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Defensive Failings and a Missed Spot Kick: United Fall 3-1 at Brentford

United’s defensive frailty cost them at the Gtech; Fernandes missed a penalty; Jensen finished late.

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Manchester United’s defensive collapse at the Gtech Community Stadium left them trailing and ultimately defeated in a 3-1 loss to Brentford. An early unsettlement left United two goals down inside 20 minutes and the damage proved decisive. Mathias Jensen’s late rocket compounded the visitors’ misery and ensured Brentford sealed the win.

There was an added subplot around Amorim. A win would have given him back-to-back Premier League victories for the first time and followed his successive home wins that included victory over Chelsea last weekend. Instead, Amorim watched his side’s confidence evaporate as they were sliced open repeatedly in the opening stages, with the coach forced to assess how his team would respond.

United fielded their new-look front three together for the first time this season. Over £200 million ($267.7 million) of talent led the line in west London. Benjamin Šeško reduced Brentford’s lead and opened his account for his new employers, firing home from close range with his fifth attempt of the first 26 minutes. Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo both looked lively when receiving possession in pockets, and Cunha was United’s leading attacking threat after the restart. A move down the right produced a cross that resulted in a penalty after Mbeumo was dragged to the turf. Bruno Fernandes was unable to convert from 12 yards for the second time this season.

Set pieces and direct play proved United’s undoing. Amorim had his side on extensive set-piece defence practice during the warm-up at the Gtech, but it had zero impact on United’s ability to counter Brentford’s direct approach. Long balls allowed Thiago to net an early brace, with even the aerially dominant Matthijs de Ligt and Harry Maguire overpowered. Michael Kayode’s long throws and Mikkel Damsgaard’s corner deliveries repeatedly tested United, forcing Altay Bayındır into action between the home side’s first-half strikes.

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The defeat leaves United 12th in the Premier League and they could finish Gameweek 6 as low as 17th. The defensive issues will demand answers as the season progresses.

Brentford

February 2026: Premier League nominees for Player and Manager of the Month

February nominees for Premier League player and manager of the month reflect a competitive month. 26

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The Premier League has published the nominees for February’s player and manager of the month awards, a list that reflects a busy and decisive four weeks.

Brentford will be represented by Dango Ouattara, who contributed two goals and two assists, including match-winners against Aston Villa and Newcastle United. Ouattara was also instrumental in Brentford’s 1–1 draw with Arsenal. Igor Thiago will not be defending his January player prize amid his club’s collective dip in form.

Viktor Gyökeres produced mixed returns. He failed to register a single shot at the Gtech Community Stadium on a sodden night but had been on target five days earlier with a second-half brace against Sunderland. He then added two more goals in the north London derby. Mikel Arteta dismissed the idea that Gyökeres had undergone any drastic changes, instead putting that double down to the particular game state, and accepted it was the best display of a debut campaign that has had its ups and downs.

Manchester City’s push has been aided by Antoine Semenyo and Nico O’Reilly. Both players out-scored Erling Haaland in February and exemplified a tactical tweak from Pep Guardiola. O’Reilly’s return to midfield supplied the physical, dynamic profile to allow a diamond between a front two that has often included Semenyo and Haaland.

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Benjamin Šeško scored three goals, each directly earning Manchester United a positive result. Without those contributions United would be five points worse off, dropping from third in the table to sixth. Virgil van Dijk returned to something approaching his best form during February, though he produced a desperately unconvincing display to begin March.

Michael Carrick is once again among the managerial nominees. United collected 10 points from a possible 12 even if some of the performances were, to borrow Carrick’s own word, “stodgy.” Were the interim hire to claim February’s gong, he would become the first manager since Ange Postecoglou in September and October 2023 to win the award in back-to-back months.

Keith Andrews has yet to win a monthly prize this season despite steering Brentford into a fight for European qualification after a disruptive summer. February was patchy for the Bees, with questionable VAR decisions helping them scrape four points against Burnley and Bournemouth. Arne Slot’s nomination arrives after Liverpool began the month with a loss to Manchester City, navigated scratchy 1–0 wins over Sunderland and Nottingham Forest, and closed with a 5–2 victory described in the draft as perhaps the least convincing of its kind. Nottingham Forest were the only team to collect four wins in February.

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Arsenal

How the Modern Market Made the Most Valuable 18-Year-Olds

Modern transfer inflation produced record valuations for 18-year-olds; injuries and timing mattered..

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“Old age and treachery will always beat youth and exuberance.” That observation sits oddly beside the transfer market of the last decade, where inflated fees have produced the most valuable 18-year-olds in football history. Transfermarkt’s crowd-sourced estimations reflect what a player might fetch on the open market on their 18th birthday and are a reminder that a world record fee in 1958 would be the equivalent of £91,000 ($123,000) today.

