| | Jürgen Klopp gets another mural in Liverpool. Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images | 03/04/2024 All eyes on the Premier League title race – including you, Jürgen Klopp! |
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Barry Glendenning | |
| | TOUGH AT THE TOP? | After playing out 90 largely uneventful minutes last Sunday that left the fans, managers and players of both teams largely satisfied and everyone else who witnessed it moaning about how tedious the whole enterprise had been, Manchester City and Arsenal are both back in action. Luckily for those with no greyhound in the Premier League title race, they’re up against different teams, rather than each other, so we can probably expect Arsenal to be considerably less cagey in their approach to their game against Luton at the Emirates. While losing against the Hatters just a few days after leaving the Etihad with a potentially priceless point would be peak Arsenal, that team belongs to a time before Mikel Arteta took over and solidified the backbone of a squad that had previously been made of jelly. Except on the several occasions that they haven’t, Luton have proved they can give even the most elite Premier League sides a decent game but on this, the occasion of their first visit to Arsenal in 33 years, one suspects they could be in for a mauling from footballers released from their fetters after being forced to play uncharacteristically defensively last time out. While it would be no great surprise to see Arsenal run amok and subject plucky strugglers Luton to a battering, it is to be hoped their players won’t upset the celebration police by high-fiving each other too hard or too often at the final whistle. On paper at least, Manchester City face a far trickier assignment when they host a side that has already beaten them this season, in an encounter where the 1-0 scoreline did Aston Villa’s almost total dominance over the reigning champions a grave injustice. As well as defending Erling Haaland from Roy Keane’s accusations that some aspects of the Norwegian striker’s play would be more suited to Mansfield Town than Manchester City, Pep Guardiola has also had to defend himself against criticism that the very public dressing-down he gave Jack Grealish in the wake of Sunday’s stalemate was for the benefit of the TV cameras. “I am the famous person of this team,” he told reporters, liberally applying the sarcasm with a ladle from the training ground kitchen. “I need the cameras for my ego so I can go to sleep with incredible satisfaction. Always I try to criticise the players so I can let them know how bad they are; especially when Erling scores three goals, the compliments have to be with me.” With his side two points clear at the Premier League summit, Jürgen Klopp will be monitoring events at the Emirates and Etihad stadiums with interest, ahead of his Liverpool’s side victory over Sheffield United in Thursday’s top-versus-bottom-of-the-table clash. Or so you’d think. “I didn’t even know that they play tonight,” he said, demonstrating the meticulous attention to detail that has made him one of the world’s great managers. “That is really not my subject. I expect them always to win. That’s not possible when they play against each other – but now they don’t do that any more so I expect them always to win.” Asked if he would consider resting players against the Blades with Sunday’s game against Manchester United in mind, Klopp’s response could scarcely have been more blunt. “Sheffield United deserves our full respect and will get that,” he said, with the gravitas of a man who would never dream of eating a sandwich in the presence of Chris Wilder, no matter how hungry he was. |
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| LIVE ON BIG WEBSITE | Join Michael Butler at 7.30pm (BST) for updates on Arsenal 3-0 Luton, while Taha Hashim will be on hand at 8.15pm for Manchester City 1-1 Aston Villa. |
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| QUOTE OF THE DAY | “I agree with [hacks] on the body language. We see it ourselves from the beginning of the game. We are Chelsea, but we need to behave like Chelsea, we need to behave like we want to belong to a big club … we cannot be an exhibition team who play football to enjoy. We need to compete. That was why I was upset and disappointed after Burnley. We tried to create chances, but after, we need to run. Why? Because we are Chelsea. Chasing the Burnley [player] like they are a Manchester United player, or a Real Madrid player” – Mauricio Pochettino continues to put a shift in during his many tricky pre-match press conferences this season. If only some of his players could follow suit. | | Mauricio Pochettino, bringing the energy. Photograph: Darren Walsh/Chelsea FC/Getty Images |
