,” Wenger told the BBC after the match.

Long way to go, plenty more hard work to be done… but it's nice to see this

To quote @MustafiOfficial, 🔙🔛🔝 – for a little while at least pic.twitter.com/rnOd0LEBRw

— Arsenal FC (@Arsenal) October 29, 2016

“In the Premier League at 1-1 you can lose the game but it was how we respond. Do we panic, give up, feel sorry for ourselves? We responded well and in the end it was a comfortable win.

“It was an important result for us. We had six wins, then one draw at home which was disappointing and a second draw or defeat would have been like we had dropped our level.”

On substitute Giroud, Wenger added: “The manager has an easy credit when he has quality players on the bench and you don’t need to be a special manager to make this decision. It was 1-1 and we had Giroud on the bench.”

Man United 0-0 Burnley: 37 shots, no goals

Manchester United Burnley

Jose Mourinho cut a frustrated figure in the stands as Manchester United failed to turn supremacy into victory, __with Tom Heaton’s man-of-the-match display helping Burnley sneak a goalless draw at his former club.

United bounced back from the humiliation at Chelsea __with a timely midweek EFL Cup derby win against Manchester City, but hopes of a follow-up victory in the Premier League were thwarted by an in-form academy graduate.

Heaton left United six years ago without a first-team appearance to his name and the 30-year-old returned to haunt United on Saturday, producing a stunning display in the Burnley goal as a pulsating match ended 0-0.

But it is likely as much of the post-match talk will revolve around referee Mark Clattenburg as the Clarets goalkeeper after giving Ander Herrera a harsh-looking second booking having already appeared to send off Mourinho.

The United boss was furious not to be awarded a penalty after a Jon Flanagan challenge on Matteo Darmian late just before half-time, from which he returned in the stands rather than the dugout.

Mourinho’s mood is likely to have darkened further as, despite a swathe of attacks, Sean Dyche’s side held firm for their first away point of the season.

FT: #MUFC 0 Burnley 0. Only a point for the 10-man Reds, despite dominating from start to finish. #MUNBUR pic.twitter.com/sVQZ2lNk69

— Manchester United (@ManUtd) October 29, 2016

It was a thoroughly entertaining draw that Antonio Valencia was forced to miss, spending his Saturday afternoon in an operating theatre after sustaining a fractured arm.

Few could have foreseen this match ending goalless when Zlatan Ibrahimovic got away United’s first shot after 24 seconds, with Paul Pogba and Juan Mata following up with efforts of their own during a promising opening.

Ibrahimovic volleyed over before an attempt to direct home was denied by Heaton, with stand-in captain Mata seeing an attempt pushed wide.

Andre Gray, Sam Vokes and United academy graduate Michael Keane tried their luck when Burnley attacked, before Johann Berg Gudmundsson met a loose ball with a well-hit volley straight at David de Gea.

The chances were not as clear-cut as those United mustered in the final minutes of the opening period, with Ben Mee forced to block after Ibrahimovic got away a shot following a lovely one-two with Pogba.

The pressure did not stop there as Jesse Lingard brought a wonderful one-handed save out of Heaton, who then tipped a fizzing Pogba strike over the bar.

Mourinho was incandescent not to have the chance to face him from the spot as Darmian went down under pressure from Flanagan, introduced minutes earlier following an injury to Stephen Ward.

Such anger is reported to have led the United boss to watching the second half from the stands, hopping around seats near the bench before settling on the directors’ box.

As Mourinho got comfortable in his new vantage point Luke Shaw got back superbly to deny Gray and Scott Arfield wasted a glorious chance, but United were now laying siege to Burnley’s goal.

6 – Zlatan Ibrahimovic has gone six league games without scoring for the first time since December 2007 with Inter Milan. Deflated.

— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) October 29, 2016

Heaton’s inspired afternoon continued as Mata was denied a similar goal to Wednesday’s against City, before handball appeals against Keane falling on deaf ears as the hosts continued to press.

United, whose manager was passing notes down to the bench, were denied once more in the 61st minute, with Burnley’s goalkeeper spreading himself superbly to stop an acrobatic Ibrahimovic strike.

Mata saw a snapshot come back off the post and Ibrahimovic’s looping header hit the crossbar, before United’s challenge was made all the more difficult.

Herrera, booked in the first half for a challenge on Dean Marney, was given a second yellow for catching the Burnley midfielder again – a harsh-looking decision considering the Spaniard seemed to slip.

Referee Clattenburg was finding himself under scrutiny as tempers frayed, with Ashley Barnes and Darmian claiming penalties at opposite ends, before Marouane Fellaini and Wayne Rooney were introduced.

Barnes came close for Burnley but the Reds kept pushing for a winner, with Pogba seeing an attempt hacked clear before Daley Blind’s drive was deflected just over.

Shaw curled just wide and Ibrahimovic just could not get on the end of a far-post cross, with Rooney firing over from a stoppage-time free-kick routine.

Football365’s Big Weekend: The watcher

Christian Benteke

Game to watch – Chelsea v Southampton
The two sides endured and enjoyed differing fates in the EFL Cup in midweek, but both Chelsea and Southampton will turn their attentions back to the Premier League on Sunday, __with both in excellent form.

A 2-1 defeat to West Ham was the smallest of flies in Antonio Conte’s ointment, the Italian having remedied Chelsea’s form __with a simple tactical switch. Playing three central defenders has brought out the best in David Luiz, Victor Moses, Marcos Alonso, N’Golo Kante and Eden Hazard. Each individual impressed in the 4-0 victory over Manchester United, which lifted the Blues to fourth, and just one point off the Premier League summit. Chelsea have scored nine goals in three league games since changing formation, and have not conceded once.

