Tag Archives: Football Manager

Welcome to the Premier League’s late-goal era


“Steve Bruce. Alisson. Sergio Aguero. Stoppage-time winners are the Premier League’s most powerful narrative device, single moments that can flip the course of a season in an instant. This year, the league’s scriptwriters have leaned into the drama more than ever. Of the 70 matches played so far, 10 have been won by stoppage-time goals, the highest share in any Premier League campaign. This is not simply an early-season quirk. When measured against any 70-match stretch, we have never seen late drama arrive so often. The closest comparison came in December 2007, when Reading and West Ham both struck at the death to raise the rolling tally to nine. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

FSG’s 15 years at Liverpool: The making of a modern super club – and what comes next?


“It was October 15, 2010, when Fenway Sports Group, then known as New England Sports Ventures, completed its £300million takeover of Liverpool. The debt-ridden Premier League giants had been pulled back from the brink of administration after the destructive reign of Tom Hicks and George Gillett. ‘I am proud and humbled,’ principal owner John W Henry told reporters. ‘I can’t tell you how happy I am. We’re here to win.’ Two days later, Henry and chairman Tom Werner took their seats at Goodison Park to watch Roy Hodgson’s Liverpool lose 2-0 against Everton, with only goal difference keeping them off the bottom of the table. A bleak afternoon opened their eyes to the size of the task ahead. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Is this the football you want?

If you tune into any Premier League game this season there is only a 54.7 per cent chance the ball is in play
“Xabi Alonso has never forgotten his introduction to the Premier League. It was a Sunday afternoon in late August 2004 but it was unseasonably cold at Bolton Wanderers’ Reebok Stadium. There was a chill in the air, but for Liverpool’s midfielder, newly arrived from Spain, the real culture shock was what happened on the pitch. … That was the Premier League’s image for many years: long balls, high balls, second balls, corner kicks, free kicks, blood and thunder, thud and blunder. As Jose Mourinho put it during his first spell in charge of Chelsea, England was the only place he had been where corner kicks were greeted almost as feverishly as goals. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Sunny uplands approaching for Inter Milan


“INTER Milan’s name has never diminished, even in their worst moments. A huge club with giant crowds and a glorious heritage, their finances were best described as a ‘basket case’ in recent years, a chronicle of massive losses, debts and ownership issues. There was a time when one wondered if one of European football’s blue (and black) riband clubs would ever regain their place among the very elite, but there are signs Inter are at least moving in the right circles once more. In 2024-25, Inter reached their second UEFA Champions League final in three years, but Paris Saint-Germain, in thrashing them 5-0, highlighted the difference between a top Italian club and one that has limitless resources. Inter may be on an even keel in terms of being able to compete at home, but the modern game has created behemoths that have become cash generating machines. …”
Game of the People

Destination World Cup 2026: The miracle of Cape Verde


“Dailon Livramento was slumped on the floor. Pico Lopes was looking for his dad in the crowd. Stopira was hugging everyone. Steven Moreira didn’t know what to do with himself. … But it’s difficult to know how you’re supposed to feel when you’ve just helped your country qualify for the World Cup for the first time. And particularly when you are the second-smallest nation to ever make it to the biggest sporting event on the planet, after Iceland. Cape Verde, a collection of 10 islands off the west coast of Africa with a population of around 525,000 and which was a Portuguese colony until 1975, have done something improbable. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Guardian -‘A defining moment of our nation’: Cape Verde goes wild to celebrate historic World Cup spot
YouTube: CAPE VERDE vs ESWATINI | CAF 2026 WORLD CUP QUALIFIERS

Why Sweden fired Jon Dahl Tomasson: Shock results, fan fury and a tactically-awkward Isak/Gyokeres partnership

“To many other football countries, sacking a national team coach is a regular event; almost part of the fun. But in the history of the Sweden men’s football side, no national team coach had officially been fired. They’d resigned, or they’d reached the end of their contract. Until now. Jon Dahl Tomasson has become the first exception to the rule. Sweden’s 1-0 defeat to Kosovo in Gothenburg on Monday was arguably the lowest point in the history of Swedish football — not because the result was a shock, but because it wasn’t. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

The Athletic’s Agent Survey: From best and worst deals to selecting champions and relegation candidates

“… Welcome to The Athletic’s 2025 agent survey, which analyses a record-breaking summer transfer window that saw the 20 Premier League clubs spend an astonishing £3.11billion ($4.16bn) on a total of 155 players. Over the past month or so, The Athletic asked 20 agents to answer a series of questions on the back of the summer’s transfer activity, predominantly looking at the Premier League. We wanted to know their thoughts on the best and worst deals, which Premier League clubs had the most to smile about after the window closed, and which three teams appear doomed to relegation. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Sir Bobby Charlton picked his World XI in 1960. We found it – and here it is

