“Inside the dressing room, there is a poster permanently positioned above the door. Three hearts, angel wings and the names of the girls — Alice, Bebe and Elsie — who, tragically, shockingly, have become known around the world. It was put up after the almost unspeakable horrors, on July 29 last year, that have traumatised this seaside town. … If you are not familiar with Southport, 20 miles outside Liverpool in the north west of England, you might not realise how close the club’s stadium is to the scene of the savage, indiscriminate attacks that resulted last week in Axel Rudakubana being jailed for 52 years. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Author Archives: 1960s: Days of Rage
Is there a conspiracy against Arsenal? Probably not – but the feeling is real
“Not for the first time this season, Arsenal fans started a chant on Saturday of, ‘Michael Oliver, it’s all about you.’ Some Wolverhampton Wanderersfans then joined in when their midfielder Joao Gomes was sent off in the second half, which followed the dismissal of Arsenal defender Myles Lewis-Skelly. The decision to send off Gomes was a good one — he could even have been given a straight red rather than a second yellow — but Lewis-Skelly’s dismissal was met with a mixture of anger and disbelief from the wider football community. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The stark reality of watching a Pep Guardiola midfield in 2025

“There was a time when Pep Guardiola used to fantasise about fielding a team made entirely of midfielders. … He pushed boundaries — or rather he turned the entire pitch into one vast midfield. His central defenders and even his goalkeepers (Victor Valdes at Barcelona, Manuel Neuer at Bayern Munich, Ederson at Manchester City) would pass the ball as precisely as other teams’ playmakers. Full-backs or central defenders would instinctively and seamlessly push up into midfield. Often he would go without a conventional centre-forward, preferring a ‘false nine’ who could drop back into midfield, flooding the middle of the pitch with nimble, intelligent technical players who enabled his team to dominate almost every game they played. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – Manchester City 3 Chelsea 1: Is Sanchez’s position becoming untenable? How did Guardiola unpick Maresca’s plan?

The oldest derby in world football may not be where you think

“There’s nothing quite like taking on your biggest local rival. The tension, the passion and a desire to defend your own turf make these tussles ‘must-see’ events, a point surely not lost on those who earlier this month attended either the Old Firm clash between Rangers and Celtic or Arsenal fronting up to Tottenham Hotspur in the 196th north London derby. On a bone-chilling Tuesday night in south Yorkshire, as temperatures hover just above zero, another derby is taking place. And while Hallam versus Sheffield FC will never compete with the tribalism of Glasgow or the glamour of the English capital, it does possess the unique boast of being the oldest derby in world football. Way back on December 26, 1860, the two clubs met for the first time at the same Sandygate ground where a sell-out crowd of 1,496 assembled to watch a Sheffield and Hallamshire Senior Cup quarter-final. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
W – Hallam F.C.
Hallam F.C.: Playing football since 1860 at Sandygate, The World’s Oldest Football Ground

