Aston Villa
Which summer signings could make Premier League debuts in Gameweek 4
Several deadline-day signings could make Premier League debuts in Gameweek 4 on Sept. 13 Watch live
The Premier League returns on Saturday, Sept. 13 after the September international break, and Gameweek 4 could bring a series of first appearances for players who arrived on deadline day. With many newcomers away for World Cup qualifiers and international friendlies immediately after signing, this weekend offers fans an early chance to see them in club colours.
At Liverpool, Alexander Isak is the most high-profile candidate for a league debut. Isak came on for Sweden during the international break in an upset loss to Kosovo. His preseason was disrupted by a standoff with his former club, but manager Arne Slot has suggested the striker is part of a long-term plan and that Liverpool will manage his introduction. Hugo Ekitiké and Cody Gakpo are also in the squad and could influence selection.
Aston Villa completed two deadline arrivals and Unai Emery will be keen to get both Jadon Sancho and Harvey Elliott on the pitch quickly. Sancho left Manchester United after being peripheral to Ruben Amorim’s plans at United this summer and now has an opportunity to impress his new manager. Elliott departs Liverpool as a Premier League champion and could have extra motivation to prove himself.
Manchester City reshaped the goalkeeper department with the arrivals of Gianluigi Donnarumma, James Trafford and Marcus Bettinelli after Éderson moved to Fenerbahçe. Trafford’s difficult outing against Tottenham Hotspur during the window may have influenced City’s business. Donnarumma could be in line to stake a claim for the number one role, with the Manchester derby a possible debut stage.
Newcastle lost Alexander Isak and brought in Nick Woltemade and Yoane Wissa late in the window. Wissa scored 19 goals for Brentford last season while Woltemade netted 12 in the Bundesliga for VfB Stuttgart. Eddie Howe also added Anthony Elanga earlier in the summer, giving the club multiple attacking options.
Tottenham Hotspur reshaped their attack with Randal Kolo Muani and Xavi Simons. Kolo Muani can provide cover amid Dominic Solanke’s injury concerns and Simons is expected to play a creative role while James Maddison is set to miss a considerable period.
Below is a brief club-player list mentioned in this piece:
Arsenal: Piero Hincapié
Bournemouth: Veljko Milosavljević
Brentford: Reiss Nelson
Brighton & Hove Albion: Charalampos Kostoulas
Burnley: Florentino Luís
Chelsea: Alejandro Garnacho
Crystal Palace: Christantus Uche
Everton: Tyler Dibling
Fulham: Kevin
Manchester United: Senne Lammens
Nottingham Forest: Oleksandr Zinchenko
Sunderland: Lutsharel Geertruida
Wolverhampton Wanderers: Tolu Arokodare
Aston Villa
Next five fixtures: how Man Utd, Aston Villa, Liverpool and Chelsea stack up
Next five fixtures for Man Utd, Aston Villa, Liverpool and Chelsea will influence the top-five race.
The 30th weekend of Premier League action closed with results that tightened the conversation around the top five. Manchester United, Aston Villa, Liverpool and Chelsea each confront runs of fixtures that could define their finishes.
Aston Villa’s reverse at Old Trafford was another disappointing entry on a poor run of form. Arsenal sit 19 points clear of Emery’s side, and the defeat was notable for Ollie Watkins being withdrawn after an hour. Morgan Rogers was also ineffective in that match.
Chelsea suffered their own setback on Saturday. Referee Paul Tierney interfered with their pre-match routine and, as the coverage noted, “don’t forget folks, you must pay respect to the ball”. Liam Rosenior’s side conceded a preventable goal to Anthony Gordon.
Those two results helped Liverpool climb back into the Premier League top five, but they did not fully capitalise. Liverpool were held to a 1–1 draw by Tottenham Hotspur. The match featured a problematic moment from Guglielmo Vicario when facing Dominik Szoboszlai’s free-kick.
European results will influence whether five Premier League places for continental competition are available. After the first legs of the round of 16, the situation is less promising than it once appeared.
Fixtures coming up (next five):
Man Utd: Bournemouth (A) – March 20; Leeds (H) – April 13; Chelsea (A) – April 18; Liverpool (H) – May 2; Brentford (H) – April 27.
Aston Villa: West Ham (H) – March 22; Nott’m Forest (A) – April 11; Sunderland (H) – April 18; Fulham (A) – April 27; Tottenham (H) – May 2.
Liverpool: Brighton (A) – March 21; Fulham (H) – April 11; Everton (A) – April 19; Tottenham (H) – May 2; Man Utd (A) – May 2.
Chelsea: Everton (A) – March 21; Man City (H) – April 12; Man Utd (H) – April 18; Crystal Palace (H) – April 25; Brighton (A) – April 26.
Manchester United’s home run has included wins over Manchester City, Villa, Tottenham, Crystal Palace and Fulham. Three of United’s next five are at Old Trafford. Bournemouth’s form can vary, and there is a mouthwatering clash with Chelsea in the colloquially named Alejandro Garnacho derby.
Aston Villa’s schedule appears friendly on paper, but Emery’s Europa League glory hunters are low on confidence and rank in the bottom five for Premier League points picked up in 2026. West Ham and Nottingham Forest present real threats in fixtures that carry relegation stakes.
