Premier League: 10 Talking Points From the Weekend’s Action

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Antonio Rudiger and Jacob Sorensen Composite: Guardian
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Antonio Rudiger and Jacob Sorensen Composite: Guardian
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Premier League: 10 Talking Points From the Weekend’s Action

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Antonio Rudiger and Jacob Sorensen Composite: Guardian
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Antonio Rudiger and Jacob Sorensen Composite: Guardian

1) Aubameyang captaincy surely in doubt

Mikel Arteta has had his fill when it comes to off-pitch issues at Arsenal, but Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang has given him another. We only know one side of the story but the manager’s position is that Aubameyang returned late from a trip abroad and, not for the first time, violated one or more of his “non-negotiables”. Arteta was already grappling with his captain’s dwindling goal output to the extent that Aubameyang was benched at Everton last Monday. Now he must consider whether dropping him from the squad that convincingly beat Southampton is sufficient punishment. Arsenal’s inconsistent young team need better leadership from their senior players, a theme yet to be consigned to history despite Arteta’s efforts, and there must be huge question marks over the 32-year-old’s status as captain now. Nick Ames

Match report: Arsenal 3-0 Southampton

2) Watford unable to dine out on clean sheets

It’s now 26 matches and counting since Watford’s last clean sheet in a Premier League match – that 3-0 victory over Liverpool on 29 February 2020 under Nigel Pearson. In the hope that they don’t have to wait until the next leap year to achieve another, Claudio Ranieri has promised his players a meal out for every clean sheet they can manage. They came within six minutes of getting one against Brentford on Friday before conceding two late goals. Unfortunately for Emmanuel Dennis, who scored his seventh goal of the season, his steak is on ice for a while longer. “I walked up to him [Ranieri] after the Manchester United game and said, ‘you need to pay for dinner,’ and he said, ‘it wasn’t a clean sheet!’,” said the striker. “I said, ‘you’re lucky but we’ll try next week to keep a clean sheet so you can pay for dinner’. A very expensive one.” Ed Aarons

Match report: Brentford 2-1 Watford

3) Antonio needs help up front for Hammers
Michail Antonio has been a revelation after his reinvention. He was the league’s joint top-scorer early in the season but he is now on an eight-game goal drought in all competitions. It is worth noting that the former winger and wing-back, yet to score more than 10 goals in a top-flight season, is the lone senior striker at a club who stand a genuine chance of securing a top-four finish. If there is a question what Antonio can be expected to do – is his ceiling 15 goals? 20? – it also illustrates the importance of buying in January. Failing to score at Burnley should not be attributed just to him on a day when only Declan Rice excelled, but it was the sort of scrappy game a professional penalty-box predator might have won. Richard Jolly

Match report: Burnley 0-0 West Ham

4) Chelsea still lack cutting edge

Chelsea have scored three goals in their last two games, but there is still no sign of a clear identity in attack. The European champions are not like Manchester City and Liverpool; it is rare for them to blow organised teams away. Creating clear chances often feels like a slog and it should be a worry that Chelsea’s most effective attacker during their victory over Leeds was Antonio Rüdiger, who won both Jorginho’s second-half penalties. Indeed, there was not much of a celebration from Thomas Tuchel when the Italian sealed the win in added time. Even Chelsea’s first goal against Leeds, crisply converted by Mason Mount, only came when they won possession high up the pitch and caught Marcelo Bielsa’s side out of shape. Otherwise it was too predictable. The title is likely to prove out of reach if Chelsea cannot sharpen their cutting edge. Jacob Steinberg

5) Attitude important for struggling Everton

When Richarlison was taken off just before the hour mark at Crystal Palace, he looked disgruntled by the decision. The Brazilian had offered very little in the time he spent on the pitch, thanks to a mixture of good defending and Everton’s incredibly defensive style of play. After making his way to the back of the dugout, he settled in for a good sulk, even when Everton got back into the game thanks to his replacement, Salomón Rondón. Lucas Digne has missed the past two games for apparent off-field reasons, a sign that not everything is right at a club who have now won once in 10 matches. The cracks are showing before a crucial period for a frustrated group of players. With significant January investment unlikely, Benítez needs his best assets onside or they could face an even more troubling second half of the season. Will Unwin