Lots of shots, zero goals: Analysing European football’s most wasteful players
“Midway through the second half of Everton’s 3-2 win against Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday, the ball fell to left-back Vitalii Mykolenko. The Goodison Park crowd bellowed “shoot” at him. It was, perhaps, an ironic request. Mykolenko has attempted 11 shots this season, and none of them have been on target, let alone actually gone in. But Mykolenko isn’t the worst offender of the prolific shooters who haven’t scored a goal. Ten players from Europe’s ‘big five’ leagues have attempted more than double that number of shots, yet remain on zero goals this season. Here’s a rundown of the top 10 — with xG separating those with the same number of shots — along with some details about where they might be going wrong. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Nottingham Forest’s signature throw-in explained – and how it led to a goal for Elliot Anderson
“If football viewers are forced to pick a part of matches they could fast-forward through, the most popular choice is likely to be throw-ins. Usually, these are trivial to the audience; just a means to resume the action after the ball goes off one side of the pitch or the other. The fun ones are those launched into the penalty area towards a cluster of players from both teams battling to get on the end of it. The most iconic long throw-ins in Premier League history were Rory Delap’s with Stoke City in the late 2000s, and in recent seasons it is Brentford and Nottingham Forest who have been the flagbearers of this approach. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Diego Simeone vs Xabi Alonso: A meeting of coaching minds – and one that could happen again soon
“Diego Simeone’s super-charged Atletico Madrid were just too much for Xabi Alonso’s eventually overwhelmed Bayer Leverkusen. The 2-1 result in Tuesday’s Champions League match was definitely not decided by a tactical masterclass from Simeone. Alonso had arguably picked the better XI and also made the more sensible substitutions to deal with how the game kept changing. But once more, Atletico showed heart and decisiveness — all the characteristics that Simeone’s super-intense management transmits to his best sides. Alonso was left to rue the result in a duel between two of Europe’s most high-profile coaches — and how his usually so well-organised and resilient team let slip a game that seemed they had full control of at one point. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Champions League Briefing: Playoffs take shape; Bellingham’s backheel; Wembanyama sees City’s collapse
A mural of Arsenal co-chair Josh Kroenke on the approach to the Emirates Stadium
“There was plenty of drama and some stunning goals as the penultimate matchday of the Champions League’s league phase drew to a close on Wednesday. Real Madrid and Arsenal barely broke a sweat, putting themselves in strong positions to qualify for the knockout stages. Manchester City, however, are in danger of suffering elimination after collapsing and letting a two-goal lead go to lose 4-2 to Paris Saint-Germain at the Parc des Princes inspired by the brilliance of Ousmane Dembele. With so much still to play for, here are the main talking points with just one matchday remaining of the league phase. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
We need to talk about fouls
“Since the recent rise to prominence of set-piece coaches in football, we have grown accustomed to scrutinising a dead-ball situation to within an inch of its life. Professional dance troupes would be proud to pull off some of the choreographed routines implemented by Premier League clubs but, from the defending team’s perspective, the situation itself is often entirely avoidable. Conceding a corner can result from opposition dominance, pinning a defence back until they are forced to clear the ball behind and try to regroup. However, conceding a free kick in your defensive third is usually a result of ill-discipline, fatigue or a rush of blood to the head. …”
NY Times/Athletic
Dissecting Justin Kluivert’s incredible performance and hat-trick against Newcastle
“There are different ways to score a hat-trick. Not the method itself, but how a player scores their three goals — a hat-trick can come from three tap-ins, or three long-range strikes alongside an incredible performance. Justin Kluivert entered the record books in November when he became the first player in Premier League history to score a hat-trick of penalties during Bournemouth’s 4-2 victory against Wolverhampton Wanderers. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Will Liverpool win this Premier League title – and, if so, when? Our experts’ views
“It is 76 days since Liverpool moved back to the top of the 2024-25 Premier League table with a 2-1 home win against Brighton & Hove Albion — a position they haven’t relinquished since. Arne Slot’s side are not always showing imperious form but have still only been beaten once in their 20 league matches so far and have a four-point advantage over second-placed Arsenal, with a game in hand, going into the weekend’s fixtures. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Is Neymar’s career in epilogue territory? He deserves to be remembered as a great
“Jorge Jesus winced as he read what sounded a lot like the last rites. … The situation belongs to Neymar. The cloudy future, too. In that small Riyadh press room, Jesus confirmed he would not be registering the forward for the second half of the Saudi Pro League season, effectively drawing a line under this latest chapter of his career. It is not clear what will happen next. Neymar is 33 in February. As Jesus was at pains to emphasise on Thursday, his ability is not up for debate. His recent injury record makes for grim reading, however: the Brazil forward has not started a match since suffering an anterior cruciate ligament injury playing for his country in October 2023. Zoom out a little further and it is just 733 competitive minutes in 23 months. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Footballers’ shin pads – the piece of equipment some pros prefer not to wear
Custom-made Diadora shin pads made for Roma’s Francesco Totti in 2006, which now appear thoroughly retro by modern standards
“… The International Football Association Board (IFAB) laws of the game state that shin pads must be worn by all players. There are no specific rules regarding size but Law 4 states that they ‘must be made of a suitable material and be of an appropriate size to provide reasonable protection, and be covered by the socks’. For years, many footballers have been playing fast and loose with their interpretation of the rules. The low socks and micro shin pads trend made cool by the likes of Manchester City’s Jack Grealish and Chelsea’s Lauren James has become vastly popular in recent years. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
What Omar Marmoush brings to Manchester City: Lethal on the break, runs behind and a passing option
“Before Omar Marmoush was racking up goals and assists in the Bundesliga, he was figuring out how to use the washer-dryer and prepare his own meals. As an 18-year-old, the transition from Cairo, the vast capital of his homeland Egypt (population: 10million), to the small German city of Wolfsburg (pop: 125,000) wasn’t the smoothest. After impressing with Cairo club Wadi Degla’s youth sides and featuring in their first team in 2016-17, Marmoush set off to Germany the following summer having accepted an offer from Wolfsburg. Initially, he spent two seasons in the reserves. This was a period which shaped him and improved his mental resilience. He took time to adapt off the pitch, too. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Diogo Jota took 22 seconds to settle Liverpool’s No 9 debate
“Diogo Jota had been deep in conversation with Kostas Tsimikas as the Liverpool duo waited to come on at the City Ground. The clock was ticking towards the midway point of the second half and Arne Slot’s side still trailed to Chris Wood’s first-half opener. For all their possession, the Premier League leaders hadn’t produced a single attempt on target. They were crying out for some inspiration as in-form Nottingham Forest, who were chasing a seventh successive league victory for the first time since 1922, held firm. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Real Madrid 2 Barcelona 5: Lamine Yamal and Co inflict a historic humiliation