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| FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS | | | | Now that Craig Bellamy is sensible (apparently), perhaps we can up-scale the grey cells in Vincent Kompany, thus continuing with the sensible goalkeeper. No offence Mr Trafford, but to paraphrase Ruby & the Romantics Our Day Will Come. Yes I know the Amy Winehouse version is within living memory but I was at Turf Moor in 1956, waterlogged and insane. My day, and The Clarets’, has been and gone many times. Many, many times (copyright Round The Horne)” –Bruce Ellis. | | So, poor old Noble Francis doesn’t win prizeless letter o’ the day despite sending in a bad pun, a Star Wars reference, and a cheap pop at Man City fans, and zero competition. Were you jealous that he’d achieved in three sentences everything you were trying (and failing) to in a week?” – Andrew Pechey. Send letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. Today’s winner of our prizeless letter o’ the day is … Noble Francis. |
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| NEWS, BITS AND BOBS | Spanish police have detained the disgraced former football federation president Luis Rubiales on his return to the country amid an ongoing corruption investigation. Getafe have been ordered to partially close their central stand for three matches by the Spanish FA following the racist and xenophobic abuse suffered by the Sevilla manager, Quique Sánchez Flores and the player Marcos Acuña in Saturday’s La Liga game. Spurs chief suit Daniel Levy says he is chatting with potential investors to “capitalise on our long-term potential” after the club posted an overall loss of £86.8m despite an increase in revenue. They may have lost Alexis Mac Allister, Yves Bissouma and Marc Cucurella, but sales of those three – as well as Topcashback yields from Graham Potter swanning off to Chelsea – contributed to Brighton posting a profit of £122.8m. Erik ten Hag suffered defensive gloom with the news that Lisandro Martínez and Victor Lindelöf are out for a month with calf ouch and hamstring twang respectively … but then the hurrahs came at Carrington as Raphaël Varane and Jonny Evans returned to training before Thursday’s trip to Chelsea. Vincent Kompany has been slapped across the chops with a misconduct charge for his protests against Lorenz Assignon’s penalty-causing second booking in Burnley’s 2-2 draw at Chelsea on Saturday. He received a red card of his own at the time from referee Darren England. | | Vincent Kompany is on the FA’s naughty step. Photograph: Phil Oldham/Shutterstock | Trabzonspor have been ordered to play six games behind closed doors after violence broke out following last month’s Turkish Super Lig defeat by Fenerbahce. Jarrod Bowen wants to become the first West Ham player to score 20 Premier League goals in a season. He’s one behind Paolo Di Canio’s 1999-2000 club-best of 16. After West Ham’s 1-1 draw with Spurs, in which he shinned his best chance of equalling the volatile, bushy-browed Italian’s tally, he tooted: “I just want to keep on doing what I am doing.” And Norwich have agreed a three-year “strategic partnership” deal with Indian Super League side Chennaiyin, a two-time stop-off for former Manchester City midfielder Elano. Hey let’s build “a mutually beneficial and culturally authentic collaboration”, parped Norwich suit, Sam Jeffery. “This is far from a mere marketing ploy,” sniffed his Chennaiyin counterpart, Ekansh Gupta. |
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| HEARTS-BRÜCKEN | The German Cup miracle is not to be. Lowly Saarbrücken’s fairytale run to the semi-finals came to an end against party-poopers Kaiserslautern on Tuesday night, with the second-tier strugglers beating their third-tier neighbours 2-0 in a match that turned on a goalkeeping howler by Tim Schreiber. He fronted up to it, though: “It’s a ball that I could normally catch in my sleep. I wanted to pick up the ball and then I felt it go through my legs,” he howled. “Of course, it’s like a knife in the heart unfortunately.” His manager, Rüdiger Ziehl, had his back, though. “We win together, we lose together. He has often saved us. He knows it himself.” Chin up, Tim. There’s always next year. | | Tim Schreiber (right) will have better days. Photograph: Jean-Christophe Verhaegen/AFP/Getty Images | | To be fair, with this pyro smoke lingering in the air, visibility wasn’t great. Photograph: Jean-Christophe Verhaegen/AFP/Getty Images |
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| STILL WANT MORE? | | | Jess Park goes through the paces at an England training session. Photograph: Barrington Coombs/Getty Images | Vietnam might still be pining for the pragmatism of Park Hang-seo as Indonesia look the livelier of the two teams in the qualification race for World Cup 2026 spots. John Duerden reports. A potted history of mid-game marriage proposals, plus managers who took charge of every club they ever played for. Because Wednesdays are Knowledge days. |
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| MEMORY LANE | | | Photograph: David Kendall/PA Archive/PA Photos |
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