The Guardian (USA)

Premier League weekly awards: Liverpool’s chaos agent; Guardiola’s frustratio­n

- Oliver Connolly

Goal of the week

Darwin Núñez is a cackling delight. Every game is an adventure. Every finish, must-watch television.

Saturday’s goal in a 4-1 win over Brentford was Nunez at his chaosinduc­ing best.

Let’s play this out. So you’re through on goal, bearing down on the box. Diogo Jota is running free next to you, in the midst of his own scoring streak. You have a few options: you could shape your body, create an angle and slide it past the keeper; you could shut your eyes, blast it either side of Mark Flekken, and hope for the best; you could try to round the keeper and roll the ball into an empty net; you could slip the ball to Jota for a tap-in.

A typical striker would have settled on one of those options. This being Núñez, running at pace, he easily could have selected any of the above and fallen over in the process. But because this isNúñez, he did something only he could imagine: he chipped Flekken.

As the ball left Núñez’s boot, an audible ‘wheyyy’ drifted in from the Brentford crowd, thinking the forward had mis-hit the ball and skied it into the stands. Jürgen Klopp flinched, his face telling us what he was probably thinking. You have got to be kidding me?

We feel you, Jürgen.

Somehow, Núñez was able to get the ball up and over Flekken to give Liverpool the lead. It was the chaos agent at his most exhilarati­ng best.

Underwhelm­ing performanc­e of the week

Was Man City’s 1-1 draw at home to Chelsea the result of an off-day from Erling Haaland or indicative of underlying concerns? The answer sits somewhere in the middle.

Haaland finished with nine shots but was unable to find the back of the net, including a hat-trick of chances that are old hat for the striker. Pep Guardiola was keen not to blame Haaland for the result. “It’s good to have nine shots, and next time he’s going to score,” Guardiola said post-match. “We create the chances, he had the chances and next time he’s going to score. I don’t blame him. It’s football, it’s human beings.”

Guardiola is right. The issues extended beyond his main man. City were flat with the ball, and too often exposed once they lost it.

City still have the best squad in the league. On balance, they’re still the favorites to win the title. But there’s more of a drop-off from City’s top stars to their replacemen­ts these days, particular­ly against the league’s upper half.

Swapping out John Stones (injured), Jack Grealish (injured) and İlkay Gündoğan (who left for Barcelona last summer) for the trio Manuel Akanji, Julián Álvarez and Jérémy Doku trio alters how City plays. Guardiola demands control – something that Grealish is happy to oblige – whereas the Doku-Alvarez duo bring a messy energy to the final third. Once they lose the ball, City are more vulnerable to counteratt­acks without Stones or Gundogan anchored in the middle of the pitch.

Finding a balance between the kinetic energy that Álvarez brings in a deeper role supporting Haaland and that Doku provides on the wing while limiting the team’s vulnerabil­ity on turnovers is a conundrum Guardiola is yet to solve. Against smaller teams that are happy to sit in and defend, with limited quality on the break, it works. Doku’s directness and Álvarez’s late runs are needed-against inferior opposition. Against teams who can punish City on the counter, though, it’s been a struggle. City have won only one of their six matches against the traditiona­l ‘big six’ in the league this season.

On another day, City probably run out comfortabl­e winners against Chelsea, with Haaland walking off with the match ball. But it’s the second time this season they’ve struggled to deal with Chelsea’s pace on the break. There are nagging questions for Guardiola to solve against the league’s best, with games against Liverpool and Arsenal looming.

The Scrooge McDuck award for earning a new contract The transfer vultures are starting to circle around Pedro Neto. And for good reason. Finally injury-free, Neto has put together the strongest run of form in his career. He added his ninth assist of the season as Wolves upset Tottenham 2-1 on Saturday. There is some noise in Neto’s assist total, but he’s proven throughout the season to be one of the most consistent creators outside the league’s top five.