Chelsea committed an initial €34 million to sign Estêvão from Palmeiras when he was only 17 in 2024. By the time he was allowed to join the Blues after turning 18 his valuation had risen sharply. The Brazilian has impressed coaches and teammates with his talent and humility. “The hardest challenge has been the weather,” he laughed midway through his first season in England.

At Arsenal, Ethan Nwaneri first captivated attention when he became the youngest Premier League player at 15 with a late appearance at Brentford. Mikel Arteta has taken a cautious route to his development. “I am responsible for building a career for him. You have to do that brick by brick,” he said, adding a longer metaphor about cementing each stage. “Now we have to put some cement, make sure it doesn’t get dry so we can put another one and that will stick. Then we put one more layer, one more layer. “If you want to put five bricks in a row, believe me, it won’t work.”

Lucien Favre on Jude Bellingham offered a different perspective: “With someone like him, I don’t look at the date of birth.” Bellingham was rated at €55 million as an 18-year-old and Real Madrid paid €103 million in the summer of 2023. His first year produced 23 goals, 13 assists, a La Liga title and the Champions League.

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Real Madrid also paid €47.5 million for Endrick a year before Estêvão and later spent €30 million on Reinier. Endrick managed one La Liga goal in his first 18 months in Spain.

Warren Zaïre-Emery started more than half of Paris Saint-Germain’s league games at 18 while competing for midfield places; his agent Jorge Mendes suggested his client could become a Ballon d’Or winner. Gavi made his senior Spain debut at 17; Emerson Palmieri admitted, “I didn’t know him,” and by 18 Gavi was among the planet’s most valuable midfielders.

Lennart Karl’s breakthrough at Bayern included the candid remark: “FC Bayern is a very big club. It’s a dream to play there. But at some point I definitely want to go to Real Madrid,” he naïvely told a cluster of fans. “That [Madrid] is my dream club, but let’s keep that between us.”

Pau Cubarsí displayed early composure after an under-11s sending off and, under Hansi Flick’s use of an offside trap, reached his 100th appearance for Barcelona while still 18.

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Ansu Fati’s decline can be traced to a rupture of his meniscus one week after turning 18 in November 2020. He was out for 10 months. Before that first injury he had played 43 games with 13 goals and 5 assists and averaged a goal or assist every 109.7 minutes. After the injury he played 80 games with 16 goals and 5 assists and averaged a goal or assist every 159.1 minutes. Matches missed through injury are listed as 2.

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Analytics & Stats

Arteta Justifies Half-Time Change After Quiet Eze Display

Arteta withdrew Eberechi Eze at half-time after 17 touches; Arsenal require more creative outputs.

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Mikel Arteta explained the decision to withdraw Eberechi Eze at half time of Thursday’s 1–1 draw with Brentford after a subdued first 45 minutes at the Gtech Community Stadium. The £67.5 million ($91.9 million) signing was tasked with being Arsenal’s chief source of creativity but touched the ball just 17 times, completed nine passes from 11 attempted, made no chances and had no shots. His combined xG and xA for one half stood at 0.02.

Arteta did not launch a broad critique but was unequivocal about the tactical need to alter the profile on the pitch. “With the way [Brentford] were pressing, we needed another kind of profile to generate many more problems for them around those areas. [Martin Ødegaard] came on really well and the team had another gear and more threat to arrive in the areas we wanted to. That’s the decision.” Ødegaard had begun the game on the bench after recent fitness issues and his introduction altered Arsenal’s attacking approach.

Eze’s early season highlight was a hat-trick in the North London Derby in late November, but he has not scored or assisted for Arsenal in any competition since three days after that game. He spent a spell out of the side in December into January, sitting on the bench for four consecutive Premier League matches, all wins, and Thursday marked his first league start in two months.

Season averages per 90, via Fotmob and accurate as of Feb. 13, 2026, include 0.32 goals, 0.20 xG, 0.16 assists and 0.14 xA, with 0.24 big chances created, 3.42 touches in the opposition box and 1.59 successful dribbles.

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Arteta added context on adaptation and the specific challenges posed by Brentford’s physical approach. “I think he had moments and it’s not easy when you move to a new club, it’s always like this,” Arteta offered. “When you play against a team like [Brentford], the ball is not on the floor a lot and you have to be constantly breaking the play. To do that, especially for attacking and creative players, is more difficult.”

With Kai Havertz sidelined for at least the next three fixtures and Mikel Merino out for most or all of the rest of the season, Arsenal’s schedule in four competitions will offer Eze further chances to respond on the pitch. Based on current form, his place in England’s 2026 World Cup plans feels at risk.

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