"100% not" – Kristjaan Speakman drops brutal Sunderland transfer comment

After securing an unexpected place in the Championship play-offs last season in their first campaign back in England's second division, much was expected of Sunderland in the opening weeks this time around. The Black Cats have been inconsistent so far, however.

Tony Mowbray's side got off to a fairly frustrating start, losing their opening two games against Ipswich Town and Preston North End, before finally getting off the mark against Rotherham, winning 2-1.

Since that first win of the season, Sunderland have gone unbeaten, drawing 0-0 with last season's play-off final losers Coventry City before shocking the rest of the league by smashing Southampton 5-0 at the Stadium of Light.

Their inconsistency has begged the question about Sunderland's need to add more reinforcements, potentially from the free agent market. And sporting director Kristjaan Speakman has given his verdict.

What did Kristjaan Speakman say?

With the likes of Tanguy Coulibaly and former Brighton & Hove Albion youth player George Cox currently available on the free agent market, Sunderland fans would be forgiven for wanting their club to assess their options, with plenty of available players linked since the deadline.

Having welcomed an impressive total of 11 reinforcements in the summer transfer window, however, which included the arrival of Jobe Bellingham, the Black Cats may feel as though they've built a squad good enough to achieve a play-off place for a second consecutive campaign.

Speakman confirmed as much, too, delivering a pretty blunt verdict via the Sunderland Echo when asked about whether Sunderland will delve into the free agent market: "We always assess the market but it’s not something we’re looking at in terms of thinking, ‘can we get this one [position].’ 100% not, definitely not. We’re really, really comfortable with where we ended up on the back of those deals we got done at the end of the window."

Speaking on the squad at Mowbray's disposal, the sporting director was quick to assure that the Black Cats have enough depth, saying: "We want to try to ensure that players have got an opportunity to play, so we want a streamlined squad. We want to ensure we’ve got enough depth of course but not so much that players can’t see a route for them onto the pitch, because that’s not good for the team culture either.

"What inevitably happens is when you’ve got your squad structure, you might be perceived to be a little bit light in some areas but we feel we’ve got cover and we’re comfortable with the flexibility we have."

Do Sunderland need more reinforcements?

Sunderland manager Tony Mowbray.

When Sunderland started the season with two consecutive losses, it was easy to become worried about their chances of replicating last season's play-off position. The majority, if not all, of those worries went away as soon as Mowbray's side put five past title-hopefuls Southampton last time out, however.

That win proved once and for all that those at the Stadium of Light are more than capable of beating anyone in the Championship this season, and perhaps even go one better than the last campaign by securing promotion. As the season goes on, Sunderland will certainly be one to watch.

Worse than Endo: Liverpool’s ‘abysmal’ dud lost possession 25x against LASK

It's starting to get a bit repetitive, but that was another real Jekyll-and-Hyde performance from Liverpool.

The Reds extended their opening unbeaten run to the season with victory over LASK in Austria, with Jurgen Klopp's side starting their Europa League campaign off triumphantly, but another slow start allowed midfielder Florian Flecker to score a scintillating goal from the edge of the box.

While a disjointed Liverpool fell flat before the break, they emerged revitalised in the second half, with the devastating offence wreaking havoc once more, and The Athletic's James Pearce heralding the "powers of recovery."

How did Wataru Endo perform vs LASK?

Having produced a similar result of first-half misfortune against Wolverhampton Wanderers in the Premier League last week, Klopp fielded a much-changed XI in Linz, and it's perhaps understandable that an unfamiliar crop took a little time to click into gear.

Regardless, reporter Neil Jones lamented the English outfit's "sloppiness" and while Nunez and Luis Diaz's swift double turned the tide, with substitute Mohamed Salah scoring late on (of course he did), the club's German manager will rue the failure to take control in the early stages once again.

naby-keita-liverpool-jurgen-klopp-premier-league

Such was largely compounded by the midfield's inability to produce composed and cohesive patterns of play, with £16m summer signing Wataru Endo failing to craft a commanding performance despite flashes of dogged defending.

The Japan captain wasn't horrific, per say, but did fail to take his moment to dazzle and misplaced some simple passes while winning just one ground duel all night, also dribbled past once and making just one tackle.

The Liverpool Echo's Ian Doyle perhaps put it best in his post-match player ratings, stating: "Appeared half-a-yard short in the opening exchanges and too often gave the ball away. A difficult night."

