Tuesday, 26 February 2019

Premier League Picks Of The Week 27

Sports - Football - Premier League - Week 27

The 27th week of the Premier League action saw:

29 goals - most by Watford = 5
243 shots - most by Newcastle = 29
84 on target - most by Newcastle = 12
110 corners - most by West Ham and Newcastle = 12 each
213 fouls - most by Liverpool = 17
29 bookings - most by Wolves = 5
1 red card - Smith for Huddersfield 
3 penalties - 2 scored (King for Bournemouth, Jiménez for Wolves)

What a game! The Super Sunday clash between arch rivals Manchester United and Liverpool ended goalless, quite disappointing after all the hype and buildup, but not a big surprise. The Red Devils defended well, held solid against all the Red pressing, whilst the visitors were unable to get the breakthrough at Old Trafford and had their keeper Alisson and defender Virgil van Dijk to thank for a breathtaking save against sub Jesse Lingard and a masterclass in stopping, blocking and denying Paul Pogba any look into the game. United stopper David de Gea kept his 100th clean sheet, which wasn't too difficult on the day, having just faced one shot on target, his side just producing three of their own at the other end as well. Mohamed Salah looked very clumsy, losing the ball too easily and too often, and it was no surprise when the
Egyptian was subbed off as well. Not much action, but plenty of injuries saw Ole Gunnar Solskjær forced to use up all his substitutions in the first half! 
And to add frustration to injuries, his men dropped two points and one place down to fifth after Arsenal’s comfortable 2-0 win against Southampton. That victory saw the Gunners overtake the Red Devils. Jürgen Klopp’s side meanwhile, returned to the top, one point ahead of the Citizens. Pep Guardiola's men won the Carabao Cup final against Chelsea on the same day after some penalty drama, having played and won the scheduled Premier League fixture of this weekend a couple of weeks ago, ending up 0-2 winners at Everton on the 6th February.*(See the note in brackets at the bottom of this blog.)

What a team! Leicester have lost four consecutive home Premier League games for the first time since January 2000. The oldest ever manager in the Premier League with 71 years and 198 days = Roy Hodgson and Crystal Palace meanwhile, are in dreamland after thrashing the Foxes 1-4 in their own backyard on Saturday evening. Claude Puel was sent packing not even 24 hours later, no surprise there, sad but true. The home side had over four times the attempts (27-7), but just the same on target (5-5), the scoreboard reflecting the sour and fruitless times. The more surprising his replacement is: Brendan Rodgers, surprising everyone including his Celtic players with the news of his departure.
Huddersfield are down and out. Nothing new there, they have been rock bottom for months now, but the way they lost at Newcastle, there was just no chance, no way, not even half a penny of hope, outdone and outplayed in every way, especially after (but not because of) the sending off. Good result for Rafael Benítez’s men, taking them up to 15th. The Magpies have recorded a league double over the Terriers for the first time since 1964-65 with their third successive Premier League win at St James’ Park for the first time since April.

What a man! Watford’s Gerard Deulofeu is only the third player to score a Premier League hat-trick on a Friday, after Dean Windass for Bradford (April 2000) and Thierry Henry for Arsenal (two in April 2004). The Spaniard did not just score three (18’, 61’, 63’), but also set up Troy Deeney (73’), who finished off with a brace of his own (91’), taking Cardiff apart. Sol Bamba was on the score-sheet (82’), a mere consolation, as 1-5 was the full-time score in Wales. It was the Hornets’ first top-flight hat-trick since Mark Falco v Aston Villa in October 1986, and the first time the side scored five in a top-division encounter since winning 5-1 against Leicester in November 1986. History.

What a goal! Was is really a corner in the buildup to the first Burnley goal or should it have been a goal kick? Chris Wood headed in the set-piece to open the scoring for the Clarets against Tottenham (57’). It doesn’t really matter, as the home side scored another one and you can’t say they didn’t deserve it. Ashley Barnes' tap-in (83’) won it for Sean Dyche’s men after Harry Kane, back from injury, had equalised and given the visitors hope of a comeback (65’). That equaliser was off a dodgy throw as well, but I’m sure Mauricio Pochettino didn’t mention that to referee Mike Dean when he stormed, shouted and pointed at the official after the full-time whistle. The boss was in the man's face! As it turned out, the temperamental Argentine accepted all charges and apologised. Meanwhile, Burnley are on their best = longest unbeaten top-flight run since 1966, unbeaten in eight (W5, D3), picking up 18 points in the last 8 games after just gaining 14 from their previous 24! This glorious run takes them up to 14th on 30 points, six clear from the drop zone. More controversial goals and decisions below...

What the hell?! The last time Fulham won an away game in the Premier League, David Moyes was still the manager of Manchester United. And the London side have still no clean sheet - even lovely Claudio Ranieri was outraged and having a go at the fourth official after West Ham’s Javier Hernández had bundled the ball over the line with his hand but the goal was still given to make it 1-1 (29’). The visitors had opened the scoring at the London Stadium just a couple of minutes into the match (3’), Ryan Babel’s first Premier League goal since 6 December 2010, exactly 3000 days ago. After the handled equaliser, Issa Diop put the Hammers ahead before the break (40’), and Michail Antonio made it 3-1, sealing the win and points in injury time (90’+1’). Any kind of confidence the Cottagers had was shattered after clear incompetence, ignorance, sheer blindness by the referees! VAR would have undoubtedly cleared that decision within seconds! 
More dubious calls were made at Bournemouth by referee Roger East, handing out penalties here, there and everywhere, leaving Wolves boss Nuno Espírito Santo scratching his head. But the Spaniard refused to blame the ref, pointing out the lying, diving, whining, cheating players (no exact quote, he was too nice about it in my opinion!). It ended 1-1, Joshua King hitting and missing one (pen 14’ and pen 85’ respectively), and Raúl Jiménez levelling from the spot (pen 83’), consistency not being in the officials' dictionary whatsoever! The first one was soft, the last one not even in the box! The other one was soft as well, whilst a clear handball was overlooked. Ridiculous! I could go on and on... As always! Every week it's the same shambles! Argh!

My Predictions - Actual Results
Cardiff 1:2 Watford - 1:5
West Ham 3:0 Fulham - 3:1
Burnley 1:2 Tottenham - 2:1
Bournemouth 2:2 Wolves - 1:1
Newcastle 3:0 Huddersfield - 2:0
Leicester 1:2 Crystal Palace - 1:4
Arsenal 2:0 Southampton - 2:0
Man United 2:3 Liverpool - 0:0

*(Everton 0:2 Man City was rearranged to the 6th February due to the League Cup final on Sunday; Chelsea 3:0 Brighton to the 3rd April, see PL week 33; both match stats have been to this week they were scheduled for)*

Clicker here for the previous Premier League Picks.

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

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