Thursday, September 25, 2014

Draws Good and Bad

Both of my favorite sides came away with draws on Saturday.   Clear thinking would say neither was acceptable but one felt a lot better than the other.  Dealing with them chronologically, we start with Newcastle's 2-2 draw with Hull City at St. James' Park.

Though the Magpies had outplayed the Tigers in the first half, the crowd was jittery owing to the fact that despite the massive statistical advantage, the home side had failed to score.  Is it Riviere or the formation, which leaves him alone up top?  We'll return to that in a minute.  Hull took the lead on a brilliant scissor shot from Jelavic, this week's YouTubeable Moment.  A second goal from Diame, also a well-taken shot, in the 68th minute left Newcastle looking dead and buried.  I was texting back and forth with Dennis trying to get the correct spelling of f***, f***, f***ety, f*** (final ruling f***ity).  Surprisingly, the St. James' crowd did not mutiny.  Further surprise, Cisse was inserted for Riviere, despite lingering questions about his fitness.  Biggest surprise, Cisse nets two in 15 minutes and Newcastle steal a point back from Hull.

Where to start?  I know, I know.  We have to get three at home against teams like Hull.  But, the Magpies pretty much dominated.  Two minor mistakes by two of the squad's more reliable players (Colback and Tiote) and Hull needed two amazing shots to convert them.  Creativity in the final third and finishing continue to be the issue.  I'm torn between the problem being Riviere or a formation with one striker.  Cisse didn't seem to have a problem with the formation.  This cool graphic suggests several things.  Like Riviere wasn't very effective except when he moved away from goal, which doesn't sound like a good thing for a striker.  (Postscript: he scored one goal from open play and another on a PK in Newcastle's 3-2 midweek win over Crystal Palace in the Capital One League Cup third round match so maybe he's figured something out.) Or, as the text notes, maybe Cabella and Sissoko are crowding each other on the right.  Whatever the issue, that did not look like a relegation-worthy team on Saturday.  This was another game I'm sure they would have lost last year so the draw isn't all bad.  I know, I know.  They still sit at the bottom of the table.

On the other side of the pond, there isn't much positive spin I can find for the Union's 0-0 draw with Houston.  They didn't look bad but at home against a team behind them in the standings has to be a win.  Sure, the Union could have been given a PK for the foul on Noguiera in the box but that can't be the sum total of the offense.  What's worse, the competition had a pretty good weekend.  The Red Bulls beat up on Seattle's second team and Columbus took a 1-0 win from New England.  Maybe the Union's fate will come down to the two matches with Columbus on 10/11 and 10/26.  In the meantime, they have a tough test at RFK Stadium against DC United this weekend.  Setting the bar a little low realistically, one point would be great.


Aston Villa Returns to Earth

This match went exactly according to the season plan except for one minor flaw.  We defended well early, pressed as a team, and countered as team, leading to two excellent chances in the first 20 minutes.....that we did not score.  Having exhausted our two shots on goal for the match (we did actually manage a third, though much later I believe) and having no goals to show for it spelled doom.  The Villans hung on for another 10 minutes until Ozil finally broke out of his post world cup daze and easily slotted home the opening goal.  Arsenal were just warming up and scored two more goals in the next 3 minutes.  One was an own goal that would probably have been scored by Arsenal had Cissokho not done the honors and the other was a typical Arsenal display of quick movement and even quicker passing.  Aston Villa essentially gave up the fight at this point and never really made a serious attempt at a comeback.

There was much talk before the match about a bug spreading through the Villa camp in the previous week.  It even forced starting midfielder Ashley Westwood out of the match during pre-game warm ups.  It's hard to blame some unknown force for 4 minutes of utter incompetence and the team didn't appear especially sluggish or tired, but who knows.  Maybe they all only had 30 minutes of real energy to give.  Or maybe Arsenal beats them every time.  In any case, this was a somewhat expected set back that still leaves Villa with 10 points and sitting in third.  It was, however, disheartening to watch Villa's effort, or lack thereof, after falling behind followed up by Leicester's fearless answer to their early deficit while hosting Manchester United.  I don't feel like our players believe such a comeback is possible and I certainly won't believe it until I see it - early leads and stingy defense feel like our only path to victory this season.  Hopefully that can be enough.