That said, he wasn't the only underperformer on Thursday evening.

How good was Kostas Tsimikas vs LASK?

While Endo's overall quality was at times laid awkwardly bare, it was left-back Kostas Tsimikas who endured the most substandard of showings for Klopp's side, with Paul Gorst remarking that he didn't have his "finest hour" down the left channel.

The Greek ace has played second fiddle to Andy Robertson ever since joining from Olympiakos for around £12m in 2020, and while he is a creative player with a wand of a left foot, producing 12 assists from just 63 appearances, he would be fortunate to have avoided a scolding.

Indeed, the 27-year-old did play the full 90 minutes, making three interceptions and one tackle, but failed to contribute with a single key pass and actually succeeded with only four of his 14 ranged passes, conjuring up nothing of note.

There was one moment, late into the first half, when Liverpool had defended a set piece and were presented with a glorious chance to counter.

The ball fell fortuitously to the defender, who barrelled forward and had apt time to unleash a through ball to either Ben Doak or Darwin Nunez – forwards of equally electric measure – but instead proved indecisive and got tangled up in the centre of the pitch, squandering possession.

That just so happened to be one of 25 times that he gave the ball away, a mind-blowingly high number and worrying indeed.

One LFC podcaster even went as far as to brand the 86-touch dud as “abysmal, and while this may be a tad harsh, it's fair to say that Tsimikas did not enjoy a match to hold in memory.

Also failing to make a single successful dribble, it was a pretty dire showing from the £50k-per-week left-back, who has done little to convince Klopp of his worth and will count his lucky stars that Liverpool's incisive attack salvaged three points to kick off the European journey.

'He didn't like it' – Ole Gunnar Solskjaer reveals the 'complications' he had with Cristiano Ronaldo at Man Utd

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has revealed Cristiano Ronaldo asked him to bench him when he was at Manchester United and then got angry when he did.

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  • Ronaldo asked Solskjaer to bench him
  • Was then angry when he did
  • 'Loads of respect between us'
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Solskjaer jumped at the opportunity to sign Ronaldo late in the summer of 2021, causing a wave of excitement and a social media frenzy. But he has admitted that Ronaldo's return did not go as planned and spoke about the player's volcanic personality.

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  • WHAT SOLSKJAER SAID

    “Cristiano – when you know him and speak to him, he wanted to play three out of four games, he realised he’s getting older as well. But when you leave him out once, he’s not happy!" Solskjaer told the podcast, brought to you by Sky Bet. "Part of signing Cristiano Ronaldo was getting that passion from him, but that did have its complications. You’ve got Mason Greenwood, Marcus Rashford and Anthony Martial, who can learn from Cristiano as he’s the best, the most disciplined and he’s been the best player in the world, and you think he’s going to help them. When he arrived at the club, he told me to start him for three games in a row, and then put me on the bench for the fourth game, but he’s so passionate so when I did that, he didn’t like it."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Ronaldo had a stunning start to his return with United, scoring twice on his debut against Newcastle and snatching winners in the Champions League against Villarreal and Atalanta. But the team's form dipped and after heavy defeats by Leicester City, Liverpool, Manchester City and Watford, Solskjaer was sacked in November. The Norwegian added: “With the ball, with him in the team, it was no problem. Without him [pressing], we had to change a little bit the different roles we’d gotten used to. We were one of the highest pressing teams before [Ronaldo joined]. We let Dan James go when Cristiano came in, and they’re two different types of players. It was the right decision to make for me – it didn’t turn out to be the right one.”

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  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Despite the complicated side of Ronaldo's personality, Solskjaer stressed that there was a lot of mutual respect between them. “I had a good relationship with Cristiano and there’s loads of respect between us. I think he behaved really well in his disappointments when I was there," he added. Solskjaer's successor Erik ten Hag had more problems with Ronaldo, who left a match with Tottenham early and was subsequently suspended from the team. He left the club in November 2022 after lashing out at the club in an interview with Piers Morgan.

Leeds: £1m dud was meant to be the next Rooney, now he’s struggling

With a new man at the helm at Leeds United in the form of Daniel Farke, that change in the dugout has provided a clean slate for those who were part of last season's dismal relegation, as well as those who had also been cast out by the German's predecessor, Jesse Marsch.

