logo
Arsenal capitalise on Bayindir error to beat Man Utd

Arsenal capitalise on Bayindir error to beat Man Utd

Yahoo11 hours ago
Manchester United's expensively-assembled new forward line drew a blank as Arsenal began their quest for the Premier League title by grinding out a 1-0 win at Old Trafford on Sunday.
Riccardo Calafiori scored the only goal after the Italian defender pounced on a huge mistake by United's stand-in goalkeeper Altay Bayindir.
United have splashed out £200 million ($271 million) on new forwards to remedy a lack of punch in the final third.
Despite promising debuts, Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo failed to find the net, while substitute Benjamin Sesko could not make Arsenal pay for not pursuing their interest in the Slovenian.
After finishing second for the past three seasons, the pressure is on Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta to deliver the club's first league title in 2003/04.
The Spaniard was left to depend on his reliable defence and goalkeeper David Raya to secure a huge three points as the visitors never got going as an attacking force.
Only four other teams scored fewer than United's 44 goals in 38 Premier League games last season as the English giants endured their worst campaign for 51 years, finishing 15th in the table.
The new arrivals have at least lifted the mood around Old Trafford and the majority of the 75,000 fans in attendance could at least leave encouraged by the performance of Ruben Amorim's men.
Cunha and Mbeumo unsettled Arsenal's normally unflappable centre-back pairing of Gabriel Magalhaes and William Saliba early on.
However, United's good work was undone by a glaring error from Bayindir, who was deputising for the injured Andre Onana.
The Turkish international meekly flapped at an inswinging Declan Rice corner on 13 minutes, allowing Calafiori the simplest of tasks to head into an unguarded net.
Patrick Dorgu came closest to a United reply before half-time with a powerful effort from distance that came back off the post.
Mbeumo and Cunha saw tame efforts easily saved by Raya, while the Spaniard did brilliantly to divert another Cunha shot across the face of goal.
Arsenal had held interest in Sesko for well over a year before instead pursuing a move for Viktor Gyokeres as the solution to their need for a number nine.
The Swede had a quiet Premier League debut and was replaced before the hour mark by Kai Havertz.
Sesko made his entrance moments later to a hero's welcome after rejecting the advances of Newcastle for the lure of the 20-time English champions.
United continued to enjoy the better of the play without finding the finish as Mbeumo saw a powerful header expertly clawed out by Raya.
But Arsenal held firm to keep pace with title rivals Liverpool and Manchester City, who also won on the opening weekend of the campaign.
kca/jc
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Watching Chelsea's Josh Acheampong closely to see if he can fill Maresca's problem position
Watching Chelsea's Josh Acheampong closely to see if he can fill Maresca's problem position

New York Times

time13 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Watching Chelsea's Josh Acheampong closely to see if he can fill Maresca's problem position

