Another European soccer weekend is in the books and, once again, there are narratives aplenty to dissect. Liverpool defeated Arsenal in Sunday's presumed "clash of title contenders," though it's clear based on the 90 minutes that both teams are far from the finished product. (Don't worry: It's the same for the rest of the Premier League after just three games, and with deadline day still ongoing.) VAR dominated the headlines after cancelling out a perfectly valid Fulham goal in the Cottagers' 2-0 loss to Chelsea, while Manchester United also had the folks at Stockley Park to thank for their late, late 3-2 win over newly promoted Burnley.
Elsewhere, there are talking points galore as Paris Saint-Germain, Bayern Munich and Napoli all secured three points to send title warnings, with Luis Enrique's charges looking the most ominous. And don't forget about Real Madrid either, as they picked up a third win from three games to take an early lead atop LaLiga -- Xabi Alonso's side still look a work in progress, but results are good right now.
It's Monday before the international break kicks in, so what better time for Gab Marcotti's musings?
Sunday's clash of title favorites at Anfield turned into what tactics nerds like to call a "chess match," but which others might describe as simply two sides unable to execute. Liverpool, defending champions playing at home, ended the first half with an xG of 0.09 and didn't actually record their first shot on target until the hour mark. Arsenal, already without Bukayo Saka and Martin Odegaard (slowed by a shoulder injury, he came on in the second half), also lost defensive stalwart William Saliba after just five minutes and clearly opted for the risk-averse route.
Situations like these usually get resolved by one of two things: either a mistake (whether by the referee or an individual player), or a moment of brilliance. Dominik Szoboszlai's long-range free kick screamer that decided the match fits in the latter category.
- Szoboszlai, Liverpool make statement by beating Arsenal
- Emotional turmoil for Amorim, but a key win for Man United
- The VAR Review: Fulham fume while Man United get late penalty
Liverpool boss Arne Slot will be pleased with three wins in three games and already a two-point gap at the top of the table, but it's pretty evident that what we're seeing on the pitch isn't the side he hopes to field later in the season. It can't be. In each of their first three games they needed late goals to turn draws into wins, and while the schedule (they faced Bournemouth and Newcastle before this) has been tough, we haven't seen what we saw from them last season -- hence the pursuits of Alexander Isak and Marc Guéhi, though while more and better personnel makes you better, there is a fair amount to sort through tactically as well.
Shaka Hislop reacts to Dominik Szoboszlai's free kick in Liverpool's 1-0 win against Arsenal in the Premier League.
Florian Wirtz in the No. 10 hole remains a long-term project. Against Arsenal, it felt like he had to navigate deeper to get the ball and escape the Martín Zubimendi-Declan Rice gorgons in front of Arsenal's back four, though it remains to be seen whether that's the best use of his talents. Szoboszlai didn't just score the winner; he also had more touches than any outfield player bar Virgil van Dijk, and he did a fair Trent Alexander-Arnold impression with some of his long-range passing. Is he keeping the right-back position warm for Jeremie Frimpong's return, or is this something we'll see again on a regular basis, in which case Liverpool will have three right-back solutions (if you count Conor Bradley too) who are totally different from each other? Alexis Mac Allister and Mohamed Salah, for different reasons, have had slow starts to the season too.
As for Arsenal, manager Mikel Arteta insists they played to win, though on Monday morning he got plenty of stick for being too negative. Results change narratives and, had they escaped with a point (or nicked a goal to win it, which they could have done) we'd be talking about his tactical master class. What's pretty evident is that the drop from Odegaard, Saka and Saliba to Mikel Merino, Noni Madueke and Cristhian Mosquera is pretty sharp. Throw in the absence of Kai Havertz -- probably a better fit in a game like this than Viktor Gyökeres -- and you can give Arteta a pass for Sunday.