Match report: Crystal Palace 3-1 Everton

6) Rodgers welcomes back terrific Tielemans

It was difficult to look beyond James Maddison for Leicester’s star turn in the 4-0 win over Newcastle given the quality of his play, particularly the outside-of-the-boot pass that led to his team’s second goal, scored by Patson Daka. But pulling the strings a little further back was Youri Tielemans. The midfielder returned from a month-long injury lay-off in Thursday’s Europa League defeat at Napoli and he cut loose here. There were the two goals, both lashed high into the net – the first from the penalty spot – but as pleasing for the manager, Brendan Rodgers, was the vision and accuracy of his passing together with his work without the ball. It was Tielemans’ pressure that led to the turnover for the opening goal and there would be a crucial defensive header to keep Newcastle out at 1-0. No Leicester player made more tackles. It was the complete performance. David Hytner

Match report: Leicester 4-0 Newcastle

7) Gerrard looks forward after Anfield loss

Ambition dominated Steven Gerrard’s thoughts following his Anfield return and the second defeat of his Aston Villa reign. Could his team have shown more in a game that Liverpool dominated but finished nervously after the introductions of Danny Ings, Emiliano Buendía and Morgan Sanson by the visitors? “You can go too gung-ho too early against the top sides and get hit for a big scoreline,” the Villa manager pondered. “But I’ll look at myself and whether I should have done it earlier.” Five games in, the new Villa manager is already thinking ahead to days when his team start on the front foot at places such as Anfield. “I want the players and people at the club to be as ambitious as myself,” he added. “I am not saying my ambitions are different to theirs, but we won’t settle for anything except trying to improve. It is still early days but we have seen enough to believe we can take this club forward, finish the season in a positive position and build.” Andy Hunter

Match report: Liverpool 1-0 Aston Villa

8) Guardiola backs struggling Grealish

Following another underwhelming performance by Jack Grealish against Wolves, Pep Guardiola defended his £100m signing while admitting he must add to the two goals and three assists he has recorded in all competitions for Manchester City this season. “One day it will unlock and he’ll score or he’ll make a goal,” said the manager. “Jack is a player whose decision-making is really good. In the final third he has to do it [better], but it will come. When you are a forward and the other team plays with 10 players or nine players in the box [as against Wolves] it’s so difficult. When one team doesn’t want to play – always it’s so difficult.” That is all fair but what is undeniable is that Grealish, having arrived from Aston Villa at great expense, is yet to truly sparkle for City. Jamie Jackson

Match report: Manchester City 1-0 Wolves

9) Sørensen steps into breach for Smith

Twenty minutes into a sodden Saturday evening fixture Dean Smith had problems. Grant Hanley’s shoulder had popped and, despite a valiant attempt to continue, his night was done. With an already patched-up defence, Smith turned to the utility man Jacob Sørensen. Having joined from Esbjerg last summer, the Dane appeared 32 times in Norwich’s Championship title run. All bar one of his 20 league starts came as a stand-in left-back. The exception was a rare outing in his preferred defensive midfield role, which is where his 10 previous Premier League minutes had come. A natural fit to come on at right-centre back against Manchester United, then. But Sørensen was not fazed. His four blocks and five interceptions were both team highs, while eight successful presses were bettered only by Josh Sargent. Even faced with Cristiano Ronaldo’s stepovers, Sørensen remained unmoved. His efforts embodied a valiant display by the hosts, even if they came away empty-handed. Sam Dalling

Match report: Norwich 0-1 Manchester United

10) Penalty calls a result of top teams’ pressure

The margins are often very small at the highest level of the professional game, and Saturday summed this up perfectly. Manchester City, Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester United all won thanks to a penalty. Many will shout about conspiracies and big-club bias but it is actually just the nature of modern football, where better teams with deeper squads dominate matches and tire out the opposition. They spend more time in the box, ultimately giving them greater chance of earning a spot-kick once defenders make mistakes. The call for handball against João Moutinho was questionable but justifiable, and few could argue with the others. None of the victorious teams were at their best on Saturday but still spent most of their matches on top – United’s possession level was the lowest of the four at 54%. Even if all four sides can perhaps count themselves lucky to win, luck is another thing teams need to be successful. Will Unwin



