Jonathan Wilson's Blog, page 78
August 24, 2021
Mailbag special: your questions answered – Football Weekly
Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Jonathan Wilson and John Brewin to answer listeners’ questions
Rate, review, share on Apple Podcasts , Soundcloud , Audioboom , Mixcloud , Acast and Stitcher , and join the conversation on Facebook , Twitter and email .
On the podcast today: the panel answer a host of your questions. Should the World Cup really be held in Qatar? Is there too much football these days? And where would Manchester United finish in the table if the Football Weekly panellists were in charge?
August 23, 2021
Romelu Lukaku dominates Arsenal on return as Chelsea’s leading man
The Belgium striker’s second debut gave a glimpse of what to expect this season, albeit against a weak defence that made it too easy
Once he had been confirmed in the starting XI, did anybody doubt that Romelu Lukaku would score against Arsenal on Sunday? Was there anybody who thought, “You know what? I think Arsenal might come up with a viable plan to stop him?” Lukaku had scored on his debut for each of the other five clubs he had played for; he required a second debut to score for Chelsea, but from kick-off on Sunday it only ever felt a matter of time.
Related: Ruthless Romelu Lukaku puts feeble Arsenal to the sword on Chelsea return
Related: Arsenal appear a club lacking in every department in capitulation to Chelsea | Jonathan Liew
Continue reading...August 21, 2021
Another defeat and Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal DNA may not be enough to save his job | Jonathan Wilson
With fans back at the Emirates, Sunday’s derby with Chelsea will show how much goodwill the manager has in reserve
Everybody wants their own Pep Guardiola. Everybody wants to find a former player, steeped in the traditions of the club, who can bring great success, preferably by using products of the academy. But the problem with geniuses is that there aren’t many of them about.
It’s also the problem of clubs: for all the talk of identities and DNA, very few of them actually have a cogent philosophy that binds first team to youth sides, or at least not one that has been in place for long enough to turn out a player who can return almost two decades after their debut to find an academy still turning out players shaped by the same prevailing idea.
Related: Arteta’s Arsenal already on back foot after bruising first night failure | Nick Ames
Related: Arsenal fans need Mikel Arteta to work out what he is trying to do | Jonathan Liew
Continue reading...August 18, 2021
No surprise Leeds lost to Manchester United, just look at the wage bills | Jonathan Wilson
Although teams can often defy financial logic for a time, to move up a tier is incredibly difficult
The easy thing is to blame the manager. It has become football’s default response to any crisis. A team hits a poor run or loses a big game: get rid of the manager. As Alex Ferguson said as many as 14 years ago, we live in “a mocking culture” and reality television has fostered the idea people should be voted off with great regularity (that he was trying to defend Steve McClaren’s reign as England manager should not undermine the wider point).
Managers are expendable. Rejigging squads takes time and money and huge amounts of effort in terms of research and recruitment, whereas anybody can look at who is doing well in Portugal or Greece or the Championship and spy a potential messiah. Then there are the structural factors, the underlying economic issues it is often preferable to ignore because to acknowledge them is to accept how little agency the people we shout about every week really have in football.
Related: Mason Greenwood has everything Manchester United need in a striker
Related: Nagelsmann’s first trophy, a Serie A preview and the Spanish Sean Dyche – Football Weekly
Continue reading...August 16, 2021
The return of the Premier League and farewell Gerd Müller – Football Weekly
Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Jonathan Wilson and Paul MacInnes to discuss the opening week of Premier League fixtures
Rate, review, share on Apple Podcasts , Soundcloud , Audioboom , Mixcloud , Acast and Stitcher , and join the conversation on Facebook , Twitter and email .
The Premier League is back and so are actual real-life fans. The panel discuss which supporters should be most excited about the weekend’s action, which fans are reading too much into the first game and who should fear an oncoming crisis.
Continue reading...August 15, 2021
Tottenham 1-0 Manchester City: Premier League - as it happened
Son Heung-min scored the only goal of the game to get Tottenham off to the perfect start against Manchester City
7.05pm BST
Right then, I’ll be off. Here’s the match report again. Bye!