Southampton’s form has been rather less pronounced – there have been no highs as high as a 4-0 win over Manchester United, and no lows as low as a 3-0 defeat to Arsenal – but they are quietly impressing. Victory over Sunderland secured progression to the EFL Cup quarter-final, but they have also not lost in five Premier League games. Only Tottenham, Liverpool and Arsenal can boast better recent records; they all reside in the top five.

There are a number of intriguing back stories to Sunday afternoon’s game at St Mary’s. John Terry will surely be relegated to the bench, with the prospect of facing Nathan Redmond enough to scare any man who isn’t 35, recovering from injury and constantly running through treacle. Nathaniel Chalobah could start, having impressed recently. If so, he will line up against Oriol Romeu, who has a point to prove against his former employers. His battle with Kante pits two of the league’s in-form players against one another.

Both clubs will also have different managers in the dugout to those who oversaw Chelsea’s 2-1 win in the corresponding fixture in February. Let’s hope Claude Puel doesn’t have to have a quiet word in Antonio Conte’s ear about his touchline antics.

Player to watch – Christian Benteke
One would have forgiven Christian Benteke for harbouring some degree of ill feeling and resentment towards Liverpool. The Belgian’s form for Aston Villa had earned him his step up the ladder to Anfield for £32.5million in the summer of 2015, but his spell was doomed from the beginning. Brendan Rodgers did not know how to use him; Jurgen Klopp had no intention of using him at all. The dream was over, and a step back down said ladder to Crystal Palace was the result.

But Benteke looks upon his time at the club in a positive light. “I don’t see my time there as a failure,” he said in August. “When I signed there was another coach and with him it might have turned out differently. I did not fit the tactical system of the new coach. That was not easy mentally because I was left to fight a losing battle. But I must not look for excuses. I could also have done better in those few minutes I got. I have not performed as expected.”

It was a refreshingly reflective and self-critical outlook, but the Belgian will surely be looking to prove a point on Saturday. Liverpool travel to Selhurst Park in Saturday’s evening kick-off, and the focus will be on how Benteke performs at his new club – a club happy to sign a player who suits their tactical system perfectly.

Palace’s approach on Saturday is no secret, and Benteke is integral to Alan Pardew’s system. Flanked by the wing wizardry of Wilfried Zaha and Andros Townsend, he will be relied upon to provide a physical threat in the area. The battle with Joel Matip is as intriguing as it will be bruising. The statistics are simple, and worrying for the visitors:

* Palace have won 20.8 aerial battles per game this season – more than any other Premier League side. Liverpool win just 14.6.

* No player has won more aerial battles than Benteke (64), this despite the striker only playing seven games. Dejan Lovren (28) ranks highest for Liverpool.

* Two Palace players (Jason Puncheon, 24, and Andros Townsend, 18) rank in the top ten for most accurate crosses. Puncheon has completed more than any other player.

* The hosts at Selhurst Park have scored four goals from set-pieces – only West Brom (six) have scored more.

* Only Swansea (18) have conceded more league goals from set-pieces than Liverpool (17) since Klopp was appointed.

Klopp might “lose respect” for people who highlight his side’s deficiencies when it comes to defending corners and free-kicks, but those critics will only disappear with Liverpool’s struggles0. Benteke scored the winner when these two sides last met; he will hope to do the same on Saturday.

Team to watch – Arsenal
In terms of presents, it was as annoying and tiresome as the pair of socks from your grandmother, and as predictable as the Lynx gift set from the weird uncle you never see. Arsene Wenger celebrated his 67th birthday on Saturday in the kind of mood that he and Arsenal fans have grown accustomed to: Frustrated.

The pessimistic view is that Arsenal were fortunate to even draw against Middlesbrough, who really ought to have won. The optimistic view is that, in any other season, it is a game the Gunners would likely have lost. Considering the disaster it was portrayed as by many, it is easy to forget that only goal difference separates Arsenal and Premier League leaders Manchester City – a club who are struggling to a far greater degree. Drawing with Aitor Karanka’s promoted side was not a positive result, but each of their main rivals have stumbled against a supposedly inferior opponent too.

And yet, that should not offset just how poor Arsenal were at the Emirates Stadium. The absence of Santi Cazorla hurt them far more than it should, with the Spaniard’s calming presence in the centre of midfield sorely missed. The nature of the draw – Middlesbrough had more shots (11 to ten) and contained the hosts with ease – was worrying.

Against Burnley earlier this month, Wenger and his players found an answer. It was an ugly answer, with Laurent Koscielny scrawling numbers all over the page before benefiting from a lucky guess, but it was an answer nonetheless. They could not repeat the feat against a similarly defensive Middlesbrough. But if they thought the Teessiders were set up negatively, just wait and see what David Moyes has in store. Arsenal travel to the Stadium of Light on Saturday, with Sunderland scrapping for their Premier League lives.

Will Alexis Sanchez, Mesut Ozil and Theo Walcott suffer one of their combined off days? Will Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain be afforded a first-team chance? And if so, will he take it? Will Cazorla return to inspire Arsenal? Will Wenger praise their mental strength or lament their finishing come 2.30pm?

One thing is for certain: Moyes and Sunderland would snatch all of the hands off for a point which would increase their total tally for the season by 50%. The Black Cats average just 41.7% possession per game – only two clubs see less of the ball – and will be happy to sit back and defend against an Arsenal side who have scored four goals in their last three league games. The onus will once again be on the Gunners, as attention turns once again to whether they can break down the staunchest of defences.

Manager to watch – Jose Mourinho
When Jose Mourinho turns his hand to writing an autobiography that will almost certainly include the word ‘Special’ in the title, he could save a whole chapter for the events of this past week. The Portuguese not-so-privately asked a managerial rival to stop “humiliating” him on Sunday, woke up in a Lowry hotel on Monday, poured his heart out about his “disaster” of a life on Tuesday, publicly apologised to Manchester United fans on Wednesday, and will welcome Burnley to Old Trafford on Saturday. Craig David is hardly casting jealous glances in his direction.