Eight months ago, when Josh Acheampong made a surprise first Premier League start against Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park, Jean-Philippe Mateta was not really his responsibility. Mateta tried at times to isolate the teenager when attempting to connect with long balls aimed in his direction, but as the middle defender in Enzo Maresca's back three in possession that day, Levi Colwill was the Frenchman's primary marker. Acheampong could focus on defending the space to the right of his fellow Cobham graduate and behind Malo Gusto. He did it very well. Advertisement 'All the players, for me, were good but if I had to decide for one, I think for sure, Josh was our best player because of his age, it was his first game,' Maresca said of Acheampong at the time. Sunday's goalless stalemate with Palace at Stamford Bridge was a different challenge, a ramping-up of the difficulty in these early chapters of Acheampong's career. Shorn of both Colwill to an ACL injury and Tosin Adarabioyo to what Maresca would only describe as a 'physical problem', Chelsea needed Acheampong to do Colwill's job off the ball and on it — a double brief that, considering the impressive solidity of Palace and the particular attributes of Mateta, might have been the most difficult individual assignment on the pitch. Acheampong never gives the impression of being fazed and signalled his readiness, as well as his intent, inside the first minute. Palace's narrow three-man attacking line closed in on Chelsea's defenders as they exchanged sideways passes until Acheampong received the ball, moving to his left with Mateta and Ismaila Sarr both closing in and no obvious forward passing options. Rather than going back to Robert Sanchez, he deftly dribbled between them, waited to commit Palace's second line of pressure, and then sent a pass out to Reece James on the right flank before taking the contact. Acheampong is not yet the passer Colwill is. That is no criticism; Colwill is exceptional at identifying and rattling low passes through the middle of the pitch, carving through opposition lines and finding the feet of Cole Palmer and others in more advanced positions. His rare vision and technique provide a vital gear change to Chelsea's possession play. The baseline stats for Acheampong in possession against Palace make for impressive reading: 99 touches (second only to Trevoh Chalobah among Chelsea players) and 80 of 86 passes completed in open play. But, also in part due to the visitors' positional intelligence and discipline in their defensive shell, he only completed four progressive passes. Palmer, Enzo Fernandez and Joao Pedro had little to work with in the final third. One thing that Acheampong can already do arguably better than any of Chelsea's other defenders is break the first line of opposition pressure with a dribble rather than a pass. Mateta grew grimly accustomed to watching the youngster glide past him. On one occasion around the hour mark, Acheampong carried the ball into the Palace half and delayed for a crucial split second to enable the passing angle he wanted, out to Pedro Neto on the left touchline, to open up. Advertisement Acheampong only played two bad passes in the game, even if both were memorable and nearly disastrous. The first, an attempted progressive pass towards the right intercepted by Eberechi Eze in the 11th minute, initiated the sequence that ended with Palace's star hammering in a free kick through Sanchez, only for Chelsea to be saved by a VAR review and the obscure Law 13. The second, a sideways pass hit behind Moises Caicedo that also fell for Eze in the 69th minute, set up a three-on-two break for Palace that Eze scuppered by immediately attempting a ludicrous shot from 40 yards. Two bad passes out of 86 is a good day on the ball by any estimation, but the reality of this position in Chelsea's system is that any time possession is lost carries grave risk. Maresca insisted on Friday that Colwill and Tosin are the only two defenders in his squad capable of playing as the middle defender and primary ball progressor in his back three. Acheampong's performance against Palace may not have changed his mind, but there were also plenty of flashes of the huge talent that has earned the 19-year-old this opportunity and underpin his case to win many more. Mateta's blend of relentless activity, impressive mobility and smart physicality make him one of the toughest pure No 9s in the Premier League to play against, and he inevitably had moments of dominance when tussling with Acheampong. One of those moments ended up yielding the flashbulb sequence of the Cobham graduate's performance on Sunday. It played out in the 32nd minute, with Mateta holding off Acheampong, bringing down a long ball out of the Palace defence and hitting it ahead of Daniel Munoz's overlapping run on the right. Undeterred by losing the initial engagement, Acheampong pivoted into a sprint and neutralised Munoz with a brilliantly firm but fair sliding tackle. He then got up quickly enough to beat Mateta to the loose ball. The Frenchman clattered into him and was booked. 'Very good,' Maresca said in his post-match press conference when asked about Acheampong's performance. 'I already showed confidence in Josh last year, he played already some games. He did very well, he dealt with Mateta very good. Overall, he did a good game.' Maresca gave no timeframe on Tosin's injury, and when asked whether he is concerned about not having a centre-back to play the Colwill role, his reply was curt: 'I already spoke about that.' Advertisement Concerns about Chelsea's ability to build their possession without Colwill — and perhaps also Tosin — for an extended period of time will not be eased by Sunday's performance. Acheampong may not be a perfect solution to that particular problem position right now, and it is too early to say if he can develop into it. But he supplied further evidence here that he is ready to play in the Premier League this season, and do so regularly. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

Chelsea could MISS OUT on Club World Cup defence in 2029 as FIFA consider changing qualifying rules to include Liverpool and Barcelona
Chelsea could MISS OUT on Club World Cup defence in 2029 as FIFA consider changing qualifying rules to include Liverpool and Barcelona

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Chelsea could MISS OUT on Club World Cup defence in 2029 as FIFA consider changing qualifying rules to include Liverpool and Barcelona

Chelsea could miss out on CWC in 2029 Blues won revamped competition FIFA may not allow them in Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱 WHAT HAPPENED? Chelsea face the prospect of being unable to defend their Club World Cup trophy in 2029, per The Times. Organisers FIFA are considering whether or not to allow the winners to qualify automatically, which is not currently the case. THE BIGGER PICTURE As it stands, each league can only have two clubs representing them in the tournament, with Chelsea and Manchester City heading over from England. That frustrated FIFA, however, as big clubs such as Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal missed out. All three are huge revenue drivers. DID YOU KNOW? UEFA may take issue with the plans, however, if the Club World Cup threatens to become a competitor for the Champions League. As it was, though, none of the three champions of England, Spain and Italy played in the tournament that the Blues won. WHAT NEXT? Chelsea kick off their Premier League season next weekend against Crystal Palace after friendlies versus Bayer Leverkusen and AC Milan.