Message to EPL Top Table Teams

Excuse me but wtf?  Us middle to lower table teams expect the top table sides to take care of business when they face the bottom dwellers.  These are the teams we fight with to avoid relegation so giving away three points to them is simply unacceptable.  Yeah, I'm looking right at you Tottenham (1-0 losers to West Brom) and Everton (3-2 losers to Crystal Palace).  Manchester United managed another first and it didn't involve losing at Old Trafford; this was the first EPL match the Red Devils lost after having a two-goal lead.  And Liverpool fell behind 0-2 early, got close but ultimately lost to West Ham 1-3.


FC Does Not Stand for Fight Club

Arlo White suggested the Man City - Chelsea contest was a cagey match.  Cage match was more like it.  Referee Mike Dean started out lenient, trying to let them play and not disrupt the flow too much, but eventually had to start handing out yellows like business cards to keep the match from turning into a hockey game.  Eventually somebody got a second - Zabaleta - and Chelsea had a man advantage for the last 30 minutes.  Man City could possibly have had 12 or 13 men on the field and it wouldn't have mattered given the quality of Hazard's cross to Schurrle.  But the story line was heading elsewhere.  Frank Lampard, he of 200+ goals for Chelsea, came on as a substitute for Man City and with a lovely right footed shot squared the match in the 85th minute.  Out of respect for his former teammates, his "celebration" was quite muted.  Given the level of fouling, I would not submit this match as an example soccer as the "beautiful game," but I would suggest it was fascinating and riveting to watch, worth viewing even if you know the outcome.


Derbies and More Derbies

Two biggies this weekend - Merseyside and North London.  Everton travel to Anfield and Tottenham are at The Emirates.  Of the four, only Arsenal have displayed any kind of acceptable form recently but expect these to be high quality matches.  Aston Villa continue their march through last year's top five, facing Chelsea at Stamford Bridge; I think Dennis has already discounted this match so even a point would be gravy.  Man City have what should be a winnable road match versus Hull, assuming they are not wiped out from the Chelsea match.  Man United get West Ham at Old Trafford; frankly I don't know what to expect from them anymore.  And lastly, Newcastle travel to Stoke City for a Monday match. Incredibly, the Potters have scored fewer goals then the Magpies but do have a stingy defense; a draw would be a very satisfactory result for Newcastle.

Looking at the TV schedule, here's a thought that is sure to be a hit in your household.  On Saturday, get up at 7:30, turn your TV on to NBC Sports Network, plant your butt in a comfortable spot and don't leave until around 5:15.  You'll see Liverpool-Everton at 7:45, Man United-West Ham at 10, Arsenal-Tottenham at 12:30 and DC United-Union at 3 pm.  Kinda makes you wish for a snow day in September doesn't it?





Wednesday, September 17, 2014

The Dark Arts of Defending

How convenient that the week I am assigned to prime blogging duties is also the week in which an Aston Villa upset is one of the main story lines. With Chelsea continuing their early domination, a couple of exciting 2-2 draws, and a pair of 4-0 blowouts that may send the participating teams in opposite directions, it was just another week at the EPL office.

Aston Villa continued a recent trend of taking points from Liverpool at Anfield. In the past 4 season, we have managed 8 points in 4 games at Anfield, though I’ll casually omit the number of points won at home over that same span. This game showcased both focal points of the Villa team this year – solid defending and making our limited chances count. In the words of Arlo White, the defense was “hard-working, solid, and disciplined” and Gabby Agbonlahor scored the game’s only goal on Villa’s only shot on target. Liverpool had the significant possession advantage for most of the game, but the Reds attack struggled with so many Villa players always behind the ball. Balotelli still looked like he was settling in and the absence of Daniel Sturridge, who was hurt while on international leave for England, was certainly a factor. Liverpool are most likely on their way to another excellent season, but this game showed that they are probably not on the same level as the other top teams this season. I have a feeling that the new-look Chelsea would have managed at least one goal given the same 81 minutes.

A deeper dive into the early season success of Aston Villa, who moved up to second in the table, shows some disconcerting trends. Counting this game, we’ve allowed an average of 13 shots per game by opponents, but conceded just one goal. On the offensive side, we’ve scored 4 goals on a meager 6 shots on target. I know what you’re thinking – these trends are unsustainable and Aston Villa is heading for a harsh reality check in the near future. But the real secret to the team was unwittingly announced during this game. When newly acquired defender Philippe Senderos flat out tripped Mario Balotelli and got away with it (seen in this week's Youtubeable Moment), Graeme Le Saux mentioned that “We've just witnessed the dark arts of defending.” There can only be one possible explanation….