What's clear is that he has pushed the club to go all-in this season, adding a ton of depth that simply wasn't there last season. Arsenal's reserve front four -- Eberechi Eze, Madueke, Havertz and Ethan Nwaneri (or Merino) -- is as good as all but a handful of team's first-choice quartets. The pursuit of Piero Hincapié adds further options to the back line (and central midfield, too). Getting the newcomers to mesh and ensuring the drop-off is limited when your starters are unavailable will take time in his case, too. They have the defensive side of the game down pat -- dialing up what they do on the attacking end, particularly when the understudies are in, will be a journey.
So if you were a little disappointed with Sunday, don't fret. Both these teams are nowhere near their ceiling. They can get a lot better.
Shaka Hislop reacts to Viktor Gyökeres' performance for Arsenal against Liverpool.
Last week I wrote about how Barcelona's defense lacked depth without the departed Iñigo Martínez and that maybe, rather than spending what precious few resources the club has on another winger/forward type like Marcus Rashford (when you already have Gavi, Fermín López, etc., off the bench), the priority should have been bolstering the heart of the back four and finding a partner for Pau Cubarsí. Judging from Flick's team selection -- dropping Ronald Araújo and Cubarsi for Andreas Christensen and Eric García -- you wonder if he figures it makes sense to hold open auditions. If so, what he saw wasn't pretty.
Barca simply fell apart after the break (zero shots on target) as the high line got caught out time and again. Isi Palazón, Oscar De Frutos, Sergio Camello all scythed through the Barca back line as if it wasn't there. Had it not been for Joan García having a monster game between the sticks, Rayo would easily have scored three or four.
Craig Burley says Hansi Flick has been left with more questions than answers about Barcelona's defending after they drew with Rayo Vallecano.
To be fair to the back line (Jules Koundé was poor too, by the way), they didn't get much help from the guys further up the pitch, especially in the second half. If you get caught in transition it's often because somebody has lost the ball and isn't working terribly hard to win it back. Barca started the game OK on a questionable pitch and for a minute, given how open Rayo play, it looked like this might turn into a shootout. But the only goal came thanks to a dubious penalty won and converted by Lamine Yamal. (VAR malfunctioned and wasn't working.)
Some like to pick on Yamal for his goal celebration where he places an imaginary crown on his head: that's a big call to make when you're 18. Then again, if he's the designated penalty taker at that age, it means he's ready to take responsibility on the pitch. And, frankly, other than Pedri and Frenkie de Jong, there wasn't much in the way of accountability out there.
Flick will have to reach deep into his box of tricks to solve this. There's enough talent in midfield and attack (and enough pride in terms of realizing that Sunday was an embarrassment) that they can find a fix at the front end. It's at the back where things look grim. Joan García can't be counted on to perform miracles every single week.
The headlines are all about video assistant referee Michael Salisbury, who disallowed Josh King's counterattacking goal for an imaginary Rodrigo Muniz foul on Trevoh Chalobah. (Hint: When you have possession of the ball and in regaining your balance you step on the foot of the opponent behind you -- an opponent you can't see since you don't have eyes on the back of your head -- it's not a foul.)
The Premier League's refereeing body, the PGMOL, admitted the error and took him off VAR duty for Sunday's game between Liverpool and Arsenal. Admitting errors is a grown-up thing to do; it would be good if they also explained why referee Robert Jones didn't overrule VAR when he watched the incident on the screen.
Fulham were furious, and rightly so. Not only should the goal have stood, but the interminable review also caused the first half to run over an additional nine minutes, with Chelsea taking the lead at the very end of it. VAR also stepped in for Chelsea's second goal, punishing a handball with a penalty, but that was more understandable.
Janusz Michaliik questions the referees performance after Fulham's goal was controversially disallowed vs Chelsea.
However, all this referee/VAR talk shouldn't distract from a poor Chelsea performance, especially in the first half. Until the final minute of first-half injury time, their xG stood at a paltry 0.11. Cole Palmer's absence -- and Liam Delap's injury -- alone don't explain it. Blues head coach Enzo Maresca needs his leaders to step up, starting with Enzo Fernández. It's one thing to beat up a horrible West Ham United like they did last week, quite another to deal with a well-drilled, organized side like Fulham.