“Happy birthday, Sir Bobby Charlton. Arguably Manchester United’s most important modern player and perhaps England’s greatest — the emblem of their World Cup-winning team of 1966, the year he won the Ballon d’Or — Charlton would have been 88 today. He died two years ago this month, the news breaking on a Saturday afternoon. It seemed appropriate, as does Charlton’s birth date falling on an international weekend. As does coming across a rare old book of his: Bobby Charlton’s Book of Soccer. It was published in October 1960, coinciding with Charlton’s 23rd birthday. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Eight expectations about football from 25 years ago that have proven misguided

“In 2000, World Soccer magazine commemorated the new century by interviewing FIFA president Sepp Blatter. One of the questions forced him to reach for his crystal ball: ‘What will the next 100 years bring? I cannot look that far ahead,’ Blatter replied. ‘I will go as far as 25 years, however.’ So what did Blatter predict? ‘I will forecast no radical changes in that time,’ he said. Oh well. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

English football, right-wing politics, and a new front in the culture wars

“It is the small hours of the morning and outside the Red Bar in central Belgrade, there are a dozen or so travelling England supporters making themselves heard ahead of a World Cup qualifier against Serbia. There are the usual chants that provide a soundtrack to England’s overseas trips, but there’s also a new addition to the national team’s songbook: ‘Stop the boats, stop the boats,’ they chant. ‘Nigel Farage, we’re all voting for Reform UK.’ …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Opponents are ‘ignoring’ Barcelona’s offside trap, and it’s working

“It was the most eye-catching result of last weekend, arguably of the entire 2025-26 season so far. But while Barcelona’s 4-1 battering at the hands of Sevilla on Sunday — their heaviest loss in La Liga for over 10 years — will go down as a major shock, the manner of their defeat will be of little surprise to those who have endured the full thrill of Hansi Flick’s reign. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Reading a football scout’s notebooks: Spotting Rodri and Benzema, and why data needs context

“The reports are beautifully presented, meticulously preserved in ring-bound notepads. Each match is recorded over two pages: home team on the left, away on the right. Next to each player’s name is his shirt number, his height, his age and the date his contract expires. There is a space next to each player’s name for observations on his performance. Some merit one or two lines; others, occasionally, are left blank. The ones that really make an impression get four or five lines. And where the old scout has used his highlighter pen, you know he was ready to make a firm recommendation. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Why are Liverpool struggling? Opponents wise to Gravenberch, Salah gamble backfiring

“Liverpool enter the October international break having lost three successive matches across all competitions for the first time since Arne Slot was named head coach last summer. The disappointing run has raised questions over what has gone wrong for the Premier League champions. Following an off-season of tragedy and change, with seven incomings and as many outgoings (two on loan), their 2025-26 squad is still gelling. Injuries and suspensions have not helped, but some issues go beyond personnel alone. Andrew Jones, Gregg Evans and Anantaajith Raghuraman outline the issues. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

English football league system

“”The English football league system, also known as the football pyramid, is a series of interconnected leagues for men’s association football clubs in England, with five teams from Wales, one from Guernsey, one from Jersey and one from the Isle of Manalso competing. The system has a hierarchical format with promotion and relegationbetween leagues at different levels, allowing even the smallest club the theoretical possibility of ultimately rising to the very top of the system, the Premier League. Below that are levels 2–4 organised by the English Football League, then the National League System from levels 5–10 administered by the FA, and thereafter Regional feeder leagues run by relevant county FAs on an ad hoc basis. …”
W – English football league system
W – English Football League
YouTube: English Football Pyramid Explained – How Promotion, Relegation and Cup Competitions Work

A deliciously imperfect title race? Has Forest’s folly been exposed? Farewell, penalty stutters? – The Briefing


“Welcome to The Briefing where, every Monday this season, The Athletic will discuss three of the biggest questions to arise from the weekend’s football. This was the round when Liverpool lost yet again, Arsenal moved to the top of the Premier League, Chelsea head coach Enzo Maresca lost his cool but gained a few friends and Manchester United won a fairly straightforward, drama-free match. Blimey. Here, we look at the prospect of a rollercoaster title race, question whether the daftest decision of the season has already been made and heap praise on a heck of a penalty. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Liverpool’s struggles show that Trent Alexander-Arnold is not easily replaced – Jonathan Wilson