With He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named working behind the scenes, expect to see a lot more shots from opponents hit the woodwork and shots from Villans magically find their way into the back of the net. Having already earned 3 points from their tough five match stretch, even 4 straight losses wouldn’t put that much of a damper on this bright start.


The weekend kicked off with the highlight match between Arsenal and Manchester City. Arsenal came ready to play and looked like a league winning side for the first 25 minutes – except they couldn’t score. New loanee Danny Welbeck was gifted a chance from inside the box on a poor City back pass, but his chip hit the post. When City scored in the 28th minute off some slow defending, it felt like a classic Gunners storyline taking shape. But they came out strong in the second half and scored two excellent goals to take the lead, including Alexis Sanchez's excellent volley. City mounted a furious rally, equalizing in the 83rd minute and nearly taking the lead twice afterwards, but eventually settled for what feels like a well-deserved draw for both sides.

Tottenham were also close to securing 3 points until an own goal miscue cost them the 3 points. Spurs scored within the opening 3 minutes of each half – the first through Chadli on a clinical finish from a rebound and the second through Eriksen on an anything but clinical finish through another rebound. Adam Johnson got Sunderland level in the 4th minute as he dribbled past what felt like the entire Spurs team and had his shot sneak through everyone. Like Arsenal in the morning, Spurs could not hold on and gifted the Black Cats another equalizer in the 82nd minute that felt very undeserved. Tottenham looked the better side and had many threatening opportunities but had to settle for just a point on the road.

I’ll let the boss cover the……um……unpleasantness of one of the 4-0 matches:

Southampton 4 Newcastle 0 (barf)

Don't feel like saying too much about the match itself, except that the score is a very fair result.  Only Colback, Haidara and maybe Janmaat and Krul had anything close to a decent performance (ed note:except when Krul punched that guy in the face; let's not bicker and argue about who killed who).  The central defense was uncoordinated and the offense anemic.  I've said too much already.

But, while most on Tyneside will say the glass is 15/16ths empty, I will see the glass as 1/16th full.  Yes the Magpies sit at the bottom of the table with just two points in four games. I suggest that even if things were going well, they'd still have just four, maybe five points by now.  Man City was always going to be a loss and a draw at Aston Villa was not unexpected (btw, Newcastle is the only side not to lose to the Villans so far); Crystal Palace at home was probably projected as a win so there's an extra two points and maybe you could see a draw at Southampton though I wouldn't have put money on it.  Yes, the team has not gelled so far but given the influx of new players, we had every reason to expect some problems out of the gate.  De Jong's injury has not helped.  Yes, the Southampton outing was atrocious, but the effort in the other matches was at least determined and competitive.

I'm not saying this is right but my guess is that anything less than a win on Saturday at home versus Hull City is the end of the road for Alan Pardew.  Five games doesn't seem like much of a sample to see if this team can get its act together. Part of the frustration stems from the poor finish to last season but I would argue that is irrelevant to the discussion.  Their best player (Cabaye) was sold and not replaced and their most important scorer (Remy) was hurt or suspended for much of the second half.  This is simply a different team and last year doesn't matter.  What does matter is the question of whether we're seeing a team that is slow to gel or signs that the new players aren't as good as projected and/or management didn't go far enough in the rebuilding.  Let us remember that constant personnel turnover is not a bug but a design feature of this franchise right now. The approach is to sign talent cheap then sell when it gets too expensive.  It's not about winning, it's about staying in the first division. To decide that you know the answer and the manager is responsible after five games seems silly to me.  If there was reason to believe that sacking Pardew now would improve the likelihood that we would avoid relegation, I might be inclined to support the move.  But right now, the only thing I see improving our chances of staying up is a January transfer window that addresses the central defense and the finishing capabilities.


