Friday 3 July 2020

Premier League Notes - Week 32

Sports - Football - Premier League - Week 32

The 32nd week of the Premier League football action saw:

34 goals - most by Arsenal, Newcastle and Man City = 4 each
219 shots - most by Palace and Chelsea = 17 each
74 on target - most by Arsenal = 8
74 corners - most by Palace = 9
226 fouls - most by Watford = 18
26 bookings - most by Norwich = 4
0 red cards
3 penalties - 3 scored (Sigurdsson for Everton, Willian for Chelsea, De Bruyne for City)

#AVLWOL
Adama Traoré starred again, making all the difference after coming on for Wolves (60’). The big Spaniard was involved in the buildup to Leander Dendoncker’s fine low finish inside the post (62’), to give the visitors the lead at Villa Park, Dean Smith watching on, looking fed up of it all. The Villans didn’t respond much after that, Nuno Espírito Santo completing a fine run of three wins out of three games since the restart, keeping them in the chase for European qualification. 

#WATSOU
Danny Ings opened the scoring in style for the Saints, surrounded by yellow shirts, the former Liverpool man slotted the ball home nice and low, cool as you like, from outside the box into the bottom right corner (17’). Ben Foster looked totally lost, probably wondering what his team mates were doing. And Ings made it two in the 70th minute, pouncing on a failed Foster throw, wham bam thank you ma’am, 0-2. Not the keeper’s day. Jan Bednarek tapped the ball into his own net to make it 1-2 (79’). But a couple of minutes later, James Ward-Prowse curled a beautiful free kick in from the tip of the semi-circle outside the box. The wall and keeper were all useless, the two-goal cushion reestablished. And it could have been a much bigger cushion, helping the Saints to 40 points with six games spare, whilst Watford stay in deep trouble.

#CRYBUR
The skipper Ben Mee opened the scoring, heading Ashley Westwood’s free kick just past the hour-mark, keeper Vicente Guaita flapping at it but not getting his full glove on it. It was an even-ish clash beforehand, both sides at it but not on it. A late Palace onslaught, Nick Pope and co dealt with it. Roy Hodgson was rambling at himself at HT. Just before FT the former England boss had a weird schoolgirl smile on him. Don’t think he’s happy. Sean Dyche was loud as always, can be more than satisfied, with his side staying solid, determined, on the ball throughout.

#BHAMUN
Mason Greenwood gave the dominant Red Devils the lead, with too much space despite having four Brighton players around him in the box, fine low finish, cool as you like, into the right corner of the net (16’). Keeper Mat Ryan could have done better, but so should have his team mates. Bruno Fernandes doubled United’s lead (29’), the Seagulls all over the place again, giving their visitors way too much freedom in and around the box, and it ended up near the semi-circle, the deflected shot finding the bottom right corner again. A couple of minutes after the break, just when it looked like the home side were creating more, United were lethal on the counter, quick and quality move, Fernandes netting his second, OGS’ side’s third. The hosts did improve after the break, but it stayed at three goals and three points for the visitors, too easy. 

#ARSNOR
Goalkeeper Tim Krul needlessly took his time on the ball for Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang to nick it and give the Gunners the lead (33’). Then the hosts ran all over the Canaries, Granit Xhaka with a fine but easy finish from inside the box to double their lead (37’). Another Norwich giveaway at the back made it two for Aubameyang and three for Arsenal (67’). The visitors couldn’t clear a corner, for Cédric Soares to slash in his debut goal to make it four goals and three points for Mikel Arteta’s side (81’), keeping them in the race for a European qualification place.

#BOUNEW
Dwight Gayle (4’) and Sean Longstaff (30’) put the Magpies on top down South, dancing all over the Cherries, leaving them down in the dumps. Sub Miguel Almirón made it three goals and three points, charging at and shooting past the back line (57’), to pile on the misery at the Vitality Stadium. Allan Saint-Maximin set up all three of those goals. Valentino Lazaro made it four (goals not points - 76’) = a hammering. And it could have been worse, Lazaro hitting the woodwork late on. The hosts got a consolation goal thanks to Dan Gosling from close range (90+3’). Eddie Howe’s men are in big trouble after four defeats on the trot, whilst it was a too comfortable, too easy night for Steve Bruce’s side.

