Brentford
United Collapse at Brentford After Fernandes Penalty Miss as Thiago and Jensen Score
Fernandes misses penalty; Šeško scores but United lose 3-1 at Brentford as Igor Thiago shines today
Manchester United suffered a 3–1 defeat at Brentford after Bruno Fernandes missed a second-half penalty, leaving Ruben Amorim under increased pressure. Igor Thiago opened the scoring by beating United’s offside trap and firing a venomous strike into the top corner, a long punt upfield exposing Amorim’s back three.
Brentford dominated early but Altay Bayındır kept United in the game by denying two close-range headers. The hosts doubled their lead when another direct aerial pass created space for Kevin Schade; his cross was palmed into the path of Igor Thiago and he was afforded a tap-in.
United found a route back shortly before half-time. Benjamin Šeško opened his United account to reduce the deficit. The Slovenian needed three attempts to capitalise on some poor goalkeeping from Caoimhín Kelleher and eventually rattled the ball home from close range.
United looked sharper after the goal but remained vulnerable at the back. Bayındır was called into action again around the hour to repel efforts from Sepp van den Berg and Dango Ouattara inside the penalty area. With 15 minutes to go Nathan Collins was penalised for pulling Bryan Mbeumo down in the box; the defender was only booked when he almost certainly should have been sent off. Fernandes, who had already missed a penalty at Fulham this season, stepped up but was denied by Kelleher from the spot.
Fernandes’ missed penalty drained United’s belief and they struggled to create notable chances. The match was sealed in stoppage time when Mathias Jensen thundered home Brentford’s third, confirming a dismal afternoon for United in west London.
Match ratings (out of 10)
GK: Altay Bayındır 6.1
CB: Matthijs de Ligt 6.4
CB: Harry Maguire 6.2
CB: Luke Shaw 5.9
RWB: Diogo Dalot 6.8
CM: Manuel Ugarte 6.9
CM: Bruno Fernandes 6.5
LWB: Patrick Dorgu 7.1
RF: Bryan Mbeumo 7.1
ST: Benjamin Šeško 8.0
LF: Matheus Cunha 6.7
SUB: Leny Yoro (66′ for Maguire) 6.4
SUB: Kobbie Mainoo (66′ for Ugarte) 6.2
SUB: Mason Mount (80′ for Shaw) 6.1
SUB: Joshua Zirkzee (85′ for Dorgu) N/A
Subs not used: Senne Lammens (GK), Tom Heaton (GK), Ayden Heaven, Diego León, Tyler Fredricson.
Brentford (4-2-3-1): Caoimhín Kelleher; Michael Kayode, Sepp van den Berg, Nathan Collins, Aaron Hickey; Jordan Henderson, Yehor Yarmolyuk; Dango Outtara, Mikkel Damsgaard, Kevin Schade; Igor Thiago.
Arsenal
Sunday Premier League Preview: Stakes High for Arsenal as London and Midlands Tests Await
Arsenal must beat Manchester United to restore a seven-point lead; Sunday also features key clashes.
Manchester City’s Saturday victory set up a pivotal Sunday in the Premier League. Arsenal know they must beat Manchester United at the Emirates Stadium to re-establish a seven-point advantage at the top. That match carries weight after Manchester United’s collective performance in last week’s derby and Bruno Fernandes’s praised role in a 2-0 win.
There is also a London derby when Crystal Palace host Chelsea, and Brentford welcome Nottingham Forest. Liam Rosenior’s Chelsea ended a run without a league win with a 2–0 victory over Brentford at Stamford Bridge, bringing his tally to three wins from four in charge. That run would be impressive for any Chelsea manager, but recent form in midweek suggests the Blues could struggle at Selhurst Park.
Crystal Palace remain in a tailspin. Steve Parish did not give into Oliver Glasner’s apparent wish to get the boot last weekend, so Glasner will occupy the home dugout as Palace seek their first league win since Dec. 7.
Prediction: Crystal Palace 1–1 Chelsea
Brentford’s season under Keith Andrews has exceeded early expectations. After a defeat at the City Ground in Gameweek 1, Andrews has guided the Bees to a campaign that looks set to better their best under Thomas Frank, when they finished ninth in 2022–23. Brentford sit seventh and have accumulated 24 points from 11 games at the Gtech, the fourth-best home record in the division. Nottingham Forest suffered an away Europa League defeat in Braga on Thursday, and that European slog may influence Sunday’s clash.
Prediction: Brentford 3–1 Nottingham Forest
The reverse fixture between Newcastle United and Aston Villa earlier in the season was uneventful, but Sunday’s meeting on Tyneside has potential. Aston Villa’s home loss to Everton increased pressure within the camp; Unai Emery’s post-match interview depicted a manager “on the brink and not one who’s distinctly overachieved.” Villa did win at Fenerbahçe on Thursday, while Newcastle cruised past PSV Eindhoven. The Magpies are inconsistent away but difficult to break down at home.