“Barcelona put four goals past Real Madrid in consecutive matches for the first time in Clasico history, lifting the Supercopa de Espana with a 5-2 rout of their arch-rivals. Madrid took the lead through a fine Kylian Mbappe goal in the fifth minute — the Frenchman banishing memories of his eight offsides in that 4-0 defeat by Barca in October — before Lamine Yamal drew the sides level with a brilliant solo effort in the 22nd minute. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
>NY Times/The Athletic: The six moments of madness that sum up a Clasico defined by disarray
The Manchester clubs striving and thriving in the shadows of City and United
“Living on the doorstep of footballing monoliths can come in handy sometimes. With Greater Manchester in the grip of a cold snap last week, Salford City were left without anywhere to train. The pitches at their Littleton Road base were frozen solid. Salford rent the pitches from Manchester United for a nominal fee. A call into Old Trafford asked whether there were any alternative options. The offer of an indoor pitch at The Cliff, United’s old headquarters, was happily accepted. ‘The problem we’ve got is it’s only 50 yards wide and I think only 80 yards long,’ said Salford’s manager Karl Robinson before Saturday’s trip to Manchester City. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Liverpool’s contract stand-offs, Jamie Carragher’s role, and a battle to shape the narrative
“Trent Alexander-Arnold kept his counsel as he left Anfield on Saturday afternoon. The Liverpool right-back did not speak to the media at the weekend but the smile on his face underlined what a difference a week makes. He had just swapped shirts with Accrington Stanley midfielder Liam Coyle, who used to play alongside him for Liverpool Under-16s. There was also a warm exchange with visiting manager John Doolan, who coached Alexander-Arnold at the Kirkby academy at the age of seven. ‘Such a wonderful and humble guy — he showed his class,’ Doolan said. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The Briefing: Arsenal’s worrying start to 2025, a fix for the FA Cup and Walker’s legacy
“The quality was not the same, but Manchester United’s FA Cup third-round win over Arsenal felt like a throwback. The red card started proceedings, but the contentious penalty decision followed by the team-wide scuffle will be a memory that could rival some of the battles between Arsene Wenger and Sir Alex Ferguson’s sides of the 1990s and 2000s. Two of the most iconic moments of that rivalry involved penalties taken by Ruud van Nistelrooy so it seemed fitting the first meeting in a cup competition between Mikel Arteta and Ruben Amorim should end with another Dutch striker dispatching a winning spot kick. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
This is Harrogate: The footballers’ town that is learning to love football

“Pretty much everyone in Harrogate knows where Gareth Southgate goes for coffee. Somewhere less refined, less discreet, less, well, Harrogate, this sort of information might be regarded as an open secret. In this corner of North Yorkshire, it is closer to common knowledge, the sort of thing that it would be a little gauche to discuss. The former England manager, now a freshly minted Knight of the Realm, is a familiar sight at the cafe in question, a bustling, sunlit spot not far from the town’s famous Royal Baths. … His other regulars disagree, just a little, on how often Southgate visits. Micah Richards, the ex-England international turned barrel-chested television personality, puts it at ‘every other day’. Danny Mills, the former Leeds and Manchester City defender, thinks that might be a bit of an exaggeration. Both, though, accept that Southgate’s presence and their own is sufficiently familiar to be unremarkable. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

