Chaos club Everton reap the whirlwind of Premier League’s financial revolution | Jonathan Wilson

The economic boom that reformed the top flight in 1992 could be about to devour one of its original ‘big five’

It’s 40 years since the greatest season in Everton’s history, when they won the league and the Cup Winners’ Cup and reached the FA Cup final. But it was a strange glory, coming as it did at a time when it was hard to see how English football, devastated by tragedy and disaster, could go on. Everton were – along with Manchester United, Arsenal, Liverpool and Tottenham – one of the “big five” clubs who led the Premier League breakaway in 1992, an event now widely regarded as having been a necessary step in the rebirth of the game.

But the move also led to football’s embrace of neoliberal economics: Everton’s only trophy since the breakaway is the 1995 FA Cup and, after three straight league defeats at the start of this campaign, they look like spending a fourth successive season battling relegation.

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Black managers face recruitment ‘bias’ in English football, claims LMA

  • League Managers Association wants action on diversity
  • Two black managers among 92 clubs in English leagues

The League Managers Association (LMA) has called for an end to the “bias” in recruitment which it believes is fostering a lack of diversity among head coaches in the English football pyramid.

Among the 92 clubs in the top four tiers of English football, there are currently just two black managers: Nuno Espírito Santo at the Premier League side Nottingham Forest and Darren Moore at Port Vale in League Two.

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Leicester City win appeal over alleged breach of Premier League PSR

  • Charge could have led to a points deduction
  • Premier League ‘very disappointed’ by decision

Leicester City are poised to avoid a points deduction this season after winning their protracted legal dispute with the Premier League pertaining to an alleged breach of profita­bility and sustainability rules (PSR).

After Leicester’s appeal, an independent panel found there was no jurisdiction for the case to be heard. While the panel conceded PSR “are, in relevant parts, far from well drafted”, the decision is a major boost for Leicester and a blow for the league, which said it was “surprised and disappointed” at the result.

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No individual player is the answer to Manchester United’s problems | Jonathan Wilson

Casemiro display against Liverpool was painful, but the blame for United’s early season struggles sits with an incoherent structure

In his beginning is his end; now the night falls. Two years ago, before their third game of the season, against Liverpool, having lost one of the games they’d played 2-1 to Brighton, Manchester United presented Casemiro before an adoring crowd at Old Trafford. At the weekend, before their third game of the season, against Liverpool, having lost one of the games they’d played 2-1 to Brighton, Manchester United withdrew Casemiro before a despairing crowd at Old Trafford. Two years ago, United won 2-1; on Sunday, they lost 3-0, and it could have been a lot worse.

It was, frankly, painful to watch: a player who once commanded games, who has won four Champions Leagues, been integral to one of the most successful sides in history, reduced to a player so devoid of confidence even the basics looked a challenge. The early signs this season had been promising. There was a sense that Casemiro was sharper again, that the concerns about his fitness that had plagued last season might have been surmounted. But on Sunday his pass accuracy was just 73%, way off what is acceptable for a defensive midfielder, and his errors cost the opening two goals.

And yet there is a context. Eleven minutes in to the second half, Kobbie Mainoo was dispossessed leading to Liverpool’s third. Manuel Ugarte, who was presented before kick-off after his £42m ($55m) move from Paris Saint-Germain, must have wondered what he’s got himself into. The United holding position is like the Siege Perilous in Arthurian legend; eventually one will come who is worthy of achieving the Grail but until then whoever takes that position is doomed.

It’s not just about individuals. United now seem to be in a similar position to the late Arsène Wenger-period Arsenal. The structure has failed and so hopes are placed in individuals. Which is daft enough when the player involved is as talented as Mesut Özil, but eventually you end up believing Nicolas Pépé is the answer to your prayers. Ugarte may turn out to be an upgrade on Casemiro, but no one player can ever be the answer.

Ugarte will need a better system around him and that’s where the focus begins to shift and the camera comes to rest on Erik ten Hag. Even with allowances for the position they inherited, how can it be that, three games into his reign at Anfield, Arne Slot has created a more coherent midfield than Ten Hag, now in his third year at Old Trafford, has managed. How can it be that, of all the former Ajax players in the pitch on Sunday, the best was Ryan Gravenberch?

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Premier League: 10 talking points from the weekend’s action

Jack Grealish on the comeback trail, Iliman Ndiaye offers Everton hope and Declan Rice appears unruffled

While Mikel Arteta fumed at the perceived injustice in Declan Rice’s sending off against Brighton, there was a far more measured response from the England midfielder. Despite admitting he had been “shocked” to see the referee, Chris Kavanagh, show him a second yellow card for obstructing Joël Veltman from taking a free kick, Rice acknowledged that a first dismissal on his 245th Premier League appearance had cost his team victory as they head into the first international break already playing catchup to Manchester City. “I just wanted to apologise to my teammates, which I’ve done, and to the fans,” he said. “When you get sent off, it’s never nice, you get a sense of guilt over you, and I was lucky that my teammates really helped me out and we didn’t lose the game. I’ll learn from it.” Ed Aarons

Match report: Arsenal 1-1 Brighton

Match report: West Ham 1-3 Manchester City

Match report: Manchester United 0-3 Liverpool

Match report: Newcastle 2-1 Tottenham

Match report: Ipswich 1-1 Fulham

Match report: Everton 2-3 Bournemouth

Match report: Chelsea 1-1 Crystal Palace

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Manchester United 0-3 Liverpool: Premier League – as it happened

Arne Slot steered Liverpool to a comfortable win, with Mohamed Salah adding to Luis Díaz’s goals

“In terms of gamechangers,” says Rick Harris, “United do have Christian Eriksen, who has probably changed more games than Nunez, Gakpo, Elliott and Endo put together.” Ha, good point. With Mount injured and McTominay sold, he may now be Bruno Fernandes’s deputy as the No 10 – and he was sensational in that slot for Denmark against Slovenia at the Euros.