Whether Mourinho was humbled by his heaviest ever defeat as a Premier League manager – particularly considering it came against his former club – is unknown, but we have witnessed a more ‘human’ aspect of the 53-year-old of late. The Portuguese often uses the media to engender confrontation and, well, be a bit of a d*ck. This vulnerable, apologetic Mourinho is merely an extension of that; he is still pandering to his fans, but in a different way.

Victory over a much-changed Manchester City was enough to ‘put Jose Mourinho on the road to redemption’ in the words of the Daily Mirror, but that hardly seems accurate. It suggests the United manager had merely suffered a flat tyre; the truth was that the wheels had threatened to come off in the aftermath of the 4-0 defeat to Chelsea. Progression in the EFL Cup is a positive, but things must be put right in the Premier League.

United are seventh, and already six points behind Manchester City, Arsenal and Liverpool. Burnley, fresh from their 2-1 win over Everton, are not the easiest assignment. But victory, by any means, is a must. Whether that is with Paul Pogba in central defence, Zlatan Ibrahimovic on the bench and Henrikh Mkhitaryan banned from Old Trafford altogether is beside the point. Anything other than a win could be catastrophic.

One-on-one battle to watch – Dele Alli v Danny Drinkwater
Gareth Southgate’s itinerary for Saturday reads as follows: Wake up at 7:05am, for that constitutes a lie-in; shower, trim beard and don one’s best suit; head downstairs for two slices of plain white bread (no crusts); read the morning newspapers, circle every spelling error and grammatical mistake, then send e-mails of complaint to the necessary parties; walk the dogs; head to White Hart Lane.

From there, anything could happen. Tottenham’s clash with Leicester pits together two clubs with a rivalry manufactured through their tussle for the Premier League title last season, but it presents a tasty midfield battle between two individuals Southgate will be keen to keep an eye on. Dele Alli’s form of late has been somewhat lacking, while Danny Drinkwater will be looking to force his way back into international reckoning. What better way to do that than by helping inflict upon Tottenham their first league defeat of the season?

Plus, Drinkwater will be looking to exact revenge for this:

Football League game to watch – Birmingham v Aston Villa
So here it is: The Peter Enckleman derby. It is the first league meeting between these two clubs since Roger Johnson and James Collins shared the goals in what sounds like a particularly brilliant 1-1 Premier League draw in January 2011. Steve Bruce was manager of Sunderland then, but the man who spent six years as Birmingham boss returns to St Andrew’s in the away dugout on Sunday.

The reaction to Bruce’s appointment at Aston Villa in October unified the Second City rivals. Some Birmingham fans were unhappy that their former manager would cross to the dark side; plenty of Villa supporters did not want a ‘bluenose’ – which is a hilarious nickname – near the club. But one draw and two wins in his first three games has dispelled any notion that he was not precisely what the club needed.

If Bruce is looking for some tactical inspiration, he would do well to watch Aston Villa’s last meeting with Birmingham. Tim Sherwood inspired them, you see…

European game to watch – Juventus v Napoli
Juventus. Napoli. First. Third. Serie A. Gonzalo Higuain. Football.

I won’t be watching this because I’m being dragged to a Halloween party. Unfortunately, it is not illegal for adults to dress up as fictional beings in the 21st century.

Yet.

Punt of the week – Christian Benteke first goalscorer at 7/1
Obviously. He let us down a fortnight ago, but we have faith in him.

Where is Mike Dean?
He’s busy smelling everyone at The Hawthorns, where he is the fourth official on Saturday afternoon.

Things Mike Dean Hates #1,345: Smelly Assistants#CelebrityRefs

(via @ronnabe)https://t.co/J6i0dqL7ci

— Celebrity Refs (@CelebrityRefs) October 26, 2016

For what it’s worth, I’d much rather smell Pep Guardiola than Tony Pulis.

Ten live matches to watch (because having a social life is overrated)
Lille v Paris Saint-Germain (Friday 7.45pm, BT Sport 3)
Aberdeen v Celtic (Saturday 12pm, Sky Sports 5)
Sunderland v Arsenal (Saturday 12.30pm, Sky Sports 1)
Crystal Palace v Liverpool (Saturday 5.30pm, BT Sport 1)
Borussia Dortmund v Schalke (Saturday 5.30pm, BT Sport 2)
Juventus v Napoli (Saturday 7.45pm, BT Sport 2)
Birmingham City v Aston Villa (Sunday 12pm, Sky Sports 2)
Nice v Nantes (Sunday 2pm, BT Sport Extra 2)
Southampton v Chelsea (Sunday 4pm, Sky Sports 1)
Marseille v Bordeaux (Sunday 7.45pm, BT Sport 3)

Watcher of the week – Matt Stead

M’Boro 2-0 Bournemouth: Ramirez adds a bit of class

Gaston Ramirez Middlesbrough

Gaston Ramirez scored a solo masterpiece as Middlesbrough reversed their worrying home form __with a commanding 2-0 victory over Bournemouth.

Ramirez’s first-half effort was a thing of beauty, starting __with a brave block deep in his own half and continuing the length of the pitch as Harry Arter, Andrew Surman and finally goalkeeper Artur Boruc were beaten by his drive, guile and craft.

For a side who had taken a single point from their first four games at the Riverside it was a heady moment, followed in the second half by another pleasing move finished by local boy Stewart Downing.

If Ramirez’s lung-busting run and delicate finish was the aesthetic choice, Downing’s close-range prod packed an emotional punch.

The 32-year-old last scored a Premier League goal for his hometown team in May 2008, in an 8-1 triumph over Sven-Goran Eriksson’s Manchester City. In the intervening years much has changed for all concerned.

In all there were 14 Englishmen in the starting sides, though Gareth Southgate, former Boro boss and now interim manager of the national side, was nowhere to be seen.

