The Guardian (USA)

Premier League: 10 talking points from the weekend’s action

- Guardian sport

Perceived injustices cannot distract spirited Toffees

If injustice was Everton’s fuel, they never quite caught fire against Manchester United. Beyond their 10-point penalty, Goodison Park rattled with the sound of further injustice, with just about every refereeing decision barracked. It is not uncommon for fans to believe referees are biased against their club, such complaints are heard at every ground in the world but John Brooks actually ruled – and wrongly, as shown by VAR – in Everton’s favour when booking Anthony Martial for a dive when Ashley Young had committed an injudiciou­s foul. A siege mentality is fair enough considerin­g circumstan­ces and during the first half there were signs it was an effective motivation tool. But becoming distracted by the perceived injustice of Brooks’s decisions only served to drop heads. Sean Dyche has form for deflecting towards officialdo­m but perhaps concentrat­ing on creating better, clearer chances for his forwards would be a superior means of kicking against the pricks than enabling fans’ persecutio­n complex. John Brewin

Everton 0-3 Manchester United

Nervy United relying on individual moments of magic

The pink-flyer fury of Goodison Park, a club railing against a historic points deduction. The siege is coming for you, the embattled men in red. How do you cope with the volatility? You get Diogo Dalot to float a hopeful ball into the box and, more importantl­y, you let Alejandro Garnacho fly. The winger’s overhead kick was a staggering mix of technical excellence and grace, a much needed bit of colour in a game that was always going to be more about scrap than intricacy. Even after a dig into the archives, the goal will sit comfortabl­y among the greatest in Premier League history. Despite a comprehens­ive scoreline, United had their nervy moments at the back, remain unconvinci­ng going forward and without key players. For now, individual moments of brilliance will have to do. André Onana provided a few in goal and the 18-year-old Kobbie Mainoo’s goalline clearance in his first Premier League start was one, too. But Garnacho trumped the lot. Taha Hashim

Injury-hit Spurs still playing well despite losing run

Three consecutiv­e defeats have halted Tottenham’s momentum. They led in each game, only to give away cheap goals with slack defending. “Angeball”, all the rage a month ago, is suddenly naive and one-dimensiona­l. Really, though, there was not too much for Spurs to worry about when they lost 2-1 to a good Aston Villa side on Sunday. Ange Postecoglo­u has a small squad and is missing a lot of important players. His defence has been ripped apart, James Maddison is out and the injury list grew longer when Rodrigo Bentancur went off against Villa. However, Spurs still played well. They could have blown Villa away after taking the lead and had chances to equalise after falling behind. This is not a crisis. “Today was about trying to play the football we want to play,” Postecoglo­u said. “If we fell short, we fell short but I didn’t think we fell short today.” Jacob Steinberg

Tottenham 1-2 Aston Villa

Akanji gives Guardiola reason to be patient with Stones

It was a surprise to see John Stones back in the Manchester City squad, although he did not get off the bench in Saturday’s home draw with Liverpool; it had been presumed he was still injured. Pep Guardiola would explain that the centre-back “feels good” but needed “one or two weeks of proper strength training sessions” before he would be completely ready. The good news for Guardiola is he does not have to rush Stones along because, in

Manuel Akanji, he has a player more than capable of filling in. Akanji played the Stones role to a tee against Liverpool, stepping up into midfield alongside Rodri, breaking lines with his carries or passes, connecting with the wingers. He was also part of a defensive effort that restricted Liverpool. Guardiola described the work of Akanji and Rodri as a “masterpiec­e.” He added: “Manu was incredible at Chelsea [two weeks previously] and here. Full-back, centre-half, holding midfield … passes, he’s strong. What a player Txiki [Begiristai­n] has bought me.” David Hytner

Manchester City 1-1 Liverpool

Pochettino fumes at ‘soft’ team but Miley has Magpies smiling

Maybe it was the sight of three goalkeeper­s and four academy players on Newcastle’s bench? Or perhaps 17-year-old Lewis Miley’s presence in Eddie Howe’s central midfield? Whatever the reason an inexcusabl­y complacent Chelsea – with Raheem Sterling, the scorer of a gloriously dipping freekick, a notable exception to the general malaise – permitted themselves to be routed 4-1 by a wonderfull­y committed Newcastle. With 11 senior players injured it was small wonder Howe spoke of a “giant performanc­e”. Or that Mauricio Pochettino cancelled a planned day off and said he was “very, very, very, very, very angry and upset”. Chelsea’s manager was guilty of only slight exaggerati­on when he said his defensivel­y slapdash team were “soft in every single challenge”. Howe can expect a considerab­ly tougher test in the Champions League at Paris Saint-Germain on Tuesday but Miley’s sublime through pass for Alexander Isak’s opening goal suggests he possesses a budding star. Louise Taylor

Newcastle 4-1 Chelsea

Havertz hits timely high note for Arsenal

There were more than a few Arsenal supporters who questioned Mikel Arteta’s judgment over the £65m it cost to sign Kai Havertz from Chelsea, but his winning goal in the 89th minute against Brentford on Saturday showed why the Spaniard was so keen. Havertz has always possessed an eye for goal and even scored just five minutes into his surprise appearance at left-back for Germany against Turkey last week. But while it seems unlikely that Arteta will play him in that position given Arsenal’s paucity of attacking options, the 24-year-old could be a key player as the title race goes on if he can find some rhythm in north London after scoring from open play for his new club for the first time. “I have tried to put my ego aside and the team is the important thing,” Havertz said of his slow start at Arsenal. “These late winners are nice and to celebrate in front of the fans was a good feeling.” Ed Aarons

Brentford 0-1 Arsenal

Ogbene’s work in training comes to fruition at vital time

A game decided over 30 mad minutes, with 12 added on beyond the

 ?? ?? Manchester United’s Kobbie Mainoo clears Dwight McNeil’s shot off the line and away from Idrissa Gueye in the first half at Goodison Park. Photograph: Michael Regan/ Getty Images
Manchester United’s Kobbie Mainoo clears Dwight McNeil’s shot off the line and away from Idrissa Gueye in the first half at Goodison Park. Photograph: Michael Regan/ Getty Images
 ?? Guardian Picture Desk ?? Luca Koleosho of Burnley, Kai Havertz of Arsenal and Lewis Miley of Newcastle. Composite:
Guardian Picture Desk Luca Koleosho of Burnley, Kai Havertz of Arsenal and Lewis Miley of Newcastle. Composite:

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