“A lot of chat about Liverpool’s contract situation,” says DDJ Stephens, “a lot about how Slot’s style is similar but more calm and patient... all good, but why is nobody talking about Nunez not getting any game time under Slot yet, despite his professed desire to make him the big nine for Liverpool?” I think he did come on for the last 20 minutes or so against Brentford, but point taken.

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Guglielmo Vicario: ‘If we win, Spurs fans will remember us for eternity’

Tottenham goalkeeper on his new leadership role, dealing with set pieces and targeting success

It is one of those things that never fails to warm the heart: the moment a young fan lays eyes on a player from their club. The reaction is almost always the same. A widening of the eyes, stunned incomprehension. Then delayed realisation and, after that, just giddy excitement.

When Guglielmo Vicario turns up at a training session run by Tottenham’s global football department at Richard Hale school in Hertford on Friday, the levels among the eight- to 13-year-olds immediately go up. “It’s Vicario,” they shout. Some of them wave. Others decide whether they want him to sign their boots or their gloves.

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West Ham 1-3 Manchester City: Premier League – as it happened

Erling Haaland scored his 24th career hat-trick as the champions made slightly heavier weather than necessary of beating their insubordinate hosts

Pep Guardiola: In a short pre-match chat with Sky Sports, the Manchester City manager reveals that Savinho is not in the squad because he has a problem with his knee. He expects him to be back just after the internatinoal break.

Referee: Michael Oliver

Assistants: Stuart Burt and Dan Cook.

Fourth official: James Bell.

VAR: Darren England.

Assistant VAR: Simon Bennett.

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Mbeumo double helps Brentford move on from Toney and see off Southampton

Aaron Ramsdale’s Southampton debut was spoiled after a double from Bryan Mbeumo and a Yoane Wissa goal lifted Brentford to victory. Ivan Toney, whose departure to the Saudi Arabian side Al-Ahli was announced in the early hours of Saturday morning watched from the stands to see how his former side would get on without him.

Mbeumo issued a promising answer with his second goal of the new Premier League campaign just before the break, before scoring his third after the restart. Wissa then bundled home to hand the hosts a comfortable lead, with Yukinari Sugawara ending Southampton’s wait for a Premier League goal late on.

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‘Amazed, amazed, amazed’: Arsenal’s Arteta on Rice red in Brighton draw – video

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta says he was amazed at the inconsistency in refereeing during Arsenal's 1-1 draw with Brighton and Hove Albion on Saturday. Declan Rice was sent off just after half-time, after the winger appeared to kick a loose ball away following the referee's whistle. Arteta says the referee has the right to make that call, but questioned why he let other similar incidents go, including one where João Pedro kicked the ball away in the first half but was not penalised.

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Everton 2-3 Bournemouth, Leicester 1-2 Aston Villa: Premier League – as it happened

Everton fell to pieces against Bournemouth, while Aston Villa secured their second win of the campaign at the King Power

… so here’s what the Premier League looks like going into today’s 3pms. Should Forest stick four past Wolves without reply, they’ll go top, top, top … for a couple of hours at least. It’s almost as if none of this really means anything until November or so, but hey, you try filling up the internet at 2.43pm on a Saturday in August.

There’s also an early batch of results in from the Championship …

Burnley 1-1 Blackburn Rovers

Cardiff City 0-2 Middlesbrough

Coventry City 0-1 Norwich City

Blackpool 2-2 Wycombe Wanderers

Rotherham United 2-1 Huddersfield Town

Gillingham 1-0 Chesterfield

Port Vale 2-3 Doncaster Rovers

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Transfer window verdict: how every Premier League club fared this summer

Liverpool and Manchester City were restrained but it was noisy again at Chelsea and Brighton spent a record total

Losing Mikel Merino in his first training session wasn’t exactly ideal for Mikel Arteta in a summer when he also added Riccardo Calafiori to an already miserly defence. Yet Arsenal fans, having awaited news of attacking reinforcements, will be relieved Raheem Sterling’s dramatic late arrival increases the competition for places and the cover – especially for Bukayo Saka. The sales of Aaron Ramsdale, Emile Smith Rowe and Eddie Nketiah and the loan departure of Reiss Nelson will be difficult for supporters to get used to but they will hope Arteta’s ruthless approach pays dividends. Neto joined on deadline day to replace Ramsdale as the back-up goalkeeper. Ed Aarons

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Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

Sean Dyche stays positive, Erik ten Hag is under familiar pressure and Ipswich have a chance for points

Another goal from super-sub Leandro Trossard sparked Arsenal’s successful revenge mission against Aston Villa last week, with the Belgian forward now having scored six off the bench since joining from Brighton in January 2023. The question now is whether Mikel Arteta is tempted to throw him in from the start against his former club when they meet on Saturday. Trossard has made only 28 Premier League starts for Arsenal – the same number of times he has been introduced as a substitute – and has managed 14 goals, with Gabriel Martinelli starting both league games on the left side of his attack so far this season. “I know the competition in the team and it pushes everyone to go onto the next level and I’m very happy to have an impact and help the team,” Trossard said after the Villa game last week. Ed Aarons

Arsenal v Brighton, Saturday 12.30pm (all times BST)

Brentford v Southampton, Saturday 3pm

Everton v Bournemouth, Saturday 3pm

Ipswich v Fulham, Saturday 3pm

Leicester City v Aston Villa, Saturday 3pm

Nottingham Forest v Wolves, Saturday 3pm

West Ham v Manchester City, Saturday 5.30pm

Chelsea v Crystal Palace, Sunday 1.30pm

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