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A VAR-Free Premier League Table at Christmas: Who Gains and Who Loses

Christmas Day table without VAR: Arsenal ahead, Chelsea and Palace fall, others shift places. today.

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Recalculating the Premier League standings as if VAR did not exist produces a noticeably different picture at Christmas. The most conspicuous change is at the top, where Arsenal and Manchester City trade places and end the day level on points.

Arsenal owe their two-point cushion over Manchester City to a favourable series of VAR calls against Everton as recently as last weekend. How it took an intervention from the VAR to spot Jake O’Brien’s attempted volleyball spike at the Hill Dickinson Stadium on Saturday night is a question for another day—and one referee Sam Barrott will not want to answer. Viktor Gyökeres converted the subsequent spot kick to secure Arsenal all three points and take them back above City this Christmas. Everton had a strong penalty appeal of their own overlooked by every official associated with the fixture.

Arsenal have topped the table on turkey day in four previous Premier League seasons and failed to win the title on each occasion. The last time Arsenal claimed first place on Dec. 25 and at the end of May was the 1947–48 campaign.

Revised table (position — points):
1. Man City — 37 (1 Up)
2. Arsenal — 37 (1 Down)
3. Aston Villa — 34
4. Liverpool — 32 (1 Up)
5. Brighton — 26 (4 Up)
6. Man Utd — 26 (1 Up)
7. Bournemouth — 26 (8 Up)
8. Chelsea — 25 (4 Down)
9. Sunderland — 25 (3 Down)
10. Fulham — 25 (3 Up)
11. Everton — 25 (1 Down)
12. Tottenham — 24 (2 Up)
13. Brentford — 24 (1 Down)
14. Crystal Palace — 24 (6 Down)
15. Newcastle — 22 (4 Down)
16. Leeds — 18
17. Nottingham Forest — 18
18. West Ham — 13
19. Burnley — 11
20. Wolves — 2

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Aston Villa’s progress is attributed to managerial work and xG over-performance rather than refereeing. Liverpool would be three points and one place better off without VAR after two penalties awarded to the opposition. Chelsea and Crystal Palace have benefited repeatedly from interventions; Chelsea have earned 0–0 draws thanks to the opposition having the game’s only “goal” chalked off. Bournemouth fans polled by The Athletic were 80% in favour of abolishing VAR. Andoni Iraola’s side have seen two wins taken from them by VAR decisions this season.

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Arsenal bring in throw-in specialist Thomas Grønnemark to seek marginal gains

Arsenal have enlisted Thomas Grønnemark to refine throw-ins as they chase marginal gains to win PL.

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Arsenal have taken an unusual step to refine a specific area of play as they chase marginal gains that could decide the title. The club already benefits from a recognised set-piece specialist, with Nicolas Jover credited for an outstanding corners return. Arsenal have scored 14 goals from corners, the leading mark in the Premier League so far this season, and the club wants to build on that advantage.

According to The Times, the Gunners have engaged Thomas Grønnemark on a consultancy basis. The 50-year-old is best known for his work with Liverpool but has also worked with Borussia Dortmund and Ajax. Mikel Arteta’s side hope Grønnemark can help “weaponise” throw-ins and provide the extra edge required to deliver the club a first Premier League title in 22 years come May.

Long throws and a more physical edge are again prominent in the English game, 15 years on from Rory Delap and Stoke City. Grønnemark was a former long-throw world record holder during his playing career, and his methods extend beyond pure distance.

Grønnemark has been credited with clear improvements at the clubs he has advised. He described his impact at Liverpool to BBC Radio Merseyside in 2024: “When I came, data showed that Liverpool were 18th in the Premier League for throw-ins under pressure,” he explained. “In my first season, we improved from 45.4% to 68.4% and went from 18th to number one.

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“People might think it’s only throw-ins, but there’s approximately 40 to 60 throw-ins in a match and they use up 20 minutes. It’s a gigantic thing in football. People have been neglecting this for many years.”

His recent work with Brentford has been visible in results. The Bees have scored nine Premier League goals from long throws since the start of last season, leading the division, with four each from Manchester United and Bournemouth the next best.

Posting on X in December 2025 as @ThomasThrowin, Grønnemark outlined his approach. “I work with throw-in tools,” he said “Throw-in basic training, throw-in small sided games, [teach] the players to scan, make the right types and length of run, reading the opponents defending pattern, use individual throw-in supers powers, throw-in sequences, unlimited space creation and much more. ]”

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Saka’s New Five-Year Deal Makes Him Arsenal’s Top Earner and a Premier League High-Drinker

Saka’s five-year deal to 2031 reportedly raises his pay to about £300,000 per week.