There were early signs that Ramirez was in the mood, snaffling a loose ball from Arter in the opening seconds and pressing with greater conviction than usual.

On the opposite flank Adama Traore was also causing problems with his direct running but Boro needed Adam Clayton to head off the line after Joshua King clipped a corner goalwards.

FULL-TIME | Aitor @Karanka's 150th game sees #Boro's 250th Riverside win! GET IN!!! #UTB pic.twitter.com/ZXhWeXT7vr

— Middlesbrough FC (@Boro) October 29, 2016

Traore had a decent penalty shout in the 18th minute when, after leaving Arter for dead, he drew a sliding tackle from Charlie Daniels.

There did appear to be contact but Traore’s tumble was belated and did nothing to persuade Stuart Atwell to point to the spot.

Jack Wilshere, whose case for an England recall is gathering momentum, unlocked the home defence after 27 minutes, scooping a pass over the back four and finding King, who cushioned the ball on his chest.

With Victor Valdes advancing, King volleyed instinctively with the outside of his boot but saw the ball canon back off the crossbar and away.

With Wilshere and Jordon Ibe pushing their side forward, Bournemouth had just started to set the tempo when Ramirez intervened quite brilliantly.

In many ways, his was the perfect goal.

At the start he showed bravery to charge down a shot from Adam Smith and he followed with pace and poise to glide past Arter. As the goal came into view Surman was sent packing with a neat turn and Boruc beaten with a measured shot.

It was good enough to win any game but, with just 37 minutes on the clock, Boro could hardly be sure at that stage.

They started confidently in the second period and fashioned another pleasing goal in the 56th minute.

Traore picked the lock this time, floating a delightful ball towards Alvaro Negredo with the outside of his boot.

Rather than aim at goal, the Spaniard headed it back across for Downing who gratefully finished the job and celebrated passionately.

Eddie Howe sought changes, Callum Wilson and Ibe making way for Benik Afobe and Ryan Fraser, while Ramirez’s afternoon ended soon after with Grant Leadbitter’s arrival.

Afobe’s work handed Smith a chance to strike from 12 yards but Calum Chambers, impressive alongside defensive partner Ben Gibson, got his body in the way.

The Cherries ensured no further damage was done, Wilshere tracking back with a goal-saving challenge to rob Traore.

Fraser even threatened a consolation with a cross-shot that required Valdes’ attention but there was no way back.

Tottenham 1-1 Leicester: Musa rescues Foxes

Ahmed Musa Leicester City

Tottenham’s revenge mission against Leicester ended in disappointment as Ahmed Musa earned the Premier League champions a 1-1 draw at White Hart Lane.

Leicester beat Spurs to the title last season and they frustrated Mauricio Pochettino’s men again, Musa’s second-half equaliser cancelling out Vincent Janssen’s first Premier League goal from the penalty spot.

The draw gives Leicester their first point away from home in the league this season while Tottenham have now gone five matches without a victory.

Janssen’s goal will come only as a crumb of comfort for Spurs, who have struggled for attacking fluency since beating Manchester City so impressively here at the start of the month.

Harry Kane could be back from injury for the north London derby against Arsenal next weekend and it seems the striker’s return cannot come soon enough.

Leicester, meanwhile, are now eight points behind their opponents in the table but they showed some of the old resilience that has been so far lacking in their stuttering title defence.

Their fans certainly delighted in running through an impressive repertoire of triumphant chants before kick-off including, “Tottenham Hotspur, we’re waiting for you”, a response to Spurs supporters hopefully singing “Leicester City, we’re coming for you” during the run-in last season.

A look at the match stats after this afternoon's 1-1 draw __with Leicester. #COYS pic.twitter.com/B4jiaBXiOe

— Tottenham Hotspur (@SpursOfficial) October 29, 2016

Dele Alli and Danny Rose tested Kasper Schmeichel __with two stinging drives early on but, for all Tottenham’s possession, they struggled for any clear-cut chances.

Alli went down in the box under pressure from Christian Fuchs but it was little more than a nudge and even the Spurs midfielder appeared unconvinced it deserved a penalty.

Leicester did have a couple of openings, Jamie Vardy unable to get the ball out of his feet when slid through on goal and Shinji Okazaki heading over Riyad Mahrez’s cross, but the contest became increasingly fractured by a number of niggling fouls.

Claudio Ranieri’s side were most guilty – they committed 14 in the opening 45 minutes alone – and, moments after Alli had crashed Kyle Walker’s cross against the crossbar, the visitors conceded a penalty.

Referee Robert Madley adjudged Robert Huth to have pulled down the twisting Janssen, who grabbed the ball purposefully, before driving it hard and straight past Schmeichel.

Tottenham’s lead, however, was short-lived. Three minutes into the second half, Leicester equalised as Vardy latched on to Victor Wanyama’s wayward header back and then squared for Musa to bundle home his second goal of the season.

Neither side, however, grabbed the ascendancy thereafter. Leicester looked occasionally dangerous on the counter-attack while Spurs’ greatest threat came from set-pieces, with Janssen whipping one free-kick onto the roof of the net.

Both sides pushed for a winner in the latter stages and the hosts almost nicked it when Jan Vertonghen’s header clipped the top of the crossbar.

Andy King’s header was then saved at the back post by Hugo Lloris and Rose’s finish hit the side-netting. It was the away supporters still singing at the final whistle.

Wilshere admits his Arsenal career may be over

Jack Wilshere Football365

Midfielder Jack Wilshere is unsure whether his Arsenal career is over.

The 24-year-old, who joined the Gunners aged nine, is currently on a season-long loan __with Bournemouth as he tries to re-establish himself following a lengthy list of injuries.

Wilshere has pulled on the Arsenal shirt just five times since May 2015 and felt he was falling down the pecking order at the Emirates Stadium.