As Neto pulled the ball back to João Gomes for the winner, you could almost hear the champagne corks popping at Gestifute HQ, the Portuguese agency with a clientele that includes a who’s who of Portugal’s great and good. A transfer to one of Europe’s biggest clubs – and a meaty new contract – will be on their desk by June.

The winger has always been a prodigious talent, but has been held back by successive injuries and a crop of managers that prioritize­d defensive stability over attacking output – Neto is nearing on playing more minutes this season than he has in the past two years combined. Neto has added more end product this season, but it’s his allaround game that will have the league’s table-toppers intrigued. He is a tidy player in crowded environmen­ts, but he can engage head-down, batteringr­am mode when need be, turning on the burners to sprint away from defenders.

Comb through StatsBomb’s database, and Neto’s nearest corollary is Leandro Trossard during his final six months with Brighton, at least in terms of production. Trossard is now helping fire Arsenal to title contention after joining Arsenal for £26m in January 2023. With plenty of time left on his contract at Wolves, Neto should command a figure double that this summer.

Tottenham and Manchester United will probably lead the race for his signature, unless Todd Boehly finds £80m buried beneath the pillows.

Player of the week

Our first back-to-back winner! With Arsenal making scoring look effortless, it’s tough to look beyond Bukayo Saka. Saka has scored in four consecutiv­e league games for the first time in his career and is playing his best football at the most important stage of the season.

For the second weekend in a row, Arsenal were rampant, putting five past Burnley on the road. Mikel Arteta’s side have been ruthless in the past two weeks, racking up an aggregate 11-0 result. They were excellent away at West Ham; they were even better at Burnley.

Saka was at the center of it all, again. He has been outstandin­g all season, but since the turn of the new year, he’s been the most potent player in the league:

Early in his career, Saka was defined by a slippery, dribble-first style. There was plenty of substance, but it was wrapped in a turbo-charged package. He knifed from out-to-in with jagged, sudden accelerati­ons, sometimes into closed corridors. Now, Saka subtly shifts through the gears. He seems to apparate from place to place, always sitting neatly between two defenders. He’s too intelligen­t to allow defenders to get close before the ball arrives, and too quick allow them to nip the ball away when they encroach on his space. More than anything, he’s evolved into a more ruthlessly efficient finisher, the kind that can power a contender to a championsh­ip.

Saka and his teammates have been at their destructiv­e best over the past month. They have tightened up at the back and rediscover­ed their goalscorin­g mojo, without succumbing to screams to sign a traditiona­l centre-forward in January. It’s now five wins on the bounce to open 2024, winning with an aggregate scoreline of 21-2.

Timing is everything in a title race. With City stumbling and Liverpool’s injury list mounting, Arsenal are peaking at the right time.

Video of the week

Warning: the following tackle is for mature audiences only.

Mason Holgate was shown a red card after a VAR interventi­on 11 minutes into Sheffield United’s 5-0 defeat to Brighton on Sunday for a shocking tackle on Kaoru Mitoma.

“In my opinion, it’s not a red card,” Sheffield United defender Anel Ahmedhodži­ć said after the match. He’s right. Forget talk of blue cards, we need a new system altogether to judge the severity of Mason Holgate’s tackle. Maybe we could move to a figure skating-style grading system. Or we could introduce flaming cards that carry an automatic five-game suspension.

Congrats to Holgate. He joins luminaires like Roy Keane, Jamie Carragher and Ben Thatcher on the Mt. Rushmore of hideous challenges.

At this stage, Sheffield United are all but relegated. To have any chance of competing in games, they need to be perfect. Brighton are a far better team than the Blades, but the home side fell apart after Holgate was sent off. It was their fifth defeat of the season by five or more goals.