Related: Tottenham’s Son Heung-min strikes to stun wasteful Manchester City
7.00pm BST
Japhet Tanganga doesn’t seem to be getting carried away. “I had my tactics,” he says of his personal duel with Raheem Sterling. “I knew coming into this game I’d had six weeks of preparation and he maybe had less.”
Who wants to hear from Japh?
Yeah, us too! pic.twitter.com/oA7U4PQZPU
6.54pm BST
Raheem Sterling talks after City lost their first game of the season for the first time in 10 years:
I thought we could control the game a little bit better. We let them counter-attack too much, they did exactly what they wanted to do. It’s a difficult one to take, but it’s a long season. I thought we were on the front foot, [but] they kept getting small counters and we should control them a bit better. But we’ll bounce back from this one. It’s always difficult to start with a defeat, but it’s a long road but we’ve got to keep focused and try to bounce back from this. I’ve played with [Grealish] a few times and it’s a good one. It’s still early days with me and him and we’ll learn each other’s games a lot more as the season goes on.
6.45pm BST
Sometimes football can be reassuringly familiar. This was Manchester City with the flaws on the outside; this is what they look like when things go wrong, as they have twice before against Nuno Espírito Santo sides, and weirdly often against Spurs. Football’s finances may be ruined and the game sinking into a moral mire, but there is still comfort to be drawn from teams, despite it all, remaining resolutely themselves.
City began with great pace and urgency, slicing Spurs open so frequently the game might have been over within 10 minutes. But then having failed to score, the mechanisms became gummed and, more troublingly, they looked extremely vulnerable on the counter-attack, with Lucas Moura a constant menace. Of course City were the more proactive side, despite being without numerous first-teamers – clubs with the essentially unlimited resources of a state should be – and of course they will win most games, but this is how they lose them, with a slight wastefulness in front of goal and a carelessness against the counter.
Much more here:
Related: Tottenham’s Son Heung-min strikes to stun wasteful Manchester City
6.45pm BST
Nuno Espirito Santo praises the hard work of his players:
It was good. It would make any manager proud when they work so hard. They were strong [at the start] and I think we were lucky, because they had real chances, but the boys held on. We knew it was going to be tough, and after the first 15 minutes I think we controlled better. Not only Tanganga, in terms of shape, in terms of organisation, the front three worked very hard. It’s very difficult to play against City, it requires a lot of discipline, but the boys were great. I’m sure that with commitment and with the talent that we have, we’re going to be a good team. I’m learning every day, and I’m very proud of them today.
Look, Harry is one of the best players in the world. Honestly. We are very lucky to have him. So he has to get ready and help the team.
6.39pm BST
Son Heung-Min has a chat:
Obviously we want to start well. With the fans finally, just an incredible performance. Everyone worked so hard to get these three points. Man City currently are the best team in the world. I think this means a lot for us for the start of the season. We did just a great job. We know Man City are a really good team. We prepared really well, we worked hard in preseason and we showed on the pitch. We did a great job, we did amazingly.
We are all professional. We wanted to focus on this game. It doesn’t matter who’s involved and who’s not. Obviously Harry’s so, so important for us.
6.26pm BST
That was an excellent game played at a wild pace and full of excellent performances. Tanganga is Gary Neville’s man of the match, but Lucas Moura was superb and the pace of Tottenham’s front three, and the ability of each of them to run with the ball, was integral. City started beautifully but couldn’t sustain it and lacked an attacking focus. I think Cancelo was their most convincing attacking force, which given some of the other players on the pitch was unexpected.
6.23pm BST
90+6 mins: It’s all over, and the champions’ title defence is off to a miserable start!
6.22pm BST
90+5 mins: Gundogan is on the ground and clutching his left shoulder. He’s not actually on the pitch, but the game has been delayed until he receives treatment.
6.22pm BST
90+4 mins: Spurs try to waste time by the corner flag. City win it back, and two noteworthy tackles follow. One, from Dele Alli on Jesus, is appalling and gets nowhere near either ball or player. The next, from Sanchez on De Bruyne, is magnificent.