He is under contract in north London until 2018 but is not certain whether he has a future there.

“I haven’t really thought about my future beyond getting a season under my belt and just trying to improve as a player,” Wilshere told the Daily Mail.

“I genuinely don’t know if I am going to end up at Arsenal or somewhere else.

“If you’d asked me two months ago if I was going to finish my career at Arsenal then I would have said, ‘Yeah, of course’.

“Two months ago I wouldn’t have seen myself being here, but here I am. And I’m enjoying it.”

Wilshere is getting what he craves __with the Cherries, having started all but one of the eight games he has been there, which is something he felt he would not get at Arsenal.

“There were a lot of midfielders and the manager brought another one in,” he added. ‘I’d been injured for a while, and I was thinking I was at a stage of my career where I needed to play.

“I’m 24 and I’ve already missed too much football, and, if I want to get to where I want to be, it’d be no good coming off the bench in every game.”

Wilshere played more games for England than he did Arsenal last season, but his axe from Sam Allardyce’s only squad as manager of the national team forced him to accept his situation.

“It was the final straw,” he said. “It hurt not being in there.”

Pep: United played ‘long ball, long ball, long ball’

Manchester City Manchester United

Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola used the words ‘long ball’ four times in a row to describe Manchester United’s approach in the midweek League Cup meeting.

Guardiola stands accused of only having one style of football and thus being susceptible to a high press, but he claims City can play in a more direct manner that does not involve hoofing the ball.

Guardiola said: “That has always happened in my career. In seven years, when you want to play build-up some opponents play high pressing and it is how to solve that.

“I know what you have to do in these cases but sometimes you need time to make it better.

“I don’t think this is the situation (reason) why we didn’t win the games.”

Guardiola went on to discuss United’s tactics on Wednesday, saying: “The goal for United it was long ball, long ball, long ball, long ball, lose the ball in the duels, score the goal.

“So sometimes you concede a goal because you have to build up and after like this. And sometimes you use the long balls you concede a goal as well.

“The strikers that we have when you have to use long balls, __with Kelechi, Kun Aguero, it’s not a good solution for me, so maybe in the future we’re going to buy a striker who is 220 centimetres and after maybe we are going to use long balls.

“But the strikers we have you have to use it because when the opponent comes [to press] you have to use that pass, more direct but not long ball because they are not going to win one [duel].

“We don’t have strikers strong enough to play in that way. So we have to create the space to pass the ball – not to use the long ball because I don’t want to play [them].”

Guardiola’s City face West Brom this weekend in a real test of their ability to deal __with long balls.

Pochettino ‘disappointed’ that ‘unlucky’ Spurs didn’t win

Mauricio Pochettino Claudio Ranieri Tottenham Leicester

Tottenham boss Mauricio Pochettino was pleased __with the way his side “dominated” the game in their draw __with Leicester – but admitted his disappointment at the defending for the goal.

Vincent Janssen opened the scoring for Spurs with a penalty in the first-half before Ahmed Musa equalised for the Foxes straight after half-time in a 1-1 draw at White Hart Lane.

Pochettino was happy his side managed to maintain their unbeaten start to the league season but admitted his defenders should have done better to hold onto the lead.

3 – All of Vincent Janssen's goals for Spurs since joining the club have come from the penalty spot. Converted.

— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) October 29, 2016

“Disappointed. We created chances. We dominated the game. But I am disappointed with the way we conceded the goal. It’s hard to lose two points,” Pochettino said after the match.

“I was disappointed for the goal as the way we conceded was a little unlucky. I am happy with the performance. We are still strong and unbeaten in the league, that is very important. It’s true we are fighting and it’s difficult to win games recently but the team showed it is strong enough.”

On Janssen’s first Premier League goal, Pochettino added: “I am very happy with him. Since the day he arrived his behaviour and performance is always improving. it’s important to hive confidence and trust in him.”

Jose: ‘Big boy’ Rooney is ‘going nowhere’

Rooney

Jose Mourinho insists Wayne Rooney is “going nowhere” despite continuing speculation about the Manchester United captain’s future.

For this first time since bursting onto the scene so remarkably at the age of 16 __with Everton, the forward faces a serious fight to get into the starting line-up.

Prior to missing the last two matches __with a calf complaint, Rooney had started five of seven games for club and country as a substitute.

The England skipper, who turned 31 on Monday, is in a period of transition and heightened speculation, with it reported this week that Mourinho had told Rooney he needs to move if he wants regular first-team football.

The United boss said that was “not true at all” and underlined his desire to keep him at Old Trafford for the foreseeable future.

“I don’t know,” Mourinho said when asked how long Rooney can play on. “With (his age being) 31, I know he can.

“I know he can, I know he’s a top player, I know he can play at the top level.

“I cannot make this kind of mental exercise of what is going to happen at 32, 3, 4, 5. I can’t say that.

“What I can say is that he’s a very good player, he’s a very important player for us, he’s going nowhere. We like him, he likes us.

“He is not happy because in the last matches he was on the bench, but I think he’s even unhappier when he’s not on the bench because he’s been injured and has to stay in the stands. There is no problems at all.”

Mourinho expressed his frustration at recent stories in the media about that matter and others, before growing frustrated as questions continued about Rooney.

“He’s my captain,” the United boss said. “He is the team captain. He behaves like that.

“In all my career I had just a couple of players that didn’t want to play and sometimes they want to hide when things got hotter.

“Apart from that, every player wants to play and I don’t know players that are happy when they don’t play.

“They are always unhappy when they don’t play. Thanks for that because that is exactly the way I want it.”

Rooney is back in contention for Saturday’s match with Burnley after recovering from injury, with the scrutiny sure to continue at time the player himself admits is a “difficult period”.

“I think he is a human being like everybody else,” Mourinho said.