Aston Villa
United Hold Firm to Beat Villa as Fernandes Hits Century of Assists
United beat Villa 3-1 as Fernandes reached 100 assists for the club and Cunha supplied the finish…
Manchester United produced a controlled home display to defeat Aston Villa 3–1 at Old Trafford. Villa levelled early through Ross Barkley’s crisp left-foot drive, but Matheus Cunha turned the game with a well-timed run in behind Ezri Konsa and a composed finish beyond Martínez.
Bruno Fernandes again shaped the decisive moves. He was the architect of Cunha’s goal and, across the afternoon, accumulated his 15th and 16th assists of the 2025–26 Premier League season, taking him to 100 assists for the club. His brilliant pass for Cunha was his 16th assist of this Premier League season, breaking United’s club record previously held by David Beckham. Benjamin Šeško’s deflected effort later wrong-footed Martínez and put the result beyond doubt.
The match also underlined Casemiro’s return to form. Once criticised during 2024–25 and the target of the comment “Leave the football before the football leaves you,” from Jamie Carragher, Casemiro has since become a steadying presence. Approaching the end of his contract and having communicated that he’ll be leaving in the summer, he has stabilised things for Carrick since he took interim charge, complemented Kobbie Mainoo and added a renewed goal threat, including from set pieces. Fans may well hope for one more year if this level continues.
Player ratings:
GK: Senne Lammens—6.5: Barely called into action. Could do nothing to stop Barkley’s low drive.
RB: Diogo Dalot—7.3: Recalled for Noussair Mazraoui and justified his selection.
CB: Leny Yoro—7.7: Maturing and making better decisions; the back four switch suits him.
CB: Harry Maguire—7.4: A hooking on the hour-mark for Ollie Watkins underlines his handling of Villa’s main threat.
LB: Luke Shaw—7.4: Perhaps his most consistent spell in terms of performance and fitness.
CM: Casemiro—7.7: Another game, another goal for the serial Champions League winner.
CM: Kobbie Mainoo—8.0: Outperformed Amadou Onana and Ross Barkley, sending a strong signal to England manager Thomas Tuchel.
RM: Amad Diallo—7.7: Restored to the lineup for Šeško, solid but offered limited end product.
AM: Bruno Fernandes (c)—8.9: The standout, providing the decisive pass and a club-record assist tally.
LM: Matheus Cunha—7.9: A superbly timed run and finish.
ST: Bryan Mbeumo—6.5: Hard-working for 75 minutes but lacked clinical edge.
SUB: Benjamin Šeško (75’ for Mbeumo)—7.0: Converted to make it his eighth goal of the season.
SUB: Manuel Ugarte (90’ for Casemiro)—N/A
Unused subs: Altay Bayındır, Ayden Heaven, Tyler Fletcher, Noussair Mazraoui, Mason Mount, Joshua Zirkzeem, Tyrell Malacia.
Match stats: possession 53% to 47%, xG 1.07 to 1.02, shots 16 to 9, shots on target 6 to 2, big chances 3 each, passing accuracy 85% each, fouls 10 to 5.
Aston Villa
Carrick opts for pressing pace as Šeško starts on the bench against Aston Villa
Carrick benches Šeško for Villa, restoring Amad and deploying Mbeumo to lead the press and counters.
Michael Carrick has left Benjamin Šeško on the bench for the visit of Aston Villa, bringing Amad Diallo back into the starting lineup and moving Bryan Mbeumo to lead the attack. Carrick has restored the Cameroonian to the centre forward role, hoping the intense pressing that has powered recent improvements can also end a four-match scoring drought for Mbeumo.
United’s uptick under Carrick has involved discarding Ruben Amorim’s 3-4-2-1 structure in favour of a disciplined, organised press that has forced errors from Manchester City, Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur. That approach depends on relentless running from Mbeumo, Amad, Bruno Fernandes and Matheus Cunha to unsettle opponents and force mistakes.
Amad’s work on the right has been particularly noteworthy. His willingness to track back and support either Diogo Dalot or Noussair Mazraoui adds balance, and his tackling improved when he operated as a right wingback for Amorim. Mbeumo provides similar levels of running but is not as sharp in the tackle as Amad, according to the observations reported.
Durability also plays a part. Amad has completed the full 90 minutes in five of the seven Premier League matches he has started, while Šeško has had far fewer full matches. Šeško has shown value as an impact option, frequently coming on to replace either Mbeumo or Cunha depending on the state of a game.
Aston Villa arrive with injury issues but remain a compact defensive unit noted for their ability to absorb pressure and make it difficult to play through. Carrick may therefore favour players who can hurt Villa on the counter, prioritising acceleration and quick transitions. Mbeumo, Cunha and Amad offer that burst in abundance; Šeško is quick once at top speed but does not possess the same initial acceleration.
Fulfilling his prematch media duties, Carrick admitted taking Šeško out of the team was not a decision he took lightly.
“Yeah, we’ve just got a good forward line to choose from, and it’s just getting that balance right really from game to game.” he told Sky Sports. “Whether it’s starting the game, whether it’s the impact coming off the bench.