Among those who fall into that latter category is Daniel James, with the Wales international – who was signed by Marcelo Bielsa back in 2021 – having taken his chance after being shipped out on loan to Fulham last season.

Following what was a difficult year at Craven Cottage for the 25-year-old as he made just 23 appearances in all competitions, the wing wizard now looks to be fit and firing again on the flanks at Elland Road, having already racked up four assists from just six Championship appearances this season.

Leeds forward Dan James.

It has also been a welcome return to Yorkshire for academy graduate, Jamie Shackleton, with the versatile asset – who can operate in midfield or at full-back – also making six league appearances this season after spending the 2022/23 campaign at Millwall, alongside promising youngster, Charlie Cresswell.

With Leeds now back operating in the second tier, the likes of Shackleton, Cresswell and James all have the opportunity to flourish under promotion expert, Farke, with that trio all likely keen to prove Marsch wrong by thriving under the new regime.

Despite those early season success stories, not all of the returning loanees have made their presence felt thus far, however, with 'Mini Messi' Ian Poveda playing a peripheral role, as has previously lauded wonderkid, Joe Gelhardt.

How much did Leeds pay for Joe Gelhardt?

Although currently on the periphery back at Leeds, the England youth international had looked to be a real star of the future when he originally burst onto the scene at Wigan Athletic, ultimately making 21 appearances for the club in his teenage years.

Amid that emergence with the Latics, the dynamic forward was hailed by former boss Paul Cook back in 2019, with the current Chesterfield head coach outlining the youngster's incredibly exciting potential, after netting his first senior goal against Hull City:

"He's got that unique talent to find space in a telephone box. He's such a natural, good footballer. To get a goal like that in front of his own fans was a special moment.

"A lot of young footballers coming into the game are not very nice people. We're just lucky to have a boy with his humility playing for us – the game is easy for him. He'll be starting soon if he carries on like that. He's a young boy that needs minding though.

"It's a very special goal from a very special player."

Joe Gelhardt

That early strong impression subsequently saw the emerging sensation snapped up by Marcelo Bielsa and co for a reported fee of just £1m, with the 5 foot 9 marksman having previously caught the attention of both Liverpool and Everton.

What was said about Gelhardt when he joined Leeds?

With Cook hailing the then-teenager as a player who could have a "really bright future" in the game, it had looked as if Leeds had been able to pull off a real coup to be able to sign the Liverpool-born starlet on the cheap.

The expectancy surrounding the in-demand ace was only heightened by comparisons to compatriot, Wayne Rooney due to the Merseyside connection, with former youth coach Tim Wyatt having previously stated:

"Very few players stand out at 14. Steven Gerrard did in my first season, Rooney and certainly Joe. I remember him turning up for our trial looking Rooneyesque. He scored three in 10 minutes on a cold and rainy night so I said he could go home to keep warm because he'd already made the team."

To be in such esteemed company is high praise indeed, with Rooney – who remains the leading goalscorer in Manchester United's history – notably one of the most iconic figures of the modern era and a player who burst onto the scene at the age of just 16 at Everton.

Despite spending much of his debut season in Elland Road in the youth ranks, Gelhardt was again hitting the headlines after making his first top-flight start in November 2021, with pundit Jamie Redknapp lauding him as a "human wrecking ball" at the time.

Since that bright introduction to life in the first team, however, it is safe to say that it has not quite gone to plan for the 21-year-old since then.

What has happened to Joe Gelhardt?

Once tipped to emulate 'Wazza', the £15k-per-week enigma has not delivered what was expected of late, notably failing to even make it off the bench in each of the last two games under Farke.

The misfiring marksman – who has three goals and seven assists to his name in 48 outings for the club – has only recently returned from a loan stint at Sunderland last season, where he scored three times and registered three assists in 20 games.

The hope would have been that with the Whites now themselves in the second tier, Gelhardt would be able to finally earn a consistent run in the side, although he has since made just two league starts thus far.

As Farke himself stated following the Carabao Cup win over Shrewsbury Town last month, the former Wigan man seemingly needs to "step up" if he is to finally flourish in Yorkshire, having even been linked with a move away from the club over the summer.

The German's words were also echoed by The Athletic's Phil Hay, who rubberstamped the belief that Gehardt has not hit the heights that were anticipated when he arrived three years ago:

"Another really talented player Gelhardt but someone who just, and I think as much as anything because of the way it's been at Leeds, just hasn't been able to follow what would have been the development plan for him.