Prediction: Newcastle 3–2 Aston Villa
Brentford
Sánchez Saves and Palmer Penalty See Rosenior Claim Nervy 2-0 Win
Rosenior wins 2-0 on Premier League debut as Sánchez keeps Chelsea safe and Palmer seals a penalty..
Liam Rosenior’s first Premier League outing ended with a 2-0 victory over Brentford, but the result papered over a number of issues Chelsea must address. The win halted a run of eight consecutive matches without a clean sheet and lifted Chelsea above their visitors to sixth in the table.
Robert Sánchez was the defining figure. His first-half stop to prevent Tosin turning a ball into his own net and a second save to deny Kevin Schade underlined a return to form after a midweek dip. Enzo Fernández was influential in midfield; his pressure led to João Pedro’s opener when a poor Michael Kayode pass deflected into Pedro’s path and VAR awarded the goal.
At full back, Reece James looked uncomfortable and well below his usual standards, exemplified by a corner that went straight out of play. Marc Cucurella enjoyed license to roam but was inconsistent. In central defence Trevoh Chalobah largely matched Igor Thiago, though Schade’s pace caused him problems. Tosin Adarabioyo was dominant inside his own 18 yards and won every aerial ball before being forced off with injury.
In midfield Moisés Caicedo did a lot of solo defending and keyed efforts to target Mikkel Damsgaard. Enzo Fernández at times tried to be too clever in the final third but pressed effectively for the opening goal. Pedro Neto was lively and created chances, while Cole Palmer, still not fully fit after a groin issue, looked sluggish but delivered a precise penalty.
Alejandro Garnacho worked hard but his end product was frustrating, most notably a miss from five yards after a fine Neto cross. João Pedro showed composure to take his goal and caused problems when operating in the box.
Rosenior altered the shape early in the second half, bringing on Andrey Santos for Garnacho and, later, Wesley Fofana and Liam Delap, the latter converting a penalty after a poor touch from Caoimhín Kelleher led to a foul. With heavy Brentford pressure at times and unrest among supporters outside the ground, Rosenior switched to a back five to close out the victory.
Substitutes: Andrey Santos (57’ for Garnacho) 6.5; Wesley Fofana (57’ for Tosin) 6.5; Liam Delap (74′ for Pedro) 6.6; Jorell Hato (85’ for Fernández) N/A; Josh Acheampong (85’ for James) N/A. Unused: Filip Jörgensen (GK), Benoît Badiashile, Marc Guiu, Tyrique George.
Starting XI: Caoimhín Kelleher; Michael Kayode, Kristoffer Ajer, Nathan Collins, Rico Henry; Yehor Yarmoliuk, Vitaly Janelt; Mikkel Damsgaard, Mathias Jensen, Kevin Schade; Igor Thiago.
Arsenal
FotMob’s Top Five Performers From Premier League Gameweek 20
FotMob ratings highlight five best performers in Gameweek 20: Grealish, McGinn, Thiaw, Rice. ratings
FotMob’s ratings singled out five players whose individual displays defined Premier League Gameweek 20.
Jack Grealish was a bright spot in Manchester City’s 4–2 defeat to Brentford at the Hill Dickinson Stadium. The loanee produced two delightful deliveries to tee up Beto and Thierno Barry for consolation strikes and completed more dribbles (four) than anyone on the pitch. He also led the match for chances created (four). There was very little for the crowd to enjoy in a miserable loss to the Bees, but Grealish “didn’t deserve to be on the losing team.”
John McGinn was the key architect of Aston Villa’s 3–1 win over Nottingham Forest. The indefatigable Scotsman scored a brace, the first a well-placed finish from inside the area to double the home side’s advantage and the second a remarkable long-range effort aided by a disastrous piece of goalkeeping. Scoring twice from an expected goals total of 0.45 underlined the quality of his contribution. Strangely, this was McGinn’s first double at club level since a 3–1 victory over Forest in the Championship in 2018–19.
Malick Thiaw continued to impress for Newcastle United, scoring his third Premier League goal in a 2–0 victory over Crystal Palace. The summer recruit was an absolute colossus defensively, registering a game-high 17 defensive contributions, including five tackles and 10 clearances, helping secure a clean sheet. His speed and physicality were crucial in thwarting Jean-Philippe Mateta.
Declan Rice overcame doubts over an injury to start for Arsenal and was central to a 3–2 win over Bournemouth. He delivered two composed finishes, bending a low effort beyond Djordje Petrović for Arsenal’s second and calmly converting Bukayo Saka’s pull back for what proved to be the winning goal. Rice’s all-action midfield display included 14 defensive contributions, and he was only out-passed by two players in the contest.