Man City Go Top With 2-1 Win at Forest After Cherki Heroics

 27 December 2025, United Kingdom, Nottingham: Manchester City's Rayan Cherki (L) celebrates scoring his side's second goal with teammate Erling Haaland during the English Premier League soccer match between Nottingham Forest and Manchester City at the City Ground. (Barrington Coombs/PA Wire/dpa_
27 December 2025, United Kingdom, Nottingham: Manchester City's Rayan Cherki (L) celebrates scoring his side's second goal with teammate Erling Haaland during the English Premier League soccer match between Nottingham Forest and Manchester City at the City Ground. (Barrington Coombs/PA Wire/dpa_
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Man City Go Top With 2-1 Win at Forest After Cherki Heroics

 27 December 2025, United Kingdom, Nottingham: Manchester City's Rayan Cherki (L) celebrates scoring his side's second goal with teammate Erling Haaland during the English Premier League soccer match between Nottingham Forest and Manchester City at the City Ground. (Barrington Coombs/PA Wire/dpa_
27 December 2025, United Kingdom, Nottingham: Manchester City's Rayan Cherki (L) celebrates scoring his side's second goal with teammate Erling Haaland during the English Premier League soccer match between Nottingham Forest and Manchester City at the City Ground. (Barrington Coombs/PA Wire/dpa_

Manchester City beat Nottingham Forest 2-1 to move provisionally to the top of the Premier League table after Rayan Cherki grabbed a goal and assist away at The City Ground on Saturday.

The French midfielder first threaded the pass for City's opener before striking an 83rd-minute winner from a set-piece to secure their eighth straight victory across all competitions.

The result moved City to 40 points, one ahead of Arsenal who face Brighton & Hove Albion later on Saturday. Forest remain in 17th place, nervously looking over their shoulder at a five-point gap between them and the relegation zone.

"When the games come we need just one thing: to win. We take the points because the championship is so long and so hard, so today is a big win," Cherki told TNT Sports.

"It's good for the team because the game was not simple."

City dominated ‌possession in a ‌goalless first half but struggled to break down Forest's compact defensive ‌shape, ⁠with striker Erling ‌Haaland largely isolated up front.

Forest's best chance fell to Morgan Gibbs-White, who failed to convert Callum Hudson-Odoi's cross in behind the defense early in the game.

CHERKI AND REIJNDERS FIND CITY BREAKTHROUGH

The breakthrough came within three minutes of the restart when Cherki slipped the ball through for Tijjani Reijnders and the Dutchman fired home from an angle to make it 1-0.

"Cherki knows how to find those passes and I could finish that one. He is very good, he finds spaces and when he gets the ball ⁠you have to be ready and in position," Reijnders said.

But City's lead lasted only six minutes as Forest launched a swift counter-attack ‌that ended with Igor Jesus crossing for Omari Hutchinson, who ‍took his shot first-time and beat Gianluigi ‍Donnarumma to score his first goal for the club.

Forest sensed victory but squandered chances when Jesus ‍and Nicolo Savona both shot over, while at the other end Phil Foden's effort was well saved by goalkeeper John Victor.

City's sustained pressure finally paid off when Josko Gvardiol headed down a corner kick for Cherki, who took it on the half-volley and sent a low drive from the edge of the box into the back of the net to restore their lead.

"All the kilos I won (gained) over Christmas time in weight, today I lost it. I am fit again. ⁠What a team Sean Dyche has made again. That's a really, really big three points," Guardiola said.

Forest's loss also extended Sean Dyche's winless record against Pep Guardiola to 17 Premier League games, the longest winless streak for a manager against another in the league.

DYCHE UNHAPPY WITH MATCH OFFICIALS

But Dyche blamed the match officials for the defeat, describing their performance as "unacceptable" after he felt decisions did not go their way.

Dyche complained that Gibbs-White was pushed to the ground for the second goal and could not get back up in time to block Cherki's shot.

"Unfortunately, the officials had a huge part of the game today and that's very unfortunate," Dyche said.

"We don't want that, but scratching my head now, I can't believe it. Just look back at some of the incidents, I just can't believe what I'm watching.

"There's ‌plenty of people here, there's TV cameras here, but everyone can see the performance today. But it's unacceptable, in my opinion, because it affects the game massively."