Arne Slot wanted Liverpool to evolve, now he faces biggest test of his career

“For Arne Slot, this is uncharted territory. Three successive defeats for the first time in his managerial career and a truckload of issues for the Liverpool head coach to address. After Estevao’s dramatic late winner at Stamford Bridge on Saturday delivered another crushing setback, it feels like the international break has come at a good time for the Premier League champions. There’s no momentum for the hiatus to dent. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – Chelsea 2 Liverpool 1: Estevao winner, Caicedo’s stunner, third defeat in a row for Slot’s side (Video)
BBC: Why Salah has become a ‘little problem’ for Liverpool (Video)

How Argentina won the 1978 World Cup: Home-based talent, free-flowing football and peak Mario Kempes

“… Forty eight years after they were defeated in the first final over the water in Montevideo, Argentina finally won the World Cup, on home soil in Buenos Aires. This was the 11th World Cup, and now five had been won by the host nation. Argentina had been awarded the tournament 12 years beforehand, but the situation in the country had changed dramatically since then, with the government ousted by a military junta headed by General Jorge Rafael Videla. This was a period of serious violence in Argentina, with the most notable death in footballing terms being the assassination of General Omar Actis, the head of the World Cup organising committee. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Long-throw tactics: How Premier League teams profit from back-post runs and second balls


“The 2020s are proving to be the decade of set pieces. With corner goals back in vogue and rugby-style kick-offs becoming fashionable again, throw-in tactics have been going the same way: longer, and into the box. In the first six matchdays of the 2025-26 season, an average of slightly over one in four throw-ins from the attacking third of the pitch were sent into the penalty area. That frequency is double the proportion of long throws from last season — though this might well prove to be an early-season trend that cools down — and a continuation of a six-year trend. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The Alternative Premier League Table: No 7 – Attacking performance versus expected goals

“Welcome to the seventh edition of The Alternative Premier League Table, where each Thursday, Anantaajith Raghuraman analyses the entire division through a specific lens. After looking at each club’s usage of long balls last week, this time our qualifier is expected goals and how teams have performed against the metric so far. As usual, the article that follows is long but detailed, so please settle down and enjoy it all — or search for the side you want to read about. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Champions League projections: Arsenal are now favourites but PSG on the rise after round two

“Matchday 2 of the 2025-26 Champions League provided us with the season’s first taste of jeopardy. The marquee fixture ended with Paris Saint-Germain winning 2-1 at Barcelona, Liverpool were shocked by Galatasaray, and Eric Dier and Monaco stopped Manchester City from making it two victories out of two. All of this and more has led to changes across The Athletic’s projections, which are powered by Opta data. Throughout the tournament, we will use these to understand each club’s probability of league-phase elimination, direct qualification to the last 16 via a top-eight finish, entry into the play-off round by placing ninth to 24th, and winning the whole thing in the final in Budapest on May 30. The link to the projections is below. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Chelsea 1 Benfica 0 – Wingers offer flashes of quality to spoil Jose Mourinho’s latest homecoming

“Jose Mourinho seems to love these returns to old haunts right up to the moment the football actually starts. This was the Portuguese’s eighth return to Stamford Bridge either side of his two stints in the home dugout, and he has still only won once — with that powerful Inter with whom he went on to win the Champions League back in 2010. He spent much of the second half here scowling at perceived injustice as Benfica, impressive for periods, fell marginally short. He was booked late on, too, for good measure. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Atletico dominated the derby by exposing Real Madrid in the channels


“It is rare to see such a basic approach working in a high-level football match, but Atletico Madrid’s style in their 5-2 thrashing of Real Madrid felt like old-school Atleti: 4-4-2, and lots of balls into the channels. Diego Simeone’s approach has evolved across his 14-year spell as head coach, introducing more attacking flair. For the ‘derbi’, though, Atletico often go back to basics. And it worked on Saturday, with Atleti putting five goals past their city rivals for the first time in nearly 75 years. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox
YouTube: SHOCKING MADRID DERBY 🔥 Real Madrid vs. Atletico Madrid | LALIGA Highlights

The half-time corner tweak that powered Arsenal’s win at Newcastle

“Before Sunday’s 2-1 victory against Newcastle United, Arsenal’s recent form at St James’ Park was three defeats and zero goals in three games, so it’s unsurprising that one of Mikel Arteta’s messages to his team was to ‘learn from the past’. And taking lessons was obvious in Arsenal’s performance, even after Nick Woltemade had put Newcastle ahead. Yes, they took learnings from previous trips to the north east, but they also adapted during Sunday’s game. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Crystal Palace 2 Liverpool 1 – Nketiah’s late winner, set-piece concerns for the champions