The other 4-0 drubbing belonged to newly rebuilt Manchester United, whose transfer signings showed up all over the pitch against a completely overmatched QPR side. Di Maria got things started in the 24th minute with a free kick that was both a pass and shot at the same time. If some else taps it in, it was a pass. If no one touches it and it goes in, it was a shot. Win-win. Ander Herrera kept the momentum going in the 36th minute with a 20 yard strike back across the goal. Old hat Wayne Rooney essentially ended the game in the 44th minute and Juan Mata added an easy insurance goal in the 58th. One dominating win does not cure all ills, but it might get them back on the right track. They obviously have the talent, but we’ll have to wait and see how it all mixes together.


The remaining games played out in mostly unsurprising fashion with Leicester and Everton picking up their first wins of the season at the expense of Stoke and West Brom respectively. Crystal palace and Burnley played a goalless draw to keep them tied at the edge of the relegation zone while West Ham and Hull played a more entertaining 2-2 draw to keep both of those sides in the currently crowded mid-table.

Looking forward to this weekend, there doesn't seem to be a whole lot of excitement to go around until the very last game of the weekend: Chelsea visit the Etihad.  The next most interesting game is probably Aston Villa hosting Arsenal, which is bizarre.  Even more bizarre is that even if Villa lose, they remain ahead of Arsenal in the table.  What strange times we live in.  Manchester United try to stick to their winning ways against lowly Leichester, Tottenham hope to put away the struggling West Brom, while Swansea and Southampton battle for those speculative, early season Champions League spots.  A slew of mid-table versus mid-table fixtures round out another weekend of our favorite past time.  Don't forget Newcastle - Hull City at 10 am Saturday, where the visitor's strategy will likely be to get the St. James' Park crowd to turn on their manager and team.

Hey old guy, what's doing with the Union?

Join and Get Soaking Wet

The drenching Saturday afternoon rains pushed the start of the crucial Union-Red Bulls match back more than an hour.  For those of us drving, that meant we would miss the last 15 minutes (and it would have been worse had I not set the TV to record an extra 30 minutes).  Still my fate was probably better than that of loyal season ticket holders like Jeff K, Jeff H and Muscoe M, who had to wait in spacious (cough, cough) confines of the PPL concourse or sit outside and get soaked.  The match itself brought back memories of the US - Costa Rica snowbowl as the ball would sometimes simply stop moving as it hit a puddle. It will not be remembered as the highest quality football seen in these parts.  What will be remembered is that the Union rallied from an 0-2 deficit to salvage a draw which will keep them in the playoff picture.  Getting one point was likely less important than the Red Bulls not getting three.  I was fine with both PK calls.  White's transgression looked pretty clear to me; recall this blog's advice: if you don't want to get called, keep your hands off the attacker's upper body.  The Ribeiro call was tough but I thought he was kicked.

On Tuesday night many of this blog's readers were at PPL Park in Chester to witness the US Open Cup Final between the Union and Seattle.  The Sounders were more technically proficient but the Union work rate - especially Le Toux, Wenger, Noguiera and Gaddis - was critical in negating that advantage.  Seattle had some early chances but Edu's header goal off a Maidana corner in the 38th minute was not against the run of play.  Unfortunately the lead was shortlived as the Union surrendered a goal early in the second half.  Both sides had times of ascendancy but neither could score in regulation time.  For the Union there was Ribeiro's shot in the 88th minute stopped by Sounder's keeper Frei; the attempt needed more pace and/or to be aimed more at the near post.  Then Noguiera hit the post in stoppage time.  Of course we were going to rue those missed chances.  Sure enough, Dempsey put Seattle up in the 101st minute working a tidy give-and-go with Martins.  Martins later sealed the win with a goal in the second overtime period.  Our group felt MacMath was largely culpable in both instances, not protecting the near post on the first and making a poor decision to come out on the second.

The final score is misleading and the disappointment real given those late misses.  However, the overall experience was electric, even with less than a sellout crowd at PPL Park.


Champions League, Europa League and La Liga

We are well aware that other action is going on all around us but with a full-time staff of none, we can't keep track of it all.  Heard something about Atletico beating Real Madrid.  Also, as of Thursday, Bob K's Sheffield Wednesday is tied with Derby on points but is two behind in goal differential.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

The Glass Ceiling

It's early September and the EPL still has that new season smell.  The table looks a little weird - Aston Villa is 3rd while Everton sits in 17th - and there's plenty of hope to go around.  Ah, but history says we know pretty much where things will end up and it's the same players every time.