#EVELEI
The Toffees bossed it thanks to Richarlison’s smashing finish (10’) and a VAR penalty that took a while to be given, harsh handball against Wilfred Ndidi, but rules are rules (but can and should be changed asap); Gylfi Sigurðsson netted his side’s first spot kick of the season gratefully (16’). Kelechi Iheanacho pulled one back shortly after the break (50’) after some ping pong in the box, both the Foxes’ forward nor the Toffee keeper Jordan Pickford knew much about where the ball was going, it ended in, 2-1, game on. Carlo Ancelotti’s side held on to the three points, leaving Brendan Rodgers and his men gutted, winless since the restart, and hanging on to their Champions League qualification hopes.

#WHUCHE
In a competitive start, the Blues had more chances, but Łukasz Fabiański saved, kept and coped well for the hosts. The Hammers thought they got the breakthrough off a corner, César Azpilicueta unable to clear the ball, causing a scramble with Michail Antonio and Tomáš Souček just in front of goal, for the latter to stab it in, but the VAR analysed the prior as offside and disallowed it after four minutes (34’-38’). Farce. The Blues won a penalty a couple of minutes later, Christian Pulisic bumped down by Issa Diop on the left corner of the box, clumsy. Willian sent the keeper the wrong way to put the visitors ahead (42’). Cruel. But the Hammers did hit back seconds later, off a corner again, headed in by Souček on the 6-yard line to make it 1-1, no doubt about this one (48’). Deserved. Antonio smashed one in after being denied a penalty call against Antonio Rüdiger seconds beforehand (51’). Karma. Willian equalised with a lovely free kick across and in off the far post, keeper so close but yet so far (72’). What a counter, what a finish, controlled and bang on and in, Andriy Yarmolenko made it 3-2, set up by an awesome Antonio, in the final minute of normal time. Wow, what a cracker! Only West Ham (22) and Aston Villa (19) have dropped more points from leading positions this PL season than Chelsea (18). Blues.

#SHUTOT
My luck, boring game, I go to the toilet, goal by Sander Berge (31’), I go to the kitchen, goal by Harry Kane (33’), both unmarked but fine low finishes; I come back into the living room, the latter's goal disallowed for handball in the buildup by a tumbling Lucas Moura = 1-0 (34’). It continued less riveting after that early drama. Lys Mousset doubled the hosts’ lead with the cheekiest of cheeky finishes, from close range, set up nicely by Chris Basham, unmarked, Spurs just watching (69’). At least this time I was inside the room, José Mourinho not happy, ranting on during the drinks break and about the VAR after the match. Kane saw his second goal flagged off correctly (77’). And another one for a foul (79’). Hat-trick of a different kind. Not. His/Their. Day. Oli McBurnie made it three goals and three points after Berge walked and put his pass through the heart of the Spurs back line to give his team mate an easy finish (84’). Kane pulled one back late on (90’). Top performance for Chris Wilder and co, flop for his Portuguese counterpart. 

#MCILIV
Jo Gomez got booked for a clumsy challenge just inside the box on Raheem Sterling, and rightly so. After a promising start for the Reds, Kevin De Bruyne put the Citizens ahead from the spot, sending Alisson the wrong way, just before the first drinks break (25’). Sterling doubled the hosts’ lead, Phil Foden and De Bruyne part of a fine counter and buildup into the Red box, Liverpool all over the place, the former Red winger had too much time and space and nicked one in, his first against his ex-club (35’). Foden made it three just before before the HT break, Andrew Robertson unable to cope, again, De Bruyne in the buildup, again, fine finish under Alisson from outside the box. Harsh scoreline on the Reds, but can’t say the Citizens didn’t deserve it. Lethal. Foden's chance was cleared off the line by VVD after a crazy restart with more lethal counters. ‪Another City counter, De Bruyne with a super cross again, providing Sterling, who saw it in off the Ox to make FOUR! Nightmare complete for the Reds (66’). And it could have been much worse, more City counters, chances, misses, offsides, VAR disallowing a Riyad Mahrez goal in stoppage time for a handball in the buildup. Jürgen Klopp’s men are still 20 points clear at the top, receiving a guard of honour before and hugs after the match by Pep Guardiola. CHAMP19NS hangover. Click here for the full ByTheMinLFC coverage.

My Predictions - Actual Results
Aston Villa 0:2 Wolves - 0:1
Watford 1:2 Southampton - 1:3
Crystal Palace 1:0 Burnley - 0:1
Brighton 1:1 Man United - 0:3
Arsenal 3:0 Norwich - 4:0
Bournemouth 2:2 Newcastle - 1:4
Everton 1:2 Leicester - 2:1
West Ham 0:2 Chelsea - 3:2
Sheffield United 0:1 Tottenham - 3:1
Man City 2:3 Liverpool - 4:0


All pictures, facts and stats were taken from the BBC match reports, ByTheMin, RMC and Sky Sports coverage.

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