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Bukayo Saka has agreed a new five-year contract at Arsenal that will run until the summer of 2031 and, according to The Guardian, lift his weekly pay to roughly £300,000. That figure would make him the club’s highest earner and place him among the best-paid players in the Premier League.

Saka was thought to be on £200,000 per week under his previous deal, which was due to expire in 2027, meaning the reported increase represents around 50 percent.

The Guardian’s reporting also identified Kai Havertz as Arsenal’s previous top earner, on about £280,000 per week. Saka, still only 24 and a homegrown player, has emerged as a clear leader at the club and regularly wears the captain’s armband when Martin Ødegaard is unavailable.

Club contract planning appears to continue beyond Saka. Ødegaard is set to be one of the next in line for fresh terms as his deal expires in 2028, while Declan Rice has been billed as the extension priority. Rice is described in reports as an all-action midfielder, “arguably the club’s most important and best player, transforming the complexion of the team with his inclusion.” Those same reports contrast the drop-off between Saka and Noni Madueke, or Ødegaard and Eberechi Eze, with the more marked difference when Rice is not on the pitch.

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Saka will not eclipse Arsenal’s highest-paid player ever. Mesut Özil reportedly had six months remaining on a deal worth about £350,000 per week when he left the club in January 2021.

On the wider Premier League stage, Saka’s reported wage still sits below the division’s top earners. The Telegraph reported Mohamed Salah’s extension would see him earn up to £480,000 per week with bonuses and a base rate near £400,000 per week. The Guardian reported Erling Haaland’s nine-and-a-half-year deal as worth around £500,000 per week. Even among English players Saka is not the highest earner: Jack Grealish is reported to earn a similar £300,000 per week at Manchester City and Raheem Sterling about £325,000 per week, per The Times. The draft report notes that neither Grealish nor Sterling have been capped for England by Thomas Tuchel and are yet to play a single minute of Premier League football for their paymasters this season.

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Saka Agrees Five-Year Deal to 2031 as Arsenal Secure Another Academy Pillar

Saka agrees a five-year deal to 2031 as Arsenal tie down another academy talent and core players 24.

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Bukayo Saka has agreed a new five-year contract at Arsenal on an improved salary, keeping the 24-year-old firmly in the club’s plans and out of reach of several unnamed suitors.

Asked in November why he appeared relaxed about the situation, the Arsenal boss said: “I prefer that word, I think it is confidence,” he told assembled media. “What Bukayo has transmitted to me and the club, and Emeka [Obasi, Saka’s agent] as well, is that they want to continue to be here. “It’s a very healthy and powerful relationship. The journey that he has had at the club and what he has become is something we want to maintain. That is something that is going to leave a legacy at this club and he needs to fulfil that role.”

The Athletic reported the new deal runs until the summer of 2031. The exact figures were not disclosed, the report saying the wage will “recognise his standing” in the game.

The same report added that, should he ever become attainable, Saka is “wanted by the biggest clubs in world football.” For now, the prospect of the winger leaving the club he joined aged seven appears remote.

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Arsenal have moved to lock down a group of academy graduates and key defenders in recent months. Myles Lewis-Skelly and Ethan Nwaneri were tied to 2030, while William Saliba and Gabriel Magalhães agreed new deals in the last seven months. Jurriën Timber is thought to be next in line for a renewal.

On the field, Saka’s form has had peaks and troughs. He teed up Arsenal’s first two goals of a 5–2 win at West Ham United on Nov. 30, 2024, taking his season total to 10 Premier League assists, but he did not register another top-flight assist until the 1–1 draw with Chelsea on Nov. 30, 2025. This season the regular penalty taker has three goals from open play and three top-flight assists, a return that Leeds United’s Brenden Aaronson can better in the Premier League.

Statistically Saka remains influential. FBref shows him fourth for xG+xA per 90 (0.60) among regulars, behind Erling Haaland, Jérémy Doku and Enzo Fernández and ahead of Hugo Ekitiké, correct as of Jan. 9, 2026.

His display against Liverpool underlined both his threat and recent frustrations, repeatedly skirting past Milos Kerkez and creating chances that teammates failed to convert. A first prolonged spell in the treatment room coincided with a dip in output, yet he has two assists in four appearances since Christmas Day. The presence of Noni Madueke should allow Arteta to manage Saka’s minutes and ease fitness concerns while adding competition.

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