I looked at each EPL season going back to 1995-96 - when the league dropped from 22 to 20 teams - and recorded where each club finished.  The results, while not surprising, suggest that the Champions League spots, i.e. the top four places, have historically been the domain of just four teams.  Those four are - all together class - Manchester United, Arsenal, Chelsea, and Liverpool.  Manchester City is having a great run but has a ways to go to catch up to those four. 

Only four teams have won the league since 95-96 - Manchester United (11 times), Arsenal and Chelsea (three times each) and Manchester City (twice).  Though not directly comparable because the EPL has just 20 teams and the title is not a playoff, in the last 19 years there have been 10 different World Series winners and 12 different Super Bowl winners.

But for me the bigger story is how little variation there is in the top four places.  Since 95-96, just 10 teams have made it to that rarefied air.  You can probably name some of them; the list includes the five I've already mentioned plus Tottenham, Everton, Leeds United, Newcastle and Aston Villa.  Sadly yes, Dennis and I have both picked teams with not-too-long-ago stretches of quality football.  But wait, even though 10 teams have made it to that level, how often is it a side other than Manchester United, Arsenal, Chelsea or Liverpool?  Not too frequently.  Of the 76 top four places up for grabs since 95-96 (19 seasons x 4 places), 61, or 80%, have gone to the Axis of Evil clubs, leaving just 15 for the rest of us.  Adding Manchester City gets that figure to 65, or 86%.

This concentration is the result, I believe, of two keys aspects of the structure of English football.  First, there is no draft.  The best young unsigned players are free to sign with any club.  They typically start with the club's youth academy and, if good enough, work their way to the reserve squad and eventually the first team.  Not that I have done a comprehensive study but it seems to me this stacks the deck in favor of the top clubs right from the start.  A low finish doesn't get you a high draft pick, it just makes it more likely that a youth prospect is going to sign with somebody else.

The second aspect is that most of the player movement from team-to-team is on a cash basis.  That is, there aren't a lot of trades like we see in American sports; instead the rights to sign a player are bought and sold for cash.  In the American model, Team A needs a striker but has too many keepers while Team B needs a keeper but has an extra striker so they arrange a trade.  That works well sometimes but how often is the team you're looking to trade with interested in any of your players?  In the EPL model, Team A just looks for teams that are will to part with a striker; assuming they can agree on the transfer fee, the deal can be done even if Team A has no one of interest to Team B.  On the one hand, this seems like a much more efficient market to me; player movement is easier.  But again, it seems like it favors the rich teams, who are more likely to have the cash to acquire the players they need than the less well-off teams, whose assets are mostly in the form of the players themselves as opposed to cash on the balance sheet.  I suppose a lower tier side can do a great job scouting to find players overlooked by the others; when those players become too expensive to retain, they can sell them and plow the cash back into new players.  In some ways, I guess that's no different than the baseball team that, hopelessly out the race in August, trades their ace pitcher for a raft of prospects.  Still seems like the advantage goes to the big money clubs to me.

Some additional random facts.  In the 19 years studied, 44 teams have competed in the EPL. Seven sides have not been relegated in that time - Arsenal, Aston Villa, Chelsea, Everton, Liverpool, Man United, and Tottenham.  Things seem a bit more open below 6th place; 19 have been as high as 7th place, 26 have reached 8th place, 30 have been in the top nine at least once, and 31 have finished at least as high as 10th.


Vincete aut perite

That's my attempt at altering the Union motto - jungite aut perite (Join or Perish) - to win or perish.  My last exposure to Latin was sophomore year of high school so my conjugation skills are a bit rusty.  Anyway, my point is that it's crunch time for the Union and even draws won't cut it now.  Fortunately, they have been up to the task.  After a 1-0 win over Toronto FC at home they went up north and played even better, besting Toronto 2-0.  This was possibly the best 90 minutes of the Union season.  Great to have Maidana and Noguiera in the line up at the same time.  Edu continues to anchor an improved back line.  There weren't too many moments when the Union were not firmly in control of this match.

Unfortunately, most of the other sides did what they needed to as well.  The Red Bulls pulled a mild upset over suddenly struggling Sporting KC, Columbus and Houston got expected wins over Chivas and Montreal, and New England beat Chicago.  The spread from 3rd to 9th is a little bigger but still pretty tight.  The Union sit in 5th right now but New York and Toronto have a game in hand.  The weekend is full of more critical matches, probably none bigger than the Red Bulls coming to Chester to face the Union at 3 pm on Saturday.  Houston and Columbus plus Chicago and Toronto are important too; New England really should be able to hand Montreal and solidify their hold on third.


