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18 March 2015

The League & Cup Review- Salute to Jonas

Sam Tonks returns with another weekly instalment of The Premier League Review with a round-up of all the action in a thrilling double game-week from England’s top flight and the first trophy of the season is won at Wembley, but was it Chelsea or Spurs?  Also, a special mention to a real role model in football, Jonas Gutierrez.

Wembley Way was filled with football fans for the first of two annual cup finals, but this time it was a local affair. Spurs and Chelsea fans made the short trip across London to Wembley for the Capit­al One Cup final.  Chelsea overcame an incredible semi-final tie with Liverpool in two hotly contested legs whilst Spurs overcame a battling Sheffield United.  Jose Mourinho had not won a trophy in England since his return in the summer of 2013, was this the first of many?  Spurs haven’t been in a cup final since penalty heartache against Manchester United in this competition a year after they beat their 2015 opponents Chelsea, did lightning strike twice?

Capital One Cup Final

It was, for the majority, a very even cup final with both sides putting their all into the game to win the first major honour of the season.  For Spurs, it was always going to be a tough ask to topple Chelsea who seem an unstoppable force this season and are now on course for a domestic double.  Goals from John Terry and Diego Costa won Mourinho his first title in his second spell in charge in South London.  Spurs put in a fighting display to make sure Chelsea didn’t run away with it and on a different day, it could’ve been their day.
Christian Eriksen was the main man in Spurs’ Capital One Cup run and so nearly made his mark in the final, but his free-kick radar was unusually off as he struck the bar.  Spurs had Chelsea on the ropes with their aggressive, high pressing style but Chelsea always looked threatening in attack.  Chelsea proved to bite Spurs for not making their pressure tell as their inspirational leader broke the deadlock.  A Chelsea set piece caused panic as John Terry’s volley deflected past Hugo Lloris.  The unfortunate Eric Dier was the body the ball flicked off to beat the regularly exceptional Lloris.  Lloris has often been a reliable last line of defence for Pocchetino and capable of bailing his side out.  But as Diego Costa engineered a chance for himself, Lloris was again beaten by a deflection.  The game was in Chelsea’s hands and Spurs were desperate now.  It just wasn’t falling for Harry Kane and co. as Chelsea’s defence was committed, solid and faultless.  As Kane weaved his way past Blue shirts, John Terry threw himself in the way of a certain goal and hope of a Spurs comeback.  Terry shone at Wembley, a ground where he used to be a regular captain for his country but retired after the racial scandal with Anton Ferdinand.  On this occasion, he was proud captain for Chelsea in their 2-0 cup final victory, one half of what should be a superb domestic double for Chelsea.



Credit: skysports.com



Premier League

In a hectic double game-week, the fight for survival, race for Europe and the title race developed and intensified further.  Last weekend, Chelsea seemingly pulled away in the title race, without even playing!  Manchester City may have just blown their last opportunity to catch Chelsea in a crucial defeat at Anfield.  Liverpool had all the momentum going into the crunch game against City and City just weren’t up for the fight.  A belter from Jordan Henderson signalled Liverpool’s intentions early on that they were in the mood.  City did react in the first half as first Sergio Aguero hit the post and then turned provider for Edin Dzeko who proved more clinical.  But, in the second half City were shaky and unconvincing as David Silva, Yaya Toure and Vincent Kompany were having off-days.  Kompany was back at the scene where he teed up the winner for Phillipe Coutinho last year, this year, the same Brazilian punished a below-par City.  Coutinho has been the cream of the crop at Anfield in their turn-around of form and was the magic man for Brendan Rodgers again.  His exquisite curling shot beat Joe Hart and City as the title race is almost over.  Arsenal and Manchester United capitalised on a slip-up from Southampton in the race for Champions League football and stay ahead of the rejuvenated reds from Merseyside.  Chelsea watched on with their Capital One Cup as their title rivals crumbled under pressure, is the Premier League title won already?