La Liga Gets Younger, Spain Gets Stronger: Spanish Football’s Homegrown Youth Revolution Explained
“… Twelve years may be a long time by its basic definition, but in international football? Try telling England fans that constitutes a long wait. For Spain, there would be no prolonged drought, no pining for an unrepeatable generation, and no arduous, decades-long reinvention of both style and type of footballers. Though the likes of Sergio Busquets, Xavi and Andrés Iniesta might never come along again, nobody was spending much time looking to the sky with their palms out. … Of the 715 minutes of football they played across the tournament, very few of which were against lower-ranked nations, they were behind for just over 33 of them. Spain were rarely hit, never mind knocked down. …”
The Analyst
What a Clasico Supercopa in Jeddah tells us about the relationship between Spain and Saudi Arabia
“Today’s Spanish Supercopa final between Barcelona and Real Madrid at the King Abdullah Sports City in Jeddah is the most visible symbol of a fast-developing link between Spanish football and Saudi Arabia. Now in its fifth year, the ‘Saudi Supercopa’ is considered by some as the cherry on top of a mutually beneficial relationship. As well as hosting one of Spain’s major knockout competitions, nine Spanish players are currently registered with Saudi Pro League (SPL) sides. The highest profile is La Roja’s Euro 2024-winning centre-back Aymeric Laporte at Al Nassr, and former Madrid captain Nacho Fernandez at Al Qadsiah. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
2024-25 FA Cup, 3rd Round Proper: location-map, with fixtures list & current league attendances.
“The FA Cup is the oldest football tournament in the world. The 2024-25 FA Cup is the 144th edition of the tournament. The FA Cup Third Round is when the teams from the top 2 divisions in England – the Premier League, and the EFL Championship – join the competition. The 20 Premier League teams and the 24 Championship teams join 20 other lower-leagues teams. …”
billsportsmaps
W – FA Cup, W – 2024–25 FA Cup
Special report: The future of St James’ Park
“Sir Bobby Robson declared it ‘the cathedral on the hill’, while Eddie Howe describes it as ‘totally inspiring’. Decision time is finally approaching over whether the iconic (and expanded) St James’ Park will remain Newcastle United’s ground, or whether they take the bold, contentious step of venturing away from their previously ever-present home. … The Athletic has spent weeks speaking to stakeholders, insiders and those affected to outline just how complicated this decision is and has learnt: Talks have yet to commence officially between the club and key stakeholders; There are claims Newcastle cannot sell St James’ — should they wish to do so — because the land is managed by the Freemen of Newcastle; Newcastle’s stadium must be ready ‘a minimum of six months’ before it is due to host its share of matches at the 2028 European Championship, affecting building timescales; etc. … Here is everything we know so far about Newcastle’s stadium plans. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
W – St James’ Park
The name of the Metro station as displayed in St James Metro station
Data has revolutionised football transfers. When will it do the same to real-time tactics?
“The football analytics boom has been firmly established, but its role within the game remains debated. Some argue that data has cleansed the game to such an extent that football has become too uniform for the average fan. For others, a data-led approach is romanticised as the tool that helps clubs find an edge in creating their underdog story. Whatever your opinion, data analysis, paired with video technology, is becoming increasingly complex in football — even if its impact on a team’s tactical approach continues to be discussed. The Athletic’s Michael Cox recently provided a compelling argument that the work being undertaken within football analytics might not have been applied as much on the pitch as we might have thought. While data-led recruitment — and even artificial intelligence — has become increasingly valuable for clubs, there are fewer examples of statistics directly informing decision-making within a game. The question is, why might this disconnect exist? …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Artificial intelligence could transform football. So what might the future look like?
“… It may sound futuristic but football is already heading in that direction, the most well-publicised example being Liverpool teaming up with Google DeepMind to improve their corner-kick strategy using AI. (Lee) Mooney built an industry-leading department at Manchester City before founding MUD Analytics, which works with clubs in the Premier League, English Championship, Scottish Premiership and MLS. He is as well-versed as anyone in how new technology can be embedded in sport and transform age-old methods. AI allows computers to learn and perform tasks and solve problems that usually require human intelligence. It is trained on huge amounts of information and simulates billions of variables, identifying and predicting future patterns. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Pellegrini rewards Ranieri’s call with starring role in Derby della Capitale
“Claudio Ranieri does not have all the answers. It can seem as if he does: the man who steered Leicester to a Premier League title and who long before that built a reputation in Italy as the first person to call when a top team was failing. In case of emergency, do not break the glass, just dial Claudio instead. He had retired after leading Cagliari to an improbable escape from relegation last season, but Roma lured him back. The club – his club, the one he grew up supporting – was in shambles: 12th in the table despite an almost €100m summer transfer splurge and now seeking a third manager of this season. How could he say no, even at 73 years old, to his first footballing love? …”
Guardian
PSG denied Monaco a trophy but Adi Hütter is making them a force
“Heartbreak, again, for Monaco. Despite another nip-and-tuck match against Paris Saint-Germain – much like their meeting in Ligue 1 three weeks ago – Monaco were cruelly felled at the death in the Trophée des Champions. Ousmane Dembélé scored the only goal of the game in the 92nd minute, finally beating Monaco’s second-choice goalkeeper Philipp Köhn, who put in a fantastic display. The real star of the show though – as has been the case all season – was Monaco manager Adi Hütter. …”
Guardian
Schick and Wirtz run wild to show only Leverkusen can live with Bayern
“The celebrations were not what they might have been. Bayern Munich had planned a Christmas display after the Friday night game with RB Leipzig, the full stop to their calendar year, which was swiftly cancelled after news filtered through of the awful attacks in Magdeburg, as the club’s CEO, Jan-Christian Dreesen, explained on the pitch at full time. While the mood was understandably dampened, Bayern had said what they wanted to on the field, just as Bayer Leverkusen did later on Saturday. In case you were in any doubt, there are just two to watch in the title race in the second half of the Bundesliga campaign. The team of 2024, and the team that is determined to make 2025 theirs. …”
Guardian
How Bruno Fernandes’ unusual positioning exploited Trent Alexander-Arnold’s defensive issues
“When the post-match discussion focuses on the player who has been dominating headlines in the previous days, it’s fair to question if that analysis is reasonable, or whether it’s simply a convenient narrative to keep everyone talking. On this occasion, the analysis was entirely fair: Trent Alexander-Arnold, subject of a transfer approach by Real Madrid, had a very difficult game in Liverpool’s 2-2 home draw against Manchester United on Sunday. The idea that Alexander-Arnold can struggle defensively is, clearly, nothing new. He is, at heart, a playmaker who got converted into a right-back because that was the simplest pathway into Liverpool’s first team. The last couple of seasons have featured attempts to field him more centrally when they are in possession, but he remains a problem without the ball. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: Liverpool 2 Manchester United 2 – Something for everyone in incredible rollercoaster game at Anfield
Newcastle’s Alexander Isak is the king of the six-yard box
“Talk to Newcastle’s greatest ever goalscorer Alan Shearer about the scoring of goals and he will bring up the importance of the ‘second six-yard box’ — meaning the space between the actual one and the penalty spot. For him, it’s where strikers should get their chances. No 9s, however, have idiosyncrasies. Current Newcastle centre-forward Alexander Isak’s winner away to Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday was his latest in a growing collection of tap-ins from within the actual six-yard box. It made the Sweden international the third Newcastle player to score in seven consecutive Premier League games, after Shearer in 1996-97 and Joe Willock in 2020-21. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Irish Football – A Sine Wave Through Time

