The peak month for 'randomness' draws to a close at last - although I'm not sure that January will be much better! It didn't seem a promising omen for the Tuesday batch of games - and perhaps for the gameweek as a whole - that BBC's 'Match of the Day' felt obliged to lead with the utterly dire game between West Ham and Brighton! Apart from the splendid top-of-the-table clash between Arsenal and Villa, this might well prove to be the most lacklustre gameweek of the entire year.
Newcastle were looking rather better than they have recently, possibly getting a boost in confidence from the return of Pope in goal. They could have gained more of a lead early on. However, their second goal - scrambled home in the goalmouth by Wissa for his first league strike for his new club - shouldn't have stood, as Guimaraes had clearly shoved over Laurent in front of the keeper before the ball was spilled towards his centre-forward in the middle of the six-yard box. The unfortunate Laurent put his side back in the game shortly afterwards with a great strike. A plucky Burnley fight-back had the away side's goal under siege for a while in the second-half, but their finishing just wasn't good enough. And Newcastle came back at them again at the end, with a Thiaw header being cleared off the line, and moments later Jacob Murphy, presented with an open goal, somehow scooped his effort over the bar. Newcastle eventually claimed the third goal they'd long threatened in added-on time, when a terrible mix-up on the edge of the box between Dubravka and one of his defenders gifted the ball to Guimaraes to curl the ball around them into an empty net. The big surprise/annoyance for FPL managers was that Nick Woltemade, owned by nearly 20%, was given a rest, and only came on for the last 10 minutes.
Chelsea dropped points yet again from being 2-1 up, and were perhaps fortunate to get anything from a game in which their defending from set-pieces was absolutely dreadful (Garnacho's marking in the box was so non-existent that he was withdrawn at half-time, and this has been such a consistent problem from him, I wonder if he'll now get any more starts; he may have value as an impact sub, but Neto and Gittens are obviously much superior options for almost every aspect of the game except take-ons), and in which Bournemouth had rather the better of the chances. Semenyo - widely feared to be making his farewell appearance for the club before an anticipated January transfer - was somewhat unfortunate not to get any FPL credit for for his long-throws which set up both of the goals (I really think 'pre-assists' are often more worthy of points than the official 'assists', which are often just accidental and/or uncontrolled flick-ons), and to concede a penalty for a very slight and entirely unintentional tap on Estevao's heel (not all 'contact' is culpable, and this was another of those right on the cusp, where many referees, perhaps the majority of them, would not have given it; except that Sam Barrott was here directed to take a second look by VAR, and that always prejudices referees towards reversing their original decision). Bournemouth had a much stronger shout for a penalty waved away when a high, dropping ball struck Gusto in the middle of the outside of his upper-arm; the contact was neither intentional nor consequential, but those are not the criteria these days; the ball struck him well below the shoulder, and his arm was extended a long way away from his body - 9 out of 10 incidents like that seem to be given these days. At least it was nice to see Palmer (from the penalty spot; although Petrovic had anticipated the direction of the shot correctly, and very nearly got to it) and Kluivert scoring again; but otherwise, yet another pretty drab match.
Everton's James Garner will perhaps be the most surprising inclusion in the 'Team of the Week', with the breakthrough early goal at Forest, a sublime assist for Barry's late second, another strong 20-yard effort flashing just wide, and a huge defensive contribution as well. Forest had a few chances, with Igor Jesus nicking the ball off a crowd of Everton defenders in the first-half but putting his effort just past the post, and substitute Bakwa striking a good cross-shot inches wide in the closing minutes. Everton regained some energy later in the game, especially after Grealish, back from several days sidelined with an illness, came on from the bench for the last 20 minutes. It was not a great performance from the home side; but even so, the result flattered Everton somewhat - this really felt more like a 1-1. Michael Keane was another late omission as a result of a 'training knock'.
West Ham v Brighton was a bit of a topsy-turvy game. 2 penalties in quick succession for Brighton, both utterly uncontentious (despite Nuno's inevitable gripes); but Danny Welbeck, having despatched the first quite competently, then bizarrely opted for a Panenka chip on the second and crashed the effort against the crossbar (and he couldn't turn in the rebound either). The visitors then gave up a penalty of their own for a supposed handball, which was much harsher - a shot fired at Dunk from point-blank range when he'd spread himself on the floor to try to block (my view on these is that it should be 'strict liability' if the defender's arm blocks a goal-bound shot; but that's not actually what the rules currently say - sometimes we see these given, sometimes we don't). In the second-half, the home side retreated into their shell and tried to hang on to their slender lead, and were increasingly under siege in their goal: as Areola flapped at a succession of corners, it became inevitable that one of them would be bundled in - and they were really fortunate to hang on to even a point. A limping Todibo had to be replaced by Mavropanos after half-time. And Mitoma finally returned from injury, playing the last half-hour, and bringing one good save out of Areola.