coutinho (credit: www.thetimes.co.uk)
Credit: thesportspace.org



The top seven were all successful in midweek which means there is still nothing to separate the five teams in the chase for Champions League football.  Spurs recovered from that Wembley woe edging a five-goal game at White Hart Lane.  The game was overshadowed with the worrying collapse of Swansea striker Bafetimbi Gomis.  The striker was rushed to hospital, still conscious and thankfully is in a stable condition and recovering, apparently Gomis has a fainting condition as he once fainted three times in a season at Lyon.  Aside from that, Liverpool, Manchester City and Arsenal drove the newly promoted sides further into trouble at the bottom with wins.  Liverpool were comfortable and controlled in a 2-0 win over Burnley, as were Arsenal in a convincing second half performance after a tough first half at Loftus Road with Alexis Sanchez back among the goals.  City were unconvincing and got a bit of luck over Leicester who once again cursed decisions against them and chances not taken.  City continue to chase Chelsea who once again grinded out a result, this time at Upton Park in a tough London Derby as Chelsea once again proved their defensive prowess.  Eden Hazard got the goal in another dazzling display.  City may get drawn into the scrap for Europe if they slip up again, as Arsenal are only four points behind the champions who may have to focus on guaranteeing Champions League football and accept defeat in the title race.

At the bottom, Aston Villa got a huge win over rivals West Brom.  Tim Sherwood finally got his first 3 points in charge with a 94th minute penalty winner from Christian Benteke who has been short of goals this season.  With a place at Wembley up for grabs this coming weekend, could this be the kick-start to Villa’s survival push?  QPR, Burnley and Leicester are all in grave danger of the drop with all three in dreadful form and short on goals or confidence.  Another team in very realistic trouble is, Everton!  Just five points clear of the bottom three, incapable of defending reassuringly and desperately lacking goals, Roberto Martinez’s nearly men last year are quickly becoming a sinking ship with no obvious captain to steer them out of trouble.  Hull and Sunderland drew in a stalemate at the KC Stadium as the tensions at the bottom were clear in a heated confrontation between Gus Poyet and Steve Bruce, who will be the ones who suffer from the heat come May and fall from the trap-door?


The highlight of the mid-week games though was at St James’ Park.  No it wasn’t the mess that was Ashley Young’s winner for United and definitely not the spitting-gate involving Jonny Evans and Papiss Cisse.  But, the heroic return of Jonas Gutierrez from his battle with testicular cancer.  Gutierrez who hadn’t played for 17 months came off the bench during their 1-0 defeat on Wednesday to a rapturous response from the home faithful.  This is a great achievement and inspiration for anyone battling long-term illness and proof that you can overcome it, so credit to Gutierrez for returning to football and inspiring many others who are in their battle with cancer.

jonas gutierrez comeback (credit: asia.eurosport.com)
Credit: thesportspace.org




Sam Tonks

The Premier League Review- Kane is Able

The Sport Space’s Sam Tonks is back for a double Premier League game-week and a focus on the latest managerial departure from the top flight as the business end of the season approaches. 

In a double game-week in the Barclays Premier League we witnessed two derbies, the end of an unwanted record, shining English talents and yet another managerial departure, all in a week’s work in the Premier League.  Sky and BT have announced new rights to show the Premier league till 2019 amounting to over £5 billion, so now the Premier League teams must really put the money where their mouths are.


PAUL LAMBERT SACKED

After an inexcusable run of results, Paul Lambert was relieved from his post at Villa Park on Wednesday.  In 25 games, Lambert’s men had tallied up a measly 12 goals which is a shocking statistic considering they boast a quick, young and talented frontline of Andi Weimann, Christian Benteke and Gabby Agbonlahor.  An unbeaten start in their first four games had led Villa fans into a false sense of security as they crumbled after defeat to Arsenal.  Villa went nearly 3 months without a win in the league after that, scoring just three goals in that time.  Benteke inspired back-to-back wins with his return from injury only for things to go downhill again.  December 7th their last Premier League win with only victories over Championship opposition in the FA Cup to show for since.  Villa went seven and a half games without scoring from the New Year till February 7th when Jores Okore breached the Chelsea net.  When your top scorer in all competitions has amassed four goals, you know there are problems somewhere in the club.  Benteke has struggled particularly to score goals with only three to show for this season, whilst top scorer Weimann hasn’t scored a Premier League goal since November.  Lambert has had limited funding from owner Randy Lerner who has made his intentions with the club clear that until he sells, funding will be limited.  Despite this, Lambert has a good squad of players but the style of football and constant injury problems has led to anxiety and anger within groups of fans.  A spine of Brad Guzan, Ron Vlaar, Fabian Delph and Benteke is a good one which should see Villa trying to push into the European mix from mid-table not fighting off impending relegation trouble.  But defeat to Hull, a team fighting their own troubles off at the bottom, was the final straw in a game which fired yet another blank for Villa.  10 league games without a win and a record of 92 goals in his 101 league games, Lambert really was in a position where the sack was a foregone conclusion.  Villa need someone who can motivate and lift the side who are in desperate need now where things can only really get better.