“He has family, like everybody else. He has kids, the oldest one in an age where he can read, he can feel, he can get that, so if he is affected by that it’s just the human nature.

“The human nature that your industry doesn’t think about, but I think he’s a big boy, he’s a big character and he copes with the situation.”

I think the referee did fantastic work, says Jose’s assistant

Jose Mourinho Manchester United

Manchester United assistant manager Rui Faria thought the referee “did fantastic work” during their game against Burnley in which Jose Mourinho was sent to the stands.

Mourinho allowed his frustrations to boil over at half-time when he was still reeling after Jon Flanagan went unpunished for a tackle on Matteo Darmian inside the Burnley penalty area.

The United boss was subsequently sent to the stands and had to watch his side falter to a 0-0 draw despite having 37 shots against the Clarets.

However, Faria, who stepped into Mourinho’s shoes for media duty in the immediate aftermath, was pleased __with how the Red Devils dominated the match, even after Ander Herrera was shown a second yellow card in the second-half.

“I think we need to congratulate the boys, it was a fantastic performance. __with 11 men we dominated the game, created opportunities, but did not score,” Faria said.

37 – Manchester United's total of 37 shots is their most in a Premier League game since 2003/04 (Opta records began). Frustration.

— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) October 29, 2016

“Even with 10 men we controlled the game. Our players were fantastic with their belief, attitude and fight.”

On Mourinho being sent to the stands, Faria added:”I don’t know what happened. It is not important what Jose said, what is important is what the referee writes in his report.

“I think the referee did fantastic work. I won’t say more than this.

“The people in the stadium could feel that the players gave everything. We fought until the last second. We have to keep working and things will happen.

“Sometimes you create only a few chances and score them all, others you create lots and don’t score any. This is football.”

We need Aguero, I want to make him feel important – Pep

Sergio Aguero Manchester City

Pep Guardiola has insisted once again that Sergio Aguero remains part of his plans after the Argentinian scored twice in Manchester City’s comfy victory over West Brom on Saturday.

The 28-year-old scored twice and assisted City’s third as they cruised to a 4-0 win at The Hawthorns to go back to the summit of the Premier League.

After being left on the bench in the Citizens 4-0 loss to Barcelona the rumour mill was in full cycle as he was linked __with a transfer away from the Etihad Stadium.

However, Guardiola has since rejected the reports and was full of praise for the striker after the impressive victory over the Baggies.

6 – Sergio Aguero has scored six times in his last seven PL games, all of which have been braces. Double.

— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) October 29, 2016

“We need Sergio. We know how important he is for us when he can convince us how good he is and how important he is for this club. He is part of the history for this club. I would like to help him,” Guardiola said.

“Still he can write the most brilliant images for himself in this club. He is one of the best. I am going to help him to be much, much better. That is my target. So that every game he feels how important he is. I’m so, so happy for him because __with all of that he is one of the nicest people I have met.”

Guardiola’s side were on a run of six matches without a victory in all competitions and the Spaniard was glad to get back to winning ways.

“When we lose there are always doubts. Also in the second half I had doubts when we didn’t play too well. I had doubts and saw what we had to improve. It’s the first time I have not won in six games. Always you have doubts. Not over the principles,” Guardiola added.

Sunderland vs Arsenal live score and goal updates from Stadium of Light

Key Events So Far

  • GOOOOAAAL! ARSENAL LEAD! Oxlade-Chamberlain darts past Watmo...
  • CHANCE! Pickford saves from Ozil
  • KICK-OFF: Sunderland v Arsenal
  • Ramsey returns
  • Team news
Load the latest update Load the latest update
Goal

GOAL! Sunderland 0-1 Arsenal

Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant goal. Alexis Sanchez nicked in ahead of Lamine Kone to score his seventh goal of the season and give the Gunners the lead.

19 mins Goal

GOOOOAAAL! ARSENAL LEAD! Oxlade-Chamberlain darts past Watmore on the right and whips an excellent delivery to the edge of the six-yard box. Sanchez steals in ahead of a static Kone to steer a diving header into the far corner!

19 mins Minute by minute

Assist Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain

17 mins Minute by minute

Khazri is doing his best to make things happen in possession, applying pressure down the right before eventually slamming an attempted cross straight into Gibbs, who was standing less than five yards away from him. A bit hopeful, that one.

Key event

CHANCE! Pickford saves from Ozil

Alexis Sanchez slipped a through ball to Mesut Ozil and the German international tried to wrap his left foot around the ball, but didn’t get enough purchase on it.

Pickford was able to make a comfortable save down low to his right.

The Sunderland goalkeeper then failed to hold on to the ball as he came out and saved at the feet of Francis Coquelin. Another nervy moment followed for the young goalkeeper as came off his line to meet a through ball aimed for Sanchez. He flapped at the ball and did enough to get it clear, but didn’t look convincing.

15 mins Minute by minute

A high defensive line from Sunderland is being prised apart by Arsenal here. Another clever pass, this time from Mustafi, sets Iwobi on his way. The winger beats the onrushing Pickford to the ball but his touch is heavy and goes out for a goal-kick.

Stats

Overall Possession Ratio

  • SunderlandKey color for Sunderland
  • ArsenalKey color for Arsenal

Possession

14 mins Minute by minute

More excellent creative play from Sanchez! The Chilean sends Coquelin in behind the Sunderland defence but he lacks the pace to get one-on-one with Pickford. The Frenchman is dispossessed but a mix-up between Rodwell and his goalkeeper almost hands the visitors a glorious chance, but Sunderland scramble it clear.

13 mins Minute by minute

Sanchez spots the run of Ozil towards the right-hand side of the box and sends an excellent pass into the German's path. He shapes up to try and pick out the opposite corner with his left foot, but Pickford reads it and dives down to make the save.

