Aston Villa
United Weigh Sancho’s Future as Villa Loan Fails to Gain Traction
United face a decision over Jadon Sancho after a limited loan at Aston Villa failed to revive his value.
Manchester United remain uncertain about Jadon Sancho’s next step after his loan spell at Aston Villa has produced limited minutes and little market momentum. United had hoped the loan would mirror Marcus Rashford’s six-month spell at Villa Park in the second half of the 2024–25 campaign, but that scenario has yet to unfold.
Sancho has made just five appearances for Villa so far and was substituted after being introduced from the bench in Sunday’s 1–0 victory over Manchester City. The Manchester Evening News report United have not agreed a plan for Sancho’s next move.
The 25-year-old’s contract at Old Trafford runs until next summer, with United holding the option to extend for a further 12 months. Letting the deal expire would mean United accepting a total loss on the £73 million they paid in 2021. Extending the contract would preserve the possibility of a fee in a sale but would carry the risk of another 12 months of his substantial wages if an acceptable offer does not arrive.
United see no long-term future for Sancho at the club and are hoping a successful loan at Villa Park will sustain some value and attract interest next summer. Any decision on the contract extension is expected later in the season, once Sancho has had more time to demonstrate his form at Villa.
Sancho’s start at Villa has been slow. He played just eight minutes across his first three Premier League games before illness sidelined him. He returned to start in the midweek Europa League defeat to Go Ahead Eagles, his second start for the club, but drew attention when he was substituted on and then off in the same match against his former employers.
Emery addressed the episode and acknowledged the player’s feelings while underlining fitness concerns. “Yes, sure [Sancho] is not happy, but I did it before with Morgan Rogers, with Emiliano Buendia, with Leon Bailey, and he played 60 minutes on Thursday,” Emery explained. “When [Buendia] was injured, my plan was maybe in case [Sancho] was going to play 30 minutes, but I decided to play more and he played 45 minutes.
“But my plan was when he was swapped with Emiliano Buendia, the idea was maybe not playing all the minutes until the last moment. And I told him as well, he can feel it, it’s embarrassing.
“Before Morgan, Emiliano Buendia and Leon Bailey, they felt the same when I subbed them, but it was not a punishment. And now it’s not a punishment.
“He played 45 minutes, I am so happy because his impact was good, his electricity, his skill, but then to play more than now… he’s not ready, fit, to play 90 minutes, 45 minutes is not easy enough for him and I am happy and of course, progressively he’s coming better and better.”
Aston Villa
Elliott’s Loan Limbo: Villa, Liverpool and a Complicated Exit Route
Elliott’s loan at Villa is unresolved; MLS interest, Liverpool and Villa decisions shape his season.
Harvey Elliott finds himself in a holding pattern as his loan at Aston Villa continues without a clear resolution. Unai Emery has been candid about the situation, saying: “On Sunday, he was on the bench, and if we needed some help from him, he was ready to do it. He is in the squad tomorrow. But the situation is not changing for him that he has now.”
Elliott moved to Villa from Liverpool on an initial loan last summer. The deal contains a clause that would make the move permanent for around £30 million if he reaches a specified number of appearances. Villa decided they were not prepared to trigger that buy option and have effectively sidelined the attacking midfielder, who is five appearances short of activating the purchase clause.
Reports have suggested Villa would like to end the loan early, but doing so would require them to pay a fee to Liverpool. If Elliott does not return to Merseyside, his game time for the remainder of the campaign looks likely to be limited. Liverpool appear unwilling to use him for the rest of the season and, having already represented both Liverpool and Villa this campaign, he cannot sign for another European club.
That restriction has focused attention on potential moves beyond Europe. Major League Soccer side Charlotte FC have been linked with Elliott, but any transfer to North America would depend on Liverpool and Villa agreeing to terminate the loan and on Elliott accepting a move to the United States. Dean Smith is the current head coach at Charlotte FC, a club that last winter completed a similar procedure when they signed Wilfried Zaha after he had played for Lyon and Galatasaray during the 2024-25 European season.
Elliott last featured for Villa in early October and faces a complex path back to regular football. Among Liverpool supporters his future is a low priority in the January transfer window, with fans instead pressing for incoming signings as Arne Slot’s squad thins. The weekend defeat to Bournemouth once again exposed shortfalls in both defence and attack, with the backline particularly stretched.