Paul Lambert HD (credit- welshbizuk.wordpress.com)
Credit: thesportspace.org


Premier League

Every fan of every football team immediately looks out for derby day or a match against bitter rivals as soon as the fixture lists were released.  So, when the games on the 27th September and 7th February came out, all fans of Liverpool, Everton, Arsenal and Spurs were bookmarking it in calendars, phones and diaries if that’s what you do.  Last weekend was ‘Derby Weekend’.  Spurs hosted Arsenal with both on good runs of form, both with just one defeat in eight and six wins in that time.  Everton had ended a run of six without a win with victory at Crystal Palace whilst Liverpool were on a seven game unbeaten run, picking three straight wins going into a trip over Stanley Park.  Spurs had not won a North London Derby since 2013 when Gareth Bale scored in a 2-1 win, so Arsenal went into this with a psychological edge, especially after racking five goals past Villa the week before.  But, they may have underestimated Spurs and Harry Kane.  Kane was the top Premier League scorer in all competitions after a double at West Brom took him to 18 goals, more than Aguero, more than Diego Costa and more than Alexis Sanchez.  In Kane they boasted one of the hottest talents in the country who was playing in his first Derby.  Arsenal had scored inside two minutes when they last visited Spurs, this time they took 11 minutes to beat Hugo Lloris.  A swift break led brilliantly by Danny Welbeck ended with Mesut Ozil volleying over Lloris as the away fans went into raptures.  However, Spurs controlled the rest of the game with possession, chances and territory.  David Ospina continually thwarted Spurs until he flapped a corner to the feet of, Kane.  His first goal in the derby brought a deserved equaliser and led a rally from Spurs for a winner.  Then, when Nabil Bentaleb picked the main man out, he excellently guided the header into the top corner to win the game for Spurs.  Arsenal were dejected as Derby Day belonged to Spurs.  The Merseyside Derby was less action-packed but the spotlight was on Steven Gerrard as he played his last derby.  Gerrard very nearly wrote his script by scoring but his superb overhead kick went just over.  Jordan Ibe lit up Goodison in his first derby after a promising loan spell at Derby as he rattled the post from a solo run and shot.  Ross Barkley entered the fray and nearly set up a winner for Seamus Coleman but Simon Mignolet came to the rescue.  Another stalemate in the battle of the Mersey duo means Everton seem to be turning a corner with an impressive defensive display.


Credit: ibtimes.com



Elsewhere, Manchester City faltered in their pursuit of Chelsea by having to rescue a point against Hull City but reacted by turning on the style in a 4-1 win at Stoke.  Chelsea have pulled seven points clear with wins over Villa and Everton as Jose Mourinho’s mean look unstoppable.  It was the end of a miserable away run for QPR as caretaker bosses Chris Ramsey and Kevin Bond managed to topple Sunderland and end the winless travels.  Southampton and Manchester United maintain top four places with Sadio Mane delivering a goal in the nick of time at Loftus Road.  United were saved by Daley Blind’s volley after some ‘direct tactics’, is that okay Louis?  Leicester continued to rue bad luck with valiant performances in defeats to Crystal Palace and Arsenal and it seems Nigel Pearson is feeling the heat after his shocking outburst at Palace’s Jason McArthur.  The stand-out tie of the midweek games was at Anfield as the ever controversial Mario Balotelli finally scored a Premier League goal in a five-goal thriller where Liverpool held off two fight-backs from Spurs.  The top four fight looks to be the tightest in Premier League history as up to six teams are vying for just two spots, the promised land of the Champions League is awaiting.



Sam Tonks

The Review- Bantams at The Bridge

The Sport Space’s Football Analyst Sam Tonks returns for a review of the past week’s action in the FA Cup and Capital One Cup.