“Ireland, like many nations, possesses an incredibly strong appetite for sport. Consistently medaling in the olympics,being ranked among the best rugby teams in the word, producing countless professional combat athletes competing at the highest levels and being the home of the GAA which is a totally unique sport to Ireland, it is not a stretch to say that Ireland is truly a hotbed of sport. If we take this to be true though, a question is raised. Why is one of the most popular sports in Ireland done at such a poor level throughout the country? … Alongside the sheer number of players involved, football remains one of the most watched sports in the country with massive amounts of people supporting an English Premier League team. …”
Football Paradise
BBC: Is this the biggest upset in the Irish Cup’s 144-year history?

This poem was written by a journalist after the final and passed on to Dundela captain Bobby McAuley (centre).
How does this end? Amorim’s best Man Utd XI? Is 1-0 to the Arsenal a problem? – The Briefing
“Welcome to The Briefing, where every Monday during this season The Athletic will discuss three of the biggest questions to arise from the weekend’s Premier League football. This was the weekend when Manchester City recorded a convincing scoreline (if not performance) against West Ham, Chelsea dropped more points, Newcastle’s fine form continued and Southampton arguably reached a new low with their 5-0 home defeat to Brentford. Here we will ask if the remainder of the Premier League campaign is a confusing mess, whether Ruben Amorim has found his best team and whether Arsenal have a 1-0 problem. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Organised crime, burners and cyber attacks: Inside Liverpool’s fight with ticket touts

“… With Arne Slot’s Liverpool side top of the Premier League, leading the way in the Champions League and in the semi-finals of the Carabao Cup, there is a buzz of excitement around Anfield. The redevelopment of the Anfield Road Stand may have lifted the stadium’s capacity beyond 60,000 last year but the demand for seats still far outstrips supply. Liverpool have 28,000 season ticket holders and a further 11,000 tickets per game are hospitality seats. Visiting teams receive around 3,000 tickets, with the rest sold to members (who pay an annual fee of between £37 and £46) via a ballot. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Best of 2024 from The Athletic UK: Our staff pick their favourite pieces (by their colleagues)

