Declan Rice blossoming for Arsenal in attacking role after goal and assist vs Bournemouth – Premier League hits and misses | Football News
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Rice blossoming as an attacker for Arsenal
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Declan Rice is best known for his defensive qualities but the 25-year-old’s performances this season might require a reassessment. He has become a lethal attacker under Mikel Arteta.
He provided the assist for Leandro Trossard’s crucial second goal in Arsenal’s 3-0 win over Bournemouth on Saturday, flicking the ball to him instinctively with the outside of his boot, then added the third himself with a cool finish on the angle in stoppage time.
Rice now has seven goals and eight assists in the Premier League this season, the fourth-highest combined total of any Arsenal player and more than twice as many as he has ever previously managed. “To do that in this league is something else,” said Arteta afterwards.
His goal involvements only told part of the story on Saturday. Rice caught the eye on numerous occasions, his drive in and out of possession pushing Arsenal upfield at times and helping to stem the tide at others. “Declan Rice, we got him half price,” was the chant from the home fans at the final whistle.
Thomas Partey’s introduction at the base of midfield has helped, giving the £105m signing the freedom to bomb forward from the No 8 position. But Rice’s increased attacking threat has been apparent all season. This was just the latest example.
Nick Wright
Newcastle narrative changing with strong season end
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It wasn’t too long ago Eddie Howe was fielding questions about his Newcastle players being on the beach.
But four wins from five, and 27 points from 14 games following a four-game losing streak either side of New Year, have changed the narrative around St James’ Park.
Howe has never looked under any sustained pressure but having reached the Champions League 12 months ago, the prospect of missing out on European football altogether would have been a tough pill to swallow this time around.
Of course, that is still a very real possibility. But the Magpies are the form team of those chasing those final two European spots, are now the top scorers outside of Man City and Arsenal and have one of their rivals for those positions, Man Utd, still to come in their final three games.
It could easily have been a gloomy end to the campaign for Newcastle, who have suffered badly with injuries during the season which has tested a squad with a talented and expensive first XI, but limited options in reserve.
If anything, Saturday’s win at Burnley was a reminder of the depth that needs adding to the squad in the summer. With Alexander Isak, Callum Wilson and Anthony Gordon all on the pitch and firing – the first time all three have started a game this season – they looked a constant threat and as dangerous in transition as any Premier League side.
It’s when their top talent are not available, or are overworked, that things begin to tail off quickly, and that is what must be addressed before the start of next season.
Ron Walker
Final third improvement next season the focus for Brentford and Fulham
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Heading to the Gtech Community Stadium in the spring sunshine, there was hope two teams with nothing much to play for beyond local bragging rights would cut loose and serve up an entertaining, goal-filled contest. It wasn’t to be.
Bryan Mbeumo’s deflected shot hit the bar in the first half and sub Raul Jimenez spurned a good opening late on but these two teams – despite bringing intensity to this derby – both proved to be badly lacking in the final third.
The visitors repeatedly failed to make good positions count, with crosses drifting away from Fulham players and some wayward passing from the disappointing Willian not helping. Birthday boy Rodrigo Muniz was not at his best, Andreas Pereira was off target and Fulham have now drawn a blank 12 times this term – only Sheffield United have done so more.
As for Brentford, there was encouraging link-up play between Mbeumo and Ivan Toney but the latter has now gone 10 games without a goal, while Keane Lewis-Potter was a nuisance for Fulham but nothing more.
The real work for these sides is done. Brentford are safe and Fulham are settled in mid-table. But the area to work on in the summer is clear…
Peter Smith
Hudson-Odoi brilliance ignites Forest fire
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Luton need at least four points to drag themselves above Nottingham Forest in the final two games. To put that in perspective, it is the same number of points they have taken from their last 12 games. That is why the Opta predictor has them at 95 per cent likely to go down.
This was a cathartic afternoon for Nuno Espirito Santo, who saw Ryan Yates’ strike survive a VAR review. So often, when the lines have been drawn or when incidents have been taken to Stockley Park, fortune hasn’t favoured them.
But the release of emotion from the away end when referee Chris Kavanagh awarded the goal – and again at full time – tells you how this could prove a seminal moment in Forest’s season.
There were 32 chances in a game that ebbed and flowed. Sheffied United had a superior xG – 2.27 to 1.49 – had more shots and more possession. But there was more conviction from the visitors, and quality.
Callum Hudson-Odoi produced two picture-book goals to help Forest overcome a dreadful start at Bramall Lane and register a first away win since Boxing Day.
That came at Newcastle with the other coming at Stamford Bridge. Their situation at the foot of the table could look even rosier if an appeal against a four-point deduction for breaking financial rules is successful, with news expected next week.
But another victory over Chelsea regardless next weekend will see Nuno’s spirited side over the line.
Ben Grounds
Blunt Blades claim unwanted record
Sheffield United’s horrible campaign hit a new low as Hudson-Odoi’s second was the 100th goal they have conceded, making them the first Premier League team to rack up a century in a 38-game season, with Swindon doing it in 1993-94 over 42 games.
There is therefore very little once more for Chris Wilder to be encouraged from this latest home defeat, having again been so wasteful with their chances.
The last side to concede more in a 38-game top-flight campaign was Leicester City in 1908-09 (102) – and it is Sheffield United’s porous defence for which they have gained notoriety this term.
United’s only clean sheet in the league this season came in December’s 1-0 home win over Brentford.
Swindon, who propped up the table in 1993/94, were until now the only team to concede a century of goals in a season since the top flight’s rebranding the year prior to that.
The Blades had already surpassed Derby’s 38-game record of 89 after their 4-2 defeat to Manchester United left them on 92 goals against. A 5-1 hammering by Newcastle confirmed their relegation and took them to 97 before they shipped three at home to Forest.
Their average of 2.78 goals conceded per game is far beyond Swindon’s previous worst of 2.38. And, with two games still to play, away to Everton and at home to Tottenham, the record will surely be broken.
Ben Grounds
Luton’s end game edging ever closer
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Luton Town may well look back on Friday night as the one where safety slipped away.
Rob Edwards still talked a good game post-match. He used words like resilience, fight and spirit. He told reporters that belief of staying up still resonates. But time is running out.
This felt like an opportunity begging to be taken. Sean Dyche’s Everton delivered a fairly rudimentary display, and played like a side whose hard graft had already been done, having secured safety against Brentford last weekend.
Dyche admitted as much: “We lost our way… there is that feeling that we’ve done our work,” he said.
The harsh reality is that Luton have only won once in their last 15. Since the start of February, they’ve shipped 46 goals in all competitions, the most of any side in Europe’s big-five leagues, also failing to keep a clean sheet. It’s hard to look beyond the stark facts.
The Hatters remained defiant and chased the game, bombarding the Everton box late on and registered six shots in stoppage time, but it wasn’t enough. The threat of relegation continues to loom large and now, for all Luton’s impressive endeavour and Edwards’ never-say-die attitude, the end game looks near.
Laura Hunter
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