It is well known that the FA Cup is a competition famous for upsets, shocks and giant-killings with historic results including Wrexham beating Arsenal, Leeds shocking Manchester United and of course the Crazy Gang defying the Culture Club.  So when the 4th Round swung in to action this weekend, Bradford City, Middlesbrough, Brighton and Cambridge were looking to add themselves to the famous list with big name killers.  As well as this, the Capital One Cup final line-up was to be decided with the second-legs at Stamford Bridge and Bramall Lane host to two very close, exciting and enthralling semi-final deciders.

FA Cup

Let’s start on Friday night and the Abbey Stadium.  Cambridge United are in the middle of their first season back in the football league, but that was put on hold as the record FA Cup winners and English League title winners Manchester United were in town.  76 places separated the sides, the biggest gulf of a 4th Round tie this year and with United running out their big guns, it looked very bleak for Cambridge.  Angel Di Maria, Radamel Falcao and Daley Blind were just a few star names turning out at the Abbey Stadium, with most not likely to have experienced anything quite as hostile, bobbly or enclosed in their professional careers so far.  You knew Cambridge couldn’t go pound for pound with Louis Van Gaal’s Reds in terms of attacking quality, but they could definitely soak up the pressure, throw their bodies in the way and defend like lions to earn that money spinning replay the fans and players desire just as much as the possibility of winning.  They were indeed lions on the pitch and despite Manchester United having 75% possession and 16 shots to 6 of Cambridge, they couldn’t breach the barrier that was Chris Dunn in goal.  United came closest in the final minutes as Adnan Januzaj weaved into the box superbly only to see his shot cannon away off Dunn.  Another shot came in, blocked by the excellent Josh Coulson.  Then the ball dropped to Di Maria and the end looked nigh for Cambridge, until the sprawling Dunn saved again.  Robin Van Persie spurned a sitter in the second half as did Falcao, but Cambridge back to front were sensational.  The work ethic, energy, determination and commitment to the cause was unquestionable and they deserved their dream replay at Old Trafford.  United were far from impressive and looked a side devoid of cutting edge and lacked quality to break down a side newly promoted to League 2, but the focus should be on just how well Cambridge played.  The fact that the Cambridge players couldn’t swap shirts as there were no replacements so they would’ve had to pay £40 to replace it, sums up the gulf between the two and how great this result was to Richard Money’s men.
Cambridge United v Manchester United FA Cup
Credit: thesportspace.org




Cambridge set the tone for the weekend, Bradford and Middlesbrough went in to their games with some confidence and hoped that they could go one step further.  Chelsea and Manchester City, the Premier League’s top two were overwhelming favourites, but Bradford have history of being a cup giant-killer and Boro were flying high in the Championship.  At the Etihad, City were leaving nothing to chance and started the regulars such as David Silva, Sergio Aguero and Fernandinho.  City seemed shaken from their loss to Arsenal the week before but chose to fly off to Dubai for a warm-weather training camp, even if they arrived just 20 hours before the match.  This may have seemed arrogant and obnoxious from City’s point of view but it’s part of their commercial deal.  Boro were not turning up to be whipping boys and in Lee Tomlin had a man constantly toying and troubling City’s defences.  Tomas Meijas was a former player under Manuel Pellegrini at Real Madrid and came back to bite as he produced great saves in the first half to keep Boro in the tie, most notably from David Silva.  In the second half, Boro came to the party and Tomlin ran the game.  After countless City chances in the first, Boro quickly made those misses count.  Fernando gave it to Albert Adomah who managed to clip the ball over Willy Caballero.  As Fernando chased to clear the ball away, in came Paddy Bamford to block the ball in, the away fans went nuts behind the goal and the upset was on.  Frank Lampard came on and nearly wrote his name into another City match but his effort deflected onto the post.  Tomlin had similar luck, his majestic roll of the ball past the helpless Eliquem Managala couldn’t be finished as he bended the ball onto the inside of the post.  Yet, Boro were to seal the deal, a slick break cut open the Premier League champions.  Bamford rolled in Kike who finished with aplomb to complete the cup shock, City out to a Championship side for the second year running. 


