Monday 20 November 2017

Five Things we've learnt from the Premier League - Week Twelve



Lady luck allows Wenger to silence critics
Arsenal deserved to win on Saturday. They were the better team for much of the 90 minutes, created more clear chances and, for once, out fought their opponents in every area. But big games are too often decided by key moments and it was a shame that this one at least started off that way. Arsenal’s opener should have been disallowed twice, firstly for an invisible foul and secondly for an offside. Spurs were right to be annoyed but their response was limp and “Spursy” even for them. They looked like a team bereft of ideas and they continue to strike a curious mix this year of looking unbeatable one minute and very easily beatable the next. 

For Wenger there was a degree of karma here. Most punters assumed Spurs would win convincingly and the Arsenal manager was finally rewarded by both a solid defensive display and a match winning performance by Ozil in a big match. The German was everywhere, pressing, tracking and creating. How frustrating it must be to see what he remains capable of, when so often he takes annual leave on key match days.

Arsenal have a very winnable run of fixtures between now and Christmas, with only the ghost of Mourinho looming over a 6 game run. If they can take this form forward and continue to strike a balance between defence and attack they remain a side capable of anything.

And by anything I mean finishing 4th.

Pogback
A goal, an assist, a match winning performance. The return of Paul Pogba was so impressive it managed to condemn Zlatan to a mere foot note. The sign of a truly great player is how much a team struggles without them in it, and after a slow return to the Premier League it’s becoming increasingly clear that Pogba may well be that player after all. The Frenchman controlled the tempo of the match throughout, and displayed a range of passing that would have made Paul Scholes blush. United look a different side with him in it, which is a good job for their fans as they’ve been largely toilet of late. A front four of Lukaku, Rashford, Martial and the continually underrated Mata combine enough pace, power and guile to threaten any defence when on song. Newcastle started the match well but were blown away second half and could have ended up losing by more.

United remain the only team with even a modicum of hope of stopping Man City this season, and to do so it’s clear they need to keep their main man fit and firing for the rest of the campaign. 

That and, you know… actually beating Man City. Twice.

Good luck with that.

Wilson helps himself as Terriers wilt
It’s been a long journey back to full fitness for Calum Wilson, but he was fully rewarded for his patience here with a terrific striker’s hat-trick. Wilson was superb and he and Josh King dovetailed to such effect that it made the wages currently being paid to the returning Jermain Defoe look farcically wasteful. Huddersfield meanwhile were woeful in the second half, so much so you had to keep checking that it was not them down to 10 men rather than the home team. Not only could they not take advantage of the extra man, they seemed to retreat into their shells and watch, statuesque as a superior, hungrier team consumed them.

Huddersfield look toothless away from home. Only Crystal Palace (literally, toothless) have scored less away from their own fans and they now have Man City, Arsenal and Chelsea in their next five fixtures. The Terriers remain in mid table, 2 points ahead of Bournemouth, but the momentum was only with one team here. Huddersfield need to regroup and fast before being dragged into the relegation battle many expected them to be contesting. 

Pulis finally pays the price for pessimism
2 wins in 21 matches saw Tony Pulis become the latest Premier League manager to bite the dust this weekend, following a spectacularly inept showing against a resurgent Chelsea. West Brom haven’t kept a clean sheet in 7 matches and when you lose your single, compelling selling point as a manager… you’re basically fucked.

West Brom have averaged less than a goal a game under Pulis, taking in over 100 league games. He is a manager who regards attacking with casual disregard and that sort of pragmatism is usually only acceptable when results are the trade-off.

Solomon Rondon, their main striker, has more bookings that goals this season and has now scored just twice in over 1000 minutes. Summer signing Jay Rodriguez has just two himself, despite playing almost every minute of the season. Shorn of last season’s 20 goal star forward, Gareth McAuley, West Brom have tumbled into the Abyss.

Quite literally given they seem to have appointed Gary Megson as their new manager. A man who I’m pretty sure died several years ago and has merely been reanimated. Still, if he can do a similar job on this West Brom side, he may well be remembered a hero after all.

Forgotten Chelsea stars continue to light up league
England’s new 100m superstar in waiting Ruben Loftus-Cheek tore apart. In a game week littered with standout turns, the two front runners for Player or the Season (no, really) once again delivered man of the match performances for their respective clubs. If De Bruyne’s brilliance has been apparent for some time, he is now making journalists everywhere reach for the thesaurus each week to find new ways to describe his luminescence. In a much more inconsistent team, Mo Salah has been anything but. The Egyptian’s arrival on Merseyside was greeted by more jeers than cheers but he has got better every game and now seems to have added finishing to his list of talents. Salah isn’t just quick, he is skilful and unusually adept at finding space. Indeed, the main key to him currently sitting on top the league’s scoring charts is because nobody has quite worked out how to mark him. If City’s attack is the best with the ball, Liverpool’s is still the best without out it. Say what you want about Klopp, but his ability to coach space management in to his forward players (yes, I just wrote that) is second to none. 

Team of the Weak

Lossl – one save, four conceded. Yes he was unprotected but none of the goals conceded were unstoppable.
Keane – allegedly a player Everton paid £25m for.
Hegazi – terrible performance from start to finish, the nadir of which was arguing with the referee for rugby tackling Hazard to the floor.
Cresswell – shot of confidence and bereft of quality.
Fernandez – symbolising Swansea’s lot at the moment and bang out of form.
Sissoko – absolutely bollocks, not worth the price of the shirt he’s in, let alone £30m.
Krychowiak – like Hegazi, has only served to make West Brom a worst side than last year.
Arnautovic – at this point, I almost half expect him to just sit down during a match.
Eriksen – was completely outshone by Ozill; Spurs need him to find his international form and fast.
Carroll – booed off by his own fans and was lucky to last that long.
Ibramimovic – returned to the team at the age of 36, some 2 months ahead of schedule and didn’t score with his one, incredibly difficult chance. Pathetic. 

Happy Hunting




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