Premier League: 10 Talking Points From This Weekend's Action

 Callum Wilson; Sander Berge; Ben Godfrey. Composite: Jonny Weeks/Getty/PA/AP
Callum Wilson; Sander Berge; Ben Godfrey. Composite: Jonny Weeks/Getty/PA/AP
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Premier League: 10 Talking Points From This Weekend's Action

 Callum Wilson; Sander Berge; Ben Godfrey. Composite: Jonny Weeks/Getty/PA/AP
Callum Wilson; Sander Berge; Ben Godfrey. Composite: Jonny Weeks/Getty/PA/AP

1) Reds leave opponents dizzy to give themselves a rest

Which is your favorite Klopp Liverpool team? The title one? The Champions League one? Or the one the year before that didn’t win anything but broke like an avenging swarm of bees and left their opponents dizzy? For some it is still the last of these, when Klopp was still grooving his patterns, working out the best way to win, and building to the supreme efficiency of last year. In which case there will have been a fond echo in the destruction at Selhurst Park, where Liverpool did give chances in the first half hour but attacked with fury either side. This was the first time in a year they have scored five in the league with the title race still alive. In this muddled season they do have the power to terrorize opponents and kill games early. This game was spectacular. But it was also, by the end, a much‑needed stroll. Barney Ronay

2) Wilting Pépé sums up Arteta’s problems

Both managers praised their respective team’s spirit here but one assessment was more convincing than the other – Carlo Ancelotti witnessed it in every Everton player; Mikel Arteta in a select few. The contrast was encapsulated in the battle between Ben Godfrey and Nicolas Pépé. Everton’s summer signing from Norwich, a right‑sided central defender by trade, has been deployed as a makeshift left-back in the absence of Lucas Digne. Resolute and determined, the 22-year-old was one reason Arsenal’s second-half improvement did not yield too many problems for Jordan Pickford. Pépé’s performance was another. He wilted in the face of Godfrey’s opposition. A well-taken penalty to equalize in the first half was a rare example of the Ivory Coast forward taking responsibility for helping a team in desperate trouble. Andy Hunter

3) McTominay setting standards for others to follow

As teams become fixated by how Bruno Fernandes can win games single-handedly, space will open up for others to make key interventions. Scott McTominay proved that a willingness to utilize the vacant areas to Manchester United’s advantage against Leeds. The midfielder is one of the fittest players in the Premier League and is making the most of it with his running into parts of the pitch where he knows chances will be created. First, he drove a vicious shot low into the bottom corner and then ran beyond the Leeds defense to finish with the confidence of a striker for his second. Some have doubted McTominay’s ability to change a game, seeing him as a reliable member of a squad rather than a match-winner. He is, however, showing his growing confidence and finally looks like he truly belongs in the United midfield, relishing the battle with those around him at Old Trafford, setting the standard the others need to follow. Will Unwin

4) Wilson shows his importance to Newcastle

It is no exaggeration to say Callum Wilson is as important to Steve Bruce as Darren Bent once proved during the Newcastle manager’s time in charge of Sunderland. Without Wilson and his eight goals, not to mention much impressive link play, Bruce’s current side would surely be stuck in the relegation zone. Instead, with Wilson finding his new employer’s counterattacking approach better suited to his skills than Bournemouth’s more patient build-ups, they are mid-table and four points better off than Arsenal. Not for the first time Wilson got Newcastle off the hook, cleverly delaying his fall to ensure he collapsed inside the box after being fouled just outside it by Fulham’s Joachim Andersen, who was shown the red card. Wilson converted the penalty, earning his team a barely deserved point. Louise Taylor

5) Stones make most of chance to shine

As Manchester City delivered the kind of gritty performance not usually associated with Pep Guardiola teams, it was John Stones who set the tone in a resilient defensive display. Vocal and calm, he combined well with Rúben Dias in central defense, helping City hold on for a precious win. The 26-year-old was focused against Southampton, never giving the impression that he was going to ruin a commanding display. Saints were limited to few chances and, as City continue to search for leaders following Vincent Kompany’s departure in May 2019, the challenge for Stones is to ensure he keeps his place. The talent is not in doubt but Guardiola has not always trusted him, especially in the big moments. Stones, desperate to win back an England place, has a chance to prove he can excel consistently. Jacob Steinberg