Credit: telegraph.co.uk



Then, Stamford Bridge.  Jose Mourinho said on Friday, “For me, it would be a disgrace it you lose to a lower league team.”  Enter Bradford.  Chelsea rested the likes of Eden Hazard, Cesc Fabregas, John Terry and Diego Costa but still had a very strong side.  Bradford have proven they are up to the big occasion, knocking Arsenal and Aston Villa over two legs out of the Capital One Cup two years ago.  So, when Chelsea strolled into a 2-0 first half lead, everyone thought it was over.  If Bradford were to add Chelsea to their scalps, it would be the biggest shock in FA Cup history.  Just before half-time John Stead incredibly fired a goal back after Chelsea cleared a corner.  Bradford sensed a chance and came out ready to take Chelsea on in the second half.  Into the last 15 minutes, still 2-1.  Bradford were becoming more dangerous and won a throw-in by the corner flag.  James Hanson flicked on the throw, but Petr Cech denied Billy Knott.  As the ball came out, the ex-Chelsea youth Filipe Morais smashed the ball into the gaping net, from 2-0 down, Bradford had levelled.  You’d of thought that was that, the lower league side would hold for a replay, oh no!  City came again, great work down the right put fans on the edge of their seat, TVs were back on and Bradford fans up in belief.  John Stead once again involved as he laid off for Andy Halliday who beautifully curled the ball into the far corner, it was too good to be true.  Chelsea 2-3 Bradford City.  The Bradford fans couldn’t contain themselves, Captain Andrew Davies had jumped onto his team-mates on the bench, but the game was not finished.  As Soccer Saturday announced a sixth goal, surely it had to be a Chelsea equaliser with the big guns on, far from correct.  Bradford picked Chelsea apart as Stead again played a part, Mark Yeates the recipient of a brilliant spin and pass, Mourinho had conceded four for the first time in his career.  The greatest FA Cup upset ever was complete, Chelsea 2-4 Bradford City.


Bradford City
Credit: thesportspace.org


Elsewhere, the holders Arsenal edged a thrilling tie as they beat Brighton 3-2, showing they seem the team to beat this year.  Liverpool and Sunderland were made to go to replays by Bolton and Fulham.  Leicester dumped Spurs out as Crystal Palace stunned Southampton.  West Ham and Aston Villa avoided replays and Reading made it past fellow Championship side Cardiff.



Capital One Cup
It was breath-taking, exciting, dramatic and edgy but finally, it was Chelsea and Spurs who reached the first cup final of the season.  Chelsea needed extra-time to see off a dogged Liverpool who arguably deserved the win over two legs.  Spurs held off a second-leg comeback from Sheffield United to send themselves to an all-London final on March 1st.



Sam Tonks

The Premier League Review- Away Days Masterclass

The Sport Space’s Football Analyst Sam Tonks is back for the latest in a weekly supply of football reviews, this time covering the Premier League and Capital One Cup semi-finals.

It was a weekend of great away days in the Premier League, with a record 7 away wins over the weekend and a draw, making the travelling away supporter’s trip worthwhile.  In the Capital One Cup, it was the big guns and a David versus Goliath tie as Liverpool faced Chelsea and Spurs entertained cup specialists Sheffield United.

Premier League
It was a weekend which narrowed down the fight for European football further.  With up to 7 teams fighting for three spots in the Champions League next season and it’s becoming impossible to call.  Southampton have shocked us all with their character, resilience and quality in how they not only kept pace with the chasers, but maintained their unbelievable start by holding on to a Champions League place up to now.  West Ham have defied the odds to even be in the top half, never mind put their name in the hat for spot, which just emphasises how good a job Big Sam has been doing from when he brought the Hammers up from the Championship.  Then the experienced veterans Liverpool, Manchester United and Arsenal are amongst it as always despite heavily inconsistent seasons.  Their experience in Champions League scraps and end of season twists puts them ahead of the rest in the race.  Then Spurs, the club who doesn’t quite know where they belong.  Every season, the Champions League is the Holy Grail, yet a realistic push would be for the top six.  But, every season they find some form and hopes get rejuvenated of a possible tilt at that top four again.  After arguably the result of the season toppling leaders Chelsea 5-3, they have momentum which makes them a force against any side and they must be considered.