11 mins Minute by minute

A low cross from Van Aanholt is intercepted by Koscielny, but Arsenal's attempts to release Sanchez on the counter-attack are scuppered. Bellerin comes back at the hosts but committs a foul on Ndong after being dispossessed.

10 mins Minute by minute

The set-piece is sent dangerously across the face of goal by Elneny, with a flick from Jones sending it out for another corner on the opposite. Ozil's delivery is claimed by Pickford, and he attempts to launch Sunderland on a break from which they __win a throw-in deep inside the Arsenal half.

Live update

A miskick by Petr Cech gives the Sunderland crowd a lift, but Arsenal quickly regain their composure and get the ball forward.

Sunderland playing like a side waiting for something bad to happen.

Arsenal staying patient so far, but you get the feeling they’re waiting to shift through the gears and run riot.

9 mins Minute by minute

Elneny clips a lovely pass out to the right for Bellerin, who moves inside off a one-two with Oxlade-Chamberlain. The ball is worked over to Gibbs on the left but he is stood up by Jones and Arsenal have a corner.

7 mins Minute by minute

Khazri produces a brilliant turn and driblles down the right before sending in a floated cross. Cech has a clear sight of it, watching it all the way before leaping up and plucking the ball down.

6 mins Minute by minute

Relief for Moyes as Pienaar, after making his way off to the sidelines, jogs back onto the pitch and looks fine to continue.

5 mins Minute by minute

Pienaar is down getting treatment following a crunching tackle from Coquelin after Ozil's corner was cleared to edge of box.

Live update

Arsenal dominating possession in the opening exchanges. Shock.

The in-form Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain had a glimpse of goal, but his header was diverted wide by the back of John O’Shea’s head.

Nervy start from Sunderland. If Arsenal score early this could be a one of those days for Sunderland...

4 mins Minute by minute

Arsenal continued to apply the early pressure. Bellerin runs down the right wing and sends a cross into the middle for Oxlade-Chamberlain. His header loops off O'Shea and Pickford has to help it behind in order to stop it rebounding off the crossbar and back into play.

2 mins Minute by minute

A nervy moment at the start for Sunderland as Sanchez charges down Pickford's kick. However, the hosts are let off as a hanball is given by the referee.

Minute by minute

We are underway at the Stadium of Light!    

Minute by minute

There was a minute silence ahead of Rememberance Day, which was impeccably observed.    

Key event

KICK-OFF: Sunderland v Arsenal

Arsenal get us underway at the Stadium of Light.

Will the Gunners __win and top the table this afternoon?

Or can Sunderland secure their first win of the season in the Premier League?

Minute by minute

Sunderland are rooted to the foot of the table and without a win in their first nine matches. Injuries to the likes of Lee Cattermole, Jan Kirchhoff, Fabio Borini and Sebastian Larsson have not helped their cause, but David Moyes will be desperate for his side to start winning as soon as possible.

Minute by minute

Hello and welcome to LIVE coverage of struggling Sunderland's Premier League meeting with Arsenal at the Stadium of Light.

Minute by minute

The teams are out on the pitch and kick off is just a few moments away!

Minute by minute

Arsenal bench: Ospina, Gabriel, Jenkinson, Holding, Ramsey, Maitland-Niles, Giroud.

Minute by minute

Arsenal (4-2-3-1): Cech; Bellerin, Mustafi, Koscielny, Gibbs; Elneny, Coquelin; Oxlade-Chamberlain, Ozil, Iwobi; Sanchez.

Minute by minute

Sunderland bench: Mika, Djilobodji, Manquillo, Love, Januzaj, Gooch, Anichebe.

Minute by minute

Sunderland (4-5-1): Pickford; Jones, Kone, O'Shea, Van Aanholt; Watmore, Rodwell, Ndong, Pienaar, Khazri; Defoe.

Minute by minute

In contrast, Arsenal are flying high at the other end of the table, sitting second behind leaders Manchester City on goal difference. They missed an opportunity to go top with a goalless draw at home to Middlesbrough last weekend, so they will be hungry to keep as much pressure on their title rivals by reverting to winning ways.

Friday, October 28, 2016

The Second City derby is the ONLY fixture where my legs turned to jelly

Second City derbies were among the most thunderous occasions of my playing career.

The atmosphere was so highly-charged, and the rivalry so intense, that you could feel the earth move.

Birmingham against Villa is the only fixture where my legs have turned to jelly for the first five minutes – although I never finished on the losing side.

It’s the game which makes people do the daftest things, like Peter Enckelman’s own goal when he let a throw-in under his foot or Dion Dublin sticking the nut on me at Villa Park. Once more, for the record: No, it didn’t hurt – and Bluenoses had the last laugh because we won 2-0.

A popular Robbie Savage of Birmingham City is greeted by Aston Villa fans
Savage said you could feel the earth move at Second City derbies

On Sunday, I want Birmingham to __win because I spent three memorable years at St Andrew’s as a player. And on the face of it, Blues should be favourites because they are at home, they are six points above Villa in the table and they have a fantastic manager in Gary Rowett who knows how much the game means to supporters on both sides of the divide.

But I fear Steve Bruce will be Villa’s trump card – and not just because they have been enjoying the new manager ‘bounce’ of seven points from his first three games in charge.

When Bruce was our boss at Birmingham, he knew Villa had the better squad, better players, more experience, a more experienced manager, they had spent more money, they had a bigger ground, a better training ground and a larger fanbase.

Savage feels Steve Bruce will be the key factor on Sunday

He harnessed all those things, used them to motivate his players, and in the 2002-3 season he came up with two wins, home and away, which were among my best nights in football.

Bruce loved being the underdog – and I’m worried he might have the same effect on Villa this weekend.

Not even Sir Alex Ferguson could keep Sunderland up

David Moyes made a mistake by saying, after only two games, that Sunderland would be in another relegation battle this season.