6) Alli’s absence could be final straw

On paper, Dele Alli seems a perfect match for José Mourinho: a hard-running creator with a strong fiendish streak. But increasingly it looks like Alli is going to be rendered collateral damage of Spurs’ Mourinho revolution. He was not among Spurs’ nine substitutes against Leicester, a development in keeping with a year in which Tottenham’s former golden boy has been shunted to the peripheries. Alli’s defenders could claim that his meagre output has been caused by this sidelining but the truth is that his form turned bad long before Mourinho arrived at the club – what has changed is that it is now keeping him out of the team. At 24, Alli has time on his side. But he will be acutely aware that he plays in a position in which England is suddenly teeming with young talent. If he wants to reassert his status as above Grealish, Foden and the rest, he might want to start looking for a new employer – and soon. Alex Hess

7) Allardyce needs signings to save Baggies

There were few positives for Sam Allardyce to take from the derby defeat to Aston Villa. Instead, the performance and nature of the loss reinforced the numerous issues West Brom have suffered from since their return to the Premier League. Their defensive problems were laid bare early on when they went behind and once Jake Livermore was dismissed for a lunge, there was no coming back. It would surprise many if Allardyce does not make plenty of moves in January, as without them the Baggies’ fate will be sealed sooner rather than later. Apart from Sam Johnstone, there does not seem to be an area on the pitch that cannot be improved; West Brom look porous at the back, lacking creativity in midfield and are completely absent in the final third. Without heavy investment, Allardyce will suffer his first relegation from the Premier League but he will do in his power to avoid such peril. WU

8) Albrighton still at Foxes forefront

He rarely makes the headlines, but Marc Albrighton is again becoming integral to this Leicester City side. Even when Leicester won the league in 2016, the midfielder felt old-fashioned, chugging up the wing, as N’Golo Kanté, Riyad Mahrez (and even Danny Drinkwater) stole the midfield limelight. Yet nobody made for appearances for City that season. He’s not big, or fast, not the team’s set-piece specialist, and has yet to register a goal or assist this season. His xG is presumably shocking. Yet the 31-year-old was brilliant against Spurs, playing the full 90 minutes, just as he has for each of Leicester’s last three league wins. The last three games he has been rested (versus Everton, Zorya and Fulham), Leicester have lost. Against Spurs, he brought versatility, tactical intelligence – even his yellow card was a cynical (but clever) tackle to bring down Harry Kane on a Spurs counter-attack – stamina to cover Leicester’s attacking full-backs and quality when it mattered, providing the cross which led to Toby Alderweireld’s own goal. He is Brendan Rodgers’s unsung hero. Michael Butler

9) Berge blow adds to Blades worries

If matters could not get any worse for Sheffield United, they will have to approach mission impossible without one of their shining lights. Chris Wilder confirmed after the draw with Brighton that Sander Berge will miss the next three months with a hamstring injury and it hardly helps matters that Berge’s deputy at the Amex, John Lundstram, now faces a three-match ban after his red card. “I’ve just been on the phone to John Gannon and Bob Booker so I think they’ll be in training on Monday morning,” quipped Wilder, who remains grounded whatever the weather. “I might give TC [Tony Currie] a call.” The less amusing truth, though, is that his side simply cannot catch a break: they are very rarely outplayed but last season’s ability to shape events in their favor appears long gone. Berge’s absence may hasten what, according to the league table at least, is a particularly unsightly demise. Nick Ames

10) Diallo in line to prove worth

This has been a scintillating season for Southampton. Manager Ralph Hasenhüttl is now being linked with the Manchester United job. Jannik Vestergaard is moonlighting as the best Southampton defender since Virgil van Dijk. In James Ward-Prowse, they have – according to Pep Guardiola after City’s 1-0 win – “the best free-kick taker I have seen in my life.” High praise to someone who has coached Lionel Messi. Oriel Romeu has been sublime in midfield but with the Spaniard picking up his fifth booking of the season against City, he will miss the trip to Fulham on Boxing Day, with Danny Ings also likely to be sidelined with a hamstring strain. Two bigs blows for Hasenhüttl, who could opt to give Ibrahimo Diallo his first start since his £11m move from Brest. The Frenchman has never played more than 11 minutes in a match since joining Saints – will the France Under-21 midfielder be trusted to fill Romeu’s boots? MB

