Premier League talking points
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[January 16, 2023]
(Reuters) - Talking points from the latest round of Premier League
games:
RAMSDALE PROVES HIS WORTH TO KEEP GUNNERS ON TRACK
Goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale has had his critics at Arsenal but the
24-year-old proved his worth in the league leaders' 2-0 victory at
rivals Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday, making a string of fine saves to
keep Spurs at bay.
Ramsdale made seven saves in total in the match, before the gloss
was taken off his man-of-the-match performance after he appeared to
be kicked by a Spurs fan following the final whistle.
"We showed the other face when we had to dig in, we needed some big
moments from Aaron," coach Mikel Arteta said.
"He was the difference when we needed him."
WAS RASHFORD NOT INTERFERING IN FERNANDES EQUALISER?
Manchester United's dramatic 2-1 comeback victory over rivals
Manchester City on Saturday was not without its fair share of
controversy.
With champions City leading 1-0 at Old Trafford until 12 minutes
before the end, Bruno Fernandes' equaliser was initially ruled out
for offside against Marcus Rashford, the target of Casemiro's
throughpass, before VAR intervened.
Rashford was deemed not to have interfered and the goal stood,
before the in-form England forward went on to score the winner. City
were adamant they had been wronged by the officials.
"The first goal is a joke," City defender Manuel Akanji told the
BBC. "I understand he (Rashford) doesn't touch the ball but he's
running for 30 metres until the last second. It is clearly offside."
LAMENTABLE LIVERPOOL RISK MISSING OUT ON EUROPE
Liverpool's lamentable season went from bad to worse as they were
hammered 3-0 by Brighton & Hove Albion, and Juergen Klopp's side are
now in danger of missing out on European football completely.
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Brighton used the win over a rudderless Liverpool to leap-frog the
Reds and move up towards the Europa League places, and few teams
will have anything to fear from Klopp's toothless attack, which was
missing the injured Darwin Nunez.
Not that his absence mattered - new signing Cody Gakpo started up
front but Liverpool were so completely overrun in midfield that they
barely threatened Brighton at all.
Klopp chose to blame a lack of organisation in his team for the
result, a tacit admission that both he and his players have a lot of
work to do if they are to make it into the top six by the end of the
season.
WHERE TO NOW FOR AILING EVERTON?
Everton's season continues to stumble from one dismal defeat to the
next and amid fan protests inside Goodison Park following Saturday's
2-1 loss to bottom side Southampton, the question for the club is
"where to now?".
Manager Frank Lampard admitted in the wake of the defeat that this
was a must-win game for his team, as was the loss by the same
scoreline to Wolverhampton Wanderers a few weeks back when the
latter were also bottom of the league.
Fan frustration for now is focussed mostly on the board, especially
as rival clubs close to the relegation zone bring in fresh talent to
help their survival bid, while Everton remain silent in the transfer
market.
There was a promise from the club's board that last year's
flirtation with relegation would not be repeated, but if anything
the situation looks more dire this time round. It is a famous name
in English football that appears on an irreversible slide.
(Reporting by Nick Said, Peter Hall, Philip O'Connor)
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