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The Briefing: A fitting defining moment in title race? West Ham's terrible timing? Loss of faith in Slot?

رياضة
The Athletic
2026/05/11 - 04:15 508 مشاهدة
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AFC BournemouthArsenalAston VillaBrentfordBrighton & Hove AlbionBurnleyChelseaCrystal PalaceEvertonFulhamLeeds UnitedLiverpoolManchester CityManchester UnitedNewcastle UnitedNottingham ForestSunderlandTottenham HotspurWest Ham UnitedWolverhampton WanderersScores & ScheduleStandingsFantasyThe Athletic FC NewsletterPodcastsPL Title Race Share articleWelcome to The Briefing, where every Monday this season The Athletic discusses three of the biggest issues from the weekend’s football. This was the weekend when Arsenal took another big step towards the Premier League title, doing their neighbours Tottenham Hotspur a favour by pushing West Ham United closer to relegation, and growing frustration at Liverpool increased the pressure on their coach Arne Slot. We discuss the London Stadium VAR controversy, the huge repercussions for Arsenal in the title race and West Ham in the relegation battle, plus the reasons for a growing sense of dissatisfaction at Liverpool. If this weekend brought a defining moment in this Premier League season, then it wasn’t Leandro Trossard’s goal to send Arsenal five points clear at the top of the table — or even David Raya’s wonderful save to deny Mateus Fernandes five minutes earlier. Nothing could define this Premier League campaign better than the subsequent sight of the VAR officials at Stockley Park spending five minutes at a bank of television screens in stoppage time, trying to work out whether a goal should stand after the wrestling match that took place at a corner kick. It was clear, upon review, that Arsenal goalkeeper Raya was held and impeded by West Ham forward Pablo before Callum Wilson converted the loose ball. Raya’s sleeve was being pulled as he jumped to try to catch the ball. Of course, it was a foul. The problem is that at least three other clear fouls were being committed at the same time: Jean-Clair Todibo on Raya, Declan Rice on Konstantinos Mavropanos, Martin Odegaard on Todibo. Kai Havertz and Tomas Soucek wrestled each other to the floor. Beyond that, Mavropanos grappled with Myles Lewis-Skelly, who briefly took hold of Crysencio Summerville. As former Liverpool and England midfielder Jamie Redknapp said on Sky Sports, “It was like watching the Super Bowl. It was chaos.” Penalty-box chaos has defined the Premier League in 2025-26, a season that began with the PGMOL’s chief refereeing officer Howard Webb announcing a clampdown on grappling at set-piece situations — only for the opposite to transpire, with almost every corner kick becoming a free-for-all, with players on both sides holding and impeding each other with impunity, so much so that even fouls as clear as that by Pablo on Raya have at times gone unpunished. The number of goals scored per game has fallen from 3.28 per game two years ago to 2.93 last season to 2.75 this term. The number of goals scored from open play is way down. So many tight games have been decided not by improvised brilliance but by set-piece routines and the match officials’ interpretation of the scrummages that unfold at almost every corner kick. It has frequently made for a grim spectacle. In this case, referee Chris Kavanagh, having eventually been sent to the screen by VAR Darren England, deemed that the foul on Raya rendered everything else academic. Former Premier League referee Graham Scott wrote on The Athletic that the foul on Raya was clear, but that Arsenal might still be considered fortunate from the perspective that “there have been several goals allowed to stand this season even when the keeper has been blocked or pinned to his goal line by an opponent”. That is the point. So many fouls have gone unpunished at corner kicks this season. There were at least three at the same corner kick yesterday. So yes, when it comes to identifying the defining moment of this campaign, it is hard to imagine there will be anything that captures the spirit of the Premier League in 2025-26 more than the sight of a VAR at Stockley Park staring at a screen, trying to work out exactly who is fouling who — which foul is taking place, which is most grievous, which is most consequential — and perhaps wondering, like many of us, how on earth football has allowed this to become the new normal. It was another of those afternoons when Arsenal had to dig deep and demonstrate that they are far more resilient than they have been given credit for. After a promising start, their attacking inspiration faded rapidly. Needing a win to keep their destiny entirely in their own hands, they seemed to have run out of time, at risk of opening the door to Manchester City in the title race. Trossard’s goal, set up superbly by substitute Martin Odegaard, was a huge moment  — as was Raya’s save from Fernandes five minutes before. All of that, combined with VAR controversy that followed in stoppage time, left Arsenal five points clear at the top with two games to play. Beat Burnley next Sunday and Crystal Palace a week later and they will be champions for the first time since 2004. Should Manchester City stumble in any of their three remaining games, then one Arsenal win will do it. After all the anxieties of the past month or two, they are nearly home and dry. And West Ham are in big, big trouble. The spirited run that gave them hope — hope of surviving at Tottenham’s expense, which for a West Ham supporter is the best kind of hope imaginable — has been followed by back-to-back defeats at the moment Spurs have begun to get some kind of act together under new coach Roberto De Zerbi. Unlike the 3-0 defeat at Brentford eight days earlier, West Ham coach Nuno Espirito Santo could not fault his players’ application this time. When he promised his team will keep fighting to the last day, it sounded more credible than it did in January after a home defeat by Nottingham Forest left them looking down and out. That is why Tottenham supporters should take nothing for granted. The most uncomfortable afternoon of their football-watching lives — spent living with the dreadful knowledge that their survival hopes would be best served by a West Ham defeat that would take Arsenal closer to the title — will have been endured with the knowledge that they still need to take care of their own business, not least at home to Leeds United this evening. So much has been said and written about the prospect of a Tottenham relegation that the scenario facing West Ham has at times been overlooked. As Chris Weatherspoon detailed here in November, the financial impact of relegation would be considerable. Should the worst happen, West Ham supporters might find themselves looking back at those incidents fresh in the memory from yesterday — the Raya save from Fernandes, the decision to disallow Wilson’s goal after a VAR check — and regard them as pivotal. But in reality, West Ham left themselves needing a minor miracle by taking just 14 points from their first 21 Premier League games of the season. A run of six wins, four draws and three defeats between mid-January and late April put them in a position where their fate was in their own hands with four games remaining, but the margin for error remained thin. West Ham’s fans will be desperate for Tottenham to slip up at home against Leeds this evening. There will be no space for mixed feelings or divided loyalties with that one. An interesting phenomenon in the Premier League is that, inside the stadium at least, supporters of English football’s two most successful clubs tend to afford managers a patience and a reverence that is often in short supply elsewhere. No Liverpool or Manchester United manager has faced derision or hostility on anything like the scale that, to cite just two examples, Ange Postecoglou and Liam Rosenior faced within weeks of taking over at Nottingham Forest and Chelsea this season. Even when managers have fallen far short of expectations at Anfield and Old Trafford, dissent towards the man in the dugout has simmered without ever boiling over into mutiny; sarcastic chants of “Hodgson for England”, when Liverpool were three points just above the relegation zone under Roy Hodgson in December 2010, is about as withering as it has got at either club. That is what made the reaction to Slot during Liverpool’s 1-1 draw with Chelsea on Saturday so striking. The booing of his decision to take off teenager Rio Ngumoha midway through the second half wasn’t mutiny by normal standards. But by Anfield’s standards, it most certainly was.  In the cold light of day, Slot’s explanation of the substitution made total sense; he said Ngumoha had cramp, which was hardly surprising on what was only his third Premier League start. But the reaction wasn’t really about the Ngumoha substitution. It was an Anfield passing judgement on a season in which Liverpool have fallen so far short of last season’s title-winning standards. Against Chelsea, as so often this term, Slot’s team appeared low on inspiration, energy and belief, lacking structure and aggression in midfield and incision in attack. How much responsibility Slot should bear is open to debate; there are mitigating factors, not just injuries and gaps in a squad that remains short in some areas despite last summer’s £450million transfer outlay, but the tragic loss of Diogo Jota and the impact it has had on all at the club. There is an entirely rational case in support of Slot, who, after all, led Liverpool to the Premier League title in his first season after taking over from Jurgen Klopp. But that case has been undermined by performances all season. Frustration has grown significantly. The club’s management have long planned to put this campaign’s difficulties behind them, learn lessons and approach next season in the expectation of a fresh start under Slot. Enquiries about whether they might move for former Bayer Leverkusen and Real Madrid coach Xabi Alonso, or Bournemouth’s Andoni Iraola, have repeatedly been brushed off by those inside the club. But with every defeat and even, on Saturday, a draw at home to Chelsea, the challenge to imagine a Slot-inspired resurgence next season has required a greater leap of faith. And if faith is evaporating at Anfield, of all places, then that does not augur well. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms
المصدر: The Athletic | Source: The Athletic

