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Rico Lewis unleashes Man City, Everton issue reminder of their problems – Premier League hits and misses | Football News


Lewis unleashes Gundogan and Man City

Ilkay Gundogan impressed in a more advanced role
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Ilkay Gundogan impressed in a more advanced role

Is City’s cloak of invincibility slipping? It has been asked this past week. It was questioned whether Pep Guardiola no longer has a harmonious dressing room.

When the cracks have emerged in title rivals before, City have gone into overdrive. Not this season. It is they who have left the door ajar. It is not the City we’ve become accustomed to.

So they came to the Vitality Stadium to take the points and to make one at the same time. Three unanswered first-half goals from Julian Alvarez, Erling Haaland and Phil Foden blew Bournemouth away.

After a winless midweek in Europe, Guardiola’s side delivered the response he wants. Certainly in terms of the first 80 minutes of this match. Pep, ever the perfectionist, will be disappointed to lose the clean sheet so late on.

Kevin De Bruyne, who missed the Leipzig game through illness, was fit enough only for the substitutes bench – but it was the use of Rico Lewis which allowed Ilkay Gundogan to decide this match before the interval.

Lewis has not started a game, indeed been used at all, since City were beaten at Tottenham earlier this month, but it was his ability to cut inside which would allow Gundogan licence to drift forward – De Bruyne-like – and cause so much damage.

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FREE TO WATCH: Highlights from Manchester City’s win against Bournemouth

Foden helped himself to a goal and an assist in the first half, as did Haaland – onto 27 Premier League goals which surpasses Sergio Aguero as the most in a single Premier League season for City – with 13 games still to play. Big moments for big players.

Foden’s only other goal since the World Cup came in the convincing 4-0 win over Chelsea in the third round of the FA Cup. For Haaland, it was just his second in his last seven games to quieten the noise around whether City are getting the best out of him. They face Newcastle next up at the Etihad – it is as you were in the title race.
Ben Grounds

Bournemouth must remain in touch come April

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AFC Bournemouth manager Gary O’Neil is staying positive following defeat to Manchester City insisting they will learn lessons from the match.

Bournemouth were without the injured Marcus Tavernier – and the hosts missed last week’s match winner at Wolves. But it won’t be in games such as these that their Premier League status will be decided.

Gary O’Neil brought Chris Mepham into the team in what was the only change from the Cherries’ win at Molineux, but on the same day his country were beaten by England in the Six Nations, Welshman Mepham was faced with a baptism of fire – his own goal compounded a torrid evening for the centre-back.

Jefferson Lerma reduced the arrears late on with his first goal since October – and O’Neil pointed to the positive of having drawn the second half.

Jefferson Lerma scores a consolation goal for Bournemouth
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Jefferson Lerma scores a consolation goal for Bournemouth

“In terms of effort and endeavour and the response to going behind, we were on the front foot,” he said. “You could feel from the fans that they were on board with the type of performance that we put in.

“We just came up a little bit short against a very good team. It was an interesting test for them at half-time because you feel the game is done.

“The second half needed to be a response and we showed the world that we did. The fourth goal could’ve killed the boys off but we still created opportunities.

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“I’m disappointed that we didn’t score a couple more. When you’re a player, you get to reflect on these games and see the level City are at. There’s a lot I will take from today and build on the positives.”

O’Neil knows the nature of this division means his side must start collecting more points, however. Bournemouth have won only one of their nine Premier League games since the World Cup break, losing six times, with their five points accrued during that time fewer than any other side.

They face a crucial April with fixtures against Southampton, West Ham and Leeds – those are the games that will decide whether they stay in the Premier League or not.
Ben Grounds

Toothless Everton issue reminder of their relegation worries

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FREE TO WATCH: Highlights from Aston Villa’s win against Everton in the Premier League.

Optimism was beginning to rise around Goodison Park. Everton have been burned before but Sean Dyche knows how to get a side out of relegation trouble.

Back-to-back 1-0 wins, both scrappy but both effective, had lifted them two places and one point above the relegation zone. Half an hour against Aston Villa was enough to remind Goodison Park, and the world, why they are where they are.

Despite racking up 15 shots and an xG of 1.69, their fourth-highest tally of the season, they did what they’ve now done 10 times in 24 games and failed to score.

They are the Premier League’s lowest scorers, have netted more than once in a game only twice this season and their two top league goalscorers, Demarai Gray and Anthony Gordon, were on the bench and have already left the club respectively.

Everton had so many promising positions. But so little idea what to do with it. Forty-four touches in the opposition box was the 28th highest of any team in a game this season – yet only two of their 15 shots were from inside the Villa area.

Of those, Neal Maupay should have bundled home the opener moments before Villa took the lead, but his weak effort allowed Tyrone Mings to clear off the line.