"I don't think anybody at Leeds would pretend that where he is now is where they hoped he would be when they first signed him back in that summer after promotion."

Joe Gelhardt

Whether it is down to the chaotic nature of Leeds in recent times – or the player's own shortcomings – it has been far from a smooth journey to date, with the question now whether Gelhardt can rise from his recent struggles or continue this underwhelming trajectory.

Chelsea preparing £25m bid for "brilliant" forward who may replace Nkunku

Chelsea are now preparing a £25m offer for a “brilliant” forward who could be brought in to replace Christopher Nkunku, according to a report.

Chelsea looking to strengthen in attack

After a very strong start to the season, the Blues’ form has started to deteriorate over the past few weeks, losing three of their last four Premier League games.

Most recently, Enzo Maresca’s side succumbed to a 2-1 defeat away at Aston Villa in what could be a real blow to their hopes of qualifying for the Champions League.

As such, Maresca may feel some reinforcements are necessary in the summer, if his side are going to compete for major honours, and a number of attacking targets are currently being assessed.

Viktor Gyokeres is one of the strikers of particular interest, with the Sporting CP star’s price tag dropping by £25m recently, while the west London club are also prepared to pay £58m for Bayer Leverkusen’s Victor Boniface.

Chelsea now join Barcelona in race to sign £67m Liverpool player

The west Londoners are looking to potentially poach their Premier League rivals.

By
Emilio Galantini

Feb 23, 2025

The need to bring in a new striker may be exacerbated by the potential departure of Nkunku, who received widespread links to different clubs during the January transfer window.

According to a report from Spain, the Blues are now looking at replacements for Nkunku and Joao Felix, and Chelsea have now set their sights on Ferran Torres, with a €30m (£25m) offer for the Barcelona forward currently being prepared.

FC Barcelona'sFerranTorrescelebrates scoring their second goal

The former Manchester City man has failed to reach the heights expected of him in Spain since his arrival, and a return to the Premier League could now be on the cards.

Torres has fallen down the pecking order at the Camp Nou, indicating a deal could be possible this summer, although his current contract runs until 2027, which could complicate things.

Chelsea’s upcoming Premier League fixtures

Date

Southampton (h)

February 25th

Leicester City (h)

March 9th

Arsenal (a)

March 16th

Tottenham Hotspur (h)

April 2nd

Brentford (a)

April 5th

"Brilliant" Torres has impressed in England before

Pep Guardiola lauded his compatriot as “brilliant” during his time at the Etihad Stadium, with the Spaniard scoring 13 goals in all competitions in the 2020-21 season.

Guardiola also insisted the 24-year-old is capable of playing as a 9, but he has most commonly been deployed as a winger throughout his career, and his goal record for Barcelona is not that of an out-and-out striker.

Season

Appearances

Goals

2021-22

18

4

2022-23

33

4

2023-24

29

7

2024-25

18

5

As such, while Torres could be a solid addition to the squad, he is unlikely to solve Chelsea’s issues in the striker department, and Maresca should pursue a proven top-level forward as a priority in the summer.

Nicolas Jackson made a flying start to the campaign, but the Senegal international has now gone eight games without a goal in the Premier League, so it is clear a replacement is needed, and Torres could be that man.

Luis Enrique explains why he's 'controlling game time' for Real Madrid-bound Kylian Mbappe as PSG boss insists club president Nasser Al-Khelaifi has 'total confidence' in his methods

Paris Saint-Germain boss Luis Enrique has explained why he is "controlling game time" for Kylian Mbappe as he closes in on a move to Real Madrid.

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  • Enrique explains why he dropped Mbappe from starting XI
  • Claims he has backing of club owners
  • PSG take on Nice in French Cup on Wednesday
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Mbappe was omitted from PSG's starting lineup for the third time in a month against Reims as the Ligue 1 leader's were held to a 2-2 draw by the ninth-placed side. Manager Luis Enrique has now explained why he has been using attacking players like Mbappe and Ousmane Dembele scarcely in the last few matches.

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  • WHAT LUIS ENRIQUE SAID

    Speaking to reporters ahead of a French Cup quarter-final tie against Nice, the Spaniard said: "We study every little detail for the players individually. All matches are important, like tomorrow's matches or in the Champions League. Ousmane has no problem, he is available to the coach. We have to control the time game for very explosive players like Dembele or Mbappe. They have incredible speed which involves risks. It involves making them play more or less minutes."