“Crystal Palace turned the tables on Liverpool, scoring in stoppage time to secure a memorable victory at Selhurst Park as Oliver Glasner’s side continued their unbeaten run in the Premier League. Liverpool’s habit of finding the net in the latter stages of matches this season seemed to have earned them a draw when Federico Chiesa levelled in the 87th minute. But an impressive Palace secured all three points with the last play of the game when Eddie Nketiah struck at the far post in the 97th minute. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: ‘Mentality’ is Arne Slot’s new favourite word at Liverpool. This is why

Atletico 5 Real Madrid 2 – Was this Alvarez’s revenge? How big a setback is this for Alonso? Mbappe best as a No 9?


“Real Madrid were humiliated 5-2 by a Julian Alvarez-inspired Atletico Madrid at the Metropolitano stadium as Xabi Alonso’s team failed their first major test in La Liga — the first time Atletico had put five goals past their city rivals since 1950. Robin Le Normand put Diego Simeone’s team in front with a 14th-minute header following some static Real defending. The visitors and league leaders responded through a 25th-minute effort from Kylian Mbappe after a fine pass from Arda Guler, before the Turkey youngster gave them the lead in the 37th minute from a Vinicius Junior assist. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How do you quantify ‘tempo’ in football?

“There is a certain aesthetic which sits alongside the most entertaining games of football — often it is that they are played at a ‘good tempo’. A player who can dictate the tempo of a match is worth their weight in gold, while identifying a team’s shift in tempo is synonymous with an increase in energy and creativity. It is a term that is frequently used within football parlance, but what exactly do we mean by it? …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Lucky Liverpool? If anything, Arne Slot’s side have been unfortunate

“It’s already a familiar story for Liverpool in the Premier League. Just like last season, they sit with a comfortable buffer between their closest rivals: the only difference is that last term it was in November when they pulled away from Manchester City, Chelsea and Arsenal, not September. Granted, there’s still a long way to go and now is not the time to be writing about a club edging closer to another title win. Yet the signs are all pointing in one direction — and it’s not towards the Etihad or London. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Chelsea are suffering from a very specific defensive tactic by their opponents

“The sluggish start, followed by a second-half spark. Long throw-ins, pedestrian approach play, even the red and white stripes. Chelsea fans had seen this film before. An unconvincing 2-1 win over League One Lincoln City in the Carabao Cup on Tuesday presented some alarming similarities to a disappointing 2-2 draw with Brentford in the Premier League earlier this month, as Enzo Maresca once again tasked his young, second-string side to get the job done. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Liverpool 2 Southampton 1: Why was Ekitike sent off? What happened to Leoni? Is Isak up to speed?

“Alexander Isak scored his first Liverpool goal, Hugo Ekitike was sent off and teenage defender Giovanni Leoni suffered a worrying injury as Arne Slot’s side won a dramatic and damaging tie against Southampton in the Carabao Cup third round. Southampton almost took the lead in the 42nd minute when Adam Armstrong hit the bar and Leo Scienza headed the rebound wide — but 38 seconds later, the ball was in the back of their net when goalkeeper Alex McCarthy’s pass fell to Federico Chiesa, who rolled it to Isak to finish from about eight yards out. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Mikel Arteta versus Pep Guardiola has become a boring battle of overwhelming caution

“Stodgy matches between Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal and Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City come as absolutely no surprise now. We’ve already witnessed a contest in which all eight defenders on the pitch were recognised centre-backs, another game when Arsenal got a player sent off and hardly got out of their own half after half-time, and a game when it barely looked like either side were even attempting to score until Gabriel Martinelli’s stoppage-time effort took a big deflection and looped in. No one is tuning into this fixture and expecting a classic. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

Liverpool, Everton and the struggle to retain a sense of community

“… This was the round when Manchester United fought through the rain to beat Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur came back from two goals down for a point away to Brighton & Hove Albion and Liverpool continued their perfect start. Here we will ask if Mikel Arteta could have been bolder in Arsenal’s draw with visitors Manchester City, whether Unai Emery’s post-match savaging of his Aston Villa players was wise and whether West Ham United and Wolverhampton Wanderers are sleepwalking towards relegation. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Skeletal tracking is football analytics’ new chapter – this is why

“Many frontiers have been crossed within football analytics. It was not too long ago that clubs would be lucky to obtain the most basic event metrics, such as shots, passes, and corners. Fast forward to the modern day, and the granularity of football data now is eye-watering. Players with GPS (Global Positioning System) vests are commonplace in the modern game as clubs monitor the speed, distance covered, accelerations and decelerations of each squad member in every training session and matchday. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Liverpool 2 Everton 1: Five wins out of five – how worried should champions’ rivals be?

