Premier League leaders Manchester City maintained their perfect start
under Pep Guardiola as Manchester United returned to winning ways
against champions Leicester City.
Here are five things we learnt this weekend.
NO ROONEY, NO PROBLEM FOR MAN UNITED
The Manchester United team sheet for Saturday's home game with Leicester
City caused a stir after manager Jose Mourinho elected to drop captain
Wayne Rooney, who has been struggling for form. The outcome did not make
pleasant viewing for United's number 10, who looked on from the bench
as his team-mates produced their most convincing display of the season
with a classy 4-1 victory over the champions.
Juan Mata slotted in for Rooney in the number 10 role and proved a far
livelier presence, slamming home United's second goal after a delightful
team move involving a chipped pass from Paul Pogba and a volleyed
lay-off from Jesse Lingard. Pogba seemed to relish the greater space
afforded him by Rooney's absence and turned in his best United
performance to date, opening his account for the club with a 42nd-minute
header. With Marcus Rashford and Zlatan Ibrahimovic also impressing in
attack and Ander Herrera setting the tempo in midfield, Rooney has a
fight on his hands to get his place back.
CONTE HAS PRESSING ISSUES IN DEFENCE
Chelsea produced a defensive horror show in their 3-0 defeat at Arsenal
as Arsene Wenger's men ended a six-game league scoring drought against
their London rivals with three goals in the first 40 minutes. Chelsea's
back four seemed uncomfortable with manager Antonio Conte's high
defensive line and struggled to play the ball through Arsenal's press.
Gary Cahill was particularly poor, gifting the ball to Alexis Sanchez
prior to Arsenal's first goal, and right-back Branislav Ivanovic endured
a torrid evening. Captain John Terry and young centre-back Kurt Zouma
are expected to return to fitness next month and having seen his team
concede nine goals in their last four league and cup outings, Conte will
be eager to get them back.
AGUERO STILL THEN MAN
As if anyone was in any doubt, Sergio Aguero took just nine minutes to
underline why he remains Manchester City's most valuable player.
Returning from a three-match suspension for elbowing West Ham’s Winston
Reid, Aguero was a constant menace for the Swansea defence at the
Liberty Stadium on Saturday.
He opened the scoring in the ninth minute with a typically predatory
finish, turning inside the penalty area and driving his shot under
Swansea goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski.
After Swansea equalised,Aguero scored again, cheekily sending Fabianski the wrong way with a clipped penalty in the 65th minute.
Aguero’s 11th goal in all competitions this season ensured City would
remain on top of the Premier League and extended Guardiola’s perfect
start.
REDS UNDERLINE TITLE BID
Liverpool have not been crowned champions of England since 1990 and a
match against Hull was exactly the kind of fixture that has often proved
their undoing in recent title bids. Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp had
written in his programme notes that describing Hull as "just hard to
beat" was doing them a disservice but that didn't stop his side winning
5-1, with playmaker Philipp Coutinho impressive again.
HAMMERS' DEFENSIVE WOES
Just when Slaven Bilic thought things couldn’t get any worse for West
Ham’s creaky defence, the Croatian coach had to watch Southampton run
his back-four ragged in Sunday’s 3-0 victory for the visitors at the
London Stadium.
After a promising first season in charge of the Hammers, Bilic appears
stuck in a recurring nightmare this term as every Premier League match
brings a fresh set of indignities for his beleaguered rearguard.
Conceding three at table-topping Manchester City is understandable, but
in the following two matches, West Ham shipped four goals in defeats
against the less star-studded attacks of Watford and West Bromwich
Albion.
Charlie Austin opened the scoring for Southampton before half-time and
further goals from Dusan Tadic and James Ward-Prowse left West Ham
captain Mark Noble admitting his side could easily have lost by six.
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