Dyche can only do so much. They have kept two of their six clean sheets in his four games so far, and are clearly so much more organised than they were under Frank Lampard. Even on Saturday, they were well-drilled and rarely cut apart until they were pushing for an equaliser late on.

But that won’t put the ball in the back of the net. The goals and points they need require the sort of composure and finesse that this Everton side does not possess.

At this point, their survival may come down to the status of Dominic Calvert-Lewin. Even not fully fit, he offers a genuine goalscoring threat and is the kind of striker Dyche has always relished working with.

Without him, it feels like things may be heading back to square one.
Ron Walker

‘Why sack David Moyes if the man you need to replace him with is David Moyes’

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FREE TO WATCH: Highlights of West Ham against Nottingham Forest in the Premier League.

“If you don’t win your first game you might not get the second game in football management so if you don’t win your 250th you might not get your 251st,” said David Moyes as he celebrated a huge milestone in becoming just the third manager to pick up 250 Premier League wins. Only Arsene Wenger (476) and Sir Alex Ferguson (528) have more.

Experience when dealing with huge amounts of noise regarding your job is priceless and Moyes is making an art out of winning games such as the one vs Nottingham Forest. When the pressure is at it’s highest, Moyes seems to ignite a performance within his West Ham players. He did it against Everton. He did it vs Forest. It’s perhaps why the Hammers have decided against relinquishing him of his duties. Why sack David Moyes if the man you need to replace him with is David Moyes?

His skillset in generating big wins in pressure cooker environments would make him incredibly appealing for an owner looking to preserve their club’s position in the Premier League.

Southampton and Leeds spring to mind.

But he is West Ham’s man for now and on this showing any fears of relegation are way off the mark. The only way should be up now.
Lewis Jones

Cooper’s gamble backfired as Forest capitulate

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Nottingham Forest manager, Steve Cooper was left deeply frustrated with the manner of the goals his team conceded in their 4-0 defeat against West Ham.

It was hard to see this Nottingham Forest capitulation coming with 20 minutes to go and the game at 0-0. Steve Cooper has instilled a doggedness and defensive solidity since they were thrashed 4-0 by Leicester in October and there was a sense that the home crowd were starting to turn as Brennan Johnson started to find space in dangerous areas.

But the Forest structure crumbled under pressure from a rejuvenated West Ham attack who opened the floodgates once Danny Ings put them in front. Forest couldn’t cope with the intensity and sank in feeble style.

Maybe Cooper – who has had the golden touch for most of his Forest tenure – has to take a fair chunk of the blame for this hammering. Perhaps sensing three points when having to withdraw Jonjo Shelvey due to his current match fitness issues, Cooper opted for Andre Ayew, pushing an extra body into their attacking shape. “The game was there,” Cooper said. “We felt the tension inside the stadium.”

But the gamble backfired as that extra space in midfield helped West Ham stamp their authority with Declan Rice and Lucas Paqueta. In a blink of an eye West Ham were 4-0 up. And that tension inside the stadium that Cooper referenced had turned to sheer jubilation.
Lewis Jones

Gracia’s pragmatism already paying off for Leeds

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FREE TO WATCH: Highlights from Leeds’ win against Southampton in the Premier League

Javi Gracia has made an instant impact at Leeds – and he has not even been in the job for a week.

The Whites looked far more organised and defensively solid under the new head coach as they kept just their fifth Premier League clean sheet of the season in a much-needed 1-0 win over fellow strugglers Southampton.

Leeds were not sparkling going forward – Gracia will have to make them more threatening – but their improved structure under the Spaniard was apparent as they restricted a below-par Saints to just two shots on target.

What will also encourage Leeds fans is the way their team closed out the game following Junior Firpo’s 77th-minute winner.

Gracia brought on midfielder Marc Roca for striker Patrick Bamford in the 86th minute to ensure the win, and it worked, as Leeds maintained control of the game, even coming close to adding a second through another substitute Crysencio Summerville.

Kicking their habit of conceding late goals in the league this season – nine in the final 15 minutes of games so far – will be a major target for Gracia.

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New Leeds head coach Javi Gracia praises the club and the supporters for giving him such a warm welcome

“Today I think is good for the confidence of all of us,” he said in his post-match press conference. “We know it’s only one step, but for us in this moment it’s an important step.

“We know it’s only one win, only three points, but it’s something really special for us.”

The victory, that ends a 10-game winless run, will give the 52-year-old a positive base to build from in the weeks ahead, while it also provides both Leeds players and fans with genuine hope and belief he can get them away from relegation trouble.

Trossard helps Martinelli shine

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Highlights of Leicester against Arsenal

Gabriel Martinelli’s goal proved decisive for Arsenal against Leicester and his player-of-the-match display owed a lot to the presence of Leandro Trossard, rather than Eddie Nketiah, in the No 9 role.