“Liverpool roll on. Last season’s Premier League winners maintained their perfect start with a 2-1 victory against Everton in the Merseyside derby, but it was far from comfortable. First-half goals from the exceptional Ryan Gravenberch and Hugo Ekitike set Liverpool on course for victory but Everton were sprightly after half-time, and turned the game into a contest in the 58th minute courtesy of Idrissa Gueye’s fine finish. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Are Pep Guardiola and Mikel Arteta copying each other – or adapting to the rest of the Premier League?

“There will be no 11th outfielder in the Manchester City goal against Arsenal on Sunday. After eight years, Pep Guardiola replaced the silky Ederson with Gianluigi Donnarumma, whose footwork is more paso doble than quickstep. It looks unlikely that there will be a right-back who can move into midfield and connect play. The no-nonsense flying machine of a centre-back, Abdukodir Khusanov, will be shuffled across instead. There will be no hint of a false nine either, only the truest number nine in the form of Erling Haaland. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Explaining Manchester United’s out-of-possession problems and why they are so damaging

“Excluding goalscoring, Manchester United’s open-play problems under Ruben Amorim mainly come when they don’t have the ball. What you do out of possession also affects your in-possession game, and vice versa. While it is too early to properly judge their 2025-26 efforts, it is possible to explore issues that were present last season and are creeping in again after five games of the current one. The Athletic reported that the team’s form was on the agenda yesterdaywhen co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe visited the club’s training ground and met with Amorim and some of the issues go right back to the start. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Newcastle 1 Barcelona 2: Is Rashford back? Should Schar have come off sooner? Are Flick’s side contenders?


“Barcelona opened up their 2025-26 Champions League campaign with a 2-1 win at St James’ Park against Newcastle United. The opening 45 minutes were very much a half of two halves. Newcastle, in typical fashion, started aggressively, with the front three pressing the Barcelona defence and winning possession in some promising positions, to the delight of the home fans. The pace of Anthony Elanga, in particular, was a consistently dangerous outlet for Eddie Howe’s side, with their best chance of the half coming when he motored down the right flank and crossed for Harvey Barnes, whose shot was saved. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Liverpool 3 Atletico 2: How did they win it late again? Why did Simeone see red? How was Isak’s debut?


“Liverpool scored yet another late goal through Virgil van Dijk to claim a 3-2 win against Atletico Madrid and kick off their Champions League campaign. Marcos Llorente had silenced Anfield with two goals to drag Atletico level — just as he did in their round of 16 tie in March 2020 — but Van Dijk ensured Arne Slot’s side had the last laugh, following late goals against Bournemouth, Newcastle United, Arsenal and Burnley in the Premier League. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Tottenham 1 Villarreal 0 – How did Spurs score such a bizarre goal on Champions League return?

“It wasn’t pretty but Tottenham Hotspur’s return to the Champions League was a winning one. A calamitous own goal by Villarreal goalkeeper Luiz Junior in the fourth minute proved enough for Thomas Frank’s side in a low-key encounter in north London, although few Spurs fans were complaining at the relative lack of fireworks. Here, we analyse the major talking points. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
YouTube: Tottenham vs Villarreal 1-0 – Highlights & All Goals

Bayern Munich 3 Chelsea 1: Clinical Kane but did drop ball help Bayern? What did Maresca learn?

“Harry Kane scored twice as Chelsea’s return to Europe’s top table ended in defeat despite a promising performance in Munich. The England forward scored a penalty for Bayern before adding a second in a 3-1 victory at Allianz Arena in the first match of the Champions League league phase. A Trevoh Chalobah own goal from a Michael Olise cross after a drop ball had put the home side ahead before Kane doubled the lead from the spot after being fouled. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: How Chelsea won the Champions League against Bayern — told by the men who did it

The night Newcastle and Faustino Asprilla beat Barcelona: ‘I swear I’ve never heard noise like that’

“Eddie Howe said it will be ‘magical’, ‘special’ and ‘the type of game you’re desperate to be part of’. Newcastle United versus Barcelona in the Champions League is an occasion dressed up as a football match, at least on Tyneside, at least until kick-off. Thursday’s match at St James’ Park is a fixture that instantly transports those of a certain generation back to September 1997 and the night Faustino Asprilla rose as high as the decibel count to register a Newcastle hat-trick that sent visitors Barcelona home, bemused and defeated. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