Salah Steers Egypt into Africa Cup Knockout Stages After VAR Denies South Africa Late Penalty

 Egypt's forward #10 Mohamed Salah shoots from the penalty spot to score the team's first goal during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group B football match between Egypt and South Africa at Adrar Stadium in Agadir on December 26, 2025. (AFP)
Egypt's forward #10 Mohamed Salah shoots from the penalty spot to score the team's first goal during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group B football match between Egypt and South Africa at Adrar Stadium in Agadir on December 26, 2025. (AFP)
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Salah Steers Egypt into Africa Cup Knockout Stages After VAR Denies South Africa Late Penalty

 Egypt's forward #10 Mohamed Salah shoots from the penalty spot to score the team's first goal during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group B football match between Egypt and South Africa at Adrar Stadium in Agadir on December 26, 2025. (AFP)
Egypt's forward #10 Mohamed Salah shoots from the penalty spot to score the team's first goal during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group B football match between Egypt and South Africa at Adrar Stadium in Agadir on December 26, 2025. (AFP)

Mohamed Salah scored again on Friday as Egypt's 10 men held on to beat South Africa 1-0 to reach the knockout stages of the Africa Cup of Nations.

Salah, who secured the Pharaohs’ opening win with a stoppage-time strike against Zimbabwe on Monday, did it again in Agadir and his penalty before the break secured progression from Group B.

But South Africa should arguably have been given a penalty in stoppage time when Yasser Ibrahim blocked a shot with his arm. After a long delay, the referee decided against awarding the spot kick after consulting video replays and Ibrahim sank to the ground in relief.

“We didn’t have much luck. We also had several refereeing decisions go against us,” South Africa coach Hugo Broos said.

Salah converted his penalty after he was struck in the face by the hand of the retreating South Africa forward Lyle Foster. Salah showed no ill effects from the blow and sent his shot straight down the middle while goalkeeper Ronwen Williams dived to his right.

There was still time before the break for Egypt defender Mohamed Hany to get sent off, after receiving a second yellow card for a foul on Teboho Mokoena.

Goalkeeper Mohamed El Shenawy was Egypt’s key player in the second half.

“We gave our all in this match right until the end, and we also hope for the best for what comes next,” the 37-year-old El Shenawy said.

Earlier, Angola and Zimbabwe drew 1-1 in the other group game, a result that suited neither side after opening losses.

Egypt leads with 6 points from two games followed by South Africa on 3. Angola and Zimbabwe have a point each. The top two progress from each group, along with the best third-place finishers.

Zambia drew 1-1 with Comoros in the early Group A fixture after both lost their opening games, meaning the winner of the late match could be sure of progressing.


Draper to Miss Australian Open Due to Injury

 Jack Draper, of Great Britain, reacts after defeating Federico Agustin Gomez, of Argentina, during the first round of the US Open tennis championships, Aug. 25, 2025, in New York. (AP)
Jack Draper, of Great Britain, reacts after defeating Federico Agustin Gomez, of Argentina, during the first round of the US Open tennis championships, Aug. 25, 2025, in New York. (AP)
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Draper to Miss Australian Open Due to Injury

 Jack Draper, of Great Britain, reacts after defeating Federico Agustin Gomez, of Argentina, during the first round of the US Open tennis championships, Aug. 25, 2025, in New York. (AP)
Jack Draper, of Great Britain, reacts after defeating Federico Agustin Gomez, of Argentina, during the first round of the US Open tennis championships, Aug. 25, 2025, in New York. (AP)

Briton Jack Draper said on Friday he will not compete in next month's Australian Open, citing ongoing recovery from an injury.

Draper, 10th in the world rankings, was forced to withdraw from the second round of ‌the US Open ‌in August ‌due ⁠to bone ‌bruising in his left arm.

"Unfortunately, me and my team have decided not to head out to Australia this year. It's a really, ⁠really tough decision," the British ‌number one said in ‍a video ‍posted on X.

The 24-year-old ‍is targeting a February return alongside preparation for the defense of his Indian Wells title in March.

"This injury has been the most difficult ⁠and complex of my career," Draper added. "It's weird, it always seems to make me more resilient. I'm looking forward to getting back out there in 2026 and competing."

The Australian Open begins on January 18 in ‌Melbourne.