Are Wolves signing the right players to survive in the Premier League?
Are Wolves signing the right players to survive in the Premier League?

New York Times

time41 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Are Wolves signing the right players to survive in the Premier League?

It was hard to disagree with anything that Vitor Pereira said after watching his Wolverhampton Wanderers side beaten heavily at the start of a new Premier League season. Yes, a 4-0 scoreline against Manchester City was a harsh reflection of their efforts. Yes, there were things to be pleased about despite the scale of the defeat. Advertisement Yes, Wolves failed to find a way to make the most of City's mistakes while the visitors punished Pereira's side ruthlessly for theirs. And yes, Pereira does need 'more solutions', as he diplomatically put it, in certain parts of games. Pereira has gone on record with his desire for 'at least three' more players before the transfer deadline in two weeks. Yet adding three extra players will only go a small way to helping him achieve his ambition of improving on last season. To really give Pereira's players the help they need, the profile of the players who arrive is even more important than the quantity. Wolves are in advanced talks with Hellas Verona over a deal for Jackson Tchatchoua to become the club's new right wing-back, and a CV that includes 62 appearances in Serie A and 10 caps for Cameroon provides promise for the future. But logic dictates that, if a deal can be agreed, at 23 and with no previous Premier League experience, Tchatchoua will need a period of adaptation to find his feet before Pereira and Wolves see the best of him. The same appears to be true of the summer signings who have already checked in. Jhon Arias and Fer Lopez were not considered ready to start the opening game of the campaign. David Moller Wolfe did get the nod but appeared tentative at times as he made his own adjustment to the first 'big five' European league of his career. All three might well come good for Pereira and Wolves once they get to grips with the demands of England's top level, but the head coach needs players who are ready to make a difference now in his first XI. He has lost his captain, Nelson Semed,o on a free transfer, as well as Rayan Ait-Nouri, who was in the winning City team on Saturday, and most notably Matheus Cunha, who left for Manchester United. 'Cunha is a world-class player, we can't expect someone to come in and just replace him,' striker Jorgen Strand Larsen told reporters after the game. 'They need time. It was the same with me last season. You come into a new league and actually score 14 goals; I don't think anyone would have expected that. Advertisement 'But it's the Premier League now, it's time to put the working boots on and they need to show that they're fit to play in this league.' Clearly, expecting either Arias or Lopez to single-handedly fill the gap left by Cunha would be unfair. But there are also signs that Wolves have failed to pull off a trick that they have completed successfully in the past. When the talismanic Ruben Neves departed two summers ago alongside midfield partner Joao Moutinho, Mario Lemina and Joao Gomes had spent the previous half a season bedding in. They began the following campaign as a fully formed midfield duo that ensured Neves and Moutinho were hardly missed. But a year later, when Pedro Neto departed, there was no player ready to fill the void, and the winger's ability to give Wolves a wide, direct outlet has still not been replaced. And now, after the departure of Cunha and Ait-Nouri, they are relying on new faces to hit the ground running to fill the void. It is an unrealistic ask. Cunha himself took six months before beginning to thrive in the league, as did Gomes and midfield partner Andre. So in the next fortnight, Wolves do not just need new players, but new players who know their way around the Premier League. They are pushing the limit for non-homegrown players, which means some players who learned their trade in England will be needed to balance the squad. But they will need them, too, because Pereira needs some 'plug-and-play' options who will strengthen his first team immediately, as Craig Dawson and Lemina — two players with extensive Premier League pedigree — did for Julen Lopetegui when Gomes and Cunha took time to settle. Saturday's opener was always likely to be an unreliable yardstick for Wolves' progress, given the riches at Pep Guardiola's disposal, and the next two league games against Bournemouth and Everton will provide a clearer gauge. Advertisement But what is clear is that Pereira still needs additions — a right wing-back, midfield cover and a creative forward as a minimum. What he needs most, though, are not more players with promise for the future but figures who can add immediate leadership, experience, and old-fashioned Premier League know-how. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store