So, there really is only one place this week’s reviews can pin its focus on, the Etihad, Manchester City, Arsenal, Pellegrini and Wenger.  It was a clash which could change Arsenal’s season and possibly people’s view of them and Monsieur Wenger.  Arsenal’s record against the ‘big teams’ has been heavily quoted, mentioned and thrown around in the media, they’ve only won once against Chelsea, Manchester United, Liverpool and City in the last 9 visits, that was a 2-0 win over Liverpool in 2012.  That record was just worsened with last season’s abominations at Anfield, Stamford Bridge and indeed the Etihad conceding 17 goals in three games, scoring 4.  Surely, after so long playing ambitious, daring football and getting blown away time after time, Wenger must settle for a more defensive minded strategy with pressure mounting on his job and tactics more than ever.  Injuries have only contributed to Arsenals worst starts under Wenger and fans calling for his head.  Despite this he’s stayed as calm and professional as ever and maintains faith in his players, some questionably.  Wenger gave starts to youngsters Hector Bellerin and Francis Coquelin, the latter who has revelled in faith shown to him since his return from a loan spell at Charlton because of injuries.  But, this was a test some thought would be too great for him in David Silva.  The playmaker has been instrumental in City’s catch-up with runaway leaders Chelsea, making this game just as important to City as Arsenal.  Everyone knew what Arsenal needed to do, could they do it?  Could Coquelin handle Silva?  Would Aguero or Sanchez steal the show? 



Credit: theguardian.com



 Well, as it goes Arsenal delivered.  The performance Arsenal fans had been calling for, the team work, determination, fight and quality all came together and City couldn’t handle it.  Possession may have been in City’s favour, but in chances and goals Arsenal were the victors.  No Yaya Toure means City don’t win these days, defeats to Stoke and West Ham and a home draw to Burnley has been without their man mountain.  Sergio Aguero and Vincent Kompany were rushed back and clearly not fit enough as Arsenal suffocated Aguero out of the game and terrorised Kompany.  Arsenal controlled the game without the ball, if that makes sense.  City didn’t once cause panic in the Arsenal rear-guard and every counter spelled danger for the champions.  It proved that Coquelin could be more than a match for Silva and was like a rash all over him.  Arsenal have been calling for a defensive midfielder for nearly a decade, Coquelin’s performance against the champions has given hope of a future prospect for the vacancy.  Sanchez wasn’t at his best but his work rate covers for that and makes his performances at a consistent standard.  But, one man has been the catalyst for the last two months, Santi Cazorla.  His performances have been improving game after a game and has been the star of the side.  On Sunday I reached new levels and was arguably his best game in an Arsenal shirt, 101 touches, 91% pass accuracy, a penalty and the assist for Olivier Giroud capping an extroadinary day for Arsenal.  City have work to do, its crunch time in two weeks, a visit to Chelsea.

 
Elsewhere, Chelsea showed their best bits in embarrassing and humiliating Swansea in a 5-0 humbling.  Wilfried Bony has gone and Swansea need a plan B, could that be Bafetimbi?  Alan Pardew produced the comeback of the season at Turf Moor with his new Crystal Palace team 2-0 down, Dwight Gayle and Jason Puncheon combined to turn it around and get back-to-back wins for Pardew, something Newcastle will be ruing.  They lost again, 2-1 to the ever improving Southampton as the managerial mystery doesn’t seem to be resolving itself at St James’.
Finally, there was drama at Goodison as Everton’s dreadful season continued and was summed up with a penalty fiasco.  Kevin Mirallas self-elected penalty taker missed the crucial kick with regular take Leighton Baines bemused and baffled along with the rest of the players, staff and fans, he ended being subbed off at half time.
Capital One Cup
The first-leg of the semi-finals occurred as the chance of a Wembley final started to become a vision to the players of the four teams involved.  Liverpool were outstanding but unable to beat down Chelsea and were held to a 1-1 scoreline with Thibaurt Courtois superb.  Sheffield United have made their name as the cup specialists with QPR, Aston Villa and Southampton all on the end of cup shocks and Spurs struggled to a 1-0 lead going to Bramall Lane.  Both are in the balance and could go either way with the second legs next week.




Courtois HD
Credit: thesportspace.org



Sam Tonks