Arsenal eventually came out comfortable winners against distant title rivals Villa, although the visiting team had some of the best chances in the first-half, and came back strongly again late in the second, to earn a deserved consolation from Ollie Watkins (via a particularly freaky 'assist' from substitute Malen - a toe-poke at goal from just outside the left post, which somehow squirmed through Raya's legs and rebounded off the upright across the face of the goal straight to Watkins's feet!). Arsenal's opener, however, a corner bundled across the line by just-returned Gabriel, was a bit dubious; the big defender had raised his elbow dangerously into the opposing keeper's chin as he jumped against him to challenge for the ball; the contact was probably only light, if there was any at all, and Martinez appeared to be guilty of going down easily looking for the foul (rather than standing strong and making sure he claimed the ball), but it did look like an unfair challenge - given the exaggerated protection usually afforded to keepers. This didn't ultimately matter, though, as Zubmimendi got the steamroller well and truly in motion shortly afterwards, and the home side went on to their most convincing win of the season. There might have been another slightly contentious moment near the end when Raya scrambled a Watkins effort out from behind him on the line, and it looked as if the ball may momentarily been fully in the goal - but the goal-line technology didn't have a clear view of the ball, and the referee and linesman weren't going to find against the league leaders on something like that. Rice was a surprise late omission with a previously undisclosed knee problem, and Emery made his first substitutions right on the hour - but fortunately they all walked off the pitch just slowly enough to earn their FPL owners full appearance points.
There were a number of decent chances in the Manchester United v Wolves game, with Dorgu flashing a 20-yard cross-shot just wide, Sesko heading a corner against the outside of the post, and Hugo Bueno forcing Lammens into a good save with his leg. The opener for the home side, though, was a bit fortuitous - Zirkzee losing the ball on the edge of the box, but getting it back again from a kind rebound, then slightly mishitting his shot, which lacked much power but took a huge deflection off Krejci to leave the keeper stranded. Krejci got some consolation in the second-half when his powerful header won his side only their third point of the season. As I warned yesterday, Amorim can't be trusted to stick with the same selection or the same tactical approach for any two consecutive games, and although Dorgu, obviously brimming with confidence at the moment, again had a great game, his attacking scope was limited when returned to a left wing-back role in the clunky 3-4-3 system.
Thursday's other goal-dry games were at least quite entertaining, but Spurs's visit to Brentford was not. The home side completely dominated their woefully lacklustre opponents, but hadn't put on their scoring boots for this one. We did, however, see the most incomprehensibly awful refereeing decision of the whole season so far, when Andy Madley - and the VAR team - inexplicably saw nothing wrong with Romero's spastic attempted clearance which got nothing of the ball but wiped out Thiago as he was breaking through on goal 25 yards out; this was unquestionably a 'denial of a goalscoring opportunity' sending-off (and a free-kick in a promising position might have yielded an immediate goal). Spurs fans felt they might have had a penalty when Archie Gray went down on the edge of the box, but there was nothing in that one.
Fulham will feel frustrated they couldn't nick all three points away at Palace. As the home side's legs gave out in the last 20 minutes or so, the visitors' pressure became relentless. Raul had already put a good header against a post before Tom Cairney finally found the deserved equaliser with a sweet left-foot shot from just outside the box. Henderson pulled off a superb reaction save in the closing minutes, when the ball fell to Castagne unmarked in the middle of the box and he unleashed a fierce drive. Andersen had a similar opportunity in the dying seconds of added-on time, but scooped his effort over the top. Marco Silva feels Palace should have been reduced to 10 men in the first-half when Devenny caught Cuenca in the face with an elbow, but it looked a slight and accidental contact that the Fulham man was making a meal of. Somehow, though, 5 Fulham players wound up in the book in this game.
Vastly improved Leeds continued their robust defensive form to deny Liverpool at Anfield - although the home side should have had at least one penalty, when Bijol had both arms around Ekitike for several seconds in the first-half (and concluded by making a vain lunge through his legs, that also made contact with the forward and might have knocked him down), but he kept going rather than falling to the floor; and in the second-half Ampadu commited a very blatant handball right on the edge of the box - and VAR did not seem to check where exactly the contact was. In general, though, Leeds were good value for their point; and indeed they very nearly nicked the win when Calvert-Lewin steered the ball past Alisson in the closing minutes, but was flagged just offside. The FPL frustrations here were more 'rest rotations' - for Calvert-Lewin, Macallister and Kerkez.
Sunderland maintained their impressive defensive solidity to frustrate City and maintain their remarkable unbeaten home record. Their only major scare came when City won a corner in the opening minutes, and Haaland's near-post flick-on was lashed home by Bernardo Silva - but he had been narrowly offside. Pep caused more FPL woe by 'resting' Gvardiol and Reijnders at the start, and making a lot of early substitutions (the removal of Gonzalez and Savinho might have been down to knocks; Nico O'Reilly's replacement wasn't). At least Doku and Rodri were able to make a return from the bench.
It's yet another particularly weird FPL 'Team of the Week', with Krejci, Veltman, Brooks, Garner, Paqueta, and Guimaraes keeping out almost all of the more favoured picks. There were a lot of rest rotations and previously unannounced injuries - and a few early substitutions - causing grief to FPL managers. And it was another wretchedly low-scoring week, both in goals and FPL points - with a dismal global average of just 40 points.
Overall, there weren't very many poor refereeing decisions in this batch of games, but a dubiously allowed goal for Arsenal, a few missed penalty awards (and one very harshly awarded against Brighton), and Andy Madley's bizarre failure to send off Romero easily get this week's score up to an 8 out of 10 on the 'Luck-o-Meter'.