    He added: "Since I arrived, since my first meeting with Luis Campos and since I knew the president (Nasser Al-Khelaïfi), I have always felt total confidence, support. The project is a bit new for the club, different from previous coaches, with a lot of young players. The idea is to see that our supporters follow us and think that we play well. I have a good time in personal terms, as a coach and that's how it is that we must carry out a football project."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    It has been suggested that Mbappe and Luis Enrique's relationship has soured in the wake of the news that the World Cup winner has reached an agreement to join Real Madrid in the summer, after his contract at PSG expires. The PSG boss bizarrely sent his best wishes for the future to Mbappe after the Reims draw as he appeared to confirm that he will be moving onto pastures new at the end of the season.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR PSG?

    PSG will next face Nice in the French Cup quarter-final on Wednesday before taking on Montpellier in the Ligue 1 on Sunday. Mbappe and Co also have the Champions League quarter-finals to look forward to, with the French champions still in the hunt for an unprecedented treble.

NWSL impressively tops YouTube and rivals Microsoft in business rankings

The National Women's Soccer League has been named in the top five of a list of the World's Most Innovative Companies.

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  • NWSL ranked fifth in World's Most Innovative Companies
  • Attendances and viewership continue to boom
  • Recent franchise valuations hit record levels
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The list, compiled by business magazine puts the league ahead of the likes of YouTube and OpenAI and chasing software monolith Microsoft. Unveiling the league in fifth place, the magazine said the league was unique as it's members were not simply subsidiaries of men's teams but were independent entities. The division recently struck a four-year rights deal worth $240 million (£190m).

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Now into its 12th season, the growth of the NWSL shows no sign of slowing down. Owners and league officials are buoyed by booming attendances and sponsorship and the league has negotiated a broadcasting deal that dwarfs its nearest competitor, the English WSL, by a factor of almost ten.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    The value of NWSL franchises has continued to rocket. In January the Portland Thorns were sold for $63 million (£49.9m), while a staggered deal to sell the San Diego Wave was recently agreed at a price that equates to $113 million (£89.4m).

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    WHAT NEXT FOR THE NWSL?

    The new season is already underway and Week 3 features a pair of headline match ups as San Diego Wave take on Seattle Reign on Friday night followed by Gotham FC's trip to North Carolina Courage on Saturday.

Ranking the 10 best Chelsea vs Arsenal matches of all time

It is rarely dull between Chelsea and Arsenal, with the London duo creating some Premier League classics over the years.

From FA Cup upsets to European routs and everything in between, there is hardly ever a bad game when these two teams line up on the pitch.

With that in mind, Football FanCast has created a list of the 10 best games between Arsenal and Chelsea.

10

2006: Chelsea 1-1 Arsenal

Right, we’re kicking things off with a game better remembered for what happened in the stands than the pitch.

The match was the first encounter between the two sides in the aftermath of Ashley Cole’s incredibly controversial transfer to Chelsea. The story was that the full-back made the move after being insulted by the contract offer he received from Arsenal.

Read more: Players to have played for Chelsea and Arsenal

This story infuriated the Arsenal faithful, who decided to make their frustrations known during the game when they threw fake cash onto the pitch with pictures of Cole adorning the front and back. Who says football fans aren’t subtle?

The game itself was still rather entertaining, mind, with Arsenal opening the scoring late in the second half before Michael Essien levelled things up for the hosts in the 84th minute with a sensational rocket.

9

1999: Chelsea 2-3 Arsenal

We’re going back to the 1990s for this one, and if there was ever a game that demonstrated just how brilliant a footballer Nwankwo Kanu was, this might be it.

Going into the match, Arsenal were looking for revenge as dropped points in this fixture the season before had cost them the title, and they did not want the same thing happening again.

Chelsea seemed to care little for their north London opponents’ title ambitions. However, by 52 minutes, they had established a comfortable two-goal lead, and it looked as if they would seal maximum points – until Kanu decided to put on a clinic, that is.

The Nigeria international pulled one back for the Gunners in the 75th minute and then grabbed another just eight minutes later to level the scores.

A sense of panic was now spreading amongst the supporters at Stamford Bridge, as well as with the Chelsea players themselves, and with just seconds left, Kanu fired home his third from a tight angle to give Arsenal the win.