Arsenal
Five pivotal stretches that will shape the 2025/26 Premier League title race
Arsenal’s four-point lead is fragile; five forthcoming gameweeks may decide the 2025/26 title race..
Arsenal arrive at this phase with a slim four-point lead and a run of results that has made every remaining matchday feel decisive. Having not won the league since the undefeated 2003–04 campaign, Mikel Arteta’s side have shown a recent wobble: an apparent reluctance to create from open play and moments of vulnerability that opponents can exploit.
The next fortnight contains tricky trips to Leeds United and Brentford, fixtures unlikely to be straightforward. Tottenham Hotspur and the North London derby loom large as well. Spurs, managed by Thomas Frank, have endured another miserable Premier League campaign; the Dane could be out of the job by the time Arsenal visit N17 in Gameweek 27. Spurs are poor at home and Arsenal have won each of their previous three visits to Seven Sisters Road. The reverse fixture saw Eberechi Eze netted a hat-trick in a 4–1 rout, underlining the derby’s potential significance.
Both Manchester City and Aston Villa have games before the North London Derby, with City hosting Newcastle United and Villa welcoming Leeds. Gameweek 28 begins with Unai Emery’s Villans on Friday night at Molineux. Wolverhampton Wanderers are harder to beat under Rob Edwards but appear set for relegation, which can make them dangerous opponents. Boubacar Kamara’s long-range strike was decisive in their previous duel at the start of Edwards’ reign.
There are further tests the following weekend: City visit Leeds on Saturday evening and Arsenal host Chelsea on Sunday, with Arsenal unbeaten against the Blues since 2021 and Liam Rosenior’s reign off to a productive start.
The standout fixture arrives in mid-April, Gameweek 33, when Arsenal travel to the Etihad. The two prior meetings in Manchester ended all-square: the 2023–24 run-in finished goalless and a John Stones strike at the death rescued a point for City at the start of last season. City barely clung on for a point in the reverse fixture and will benefit from the arrivals of Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guéhi and the return of a couple of defenders from injury.
Liverpool remain a wild card after a disappointing title defence under Arne Slot; they host City on Feb. 8 and visit Villa later in the season. Arsenal finish a home outing against Burnley, while City close an away run at Bournemouth. If Arsenal’s recent dip becomes a collapse, City and Villa could overturn the deficit and a final-day showdown at the Etihad between City and Villa would decide the title.
Arsenal
How Arsenal’s next five league fixtures stack up against Man City and Aston Villa
Arsenal lead cut to four points after United win; City and Villa face testing next five PL games Feb
Manchester United’s 3–2 victory at the Emirates has tightened the title race. Arsenal’s lead is now four points after the weekend’s action.
Man City stopped the rot at home to Wolverhampton Wanderers, while Aston Villa were superb in their 2–0 triumph at Newcastle United. Their hopes of making this a thrilling title race have been boosted by Michael Carrick’s Red Devils.
The run-in remains some time away, but the 2025/26 season has entered a crucial period. Below are the next five Premier League fixtures for the three sides and how they compare.
Arsenal (50 points)
Man City (46 points)
Aston Villa (46 points)
Leeds Utd vs. Arsenal (Jan. 31)
Tottenham vs. Man City (Feb. 1)
Aston Villa vs. Brentford (Feb. 1)
Arsenal vs. Sunderland (Feb. 7)
Liverpool vs. Man City (Feb. 8)
Bournemouth vs. Aston Villa (Feb. 7)
Brentford vs. Arsenal (Feb. 12)
Man City vs. Fulham (Feb. 11)
Aston Villa vs. Brighton (Feb. 11)
Tottenham vs. Arsenal (Feb. 22)
Man City vs. Newcastle (Feb. 21)
Aston Villa vs. Leeds Utd (Feb. 21)
Arsenal vs. Chelsea (Mar. 1)
Leeds vs. Man City (Feb. 28)
Wolves vs. Aston Villa (Feb. 27)
Arsenal face two potentially troublesome away days at Leeds United and Brentford, teams capable of disrupting the leaders as Nottingham Forest did in their recent goalless draw at the City Ground. In between those trips the league leaders welcome a home-reliant Sunderland to the Emirates and must also travel to Tottenham before the visit from Chelsea.
The Gunners will be hopeful that Spurs offer some domestic competence when Man City travel down to N17 next weekend. Guardiola’s side may need to put together one of their vintage runs to track down the leaders, but they’ve got to visit Anfield and Elland Road in the next month.