6.20pm BST
90+3 mins: Zinchenko tries a cross from only just inside Tottenham’s half, which Lloris claims easily. More roars from the crowd.
6.20pm BST
90+3 mins: Lo Celso tries to dribble into the penalty area, but just as it looks like he might conjure himself a chance Fernandinho pops up to deal with the situation.
6.18pm BST
90+1 mins: There will be about four minutes of stoppage time. They start with Grealish getting annoyed with Lucas Moura for going down a little easily (the irony!) and Sanchez getting annoyed with Grealish for getting annoyed with Lucas Moura. Both annoyed footballers are booked.
6.17pm BST
90 mins: Cristian Romero comes on for Hojbjerg.
6.16pm BST
89 mins: Hojbjerg has gone down, and is suffering from a severe case of unspecified malaise.
6.16pm BST
89 mins: Another City corner comes to nothing, and when they toss the ball back into the area Lloris comes and claims, to massive acclaim from the home support.
6.14pm BST
87 mins: City work the ball to Torres, now on the right, but his low cross is too close to Lloris.
6.12pm BST
85 mins: That corner makes the one that ended with a Cancelo 18-yard header look good.
6.12pm BST
84 mins: Save! De Bruyne hits a 20-yard curler that looks very nice but is punched away by Lloris. Still, City have a corner.
6.10pm BST
83 mins: Spurs bring Matt Toherty on for Tanganga, who has been excellent on what looked, in those first few minutes, to be the flank down which City would rip Spurs apart.
6.09pm BST
81 mins: City win a corner, and try something off the training ground. This appears to be setting up Cancelo to attempt to score with a header from 18 yards, which suggests they need a bit more time on the training ground. “Last season City took it easy for the first six games to create a sense of false hope for the title pretenders, then turned on the afterburners and won the league by 12 points,” notes Richard Harris. “Even if they lose today it will only make Gunners fans happy that the Invincibles’ record is safe for another season.”
6.07pm BST
79 mins: Spurs ping the ball to Son, who controls excellently and has another shot deflected wide.
6.06pm BST
79 mins: A double change for City, who bring Zinchenko and De Bruyne on for Mendy and Mahrez, and also tell Jesus to get in the middle.
6.05pm BST
78 mins: Lucas Moura looks as fit as the butcher’s proverbial dog. He’s sent scampering down the right again, and wins his side a free kick.
6.04pm BST
77 mins: Spurs bring Lo Celso on for Bergwijn, who gets a nice ovation for his efforts. The downside of basically only attacking on the break is that Tottenham’s front three have had to do a lot of sprinting.
6.02pm BST
75 mins: Save! Jesus plays to Grealish, running into the left side of the area, but his left-foot shot is straight at Lloris, who saves.
6.01pm BST
74 mins: Spurs win a free kick on the right, but when it’s sent into the mixer Davinson Sanchez blocks Lucas Moura’s shot.
5.58pm BST
71 mins: City have brought on a striker, with Jesus coming on. But he’s replaced Sterling, and has taken his place on the left.
5.58pm BST
70 mins: How has this not gone in? Alli fouls Mahrez and after along delay while everyone gets set City work it perfectly, passing right to Cancelo who sends a brilliant cross into the six-yard box where Torres gets a foot to it and somehow diverts it wide.
5.54pm BST
66 mins: Handbags! Lucas Moura seems to have tackled Grealish cleanly and is miffed when the refereee blows his whistle. So he doesn’t immediately give the ball to anyone in blue, leading to much fractious jostling. The Brazilian is booked.
5.52pm BST
65 mins: I’m not entirely sure that it was in Tottenham’s interests to use this game to demonstrate City’s desperate need for a striker.
5.50pm BST
63 mins: Every time City lose the ball Spurs are threatening to rip their defence apart. This time Lucas Moura is a little over-ambitious with his final pass, and Ederson claims.
5.48pm BST
60 mins: Bergwijn misses a brilliant chance for a second! Spurs have been breaking excellently, and this time Lucas Moura roars down the middle and his pass left to Bergwijn deflects off a diving defender even more perfectly for Bergwijn, who has nobody but Ederson ahead of him, runs into the area and clips a shot well wide!