8

2004: Arsenal 1-2 Chelsea

Nobody likes losing to your rivals in the league, but you’ll usually get over it pretty fast; after all, you’ll get the chance for revenge in a couple of months, anyway.

The same cannot be said for a Champions League knockout game.

The second leg of the 2004 Champions League quarter-final between Arsenal and Chelsea is one of the best all-English ties in the competition’s recent history. Still, it’s probably not remembered quite so fondly by the men in red.

The sides had played out a 1-1 draw at Stamford Bridge in the first leg, and so Wenger’s men – who were on their way to becoming invincible – fancied their chances of advancing at home.

Read more: Arsenal’s top 20 Champions League moments

A Jose Antonio Reyes goal on the stroke of half-time only reinforced the belief that the north Londoners would soon be semi-finalists, but a 51st-minute goal from Frank Lampard brought Highbury back down to reality.

The game was somehow even more tense from that point onwards, but the away side would finally cut that tension when Wayne Bridge put the Blues in front in the 87th minute with a match-winning away goal, breaking the hearts of Arsenal fans everywhere.

What makes this loss all the more painful is that the semi-final against AS Monaco, and arguably the final against Porto, were both very winnable games for this Arsenal side. Wenger could have had Old Big Ears to go alongside his golden league title that year.

7

2007: Arsenal 1-2 Chelsea

Another victory for the men in blue makes it into the list at number seven, although it wasn’t just any victory, as this was the 2007 League Cup final.

Arsenal were making their sixth appearance in the competition’s finale, and Chelsea their fifth, but it was the first time the sides had met one another in the showpiece event. Tensions were already higher than in previous finals, as the two sides were battling it out for the league title only two years prior.

The Gunners were the ones to strike first in the game as Theo Walcott found the back of the net in the 12th minute, although it took just eight minutes for Didier Drogba to level the scores.

In the 63rd minute, Chelsea captain John Terry had to be taken off the pitch following a collision with Abou Diaby that left him unconscious.

The game was finally won by the men in blue when Drogba put away his second of the game in the 84th minute.

However, the game once again exploded into life when an argument between Kolo Toure and John Obi Mikel resulted in a fracas between both sets of players. In the end, both Toure and Mikel were sent off, as was Emmanuel Adebayor, who had hit Wayne Bridge during the scuffle.

6

2014: Chelsea 6-0 Arsenal

We’re sorry about this one, Arsenal fans.

It’s never nice to lose to one of your biggest rivals, but to lose 6-0 is a whole other level of hurt, and so this game is surely one the club’s worst defeats to Chelsea.

The build-up to the game was dominated by talk of Arsene Wenger’s 1,000th game in charge of the Gunners, and there were a lot of very nice things said about one of the game’s true greats, but those words would mean very little if the players on the pitch couldn’t put in a performance.

Unfortunately for the Frenchman, Samuel Eto’o opened the scoring after just five minutes before Andre Schurrle added another two minutes later. Things would go from bad to worse in the 15th minute when Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain handled the ball in the box, which led to a penalty and a red card – although not to him.

Somehow, match official Andre Marriner mistook Kieran Gibbs for the Ox, and sent the left-back off instead, causing sheer confusion among the players. The penalty was calmly converted by Eden Hazard, but things kept getting worse for the men in red.

Oscar scored a fourth on the stroke of half-time to make it 4-0 before scoring another in the 66th minute. The game was rounded off in the 71st when a certain Egyptian named Mohamed Salah scored his very first Premier League goal.

Wenger’s special day really couldn’t have gone any worse.

5

2017: Arsenal 2-1 Chelsea

The Gunners have generally had the number of their west London opponents in the FA Cup, and the 2017 final was no different.

Going into the game, Chelsea had just been crowned Premier League champions while Arsenal had missed out on the top four for the first time in Wenger’s reign, and so it was the men in blue who were the clear favourites, although, that didn’t seem to translate onto the pitch whatsoever.

Arsenal took the lead in the fifth minute thanks to a controversial goal from Chile international Alexis Sanchez, and they continued to look threatening right up to the break.

Things went from bad to worse for Chelsea in the second half as Victor Moses got a second yellow card in the 68th minute for diving. However, even with a man down, Chelsea managed to level the scores when Diego Costa found the back of the net in the 76th minute.