Judging from the reaction to Inter's 2-1 home defeat to Udinese, it seems as if folks have very short memories. Like maybe they forgot that Cristian Chivu is a de facto rookie coach: He had 13 games in charge at Parma last year, winning just three. Or that Inter pummeled Torino 5-0 in the opening match of the season. Or, for that matter, that the guy Chivu replaced, Inzaghi, is a heck of a coach and it's not easy to replace him.
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What's more, this is still very much Inzaghi's Inter, which means Chivu has a conundrum. Does he implement his playing style? Does he try to keep Inzaghi's concepts? Or, more likely, how does he blend the two? Inzaghi's tactical mastery allowed him to carry a midfield with no defensive midfielders, though I'm not sure Chivu can do that. It's fine: There's more than one way to play the game.
What's not going to help him is talk about needing to install "motivation" and "enthusiasm" into his players. Appreciate the honesty, Cristian, but that's your job and if you say it's missing, you're basically saying you're not motivating your troops.
That said, it's early and he doesn't deserve some of the criticism he got postgame. Especially getting ridiculed for ending the game with four strikers when chasing the game. (He sent on Ange-Yoan Bonny and Francesco Pio Esposito while keeping Lautaro Martínez and Marcus Thuram on the pitch.) Yeah, Inzaghi rarely did that -- he'd find other ways to tweak -- but that's the point. He's not Inzaghi, he's his own man and that can be perfectly reasonable way to try to find the equalizer when you're down a goal. Save the Chicken Little act and give him time to work.
10. PSG go next level at Toulouse: There are different ways to win 6-3. It's still a three-goal margin of victory, but sometimes it can be a tight, exciting game with one side pulling ahead at the end. Not here. Paris Saint-Germain were 3-0 up inside of 15 minutes and 5-1 up before the hour mark. Game over. The rest is garbage time, which is when -- after Luis Enrique duly made his substitutions -- the home team pulled a couple of goals back. PSG ended up with a whopping 76% possession and weirdly got outshot by Toulouse (14-13), but only because by that stage the game was over. João Neves took the headlines with a stunning hat trick (two of them overhead kicks), while Lucas Chevalier saved a penalty (two, actually, given the first one was retaken). A lot will have to go wrong this season for PSG to drop points in Ligue 1.
9. Zambo Anguissa's buzzer-beater saves Napoli, but this year feels different: Sometimes you deliver a stinker, somehow manage to score and eke out a 1-0 win. And sometimes you need the final kick of the game to break the impasse when really, you deserved to score earlier. Thanks to André-Frank Zambo Anguissa, Napoli's 1-0 win over Cagliari belongs to the latter category, unlike many of the 1-0 wins they got last season. Cagliari parked the proverbial bus, star signing Kevin De Bruyne was a notch below his best, and Napoli were a bit languid in their play -- but the chances still came, albeit after the break. Antonio Conte, however, still has the tactical chops to give himself the edge, like he did when he sent on a genuine winger like Noa Lang. This feels like a team pacing itself, knowing it's ready to reap what it sows. That wasn't the sense last season, when they won the title.
Ale Moreno looks at the reasons why Real Madrid are still struggling despite beating Mallorca 2-1 in LaLiga.
8. Real Madrid getting results, but still waiting on performances: The good news is Real Madrid are three for three, Barcelona are three points back and Atlético Madrid a whopping seven points back. On the flip side, Saturday's 2-1 win over Mallorca underscored how this doesn't yet feel like a Xabi Alonso side. There's little value-add from the coach (which may be understandable, given it's still very early in his tenure) and it's still about talented individuals doing what talented individuals do. Consider Kylian Mbappé's disallowed goals (correct, but close) or, for that matter, Vinícius Júnior's strike that made it 2-1. This isn't about patterns of play; it's about having exceptional players. Which isn't a bad thing ... just that when great players have off days, you can get stuck. It feels as if Xabi is still holding auditions for his starting XI (and, in any case, he'll have to rewrite the script when Jude Bellingham returns). Don't expect to see Xabi's vision of Real Madrid to come together until the new year ... which is why it's good they're getting results under their belts in the meantime.
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