“We didn’t expect to write about flowery wallpapers in 2024, that’s for sure. Or Taylor Swift. We did expect to write about Jurgen Klopp, Erik ten Hag, and Lamine Yamal, and Andy Murray retiring. It was a wild old year in the world of sport and we wanted to take a moment to look back at — and celebrate — the excellent work of our writers over the past 12 months, covering not just football (soccer), but tennis, the Olympics, the Paralympics, and athletics, too. We wanted to know what they liked, too, so we asked them to nominate articles, podcasts or videos produced by their colleagues and tell us why. So here are all the pieces of work selected by writers, editors and producers on The Athletic UK and North American soccer staff (the editors in the U.S. did their own version of this, too). Enjoy! …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Johan Cruyff and the incredible wallpaper drawings that explain modern football
The art of scanning in football
“Earlier in the season, Frank Lampard spent some time with Rodri at Manchester City, breaking down the Ballon d’Or winner’s game as part of a ‘midfield masterclass’ that he was filming. ‘I did about a 50-second run of him against Aston Villa where he was scanning through the pitch,’ former Chelsea and England midfielder Lampard tells The Athletic. ‘He kind of went deep, got the ball, checked his shoulder five times, did it again and ended up putting (Ilkay) Gundogan through on goal. So he’s a scanner.’ Lampard was a scanner too. When Geir Jordet, a professor at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, carried out a study a decade or so ago, after getting his hands on a pile of Premier League ‘Player Cam’ DVDs, he discovered that Lampard scanned more frequently than any of the other 117 footballers he watched. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Ranking every team in England’s top four divisions based on their performance in 2024
“English football in 2024 served up a bit of everything: stunning strikes, comical own goals, baffling errors, refereeing controversies, promotions, relegations, trophies lifted, CVs sifted and much more besides. So as 2024 draws to a close, we have decided ignore those opposed to calendar-year stats and unify all 94 teams (yes, Sutton United and Forest Green Rovers, you may no longer be in the EFL but we haven’t forgotten your efforts between January and May), even if it is only for a few hours before yet more football gets under way on New Year’s Day. You can sort the main table by games played (which includes play-off games), wins, defeats, win percentage and points per game (the latter excludes play-off games, for obvious reasons). Click on a column header to sort by that category. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Mohamed Salah: The best season of any Premier League attacker ever and the numbers that prove it
“Mohamed Salah is having the greatest Premier League season for an attacker ever. Opinion? No. This is a fact. The Liverpool star sits at the top of the list for the best minute-to-goal-contribution ratio of any Premier League player and shows no signs of slowing down though he turns 33 in June. Salah’s 30 goal contributions in 18 appearances means he is averaging a goal or an assist every 52.7 minutes, six fewer than the second-best (Gabriel Jesus, Manchester City 2016-17, 59.1) and 10 better than Erling Haaland for City last season, the closest player on the list who had also played more than 1,000 minutes. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Why did it come to this with Salah, Van Dijk and Alexander-Arnold contracts at Liverpool
NY Times/The Athletic – West Ham 0 Liverpool 5: Breaking down Salah’s extraordinary assist and why Diaz is scoring
Spain: 2024-25 La Liga – Location-map, with 3 charts: Attendance etc.
“… The map. The map page shows a location-map for the 20 clubs in the 2024-25 La Liga, with recently-promoted and -relegated teams noted. (Promoted in 2024: Valladolid, Leganés, Espanyol. Relegated in 2024: Cádiz, Almería, Granada.) The map also shows the 17 Autonomous Communities of Spain, and the 20 largest Spanish metropolitan areas. Those 20 largest Spanish metro-areas, with their 2018 population estimates, are listed at the top-centre of the map-page. …”
billsportsmaps
W – 2024–25 La Liga
Guardian: Sid Lowe is Spanish football correspondent based in Madrid
Brenden Aaronson finishes off the ‘perfect team move’ that showed the best of Leeds
“It had been a wasteful night for Leeds United before Brenden Aaronson scored a goal-of-the-season contender. Derby County did their best to frustrate and deny the Championship leaders. They did it well until the 79th minute. But, as they have done all season, Leeds will pass and pass and pass again until they find a minuscule opening capable of hurting their opponents, and so they did with Aaronson’s winner 11 minutes from time. Leeds had other chances and it threatened to become a costly game in the title race, but the beauty of Aaronson’s goal — which takes his tally to seven for the season and earned him a man-of-the-match award — was worth enduring the frustration up to that point. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Pace, swerve, angle – the art of the ‘olimpico’, football’s (usually) rare phenomenon

“Oscar Wilde once famously wrote that ‘to concede one goal direct from a corner is a misfortune, to concede two in eight days looks like carelessness.’ The thoughts of Oscar, noted corner-kick scholar, may have been rushing through the heads of anyone associated with Manchester United recently after they allowed not one but two ‘olimpicos’ — which, if you’re not familiar with the term, means scoring directly from a corner — in just over a week, in two different competitions. The first came from Son Heung-min in that madcap Carabao Cup quarter-final against Tottenham, his corner sailing over second-choice keeper Altay Bayindir and into the net. The second saw Matheus Cunha flummox Andre Onana, with the help of some judiciously positioned Wolves defenders, in the Premier League on Boxing Day. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

‘It’s always intense’: The eight teams leading the fight for Premier League promotion

“… Burnley had just beaten promotion rivals Watford 2-1, a scoreline unreflective of the home side’s superiority. Both clubs were at the beginning of the Championship’s un-festive, five-games-in-15-days Christmas and New Year fixture special. The home fans witnessed a sixth win in eight games and had been given fresh evidence of a team that captain Josh Brownhill tells The Athletic is ‘gelling more and more… getting stronger and stronger’.All in claret and blue could look forward with confidence to the next game – Sheffield United away. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Liverpool’s corners: ‘Sugar huddles’, more inswingers – and room for improvement
“It has been hard to find fault with Liverpool’s performances this season. Six points clear at the top of the Premier League and making serene progress in the cups, this has been a dream start to the Arne Slot era. There is, however, one metric where the Dutchman may find room for improvement: corners. Liverpool are the top flight’s leading scorers this season with 40 but, according to Opta, only two have come from corners — a steep decline from the Jurgen Klopp era, when they would regularly lead that particular metric. Their set-piece struggles were underlined against Leicester on Boxing Day when Liverpool won eight corners in the first half but failed to create a chance from any of them. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Premier League half-season review: Tactics and trends that have shaped 2024-25 so far
“This week brings up the midway point of the 2024-25 Premier Leagueseason. It’s already been a memorable campaign, with Liverpool clear at the top, the two Manchester clubs in turmoil and the increasingly-familiar sight of the three promoted teams in the bottom three. But what have been the tactical and numerical trends that have captured our experts’ attention, and how do they see the second half of the campaign playing out? Ahmed Walid, Thom Harris and Anantaajith Raghuraman discuss their key takeaways. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The four ‘seasons’ of the 2024-25 Premier League campaign so far