Unfortunately for the Blues, their reprieve lasted just three minutes, as Aaron Ramsey scored the winner in the 79th minute, securing the Gunners their 13th FA Cup.

What made this win all the more impressive was that Per Mertesacker made his first start of the season and put in one of the all-time great FA Cup final performances, leading to Arsenal fans referring to the game as ‘The Mertesacker Final’.

4

2022: Chelsea 2-4 Arsenal

Arsenal’s visit to Stamford Bridge in April 2022 delivered them their biggest away win against the Blues in over a decade as they put four past Thomas Tuchel’s disorganised side.

The first half was a thoroughly entertaining affair that saw the Gunners take the lead twice, only for Chelsea to level the scores in reply. The second half was just as entertaining, but the home side could not reply when Arsenal doubled their score.

The result ultimately meant very little in the grand scheme of things as the Gunners still missed out on the top four, but the fact that all four goals were scored by Hale End products must have given the fans a lot to cheer about, with Emile Smith Rowe and Bukayo Saka adding to Eddie Nketiah’s brace.

3

2020: Arsenal 2-1 Chelsea

If we’re being honest, finals are usually rather rubbish, aren’t they? They can become boring games in which sides are so afraid of losing that they don’t create anything.

Well, that certainly wasn’t the case in the 2020 FA Cup Final.

Going into the game, Arsenal were experiencing something of a crisis as they had just finished eighth in the league, sacked Unai Emery earlier in the season and generally looked poor. Granted, they had beaten Manchester City in the semi-final, but there was a concern that the final would be a step too far.

Chelsea, on the other hand, had made it into the Champions League and generally looked to be making decent enough progress under Frank Lampard, although we know how that turned out.

The game was a tightly fought affair, and the Blues opened the scoring just five minutes in courtesy of Christian Pulisic. However, Arsenal found themselves level just 23 minutes later thanks to a penalty from Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, and it was the Gabonese forward who then gave his side the lead in the 67th minute thanks to a lovely curled effort.

While Arsenal were by no means dominant in the game, this win might just have given Arteta the time he needed when things started to go wrong the following season.

2

2019: Chelsea 4-1 Arsenal

The Gunners’ 6-0 embarrassment was bad enough, but Arsenal’s defeat to Chelsea in Baku was arguably even more painful.

The Europa League final in 2019 was probably Unai Emery’s most important game as Arsenal boss; after all, he had missed out on the top four, failed in the domestic cups and built his reputation off the back of winning the thing multiple times with Sevilla.

So, surely he’d deliver this time as well?

Unfortunately for the Spaniard, what unfolded in the Azerbaijan capital must be one of the most one-sided European finals in recent memory as Chelsea dismantled an incredibly poor Arsenal side to win 4-1.

Read more: Eden Hazard’s greatest career moments

The first half ended goalless, but within 20 minutes of the restart, the Gunners were 3-0 down and facing a humiliation in front of the footballing world. Alex Iwobi pulled one back for the north Londoners, but the damage was done, and a fourth Chelsea goal just three minutes later compounded Arsenal’s misery.

The only reason this isn’t higher on the list is because it was so one-sided; we can’t call it the greatest game between the two sides, as only one team showed up that day.

1

2011: Chelsea 3-5 Arsenal

So, we’ve made it to our pick for the greatest game between these two sides, and we reckon a fair few of you will agree.

Now, there are usually a lot of goals when these two sides meet regardless of the competition, but the Premier League game at Stamford Bridge on 29th October 2011 took it to another level.

The eight goals scored on that day made this the highest-scoring encounter between Arsenal and Chelsea since the Gunners’ 5-4 victory back in March 1958.

Chelsea took the lead twice in the first half with a 14th-minute strike from Frank Lampard and a 45th-minute goal from John Terry, while Robin van Persie briefly gave the visitors parity in the 36th minute.

However, the Gunners soon took the lead in the second 45 thanks to goals from Andre Santos and Theo Walcott before the 55th minute.

Not sitting down, the home side once again levelled the scores in the 80th minute through Juan Mata, but two more strikes from Van Persie in the final stages of the match took the game away from the hosts and gave the men in red a famous away victory.

And there we have it, our picks for the top ten games between Arsenal and Chelsea. Let’s hope Saturday’s encounter can give us another classic.

