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Carabao Cup

Maresca lashes out at half-time as Chelsea scrape past Lincoln in Carabao Cup

Maresca said “Absolutely, absolutely, absolutely.” Chelsea “struggled” early but won at Lincoln.

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Enzo Maresca admitted he was furious with his players at half-time after Chelsea edged League One Lincoln City 2-1 in the Carabao Cup.

The Italian resisted making changes at the interval and was quickly rewarded when Tyrique George and Facundo Buonanotte struck inside the opening five minutes of the second half to turn a tense match in Chelsea’s favour. The late scoreline left the visitors with a nervy victory but progression to the next round.

Maresca linked the flat first-half display to the side’s morale following a disappointing defeat to Manchester United at the weekend, saying the squad lacked the right mentality against lower-league opposition.

Asked if he was angry with his players at the break, the Italian responded: “Absolutely, absolutely, absolutely.

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“I know some of them didn’t play these kind of games. I asked them how many times they had played against League One teams because you need to play a different kind of game.

“It’s not the same game because the desire is double from them. We struggled a bit in the first half but we were much better in the second half and we won the game.

“If the next game is against a League One or League Two team away, for sure this experience will be good for the next one. This has been a good experience.”

Chelsea fielded a strong starting XI, including summer recruits Alejandro Garnacho, Jamie Gittens and Jorrel Hato. Regular first-team players Enzo Fernández, Wesley Fofana and Trevoh Chalobah also started, highlighting Maresca’s intent to approach the cup tie seriously despite the opponents’ lower-league status.

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The manager’s halftime intervention and faith in his starters produced the decisive early second-half goals, but the performance reinforced Maresca’s point that matches against League One sides demand a different intensity and focus.

Arsenal

How Arsenal and Man City’s Next Five Premier League Matches Stack Up After the Derby

Arsenal restored a five-point lead after the derby; next five fixtures for both sides compared Wembley

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Mikel Arteta insisted Arsenal would prove their credentials after dropping points in back-to-back Premier League games. The Gunners did exactly that at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, mirroring their 4–1 win from November and restoring a more comfortable margin at the top.

Arsenal sit on 61 points with Manchester City on 55. City will have the opportunity to reduce that gap when their rearranged match with Crystal Palace is played. The title contenders remain locked in a long duel that looks likely to run into late May.

Here are the next five league fixtures for each club.

Arsenal (61 points)
– Chelsea (H) – March 1
– Brighton (A) – March 4
– Everton (H) – March 15
– Bournemouth (H) – April 11
– Man City (A) – April 18

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Man City (55 points)
– Leeds (A) – Feb. 28
– Nott’m Forest (H) – March 4
– West Ham (A) – March 14
– Chelsea (A) – April 11
– Arsenal (H) – April 18

The two sides also meet in the Carabao Cup final at Wembley on March 22 before the Premier League leaders head to the Etihad Stadium on April 18. While history suggests that head-to-head duels between the league’s top two don’t tend to decide the direction of the title, that April contest will be influential in shaping the summit.

Arsenal cannot assume an untroubled run. Champions League hopefuls Chelsea remain a challenge despite dropping points in consecutive matches. Brighton ended their slump away at Brentford on Saturday. Everton could make a push for Europe, and have been far better away from home this season, so the Toffees’ trip to north London represents a potential banana skin for the Gunners.

Arsenal then have almost a month’s break from the top flight before Bournemouth visit the Emirates Stadium on April 11.

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Arsenal

Rice Issues Stark Reminder as Arsenal’s Four-Front Bid Hangs in the Balance

Rice warned Arsenal that recent poor results could undo a season where cups and title still possible

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Declan Rice issued a blunt assessment of Arsenal’s position ahead of the north London derby against Tottenham Hotspur, warning that recent poor results could erode the club’s strong standing across four competitions. The midfielder spoke to Sky Sports and addressed the mounting narratives around the team.

Rice dismissed the “outside noise” and the idea of ‘bottling’ but was clear about the consequences of continued inconsistent results. He said the squad “fully believe” in one another and stressed the need to maintain focus. “And we enjoy it every day,” he added. “Of course you do. This is our job—we’re playing for Arsenal, we’re in the final of the [Carabao] Cup, in the next round of the FA Cup, in the [last 16 of the] Champions League, first in the Premier League.

“We need some perspective about where we are, but also we need to look a bit bigger to understand that if we carry on doing what we’re doing in terms of the results, it isn’t going to last.”

Rice underlined Arsenal’s capability to win across competitions, pointing to their earlier domestic and European form, but insisted the players must “pick that up” quickly. “We’ve got to be switched on. You’re going to be ready for everything that’s thrown at you because that’s what is needed for these final games,” he said.

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Arsenal still lead the Premier League with Manchester City close behind, leaving the prospect that the Gunners could be overtaken and finish second. In cup competitions Arsenal face decisive fixtures: the Carabao Cup final against Manchester City at Wembley on March 22, a Champions League two-legged tie against one of Borussia Dortmund, Atalanta, Bayer Leverkusen or Olympiacos shortly before then, and an FA Cup fifth-round match against League One’s Mansfield Town on March 7.

The season’s extremes are straightforward: Arsenal could win multiple major trophies for the first time in English football history, or they could finish 2025/26 without silverware and extend their major-trophy drought into a seventh year. For now the title challenge remains in their own hands, but results must improve if that position is to hold.

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Arsenal

Why Arsenal’s Wednesday Trip to Wolves Is the Premier League’s Lone Midweek Match

Arsenal’s trip to Wolves is Wednesday only midweek tie after a Carabao Cup final rearrangement soon.

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The Premier League schedule places Arsenal alone on Wednesday night as they travel to bottom-of-the-table Wolverhampton Wanderers. That clash is the only midweek top-flight fixture, a consequence of Arsenal reaching the Carabao Cup final earlier this month.

After escaping Brentford’s Gtech Community Stadium with what could prove to be a valuable point last week, Arsenal lead the Cityzens by just four points with 12 games to go. A win at Molineux would allow Mikel Arteta’s side to open up a seven-point cushion at the top before the next round of league fixtures, with Manchester City hosting Newcastle United while the leaders face off against suffering local rivals Tottenham Hotspur.

Arsenal’s trip to Molineux had to be rescheduled after Arteta’s side reached the Carabao Cup final by virtue of a 4–2 aggregate victory over Chelsea earlier this month. The Gunners will take on Manchester City at Wembley on Sunday, Mar. 22, and Wolves were due to host the title favourites that weekend. The Wolves fixture was therefore moved forward to Wednesday night, given that both teams have no other commitments that week.

Many are projecting a comfortable away win against one of the Premier League’s worst-ever teams, but Wolves ran Arsenal close in the reverse fixture before Christmas. They were a Yerson Mosquera own goal in stoppage time away from snatching an unlikely point at the Emirates Stadium.

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Manchester City will also need to have their league game against Crystal Palace rescheduled because of the Carabao Cup final, but that fixture will likely be played closer to the end of the season as a result of European commitments. For now, Arsenal’s solitary midweek outing offers a clear path to extend their lead, while the rearranged timing reflects the knock-on effects of cup progress on an already congested calendar.

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