5.46pm BST
59 mins: Mahrez crosses from the right and Sterling jumps for it, goes down and looks pleadingly at the referee, who isn’t interested and rightly so.
5.45pm BST
57 mins: Replays suggest that Ederson might have saved Son’s shot if he had only tried to, rather than just standing still and watching it whistle past him. Also that Dias might have got in its way, but he wasn’t sure whether to go with foot or head and ended just thrusting out a knee, which was definitely the wrong choice of body part.
5.43pm BST
Spurs have their first shot on target, and it only goes into the net! It is an absolute cracker from Son Heung-Min, who runs down the right, cuts inside Ake and hits a low left-footer from the edge of the area that curls just inside the far post!
5.41pm BST
53 mins: A wild 45 seconds or so for Spurs, who hit a cross from the right that nearly drops to a player in white but doesn’t, then hit a cross from the left that nearly drops to a player in white but doesn’t, then a cross from the right that would have dropped to a player in white (Alli) had another one (Lucas Moura) not headed it away from him.
5.37pm BST
49 mins: It’s been coming, and now it’s arrived! Sterling cuts in from the left and scuffs a rubbish, bobbly shot straight into the arms of Lloris.
5.36pm BST
48 mins: A nice City move ends with Gundogan, who turns and shoots straight into a defender’s leg. Spurs counter, and from 25 yards Moura drags a shot well wide.
5.34pm BST
47 mins: Spurs have the first chance of the new half after Alli dispossessed Fernandinho runs towards the penalty area and then passes to Hojbjerg, whose low shot across goal is bad enough that Son might have turned it in had Dias not cleared it first.
5.32pm BST
46 mins: Peeeeeep! Ferran Torres starts half two for Manchester City.
5.29pm BST
There have been no shots on target.
5.28pm BST
It’s been an interesting game, played at the familiar hurly-burly Premier League™ pace, though it can broadly be summarised as one in which one team excelled for 10 minutes, and neither really hit the heights thereafter.
Meanwhile, if my inbox is anything to go by everybody thinks Kane should be sold, if for a variety of reasons. “It makes more and more sense that Kane was left out today,” rages Matthew Richman. “I’m perfectly happy leaving to the imagination the image of half-hearted pressing as his midfield is overrun all while his agent tries to finagle his way out of a contract for more money on a weekly basis than many see in a lifetime. I understand that he has quite the bank of goodwill from Spurs fans, but between this saga and a Euro showing where his best moments were on the way down to the grass I find his image somewhat wanting.”
5.17pm BST
45+2 mins: One last Eric Dier booted clearance and the teams go in level at the break.
5.16pm BST
45 mins: There’ll be one minute of stoppage time, or somesuch.
5.13pm BST
43 mins: Another shot from Son, again about 20 yards out, but this one dips onto the roof of the net. City were massively superior for about 10 minutes, but now it’s anyone’s game.
5.12pm BST
40 mins: Close! Moura leads a Spurs break and finds Son, who uses Bergwijn’s decoy run, turns back onto his right foot and hits a shot from 20 yards that flicks off Cancelo ‘s right buttock and bounces just wide. The referee gives a goal kick.
5.08pm BST
37 mins: The referee is really vehemently opposed to booking Tanganga. Having given him a final warning 10 minutes ago when he fouls Sterling again he calls Lloris, the Spurs captain, over and gives him another final warning only seriously this time he means it.
5.06pm BST
35 mins: Chance for City! Sterling crosses from the left and it drops to Mahrez for a left-foot half-volley, which he smashes six yards wide.
5.03pm BST
32 mins: Son ruins a Spurs break again, refusing to cross from the left this time, coming back onto his right foot, giving City plenty of time to get back in defensive position and then passing to a teammate in a worse position.
5.01pm BST
30 mins: A penalty appeal as the ball hits Skipp in the chest/arm area, but the referee is unimpressed. “Oliver Skipp is not a footballers name,” insists Stephen Carr. “It sounds more like someone who has a successful blog about craft gin.”