All 36 Champions League teams ranked ahead of this week’s big kick-off

“Less than four months after Paris Saint-Germain lifted their inaugural Champions League title by thrashing Inter, the 2025-26 edition is upon us. The 36-team league phase of Europe’s premier club competition kicks off on Tuesday, with Arsenal facing Bilbao’s Athletic Club in one of the two early kick-offs. There are plenty of other highlights this week too, with Bayern Munich facing Chelsea in a rematch of the 2012 final, Liverpool coming up against Atletico Madrid and Newcastle United hosting Barcelona. So, how do we assess each of the teams involved in the first round? This is our definitive — but also entirely subjective, and extremely debatable — ranking. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Liverpool became Little Hungary: ‘We used to pray for times like this’


“Outside the Puskas Arena in Budapest, the crowd is separated by two distinct colours. In black are the Carpathian Brigade, a nationalist ultras group of mainly large, burly men who stand behind the goal and bellow every chant to the accompaniment of a megaphone. They are loud, intimidating and not to be trifled with. In red is another group — no less supportive but far less forbidding. They wear Hungary’s home shirt and join in with some of the singing, but their devotion is not just restricted to the national team. Increasingly, they are also devoted followers of Liverpool, who now have three national team players in their squad. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: Three Liverpool puzzles facing Arne Slot

Seventy years ago, Hibernian started Britain on an exciting European adventure

“The league phase of the UEFA Champions League begins soon in what is the 70th year since the competition first took place. The first game took place on September 4, 1955 between Sporting Clube de Portugal and Partizan Belgrade, a 3-3 draw in Lisbon and the first British club to participate, Hibernian, made their bow on September 14 with a trip to Rot-Weiss Essen. … Meanwhile, Hibernian, who had finished fifth in the Scottish League in 1954-55, were confirmed as Scotland’s representative. Some sceptics wondered if Hibs were equipped to play in the competition, but Partizan had finished at the back end of their domestic top six. …”
Game Of People

How West Germany won the 1974 World Cup: Beckenbauer as leader and tactician, and their own brand of Total Football

“… In a tournament compromised by wet weather and therefore boggy pitches, hosts West Germany were not overwhelmingly popular winners. Their 1972 European Championship-winning side had played open, expansive football, but that approach gave way to a more cautious, less spectacular approach here. A key difference was the decline of star midfielder Gunter Netzer, who had controversially left Borussia Monchengladbach for Real Madrid a year earlier, but endured a disastrous first season in La Liga, failing to score a single goal. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video) – Michael Cox

Burnley 0 Liverpool 1: Why did Salah’s goal make Premier League history? How many late winners have they had?


“Liverpool sealed a late, late victory at Burnley after a stoppage-time penalty for handball was converted by Mohamed Salah. It leaves Liverpool top with 12 points from four games, but fans were made to sweat for that winning moment. … Liverpool’s attack in general were frustrated, while there was an early exit for left-back Milos Kerkez. Slot replaced him with Andy Robertson in the first half after Kerkez picked up a yellow card for diving. Burnley were reduced to 10 men towards the end after Lesley Ugochukwu was shown a second yellow card for a foul on Florian Wirtz. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Best of the Rest XI: Picking the strongest team outside the ‘Big Six’

“This summer, the traditional ‘Big Six’ clubs signed more players from the rest of the Premier League than in any of the previous 15 seasons. As Oliver Kay explained, Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, and Tottenham Hotspur bought a combined 11 players from the ‘other’ 14 clubs. As recently as the 2021-22 season, those six clubs only signed three from the other Premier League teams. A big reason for this is the purchasing power advantage these clubs enjoy, especially since the Premier League introduced its profit and sustainability rules (PSR). The ‘Big Six’ clubs do not always occupy the top-six spots in the league — Tottenham and Manchester United actually finished in the bottom six last season — but their commercial and matchday revenues are on a different level. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

England (including Wales), 2nd Division: 2025–26 EFL Championship

“The map shows the average attendance of the 24 clubs of the 2025-26 EFL Championship (England/2nd division). The clubs’ badges are arranged around the coast of Britain, in grouped boxes. They are grouped by Counties or Regions. The circles-with-club-badges represent each club’s home league average attendance for 2024-25 – the larger the circle, the higher the club’s attendance last season. Each circle-with-badge points to the club’s home-venue location. That home-venue location is listed on the map, along with the club’s home-county or home-region. …”
billsports
W – 2025–26 EFL Championship

