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VAR Overturns Arsenal Penalty at Craven Cottage After Kevin Touch Deemed Playing the Ball

VAR overturned Arsenal penalty at Craven Cottage after Kevin was ruled to have played the ball later

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Arsenal were denied a penalty at Craven Cottage after VAR determined a Fulham player touched the ball before contact with Bukayo Saka. Saka drove into the Fulham area and a lunging challenge from the Fulham number 22 left him on the turf as the ball ran away. Referee Anthony Taylor initially pointed to the spot and play was stopped for what looked like a clear penalty.

The decision was then referred to VAR and, after an extended review, Taylor announced the reversal. “After review, Fulham 22 (Kevin) makes a challenge and plays the ball. Therefore, no foul is committed. No penalty and restart is a drop ball to the goalkeeper,” Taylor announced.

The ruling left the Gunners without a spot kick while they remained a goal ahead at that point in the match. The incident recalled a similar overturn less than a month earlier at St. James’ Park when Arsenal had a penalty chalked off against Newcastle United.

In that earlier case Viktor Gyökeres had collided with goalkeeper Nick Pope in a one-vs-one situation and Jarred Gillett originally awarded a penalty. Gillett later reversed his decision after VAR. “After review, the Newcastle goalkeeper plays the ball and there is no foul. The final decision is drop ball,” Gillett said. Gillett also revealed, because of a hot mic, that Pope got a touch on the ball with his toe.

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Arsenal went on to win that Newcastle game 2–1 thanks to a late goal by Gabriel. The club did receive a penalty the following week against West Ham at Emirates Stadium.

The Craven Cottage decision continues a recent pattern of penalties being overturned on VAR review when officials determine the goalkeeper or defender played the ball first. For Arsenal, the reversed award against Fulham came at a moment when the team held the lead, leaving a frustrated side and supporters to debate the fine margins VAR is policing.

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Eberechi Eze reveals decision behind Arsenal move

Eberechi Eze says he was ready to join Spurs before Arsenal’s late bid sealed his move in detail…

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Eberechi Eze has outlined how a late approach from Arsenal changed the course of his summer. Spurs appeared to be leading negotiations in mid-August after James Maddison suffered a serious knee injury and the accepted departure of Son Heung-min led Tottenham to seek a new creative outlet. Talks were held, personal terms had been accepted and Crystal Palace were reportedly content with a £55 million ($73.2 million) fee on the table.

Speaking during a return to his former secondary school, Eze acknowledged the strength of Tottenham’s position. “I was prepared to go to Tottenham,” Eze admitted, as quoted by The Athletic, “but from the moment Arsenal came, it was always going to be them.”

Those Arsenal discussions were not brand new. Eze had a meeting with Mikel Arteta and sporting director Andrea Berta several weeks before Tottenham formalised their interest, informing his boyhood club he was eager to return to the Emirates. The Gunners had been weighing options that included Morgan Gibbs-White and Morgan Rogers before Eze intervened.

On the day he was due to sign for Spurs, the 27-year-old rang Arteta to check whether a move to Arsenal remained possible. When a £67.5 million deal was later completed, the Spanish manager reflected, “That shows you how much he wanted to come,” underlining the forward momentum behind the transfer.

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Adjustment to Arsenal has presented challenges. Eze arrived from a Crystal Palace side built to sweep forward on the break and has yet to replicate his previous creative output. Across seven Premier League appearances for Arsenal this season, he has created just two chances from open play, fewer than seven of his teammates.

Crystal Palace travel to the Emirates on Sunday afternoon with a compact shape that is likely to limit the space Eze enjoyed at Selhurst Park, but Arteta remains confident the midfielder can make an impact on what promises to be a “special” occasion.

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Ten leading contenders for the 2025 Golden Boy award

A concise ranking of the 10 leading Golden Boy 2025 contenders based on performances and moves. 2025

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The Golden Boy award once again gathers a wide field of candidates. Past winners include Lionel Messi, Wayne Rooney, Kylian Mbappé, Erling Haaland and Lamine Yamal, and the 2025 list contains a mix of established youngsters and fresh faces who have made notable moves or produced important minutes.

Warren Zaïre-Emery: A breakout figure across 2023–24, he made 32 starts for Paris Saint-Germain in a season that delivered four major pieces of silverware. Despite that, his minutes in the Champions League were limited as Luis Enrique favoured a midfield trio of Vitinha, João Neves and Fabián Ruíz. Zaïre-Emery finished 2024–25 with five goal contributions.