Chester Blues

Good news on the cyber pitch, less positive off.  We stole three points at Hull City despite being outshot 15-3 and outpossessed 55%-45%.  A late goal off a corner by Ronan Gallagher was the difference.  In the lower leagues, I tended to ignore my scouts when they said the upcoming opponent did well against a 4-4-2 formation; I figured we were just a better side.  Not so in the EPL.  I've used a 4-1-2-1-2 and a 4-1-3-2 so far and am paying strict attention to the scouting reports about formations.

The bad news is that another player, Gaetano Hoffman, a young Swiss striker has also said he is having trouble settling into the Chester.  What is it about the city?  No night life?  I've never been to Chester so I can't say but this is an annoying trend.


The EPL Lineup

The weekend gets off to a great start with Arsenal hosting Man City, both looking to return to form after last week's disappointing outings.  Then we have first playing second as Swansea City travels to Stamford Bridge to take on Chelsea.  Aston Villa gets another prime time TV showing as they take on Liverpool.  Tottenham and Everton have every hope of getting past their recent losses as they take on Sunderland and West Brom.  Man United host Queens Park Rangers, setting up another one of those [insert team here] hasn't won at Old Trafford since [insert year here].  And my beloved Magpies go way south to take on Southampton; not holding my breath for anything positive out of this road trip.

Probably won't get to see a lot of these - or the Union - live so if you happen to watch some of these, jot down a few notes and put them in next week's comments.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

A Good Transfer Window Shot to Hell

Me: Did you see who Man United signed?

Michael B: Yeah, Falcao and Blind

Me: Did you see who Newcastle signed?

Michael B: Uh?

Me: Right, nobody

Despite the late outburst versus Crystal Palace, it was pretty clear that the Magpies needed a more consistent scorer up top and maybe a center back for some depth for the back line.  They got neither.  And Ben Arfa is gone to Hull on loan, and Yanga-Mbiwa is out on loan to Roma.   This seems very risky.  A few things don't go right and Newcastle could find themselves looking over their shoulder at the relegation zone coming up fast in their rear view mirror.  And after all that work to get 80% of the way to a solid club. 

http://ep.imgci.com/PICTURES/CMS/53000/53027.3.jpgThe quiet end to the transfer window was a perfect exclamation point to Saturday's disappointing match against Crystal Palace. Thirty seconds in, we were down 1-0 on a rebound from Marouane Chamakh, which is apparently Arabic for I can't find a good hairstylist in London (see right).  Daryl Janmaat tied the game in the 37th minute with a shot from the scrum that eeked its way in.  The good feeling lasted only until the 48th minute when Puncheon put Crystal Palace up again.  A voice in the back of my head said we can still win this match 3-2.  What I didn't hear was the voice even farther back in my head which whispered, yeah but we won't.  The Magpies were stirred by the appearance of 18 year-old Rolando Aarons, who tied the match at 73 minutes.  Then, just as I had said, Mike Williamson put Newcastle up with his first-ever EPL goal in the 88th minute.  Ah but the deeper inner voice was ultimately correct as Zaha took advantage of sloppy defending to square the match in the 95th minute.  Ironically, the reason for seven minutes of stoppage time was all the time-wasting by Crystal Palace while they were protecting their 2-1 lead.  The neutral will say it was a fair result and I am forced to agree.  In fact, I think this is match we would have lost last year.  Still, a tie with Crystal Palace is not like kissing Rebecca Lowe.


Things were much better in Birmingham for my blogmate.  Dennis reports:
Aston Villa showed a slight recession towards last season's form in nearly giving away a very deserved 3 points.  They outplayed a tired looking Hull in every aspect for 75 minutes, scoring two very clinical goals off of turnovers.  An own goal got my nerves back on edge for 20 minutes and ruined the goal of a season-long clean sheet, but the Villans defense once again prevailed.  Recently promoted to the first team, Jack Grealish showed a lot of poise, creativity, and ability to draw yellow cards.  On his first three touches after coming on as a late sub, the Hull player defending him was awarded a yellow for a foul.  He also is the only player on the team whose hair is even close to world class (not that he faces much competition since most of the team has no hair at all). With 7 points through 3 games, Villa sit in 3rd but are facing a very tough next 5 matches. I will be pleased if they manage 1 point out of the possible 15, though that puts us pace for a relegation-avoiding 38 for the season. New signing Tom Cleverley should help shore up an energetic but inconsistent midfield as Villa try to maintain some of this early season success.