Aston Villa, the only team in England’s top seven divisions without a goal

“Aston Villa’s goal of the month for August was simple. They decided not to bother with it at all because, for only the second time in their history, Villa failed to score in their first three league fixtures. They are the only team out of 162 that make up England’s top seven leagues (Premier League down to the National League North and South) yet to hit the back of the net. A big caveat here is that they have played only three league matches, whereas some teams in lower leagues have played more than double that number. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The Alternative Premier League Table: No 4 – Comparing team starts with corresponding 2024-25 fixtures


“Welcome to the fourth edition of The Alternative Premier League Table, where each Thursday, Anantaajith Raghuraman analyses the entire division through a specific lens. After looking how each team deals with taking penalties last time, this week we’re looking at each team’s start to 2025-26, comparing it with how they performed in the same fixtures in 2024-25. This article is long but detailed, so either settle down and enjoy it all — or search for the team you want to read about. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Tottenham Hotspur: How would a takeover work and what could it cost?

“Tottenham Hotspur has been the club where everything changes but its owners. For all that managers and players come and go, ENIC has held power for almost a quarter of a century. No Premier League owner has lasted longer. The front-facing leader had always been Daniel Levy but his sudden removal as the club’s chairman last Thursday has invited instability and expressions of interest from would-be buyers. The Lewis family, majority shareholders of ENIC, maintain they have no wish to sell but the noise around a fresh start has rarely been louder. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

England 2 Andorra 0: Anderson best of the bunch as Tuchel’s team fail to set pulses racing

“England made it four wins from four in their 2026 World Cup qualifying group, but it was far from convincing stuff. There was a fresher look to Thomas Tuchel’s starting XI, with the likes of Bukayo Saka, Phil Foden and Cole Palmer all out injured, but despite maintaining complete control of the match and never looking in any danger of dropping points, there was little to get the Villa Park crowd off their seats. A first-half own goal and a second half Declan Rice header were enough to preserve their five-point lead at the top of Group K, as they prepare to travel to Serbia — the biggest threat to their qualification hopes — on Tuesday. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian – Watching Andorra: like a month made up entirely of Tuesday afternoons

No man born in 1976 played for England – and what else birth years tell us about football

“One of the charming aspects of following foreign football is realising that certain concepts are expressed in different ways to how it’s done in your own country. And one of these, for those of us accustomed to British conventions but who follow the game in continental Europe, is the simple passage of time. So whereas you’re generally more likely to find the 24-hour clock on the continent — a kick-off time might be listed at “19h” — it is somehow also more common for their television scoreboards to display a clock counting up from 00:00 at the start of the second half, rather than the 45:00 we’d be accustomed to in Britain. Similarly, if you read — for example — La Gazzetta dello Sport in Italy, you won’t read goals recorded as being scored in the 65th minute in its pages, but instead in the 20th minute of the second half. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

‘Action’ from an 1878 game between England and Scotland

The Kroenkes at Arsenal: The rise of Josh, transfer investment, and fan sentiment

“As the final whistle went at Old Trafford after Arsenal kicked off their Premier League campaign with a victory over Manchester United, Josh Kroenke left his seat in the directors’ box and headed for the dressing room. Having made the trip from the United States, Josh was in Manchester to watch Arsenal’s first match of the season, something he does annually, and stayed on to watch their 5-0 win against Leeds United the following weekend at the Emirates Stadium. But after congratulating the players and manager Mikel Arteta at Old Trafford — it is not unusual for Josh to venture into the dressing room following a game — attention soon turned to planning and strategy meetings. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Booting the ball out from kick-off is a worrying trend – this rule change would curb it

“In 1991, England travelled to Poland for their final qualification match for Euro 92. It was a crucial contest: the winners would qualify for the tournament, with a draw favouring England. Considering the importance of the game, it was a surprise that England manager Graham Taylor handed debuts to two players: Queens Park Rangers winger Andy Sinton and Crystal Palace midfielder Andy Gray. The latter was given an unusual role for the game’s opening moments. With David Platt and Gary Lineker taking the kick-off, Gray was instructed to stand just behind them and launch a diagonal ball downfield towards the corner flag, and out for a Poland throw-in.  …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