Franco Mastantuono: The young Argentine earned a reputation at River Plate and moved to Real Madrid in the summer. Mastantuono shone at the Club World Cup and Xabi Alonso entrusted the creative teenager with significant responsibility on arrival in Madrid.

Ethan Nwaneri: Called upon amid Arsenal injury problems, Nwaneri stepped in at the turn of the year. The Premier League’s youngest-ever player in 2022 delivered key performances in victories over Leicester City, PSV Eindhoven and Manchester City, operating off the right or infield.

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Arda Güler: Carlo Ancelotti gave him only rare chances, but after impressing at the Club World Cup Xabi Alonso has made Güler a regular in the Madrid midfield. He is a versatile playmaker brought in to help replace the control lost with the retirements and departures of senior midfield figures.

Myles Lewis-Skelly: The Hale End graduate emerged as Arsenal’s breakout late in 2024, displacing Riccardo Calafiori and earning an England call-up in March, when he scored on his debut. His strength and fit for an inverted role helped his rise.

Estêvão: Seen on social clips and at the Club World Cup, the Brazilian agreed to join Chelsea after the tournament. He finished fourth in the 2025 Kopa Trophy and opened his Stamford Bridge account with a late strike that beat Liverpool before the October international break.

Dean Huijsen: After Bournemouth accepted Juventus’s offer, Real Madrid paid £50 million ($66.5 million) a year later. Huijsen was one of the Premier League’s standout defenders for the Cherries, though his early Madrid spell included two harsh red cards.

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Pau Cubarsí: Barcelona’s defender finished seventh in the Kopa Trophy. He played a key part in a side that won three pieces of silverware and nearly reached the Champions League final, forming a strong partnership with Iñigo Martínez.

Kenan Yıldız: After his 2023–24 breakthrough, Yıldız was given Juventus’s No. 10 shirt and delivered consistent performances down Juve’s left flank, with several notable contributions coming in 2024.

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2025/26 FPL: Gameweek 9 player picks and the Oct. 24 deadline

FPL Gameweek 9 picks: goalkeepers, defenders and forwards to consider for the Oct. 24 deadline. BST.

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Gameweek 9 offers few standout heavyweight clashes, which can make it an ideal week for FPL managers hunting steady returns. Below are considered selections drawn from the current form and fixtures ahead of the Oct. 24 deadline.

Goalkeepers: David Raya (£5.7m) is highlighted for clean sheet potential after conceding just three times in all competitions this season and is described as a set-and-forget option. Nick Pope (£5.2m) sits as FPL’s second-highest scoring goalkeeper through the opening eight rounds and has kept three clean sheets in his last four matches in all competitions, with Newcastle hosting Fulham on Saturday. Robert Sánchez (£4.9m) is the cheaper alternative; he will be aiming for a shutout at home to Sunderland, who have scored in only one of their four away games.

Defenders: Marc Cucurella (£6.1m) offers attacking and defensive upside, having delivered 15 points across his past two matches and creating 11 chances for Chelsea this term. Gabriel (£6.4m) is the leading defensive candidate, having provided more points than any other defender this term and 45 in his last five Premier League matches. Marcos Senesi (£5.0m) is the obvious Bournemouth route into defence at home to Nottingham Forest, with 48 points this term. Dan Burn (£5.1m), Kieran Trippier (£5.0m) and Joe Rodon (£4.1m) are also noted as solid defensive choices.

Midfield and attack: Antoine Semenyo (£8.1m) has outscored other midfielders by 24 points and is a must-have at home to Forest, having produced five-plus points in all his home games. Declan Rice (£6.6m) could benefit from Arsenal’s set-piece threat at home to Palace. Bukayo Saka (£10.0m) remains a reliable long-term option despite fitness setbacks.

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Forwards: Erling Haaland (£14.7m) remains a must-have after 11 goals in eight league games and is primed to score as Manchester City visit Aston Villa. Cody Gakpo (£7.5m) has scored in his past five matches for club and country and faces Brentford. Igor Thiago (£6.1m) is a budget gamble after five league goals in eight matches.

Reminder: The Gameweek 9 deadline is 6:30 p.m. BST (1:30 p.m. ET, 10:30 a.m. PT) on Oct. 24.

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