“As we ease into the dreamy relentlessness of football’s festive period, it’s easy to forget the staccato nature of the opening months of the season, short sprints of fixtures punctuated by the four words most Premier League fans hate hearing: ‘It’s another international break.’ Supporters may despair as their favourite players disappear around the world three times in three months but these mandated interruptions do allow the season to be divided into four neat sections, something many managers exploit by targeting a block of games almost as a hyper-focused mini-season. For those of us on the outside, splitting the campaign into smaller chunks can offer us a bit more insight than simply looking at the league table, especially as the campaign progresses. Welcome, then, to The Four Seasons of the Premier League So Far. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The Transfer Radar 2025: The Athletic’s ultimate guide to players who could be on the move
“Welcome to The Transfer Radar. Each major tournament, The Athletic has built a scouting guide highlighting the players to watch. This winter, we are launching a new version of The Radar — one focused on transfers across 2025. We began with 25 players we expect to be of transfer interest to major clubs across Europe over the January and summer windows in 2025. As of December 19, we have added three more players we expect to be of interest. This is not to say that they will move, but based on the conversations our reporters have been having, they are players that are being talked about among recruitment departments. While most fans are focusing on the January window, clubs are already having conversations about next summer. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
‘I don’t digest food properly now’: The all-consuming pressure of managing a football club
“Pep Guardiola’s list of symptoms is long and unsettling. He has trouble sleeping. He can only take light meals in the evening. On some days, he does not eat at all. He finds it difficult to read because his mind keeps wandering. He feels, at times, intensely lonely. Things can get so bad that they begin to take on a physical form: bouts of back pain, breakouts on his skin. They are not isolated to moments like the one in which the Manchester City manager finds himself trapped, when his team are locked in a tailspin he has spent the better part of two months trying and failing to halt. By his own admission, he is always like that. Guardiola cannot sleep, or eat, or relax even when things are going well at work. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
How Diego Simeone toppled Barcelona with the oldest trick in the book: Fresh legs
“Was it a winning goal that never seemed on the cards or a winning goal that felt inevitable. Either way, Alexander Sorloth’s 96th-minute strike to give Atletico Madrid a 2-1 victory at Barcelona on Saturday night is the most significant goal scored in European football so far this season. Barca, at one point runaway leaders of La Liga, have been reeled in and now overtaken. Atletico are Spain’s Christmas No 1. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Tottenham 3 Liverpool 6: Slot’s side top of league at Christmas, Gray day, smart Szoboszlai
“Liverpool beat Tottenham to cement their spot at the top of the Premier League for Christmas. Luis Diaz opened the scoring at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium after a pinpoint cross from Trent Alexander-Arnold before Alexis Mac Allisterdoubled the lead when he nodded home from close range. The home side hit back with a curling effort from James Maddison but Arne Slot’s team showed their class with a swift counter-attack just before half-time, which Dominik Szoboszlai converted after winning the initial flick-on, and two second-half strikes from Mohamed Salah. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: How Trent Alexander-Arnold’s passing style has changed – and the importance of the letter ‘L’
Man Utd 0 Bournemouth 3: Problems for Amorim, conceding first again and more set-piece issues
“After the high of their dramatic derby victory last Sunday, Manchester United were brought back down to earth in the Premier League with a heavy home defeat against Bournemouth. Ruben Amorim and his team have experienced wildly contrasting fortunes over the past seven days. There was euphoria as two late goals earned a 2-1 win at the Etihad Stadium a week ago, but now they have suffered back-to-back disappointments in exiting the Carabao Cup quarter-finals after a seven-goal thriller at Tottenham, followed by this dismantling. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Barcelona are stumbling after a flying start – have teams worked them out?
“Barcelona have been prepared to play with fine margins under Hansi Flick this season, but the gap at the top of La Liga — just goal difference before the visit of in-form Atletico Madrid this weekend — is starting to feel uncomfortably slim. They took 33 points from a possible 36 to start the campaign but have since won just one of their last six games in the Spanish top flight. Their offside trap had been faultlessly precise until the end of November when they lost 2-1 at home to Las Palmas, and then against Leganes on Sunday they conceded their first goal from a set piece all season. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Arne Slot at Liverpool – what the rest of football thinks: ‘He’s cool as hell’