ملاحظة تحريرية | Editorial Note: نُشر هذا المقال في الأصل بواسطة The Athletic. خبر (Khabr) هي منصة إعلامية أردنية مرخّصة تعمل بالذكاء الاصطناعي. نضيف قيمة تحريرية من خلال: تحليل ذكي للأخبار، ملخصات تلقائية، رواية صوتية بالذكاء الاصطناعي، ترجمة متعددة اللغات، وتدقيق الحقائق. هدفنا جعل الأخبار أكثر وضوحاً وسهولةً للقارئ العربي.

This article was originally published by The Athletic. Khabr is a licensed Jordanian AI-powered news platform (Registration #82086). We add editorial value through: AI-powered news analysis, automated summaries, AI audio narration, multi-language translation (Arabic, English, French, Turkish), and AI fact-checking. Our mission is to make news more accessible and understandable for Arabic-speaking audiences worldwide.

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المزيد عن رياضة | More on Sports

هذا الخبر ضمن تغطية خبر لقسم رياضة. نقدّم لك تحليلات ذكية وملخصات يومية لأهم الأخبار من مصادر موثوقة متعددة. المصدر: The Athletic. يوجد 6 مقالات مرتبطة بهذا الموضوع.

This article is part of Khabr's coverage of Sports. We provide AI-powered analysis, summaries, and multi-source aggregation to keep you informed. Source: The Athletic. Tags: title race, West Ham, football.

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