4.59pm BST
28 mins: Spurs attack, Lucas Moura running from inside his own half towards the City penalty area, but his prod through to Bergwijn is a bit overstrong, and the move breaks down from there.
4.58pm BST
26 mins: An encouraging spell of play for Spurs. City try to break with Sterling and Grealish combining again on the left, but Tanganga takes hold of Sterling and doesn’t let go, conceding a free kick and earning himself a strict talking to from the referee.
4.55pm BST
24 mins: Blocked on the line! Ederson comes out for a free kick but doesn’t reach it, and the ball loops sideways to Lucas Moura, whose volley looked to be heading in at the near post had Gundogan not got in the way.
4.53pm BST
22 mins: This one flicks off the head of Dias at the near post and bounces out of the other side of the area.
4.52pm BST
21 mins: Another corner for the home team, after Mendy loses the ball and a few moments later Bergwijn’s shot is deflected wide.
4.50pm BST
19 mins: Now they win a corner, but Ake heads clear.
4.49pm BST
18 mins: A few better minutes for Spurs, who have kept the ball for a while. They haven’t done much with it, but really they just needed to not be defending for a little while.
4.46pm BST
15 mins: Grealish gets a bit stuck on the left flank, but Hojbjerg offers him a leg to fall over so he ends up with a free kick.
4.43pm BST
12 mins: City win a corner, which they take short. Eventually Mendy overhits a cross, Mahrez rescues it near the opposite corner flag and he leaves a Spurs player on hi backside before dribbling to the byline and crossing low into the arms of Lloris.
4.40pm BST
10 mins: Sky report that Kane is in the stadium, watching his team dominate a lacklustre Spurs side.
4.39pm BST
8 mins: Mendy is dispossessed and the ball worked to Son, who runs at Ake on the right but refuses to cross towards Lucas Moura and Bergwijn, stops, turns back and plays a 40-yard backwards pass.
4.38pm BST
7 mins: No goals yet, but this has “4-0 away win, home team booed off at half and full time” written all over it.
4.37pm BST
6 mins: Another chance! Dier gets a foot to Mahrez’s cross but just prods the ball out to Cancelo, bursting into the area, whose low shot zips just wide!
4.35pm BST
5 mins: Nearly a goal! Mendy crosses from the left, Lloris comes for it but gets nowhere near, and Fernandinho heads just wide of an empty net.
4.35pm BST
4 mins: Skipp intervenes again from the free kick, flicking Gundogan’s shot over the bar with his head.
4.34pm BST
3 mins: A chaotic opening ends with Grealish bursting into the penalty area and going down. Looks like Skipp gave him a shove, just outside the box.
4.31pm BST
1 min: Peeeeeep! Spurs get the ball rolling.
4.30pm BST
And out they come! The players get ready for kick-off, and Mendy has a long chat with Grealish before it happens. And now for football.
4.27pm BST
The teams have gathered in the, um, foyer area near the lifts.
4.25pm BST
“Is Hugo Lloris did say that it was better ‘to step back to come back stronger’ he was probably translating from the familiar expression in French,“reculer pour mieux sauter, literally take a step back to jump better,” suggests Charles Antaki. “What he didn’t say, though, is that sauter also means to blow up.”
4.17pm BST
Pep Guardiola has his pre-match talk with Sky:
Jack is not going to solve our problems. We will involve him in the way we want to play, be part of something, and then help him as much as possible to produce in the game as many times as possible. He has to be himself. He didn’t come for one game or two games, he came for many years. Maybe he adapt quicker, maybe he needs more time. We are going to wait.
The selection today was more thinking of the guys that have been here since the beginning. Two days ago was the first time we were all together. Some guys get condition quicker. They arrived good, but it’s just the first game. There are 38 games. They know everyone is going to be involved.
4.12pm BST
I wonder how long they had to spend dreaming up this nickname:
A start for Skippy. pic.twitter.com/S8BkXQqaxz
4.08pm BST
Nuno Espirito Santo has a quick chat with Sky about Kane. “He has to continue his preparation. I think Harry needs to work, he worked today, and he’ll keep on working until he’s ready to help the team,” he says. “He needs to be fit. A different case with Bryan because he came from the Olympic Games. For them it’s important for them to be here, to see the hotel, the stadium.”