Liverpool’s style impressed Brighton manager Fabian Hurzeler
“To fully gauge the impact of Arne Slot at Liverpool since his arrival in June, you need only talk to those around his squad. The Athletic has been told that at least three players at Anfield have said in private that Slot’s methods could have served the team well during times in recent seasons when they just missed out on the biggest prizes. This is not to denigrate Slot’s predecessor, Jurgen Klopp, an Anfield legend who brought the club unparalleled success in the Premier League era and over a far longer period of time than the Dutchman has worked on Merseyside. The ease of the transition has also, in part, been down to Klopp laying such solid foundations. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
The beautiful game’s ugly secret
“The #MeToo movement swept through Hollywood and fundamentally shifted the paradigm of accountability for powerful individuals accused of sexual misconduct. It ignited a global reckoning that sought repercussions for actions long shielded by status, money, and influence. The movement dampened the careers of comedians, actors, film and television producers, and executives accused of inappropriate sexual behavior and led to the criminal convictions for some high-profile figures such as Harvey Weinstein, R. Kelly, Danny Masterson, and Bill Cosby—though Cosby’s conviction was later overturned. It has also extended beyond Hollywood and seen a similar reckoning in the music industry, academia, medicine, finance, and even religious and political institutions. In the arena of sports, one of the most shocking and biggest sexual abuse scandals centered around Larry Nassar, who served as the team doctor for the United States women’s national gymnastics from 1996 to 2014. During his tenure, he exploited his position to sexually abuse hundreds of young athletes, many of whom became Olympians. …”
Africa Is a Country
Introducing the most dangerous pass in football
“A sharp, anxious intake of breath, followed by a round of applause that carries a mixture of quiet admiration and, more than anything, relief. On other occasions, it ends with supporters shaking their heads and asking why. We are talking about the crowd reaction to — and I’m borrowing this description from a colleague who is a regular at Stamford Bridge — ‘the most dangerous pass in football’. It’s the short, vertical ball from the goalkeeper to — typically, but not always — the midfield pivot, who is receiving under pressure, back to goal and close to their own penalty area. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Kyle Walker is caught in the grip of a crisis. He has become the on-pitch face of Man City’s struggles
“Kyle Walker never expected this. He didn’t expect to be captain of the Premier League champions at the age of 34. He didn’t expect to be closing in on 100 caps for England. He thought the treadmill would have slowed down by now. He thought the spotlight would have become less intense. If you had invited him to map out his career 10 years ago, or even after Manchester City signed him for £50million in the summer of 2017, he would have guessed he would be back at Sheffield United by now. That was his only real ambition growing up on the Lansdowne Estate in Sheffield, his horizons and dreams stretching little further than Bramall Lane half a mile away. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Man City 1 Man Utd 2 – Amad’s genius, Nunes’ errors and Amorim’s set-piece problem
“Amad scored a brilliant late winner in the Manchester derby shortly after earning the penalty that had put Ruben Amorim’s team level as Manchester City crumbled in the closing stages at the Etihad Stadium. The main story before the game was Marcus Rashford and Alejandro Garnacho being left out of the United squad, with United head coach Amorim saying he made the decision after evaluating ‘everything’. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Rashford runs out of road at Manchester United as Ratcliffe shows steely edge
NY Times/The Athletic: Why Lisandro Martinez’s new creative role was key to Manchester United beating City

Mikheil Kavelashvili used to play for Manchester City. Now he’s Georgia’s far-right president-elect
“It was an April’s day in an era when Manchester City were still playing at Maine Road and a visit from Manchester United was a lot more daunting than it has been in recent years. City were on the attack. The ball was swung over from the left into the penalty area. Gary Neville was never going to beat Niall Quinn, the 6ft 4in (193cm) City striker, in an aerial contest. Another player in blue was waiting for Quinn’s knockdown. And that was the moment Martin Tyler’s voice went up an octave in the Sky Sports commentary box. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Liverpool 2 Fulham 2 – Slot’s team come from behind twice after Robertson red card
“Liverpool dropped points in the Premier League title race on Saturday afternoon, but after coming from behind twice with only 10 men, a 2-2 draw with Fulham feels like a semi-positive result. Arne Slot’s side played most of the game with 10 men after Andy Robertsonwas sent off for bringing down Harry Wilson when the former Liverpool man was through on goal. By that stage, Liverpool were already losing, Andreas Pereira’s acrobatic finish putting the high-flying Londoners 1-0 up. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
What makes Thomas Frank special: ‘Secret sauce’, training for stoppage time and games of Risk
“The setting was Brentford’s buoyant home dressing room and Thomas Frank was delivering a rousing speech. It was last Saturday, minutes after Newcastle United had become the latest side to crumble at the Gtech Community Stadium. Brentford dispatched their visitors 4-2 to earn a seventh home win in eight Premier Leaguegames this season, but rather than salute the club’s star goalscorers Bryan Mbeumo and Yoane Wissa, Frank made a beeline for less-feted players. There was praise for captain Christian Norgaard for making 100 Premier League appearances and for Ethan Pinnock for reaching 200 games for Brentford. Substitutes Mikkel Damsgaard and Kevin Schade were heralded for their ability as ‘finishers” while defender Ben Mee, who only came on in the 87th minute, was hailed for offering encouragement and leadership. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Thomas Frank – Brentford – Tactical Analysis
W – Thomas Frank
Dean Henderson’s ‘head saves’ – and how they are lifting Crystal Palace
“Dean Henderson is using his head in helping Crystal Palace return to form. The England goalkeeper has been showcasing an unusual kind of save in recent months, stopping three goal-bound efforts with his face after rushing out to close down an attacker. The first was against Pablo Sarabia during the 2-2 draw with Wolves on November 2; then, a week later, he denied Andreas Pereira even though Palace were eventually beaten 2-0 by Fulham. Most recently, and memorably, he repeated the trick against Erling Haaland in another 2-2 against champions Manchester City. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