Nketiah, rested at the King Power Stadium having picked up a knock, is an out-and-out striker who rarely strays beyond the width of the opposition box but Trossard is far more inclined to drift towards the flanks and, specifically, to the left.

That’s good news for Martinelli, who loves to cut inside and interchange positions with his striker, much as he did for his winner on Saturday, when Trossard pulled wide and fed him on the inside, allowing him to finish beyond Leicester goalkeeper Danny Ward.

Gabriel Jesus, like Trossard, is a roving centre forward whose movement to the flanks helped Martinelli thrive in the opening months of the season, but the 21-year-old has proved far less effective when deployed alongside Nketiah.

Indeed, before his goal from the bench in last weekend’s 4-2 win over Aston Villa, Martinelli had not found the net in eight games in all competitions, all of which Nketiah started.

Now, however, as Gabriel Jesus continues his recovery from injury, Mikel Arteta knows he has another alternative in the absence of his main striker – and it’s one which suits Martinelli.
Nick Wright

Leicester lost without Maddison

Nobody has scored more goals or provided more assists in the Premier League for Leicester than James Maddison this season, meaning alarm bells were raised when the teams were announced and he was nowhere to be seen.

Brendan Rodgers explained the midfielder – who had been suffering with a knee injury – was absent due to illness, and that had a knock-on effect on Leicester’s game plan.

The hosts seemed content to sit in and frustrate Arsenal, with Harvey Barnes and Kelechi Iheanacho their outlets on the counter-attack, but it was a strategy that failed to test Mikel Arteta’s side.

A draw would have been a good result for Leicester but once Gabriel Martinelli scored, they were unable to alter their approach.

Even the introduction of Youri Tielemans and Jamie Vardy from the bench failed to spark the Foxes into life and they ended the game with only one shot – the fewest any team has had in a single game in the Premier League this season – and an expected goals total of just 0.02.

Wins over Aston Villa and Tottenham, plus some much-needed arrivals in the January transfer window, looked to have turned the tide on Leicester’s disappointing season, but they now find themselves very much in the battle to avoid relegation – and hoping Maddison recovers in time to face Southampton on Saturday, live on Sky Sports.
Joe Shread

Is Solomon ready to impact games from the start?

Fulham's Manor Solomon levelled against Wolves
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Fulham’s Manor Solomon levelled against Wolves

Fulham’s first-half frustrations were compounded by Joao Palhinha becoming the first player to pick up 10 yellow cards in the Premier League this season. Such is his importance to this side, Marco Silva is likely to suffer from his forthcoming two-game suspension.

But Fulham refused to allow an off-night to result in no return. Here, they avoided defeat after conceding the opening goal of a Premier League game at home for only the second time in their last 22 such games, also securing a draw against Bournemouth in October this season.

Just before the hour mark, Matheus Cunha was carried off on a stretcher following an innocuous challenge. Cunha was replaced by Adama Traore following a lengthy stoppage in play while he received treatment.

The incident sparked the hosts into life. Until then, Wolves had controlled proceedings and might have stretched their lead had Raul Jimenez found the inside of the post when rising unmarked.

It was only then that half-time substitute Manor Solomon once again showed his quality, picking up the ball at the edge of the box and curling it into the far corner.

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Highlights from Fulham’s 1-1 draw against Wolves

Silva said: “I feel he is ready to start, but he’s not ready for 90 minutes. He can start games and maybe play 60 minutes. Soon, he is going to start from the beginning. He is a top professional, just like the others.

“Manor is working hard and is fighting for his position. I know he wants to start football matches, but it is the same for Harry [Wilson], Bobby [De Cordova-Reid] and the others. It is good to have healthy competition.”

After the disappointment of suffering a serious knee injury in the first game of the Premier League season against Liverpool, Solomon is making up for lost time. The question now is whether Silva still sees him as a specialist, deadly finisher in games or whether he is ready to contribute from the off.
Ben Grounds

Raul to come roaring back to form?

Raul Jimenez’s days at Wolves look numbered before Julen Lopetegui walked through the door. He hasn’t looked the same all-action centre-forward since returning from that horrific fractured skull sustained in 2020.

However, to even get back playing at the elite level is an achievement let alone trying to match or hit the heights of past performances that certainly ranked him as one of the best strikers in the Premier League at his best.

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Wolves manager Julen Lopetegui believes the second-half injury to forward Matheus Cunha proved a turning point as Fulham fought back to draw 1-1 in the Premier League.

And he does remain half a yard short still but at Fulham on Friday night his intelligence and ability to occupy defenders in order to start attacks provided a great platform for Wolves to build. For the first time in a while, this was just his second Premier League start since August, Jimenez was a help rather than a hindrance to the team.

Jamie Carragher called his performance “fantastic” as the striker grabbed an assist for Pablo Sarrabia’s goal with a clever header to set up the opportunity. Wolves fans will be hoping this is the start of Jimenez finding consistency in his game.
Lewis Jones



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