Perhaps the most frustratin­g thing for Sheffield United is that they lack any discernibl­e style. Burnley were thrashed 5-0 by Arsenal on Saturday, but the atmosphere around Chris Wilder’s team feels different. There may be a sense of naivety about what Vincent Kompany’s team are trying to do, but it’s clear that they’re trying to do something.Sheffield United look like a motley group of players who met at a bus depot 10 minutes before kickoff.

Does anything say you’re lessseriou­s about Premier League survival than donning this hairdo 4-0 down at home with your side down to 10 men?

At that point, don’t you race to find some trimmers to clean the lot off before entering the pitch?

Sheffield United are one of the most uncompetit­ive teams in league history. And their defining characteri­stic, at this point, is caving once things start to go wrong.

Embarrassi­ng headline of the week

In case it escaped your attention, Nottingham Forest are appointing the first ‘referee analyst’, bringing Mark Clattenbur­g out of the podcast rounds to help prepare the team for upcoming match officials. Yes, that’s a real sentence.

“I’ll be working with Forest under

A late goal from substitute Marko Arnautovic gave Inter Milan a 1-0 home victory against Atlético Madrid in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie on Tuesday.

The Austria striker, who had replaced the injured Marcus Thuram at half-time, redeemed himself after several missed chances by squeezing the ball home after Lautaro Martínez’s shot was saved by goalkeeper Jan Oblak in the 79th minute.

It was only the second time the teams had played each other, with Atlético winning 2-0 in the Uefa Super Cup back in 2010.

“It’s very satisfying. The lads were wonderful against a physical, technical side that did not make it at all easy,” Inter’s manager, Simone Inzaghi, told

Sky Sport Italia.

“We know this is only the first leg, the second match will be tough, and certainly there are regrets for the result considerin­g with all that we created, we deserved a wider scoreline. This is football, we keep going,” Inzaghi added.

The return fixture is on 13 March in the Spanish capital.

Inter wore black armbands as their fans at San Siro paid tribute to the club’s former player Germany World Cupwinner, Andreas Brehme who passed away aged 63 earlier on Tuesday. They dominated the match and although Atlético had their chances the home side’s solid defence prevented the visitors from getting any attempts on target.

Samuel Lino had Atlético’s first opportunit­y but his right-footed curler went just wide of the far post. Before the interval Martínez and Thuram had openings to break the deadlock for Inter but also came up against a resilient defence, with attempts blocked or saved by Oblak.

Inter started the second half on the attack as Federico Dimarco supplied a cross to Arnautovic, who slid in slightly late and ballooned the ball over from close range. Just after the hour the home fans again expressed their frustratio­n as Arnautovic, having found himself free in front of goal, sent another effort over the crossbar before the villain became the hero of the night with his late winning goal.

“The third chance came after I missed a couple and I’m happy to have scored for the people who came here to cheer as well as for my teammates and for my family, who were here tonight,” Arnautovic told Mediaset.

Despite the late win it was also a night of concern for Inzaghi as Thuram, a pivotal player this season, was substitute­d at half-time, seemingly struggling with a leg injury. The 26-year-old has made a significan­t contributi­on this term with 12 goals and 11 assists in all competitio­ns.

“He will have tests and we hope that we won’t lose him for long,” said Inzaghi.

 ?? Season. Composite: Reuters; Walt Disney Co/Everett/Shuttersto­ck ?? Manchester City have one once in their six matches against the traditiona­l ‘big six’ this
Season. Composite: Reuters; Walt Disney Co/Everett/Shuttersto­ck Manchester City have one once in their six matches against the traditiona­l ‘big six’ this
 ?? Photograph: NBC ?? Jürgen Klopp reacts to Darwin Núñez’s chip.
Photograph: NBC Jürgen Klopp reacts to Darwin Núñez’s chip.
 ?? Sabattini/Getty Images ?? Marko Arnautovic celebrates after scoring against Atlético Madrid. Photograph: Alessandro
Sabattini/Getty Images Marko Arnautovic celebrates after scoring against Atlético Madrid. Photograph: Alessandro

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