4.00pm BST
Tottenham’s new away kit, though. Thoughts? It’s clearly appalling, but I quite like it anyway.
3.49pm BST
And finally, here’s a short story on the teams from PA Media:
Harry Kane was not involved in Tottenham’s Premier League opener against Manchester City.
The England captain, who wants to join City this summer, only had two training sessions with the first team following his late return from holiday.
3.47pm BST
And here’s Richard Jolly on Pep Guardiola’s pre-match thoughts, which are, in short, that if some sheikh wants to monetise the natural wealth of the nation his family happen to rule by birthright and funnel the funds into his own and eventually Pep’s own pockets, “what’s the problem?”
Pep Guardiola is the big spender whose greatest triumphs came on the cheap, even if it may not make him the poster boy for penury. As he cited his cut-price Champions League wins, the impression he gave is that he sees them as part of football’s rich tapestry. Guardiola is set to become the first manager to field a £100m footballer in the Premier League – and if he has his way then Jack Grealish will only possess the status as the division’s record signing for a few weeks.
If Sunday’s game at Tottenham doubles up as a tug of war for Harry Kane’s services, money may form a familiar backdrop. Guardiola can be an alchemist of a coach and an inventive tactician, but he is familiar with the accusation he has become a chequebook manager. English football’s maiden nine-figure buy may be used in the case for the prosecution. Tottenham offered £25m for Grealish in 2018; perhaps Daniel Levy’s reluctance to go higher amounted to a false economy as, three years later, Manchester City paid four times as much for the Aston Villa captain.
Related: ‘Each club has its own reality’: Pep Guardiola defends big spending
3.40pm BST
Here’s David Hytner on Nuno Espirito Santo’s pre-match thoughts, though events have rather overtaken the story given that we now know that Kane is spending the afternoon at home:
Nuno Espírito Santo has suggested he will factor in the turmoil that Harry Kane is experiencing before deciding whether to name him on Sunday in the squad to face Manchester City – the club that the Tottenham striker is desperate to join.
Kane trained with his Spurs teammates on Friday for the first time in pre-season after a later-than-expected return from a holiday in the Bahamas and Florida (at least from the club’s point of view) and a requirement to quarantine for five days.
Related: Nuno will factor in turmoil before deciding if Kane faces Manchester City
3.37pm BST
That Manchester City team news tweet is interesting. How have they made Grealish’s face so shiny? Someone seems to have been at him with the furniture polish.
3.34pm BST
The teams have been confirmed, the big news being that as widely trailed Harry Kane is absent and Jack Grealish is starting:
Tottenham Hotspur: Lloris, Tanganga, Sanchez, Dier, Reguilon, Skipp, Hojbjerg, Bergwijn, Alli, Lucas Moura, Son. Subs: Doherty, Romero, Winks, Gil Salvatierra, Sissoko, Lo Celso, Gollini, Davies, Scarlett.
Man City: Ederson, Joao Cancelo, Dias, Ake, Mendy, Grealish, Fernandinho, Gundogan, Mahrez, Torres, Sterling. Subs: Walker, Stones, Gabriel Jesus, Zinchenko, Steffen, Laporte, Rodri, De Bruyne, Bernardo Silva.
Referee: Anthony Taylor.
Your team to face @ManCity! pic.twitter.com/BUFdDIMny8
TEAM NEWS IS IN!
XI | Ederson, Cancelo, Dias, Ake, Mendy, Fernandinho (C), Gundogan, Grealish, Mahrez, Torres, Sterling.
SUBS | Steffen, Walker, Stones, Jesus, Zinchenko, Laporte, Rodrigo, De Bruyne, Bernardo.
@HaysWorldwide
#ManCity | https://t.co/axa0klD5re pic.twitter.com/8yfNFHOSVe
3.30pm BST
Harry Kane has been left out of the Tottenham squad for this match, apparently because he is not fit enough to play.