Hmm...Grealish may be a sort of reverse Midas Man - everything that touches him turns to yellow.

Dennis was the only one to get a satisfactory result this weekend.  At the worse end of the spectrum were Everton (a 3-6 loser at home to Chelsea) and Tottenham (down 0-3 to Liverpool, also at home).  Everton fans may feel hard done by some uncalled offsides on the first two Chelsea goals but the first was really close and the Toffees benefited from a non-call themselves when Tim Howard handled the ball clearly outside the box.  There was some discussion as to whether Howard should have been sent off for denying an obvious goalscoring opportunity - that is, assuming either Jon Moss or his assistant had decided the play was outside the box.  My read of Advice to the Referees, Section 12.37 suggests it is not a red card as the referee is instructed to decide whether in his opinion "the ball would have likely gone directly in the goal but for the handling."  I think the ball would have bounced off Howard's body if he hadn't caught it.  Maybe a yellow for interfering or impeding with an opponent's attacking play by deliberate handling.  Howard later got a yellow for confronting Costa, after he taunted Coleman for an own goal.  A wild match all around that featured five goals in 11 minutes.  After that performance you can see why Chelsea felt the need to add Loic Remy to boost their scoring.  Right.  Tottenham-Liverpool was nowhere near as entertaining; the Spurs never really got untracked.

Not as disastrous but disappointing nonetheless for their fans were the 0-0 draw between Man United and Burnley and Arsenal's 1-1 draw with Leicester.  These powerhouses clearly would have looked for more against the newly promoted sides, even on the road.  Arsenal was without Giroud but will have Danny Welbeck next time out.  Other matches of note: Stoke hung a 1-0 loss on Manchester City, at the Etihad no less and Swansea remained undefeated by thrashing West Brom 3-0; Sigurdsson picked up three more assists.

Yaya Toure picked up the third BFS of the year.  We're on pace for 38 so the competition for BFS of the Year could be tight.  Don't forget to check out Dennis's ratings in the upper right hand corner of the blog.


Talking Union

Their play, though not great was good enough to earn a 1-0 win over struggling Toronto.  The Union had the run of the play for most of the match but couldn't beat TFC keeper Joe Bendik until the 55th minute; Maidana put the ball into space down the right side, LeToux ran it down, dribbled deep, then placed a perfect cross to Casey, who one-timed it into the net.  Simple, elegant and totally YouTubeable.  The win still leaves them in 6th based on MLS tiebreakers - most wins, then goal differential - but they are in the hunt.  A second match with Toronto this Saturday gives them the chance to play a team in turmoil.

New England got two wins to move into 3rd, and Chicago stayed in the chase with a 1-0 win over Dallas, while Columbus fell to Montreal 0-2 and the Red Bulls went down 0-2 against DC United.  Eight points separate 3rd through 9th and just five points separate 4th through 9th.  With just eight or nine games to go, everything seems wide open.


International Break

No EPL this weekend but all the MLS playoff contenders from the East are active.  Besides the Toronto-Union match, there's the Red Bulls hosting Sporting KC, Houston home against Montreal,  Chicago at New England and Columbus hosting Chivas.  The standings could easily be much different by the time Monday rolls around.

I'll use the light schedule to put up a post early next week on the recent history of how clubs finish in the EPL standings.  Hint: the top four spots don't often go to clubs named Newcastle or Aston Villa.  Speaking of international breaks, I will be traveling for a conference - the National Association of Organizations That Do What My Agency Does - and probably won't catch too many games the weekend of 9/13-14.  But you'll be in the capable hands of Dennis.

Also, you La Liga guys like Miguel and Roberto feel free to keep us up to date on happenings there.  I understand Atletico's manager got himself suspended.

Another also - Bob K is somehow involved in some kind of wager where Sheffield Wednesday has to finish above Derby County in the Championship (2nd) Division. Through five matches they are even but Derby leads on goal differential.  And what's this? Recently relegated Fulham sits in 23rd with just one point in five matches; could be a long road back to the Premiership.