The Guardian Sport



Chelsea’s Maresca Rues ‘Easy Goals’ Conceded in Loss to Atalanta 

Chelsea's coach Enzo Maresca leaves the pitch after losing the UEFA Champions League soccer match between Atalanta BC and Chelsea FC, in Bergamo, Italy, 09 December 2025. (EPA)
Chelsea's coach Enzo Maresca leaves the pitch after losing the UEFA Champions League soccer match between Atalanta BC and Chelsea FC, in Bergamo, Italy, 09 December 2025. (EPA)
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Chelsea’s Maresca Rues ‘Easy Goals’ Conceded in Loss to Atalanta 

Chelsea's coach Enzo Maresca leaves the pitch after losing the UEFA Champions League soccer match between Atalanta BC and Chelsea FC, in Bergamo, Italy, 09 December 2025. (EPA)
Chelsea's coach Enzo Maresca leaves the pitch after losing the UEFA Champions League soccer match between Atalanta BC and Chelsea FC, in Bergamo, Italy, 09 December 2025. (EPA)

Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca was disappointed by how his side conceded two second-half goals to throw away their lead and slump to a 2-1 Champions League defeat at Atalanta on Tuesday.

Joao Pedro broke the deadlock for Chelsea after 25 minutes, but Serie A side Atalanta returned with far more intent after the break and overturned the deficit through goals from Gianluca Scamacca and Charles De Ketelaere.

Maresca said his side should have taken the chances they had to add to their first-half lead.

"After we conceded the 1-1 (goal), we lost a little bit of control of the game, and then we conceded the second one," he told reporters.

"I think both goals, we can avoid both of them. They're quite easy goals."

The win put Atalanta near the top of the Champions League table, putting them in the mix for direct qualification for the round of 16 with 13 points, while Chelsea have 10.

If the Premier League club do not win their remaining games against Cypriot side Pafos and Italy's Napoli, they will likely finish outside the top eight and be forced to play a two-legged playoff match.

"Probably with two wins, probably with 16 points, you can be in the top eight," the Italian manager added.

"Not sure about that, but now the focus has to be the next game. And then the next one, for sure. If we want to try to finish top eight, we need to win both.

"Otherwise, we try to play the playoff and then go to the next round."

Chelsea next host Everton in a league match on Saturday.


Specter of Salah Still Hangs Over Liverpool Despite Win Over Inter 

Liverpool's manager Arne Slot gestures after the Champions League, league phase, soccer match between Inter Milan and Liverpool in Milan, Italy, Tuesday, Dec.9, 2025. (AP)
Liverpool's manager Arne Slot gestures after the Champions League, league phase, soccer match between Inter Milan and Liverpool in Milan, Italy, Tuesday, Dec.9, 2025. (AP)
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Specter of Salah Still Hangs Over Liverpool Despite Win Over Inter 

Liverpool's manager Arne Slot gestures after the Champions League, league phase, soccer match between Inter Milan and Liverpool in Milan, Italy, Tuesday, Dec.9, 2025. (AP)
Liverpool's manager Arne Slot gestures after the Champions League, league phase, soccer match between Inter Milan and Liverpool in Milan, Italy, Tuesday, Dec.9, 2025. (AP)

The shadow of Mohamed Salah's bust-up with Liverpool hung over the team as they faced Inter Milan in the Champions League on Tuesday and the Egyptian forward's situation looks a long way from being resolved after they eked out a narrow 1-0 win.

Salah was left out of Tuesday's squad by coach Arne Slot after his withering comments on Saturday, when he accused the club of throwing him under the bus having been left on the bench during a 3-3 Premier League draw with Leeds United.

When asked ahead of Tuesday's game if Salah had played his last game for the club, Slot said he had "no clue".

With the travelling fans singing the coach's name after the final whistle against Inter, Slot took a slightly more conciliatory line towards Salah, suggesting that the player may have spoken in the heat of the moment after the disappointing draw with Leeds.

Yet he also suggested the responsibility may rest with Salah to repair the damage.

"You concede, and then a lot of things are being said. Normally, that affects players as well, because he's been so influential for the club and the players, so it's never nice when something happens to their team-mates," Slot said.

"Everyone makes mistakes in life, but does the player know he's made a mistake? Should the initiative (to make things right) come from him or me? That's another question," he added.