3.30pm BST
Hello world!
The first Premier League weekend of the season gets a big box-office send-off as last season’s champions come up against ... well ... what are Spurs these days exactly? A big club with a fantastic stadium and some excellent players, obviously, but one whose title pretentions suddenly seem a distant memory.
Related: Hugo Lloris: ‘If the manager needs Harry he will be professional’
Continue reading...Tottenham’s Son Heung-min strikes to stun wasteful Manchester City
Sometimes football can be reassuringly familiar. This was Manchester City with the flaws on the outside; this is what they look like when things go wrong, as they have twice before against Nuno Espírito Santo sides, and weirdly often against Tottenham. Football’s finances may be ruined and the game sinking into a moral mire but there is still comfort to be drawn from teams, despite it all, remaining resolutely themselves.
City began with great pace and urgency, slicing Spurs open so frequently the game might have been over within 10 minutes. But then having failed to score, the mechanisms became gummed and, more troublingly, they looked extremely vulnerable on the counter‑attack with Lucas Moura a constant menace.
Related: Tottenham 1-0 Manchester City: Premier League - reaction!
Continue reading...August 14, 2021
PSG’s signing of Lionel Messi shows celebrity is trumping competition | Jonathan Wilson
Ligue 1 looks unhealthily one-sided and it is not alone: the domination of the game’s super-clubs is only just beginning
It gets to Sunday evening. You’ve done your chores. You’ve had your dinner.
You’re tired. You have work on Monday. You just want something to stick on the telly while you flick through the papers or doze on the sofa. These days you have choices. Next Sunday, for instance, if you have a comprehensive satellite package, you could watch Levante against Real Madrid, Roma against Fiorentina or Nice against Marseille. Which are you going to choose?
Related: Grealish and Lukaku deals expose inequalities of the Premier League
Related: Difficult days for Real Madrid and Barça plunge La Liga into uncertainty | Sid Lowe
Continue reading...August 8, 2021
Fan fatigue dulled Community Shield but Jack Grealish’s role was revealing
Leicester’s victory over Manchester City told us little except for hints of where Pep Guardiola might play his new signing
The good news is that, unless José Mourinho has turned up looking dishevelled, the Community Shield very rarely means anything. Every year we go through the rigmarole, sifting the entrails for clues to the season ahead and most years whatever omens are there turn out to be misleading: Arsène Wenger never did get his mojo back, Tom Cleverley was not the midfielder England had been waiting for and Andriy Shevchenko was not a guarantee of goals. But 2015-16 did turn out to be a weirdly bad season for a weirdly disengaged Mourinho.
The bad news is that, if this Community Shield does mean anything, the future does not look especially bright, at least for anybody outside of Leicester. Their fans will quite rightly celebrate another trophy – that’s a clean sweep of domestic silverware for them now over the past 21 years, success that would have seemed implausible at any previous point in their history – and they can take great heart from the performances of Ricardo Pereira and Harvey Barnes, both of whom missed significant chunks of the last season through injury.
Related: Leicester pluck good memories from win over Manchester City | Paul Doyle
Continue reading...August 7, 2021
Harry Kane shares blame but Spurs’ failure to invest led to this outcome | Jonathan Wilson
Tottenham striker has been criticised but he has a right to be selfish – and to question the club’s inaction over past two years
The tendency always is to oversimplify, to try to find one person to blame: if only he had acted better, if only he had done his job properly. But it is rarely about that – or rarely just about that. The agency of individuals should not be denied. Harry Kane and Daniel Levy have played their parts in the continuing saga of the forward’s proposed move to Manchester City. But this is also about wider economic forces.
Over the past week or so the majority of the focus has been on Kane. Already there is a sense his reputation has been sullied by the saga, distaste at his reluctance to train heightened by the fact that he is the England captain – as though wearing the armband meant that, like Billy Wright and Caesar’s wife, he must be above suspicion.
Related: Manchester City are the team to beat again, but how can they be stopped? | Jonathan Wilson
Continue reading...Jonathan Wilson's Blog
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