Grading each Premier League club on their summer transfer business

“The transfer window is over. Over 150 senior players have been signed by Premier League clubs. Others have moved on to the continent. Much like every year, a club’s transfer window will likely be judged a success or a failure based on the season that follows — that big-money striker who fires his new side into the Champions League or the huge (and unresolved) hole in defence that means a club slips into a relegation scrap. But with the window having just closed, we asked The Athletic’s club reporters for their view on how it panned out for their side, and what grade they would give the club’s window. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Evolution not revolution: The impact of squad churn on Premier League performance

“It is easy to get swept up by the excitement of a busy transfer window, the promise that a crop of talented reinforcements will rejuvenate and transform a side’s fortunes. Premier League clubs spent record sums chasing that promise this summer, but as tantalising as big-name arrivals and sweeping changes can be, can too much be disruptive? We have a recent case study: Liverpool were the biggest spenders in the summer 2025 window, but that came after a 2024-25 season in which they had barely added to their ranks at all. The result? A Premier League title in Arne Slot’s first campaign in charge. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Brazil won the 1970 World Cup: Pele’s return, a fearsome front five – but ‘an incompetent goalkeeper’


“… Mexico was a controversial choice as World Cup host in 1970, primarily because it was widely expected that the heat and altitude would result in poor football. Instead, Brazil turned on the style to become, almost without question, the most celebrated World Cup-winning side in history. It helped that the World Cup was now televised around the world — and for the first time, in colour. … Brazil triumphed amid a period of political turbulence back home, with a military dictatorship in place since 1964. ‘We had a fantastic side and everyone expected us to win, which gave me the shakes,’ Pele later said. ‘I was very nervous and under a lot of pressure. Maybe people have forgotten, but the political situation in Brazil was not good and we felt that we simply had to win the title. Thank God we were able to do it.’ And they did it in style. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Liverpool defeated Arsenal by eventually showing more ambition in attack


“Liverpool’s 1-0 win over Arsenal, a contest between last season’s top two — and, judging from Manchester City’s poor start to the campaign, probably this season’s top two as well — was a classic of the genre. Not ‘classic’ because it was a memorable encounter, but ‘classic’ because matches between the two title contenders are often like this: tight, cagey and disappointingly defensive. Those titanic encounters between Pep Guardiola’s City and Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool, which seemed to regularly finish 2-2, were the exception to the rule. For long periods, Arsenal and Liverpool seemed to be playing out a dull goalless draw. It was a track stand of a football match, ahead of 35 further Premier League fixtures. But, put simply, the game was eventually won by the side that did more to win it. Fortune favours the brave. …”
NY Times/Athletic – Michael Cox
NY Times/Athletic – Breaking down Dominik Szoboszlai’s awesome free kick: ‘The pace, trajectory and movement is ridiculous’
NY Times/Athletic – Liverpool 1 Arsenal 0: Incredible Szoboszlai free kick from distance wins it at Anfield
YouTube: EVERY Angle of Unstoppable Dominik Szoboszlai Free-Kick! | Liverpool vs Arsenal

Why Jose Mourinho was sacked: Champions League exit and attitude towards Fenerbahce

“There was something quite poignant in Jose Mourinho and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, two of the managers who ultimately tried and failed to make sense of the post-Sir Alex Ferguson Manchester United, both being sacked by Istanbul clubs within 12 hours of each other. Besiktas dispensed with Solskjaer late on Thursday evening, then on Friday morning Fenerbahce announced they had ‘parted ways’ with Mourinho, after 14 months in charge and with the earth suitably scorched and smouldering behind him. In some respects, Mourinho’s departure was a surprise. Fenerbahce had stuck with him after a trophyless first season in charge, so the expectation was that if they were going to make a change, it would have been earlier in the summer. The dressing room was surprised: they had returned from a Champions League qualifier against Benfica on Wednesday and were expecting Mourinho to take charge of training on Friday and their game against Genclerbirligi this weekend. But in other ways, it wasn’t a shock. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The Transfer DealSheet: Latest on Man Utd, Arsenal, Liverpool, Real Madrid and more

“Welcome to the 13th edition of The Athletic’s Transfer DealSheet for the summer 2025 transfer window. Our team of dedicated writers, including David Ornstein, will take you inside the market to explain the deals being worked on. The transfer window is open and will run until September 1. The information found within this article has been gathered according to The Athletic’s sourcing guidelines. Unless stated, our reporters have spoken to more than one person briefed on each deal before offering the clubs involved the opportunity to comment. Their responses, when they were given, have been included. We aim to bring you analysis you can trust about what is happening at Europe’s leading clubs and the latest information we’re hearing from across the market. This year, The Athletic’s football finance writer, Chris Weatherspoon, will be adding to our analysis of the transfer market. …”
NY Times/The Athletic