With only two points from nine games, it has become a self-fulfilling prophecy. But he’s a decent man, and I don’t like it when people start calling for his head and Sam Allardyce to be given his old job back.

Moyes has only been at the Stadium of Light five minutes. As grim as Sunderland’s plight may be, it’s not his fault – there is something fundamentally wrong at the club.

David Moyes gestures to referee Chris Kavanagh
David Moyes was sent to the stands against Southampton

The same thing happens year after year – they dodge relegation by the skin of their teeth, whether it’s Paolo Di Canio, Gus Poyet, Dick Advocaat or Big Sam pulling off the great escape. And then the whole cycle begins again.

I fear for Moyes because the recent pattern has been for Sunderland to start badly and a new manager to come in and pull things round. But this time, I think the Black Cats have used up their nine lives.

Just as Aston Villa flirted with relegation for several years before it finally happened, I’m afraid Sunderland are going down this time.

When your luck’s out, you lose to a wonder goal, get robbed by a penalty decision, get charged by the FA after being sent to the stands for protesting, and then you’re stranded because your plane home is grounded by fog, which is what happened to Moyes at Southampton in the EFL Cup on Wednesday.

David Moyes remonstrates with the fourth official
Savage fears that Moyes's Sunderland are doomed to relegation

Sadly, those hard-luck stories are typical of teams who are heading for the drop – and typical for managers like Moyes who are under big pressure. I’m not sure Moyes can keep Sunderland up. I’m not sure Big Sam could do it if he came back.

In fact, it’s looking so grim on Wearside that I doubt if Sir Alex Ferguson could rescue them now.

The stadium's not to blame - the fans are

Instead of blaming the layout of a football stadium, there is a much simpler way of addressing the crowd trouble at West Ham’s EFL Cup tie against Chelsea.

Trouble in the crowd
Savage says the London Stadium cannot be blamed for crowd trouble

Whoever was throwing coins, bottles or seats – I wasn’t there, but it sounds as if there was nonsense on both sides of the segregation – the truth is clear as crystal.

Nobody forces football fans to behave like animals. It’s a lifestyle choice.

People who cheered Mo Farah and Jessica Ennis-Hill at the London 2012 Olympics didn’t throw missiles – so the problem at West Ham games must be a minority of fans, not the venue.

Thursday, October 27, 2016

Spooky sports venues: 10 of Britain's most haunted football and cricket stadia

Ghosting past defenders? Spooky club hoodoos? Or bogeyman striker who always scores against your team?

It could all be possible as a surprising number of sporting venues have a supernatural link.

It could be a ancient burial site nearby, a ghostly figure who stalks the halls or a the remains of hundreds of people beneath the pitch.

We've drawn up a list of the most haunted places in sport:

1) Highbury Stadium

Home of Herbert Chapman’s ghost

Two dead souls were said to have made a home for themselves at Arsenal’s previous stadium, before the demolition into luxury apartments.

The ghosts in question are that of former Arsenal manager Chapman and a horse that died during the construction of the building.

No harm ever came to fans or staff at the club during the time of the claims… but will the spirits emerge at the Emirates Stadium in years to come?

2) St Mary’s

Evil spirits ruled locker rooms

Southampton fans and staff have raised alarm at feeling the presence of spirits moving objects and causing mayhem within the facilities of St Mary’s stadium.

The scare fest grew to such scale that action was taken to call upon a pagan white witch to carry out a ceremony to banish the nuisances for good.

3) AJ Bell Stadium

Suspected ghosts at Salford Rugby Club

Strange things are afoot in Salford, for which there can only be one explanation – according to staff at the English rugby club.

Management and workers are convinced that a higher being, possibly a ghost figure, is responsible for objects being moved around at will, and lifts operating off their own accord.

No sightings have been claimed as yet so the mystery remains unsolved.

4) King Power Stadium

Graveyard of King Richard III

Less than a five minute journey from the Leicester City Football ground is the burial site of Richard First, his bones were discovered there only recently this year.

Is his ghost putting Leicester off their form – or is that just second season syndrome?

5) Stadium of Light

Shadowy figures haunting Sunderland FC’s stadium


In 2005, staff members spotted a dim shape in a corridor and perceived it to be a supernatural being.

A second sighting was reported by Sunderland’s then-striker Stephen Elliot which fuelled the rumours of the club being haunted.

The spirit is known as Spottee, the 18th Century fiend who guided ships to crash upon rocks.

6) Harbourne Cricket Club


Harbourne Cricket Club where a groundskeeper captured a supernatural being on camera


A retired groundsman was convinced he caught the spectre of the Rev Edward 'Moses' Roberts on his phone camera when out taking photos of another staff member sweeping the wicket at Harbourne Cricket Club.

Trevor Townsend, who had worked at the sports complex for 16 years prior to the sighting, reported never having seen anything of this kind ever before – is sure it is that of Edward “Moses” Roberts, who served as the vicar of St Peter’s Church, Harborne in 1858 and also watched weekend matches close to the ground.

7) Home Park


Former player haunts the halls of Plymouth Argyle


Fans of Plymouth Argyle are convinced that dark arts are at play and the culprit is the spirit of a former footballer of the club.

Rumour has it that the ghost of Dominick Blizzard wanders around the facilities after dark turning lights on and off, and helping himself to a shower in the changing room on days when Home Park is closed to the public.

8) Madejski Stadium

Deathbed of King Henry I is nearby

Between the home ground of Reading FC and Reading Gaol lurks the spirit of King Henry I, whose bones were recently discovered there by archeologists.

Has a royal curse been the cause of Reading’s fall from Premier League fame?

9) Goodison Park

The pitch is a cemetery for fans that passed away

Unbeknown to many away fans, a solid perimeter of scattered ashes of hundreds of supporters of the club separates them and the main pitch.

The allocated space is now full so ashes are being distributed elsewhere in the grounds.

Research conducted by sports company www.ticket-compare.com