Liverpool have one more Premier League game against Brighton & Hove Albion before Salah departs to play with Egypt in the African Cup of Nations on Dec. 15.

Salah is the third-highest scorer in Liverpool's history behind Ian Rush and Roger Hunt with 250 goals in all competitions and defender Andy Robertson said he hoped the Egyptian's time at the club was not over.

"That'll be up to other people. It's not up to me, but I love playing with Mo Salah, and I hope to continue to play with him," the 31-year-old said.

Crowned Premier League champions under Slot last season with Salah contributing 34 goals and 18 assists in 52 games across all competitions, Liverpool have struggled to find their best form so far this term, but Tuesday's win might give them some breathing-room.

"We know we're in not the best moment, we know the results haven't been good enough, we know the performances haven't been good enough. So it's important that this club is in the Champions League, and then when you are you have to compete in it," Robertson said.

"The supporters expect us to go far in it (the Champions League), so we need to up our performances to get through and then to hopefully build momentum, so it was a huge result for all of us."


Kobe's Sasaki Scores Late Penalty to Claim Draw in Asian Champions League

Soccer Football - Friendly - Vissel Kobe v FC Barcelona - Japan National Stadium, Tokyo, Japan - June 6, 2023 Vissel Kobe players pose for a team group photo before the match REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
Soccer Football - Friendly - Vissel Kobe v FC Barcelona - Japan National Stadium, Tokyo, Japan - June 6, 2023 Vissel Kobe players pose for a team group photo before the match REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
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Kobe's Sasaki Scores Late Penalty to Claim Draw in Asian Champions League

Soccer Football - Friendly - Vissel Kobe v FC Barcelona - Japan National Stadium, Tokyo, Japan - June 6, 2023 Vissel Kobe players pose for a team group photo before the match REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
Soccer Football - Friendly - Vissel Kobe v FC Barcelona - Japan National Stadium, Tokyo, Japan - June 6, 2023 Vissel Kobe players pose for a team group photo before the match REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo

Hosts Vissel Kobe salvaged a 2-2 draw with Chinese Super League outfit Chengdu Rongcheng through Daiju Sasaki's 90th-minute penalty in the Asian Champions League Elite on Tuesday to bring down the curtain on coach Takayuki Yoshida's time in charge.

Yoshida announced last week that he was standing down after three-and-a-half years in charge having led the club to the J-League title in 2023 and 2024, but Kobe were unable to give the 48-year-old a winning send-off.

Yoshinori Muto put Kobe in front in the 18th minute when he scored on the turn from eight yards out but Chengdu forward Felipe lashed in the equaliser from distance in first half stoppage time, Reuters reported.

The Brazilian was on target again from the penalty spot with 13 minutes remaining, although Sasaki was also successful with his spot kick in the final minute to earn Kobe a point.

The draw means Kobe are two points clear in the eastern league phase standings of second-placed Machida Zelvia, who cruised to a 3-1 win over Ulsan HD from South Korea.

Asahi Masuyama gave the home side the lead when he deflected Hokuto Shimoda's volley past Jo Hyeon-woo in the sixth minute and Takuma Nishimura doubled the advantage 15 minutes later.

Oh Se-hun's header two minutes into the second half extended Machida's lead before Um Won-sang slid in to score a consolation for Ulsan in the 55th minute.

GOALKEEPER CHEN DENIES JOHOR DARUL TA'ZIM

Johor Darul Ta'zim moved up to sixth with a 0-0 draw against Shanghai Port with the Malaysian side thwarted by a stellar performance from Chinese goalkeeper Chen Wei while Bergson and Nacho Mendez hit the woodwork for the hosts.

Buriram United, meanwhile, were frustrated by a late penalty decision that earned Gangwon FC a 2-2 draw in Thailand after Mark Jackson's side had come from behind to lead.

Mo Jae-hyeon put the visitors in front in the 33rd minute but Ko Myeong-seok's header levelled the scores 13 minutes into the second half.

Suphanat Mueanta's calm finish from an angle put Buriram in front in the 65th minute before Guilherme Bissoli was judged to have fouled Park Ho-yeong in the area. Kim Dae-won converted the 74th-minute spot kick to earn his side a point.

The first eight finishers in the 12-team league phase will advance to March's last 16 in both east and west Asia with the quarter-finals, semi-finals and final to be played in a centralized venue in Saudi Arabia in April.