What needs to happen before USMNT star Gio Reyna ‘blows up’ – with Nottingham Forest team-mate Matt Turner seeing plenty to get excited about in frustrating loan spell

It remains a matter of time before Gio Reyna “blows up”, says Matt Turner, with the USMNT star’s potential clear for all to see at Nottingham Forest.

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  • Playmaker left Dortmund for Reds loan
  • Struggled for game time in England
  • Expected to come good at some stage
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The 21-year-old playmaker has endured a frustrating time at the City Ground on the back of his loan move from Borussia Dortmund in the winter transfer window. Injuries have held Reyna back at times, but he has seen just 39 minutes of action across four substitute appearances.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Reyna is in danger of flopping in England as Forest bid to avoid relegation out of the Premier League. He may return to Germany in the summer with more questions being asked of his future and ability to deliver on lofty expectations.

  • WHAT TURNER SAID ABOUT REYNA

    Turner claims to have no concerns in that department, with the USMNT goalkeeper – who faces his own problems at Forest – telling the of a countryman that he keeps a close eye on in training: “I watch him train every day and I see such a smart and gifted player. I know that he could help our national team a ton… I think it's a matter of time with him finding a perfect scenario before he really blows up.”

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    WHAT NEXT FOR REYNA?

    Forest do not look like being the “perfect scenario” for Reyna, as they cannot afford to take risks in a thrilling basement battle. Another move may be on the cards this summer, with Reyna hoping to savour CONCACAF Nations League glory with his country before then going on to form part of Copa America plans.

Arsenal team news: Arteta must unleash his "difference maker"

Arsenal are back in action this evening following the international break, and what better way to return than with a London derby at Stamford Bridge, as the Gunners visit Chelsea in the Premier League.

Mikel Arteta’s side remain unbeaten in the 2023/24 league campaign, sitting in second place narrowly behind Tottenham Hotspur on the mere basis of goals scored, contrasting to Mauricio Pochettino’s start to life in west London.

The Blues currently sit in 11th having won three, drawn two and lost three from their opening eight fixtures, yet they have started to build some momentum of late, making this evening's affair just that bit more feisty.

What is the latest Arsenal team news against Chelsea?

Arsenal signed off before the international break with a statement win against Manchester City, beating Pep Guardiola’s side in the league for the first time since 2015 in a well-fought 1-0 win at the Emirates.

Arteta’s side will be hoping to build further from their stellar victory by beating Chelsea this evening, with the motivation there to replicate the win at Stamford Bridge against the Blues last term.

Arsenal beat City without their star man Bukayo Saka, who was sidelined due to injury, with the manager confirming that he can’t determine the Englishman’s fitness up until a pre-match fitness test.

Another scare has since surfaced with Arteta revealing in his pre-match press conference that William Saliba will also require a late fitness check, as he nurses a toe injury that saw him withdraw from international duty, with Leandro Trossard in a similar situation.

There could be some rotation evident from the squad that beat Manchester City 13 days ago, with positive news being the return of midfield enforcer Thomas Partey.

Should Thomas Partey start against Chelsea?

After missing four Premier League games due to a groin injury, Partey re-joined the squad as a second-half substitute against City, where Jorginho was given the nod ahead of him as he eases back into match fitness.

Lauded as a “difference maker” by journalist Eduardo Hagn, Arteta could finally unleash his best midfield combination against Pochettino's men with Declan Rice, Partey and Martin Odegaard theoretically posing to be the strongest trio in contention at the Emirates.

Former Blues forward Kai Havertz had been deployed in the middle of the park in place of Partey during his absence, however the former Atletico Madrid maestro has a presence that cannot be matched in Arsenal’s current options.

Considering the threat that Enzo Fernandez poses in building play from deep in Chelsea’s midfield, starting Partey from the off could be a decisive factor in Arsenal getting the win at Stamford Bridge.

The Argentine averages 10.89 progressive passes per 90 this season in the Premier League, the highest of any midfielder, as per FBref, highlighting the influence he can exert on those ahead of him from the engine room.

On the other hand is Partey, who if paired with Rice, could relieve the pressure of defensive duties on the Englishman, suggested by his average of 2.54 tackles per 90 last term, as well as his ball-carrying ability with 50.67 carries per 90, via FBref.

The combination of the Ghana international and Arsenal’s £105m man could smother any pressure hoping to be stemmed from Fernandez, with a pivot that can both be the anchor and progress effortlessly in transition.

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