English Premier League: The Story So Far

With the festive period now out of the way and just passed the half-way point of the season, we have a pretty clear picture of where things stand top and bottom of the Premier League.

Though there have been a few surprises: the excellent first half of the season West Brom have had, the relegation scrap that Newcastle are now embroiled in and just how shockingly awful QPR were under Mark Hughes; the title race is somewhat predictable.

I said before the season kicked off, that the title will be a 2 horse race and that I fancied Man Utd to nick it ahead of rivals City. That prediction is looking likely to come to fruition and if it does, with City’s second consecutive exit from the Champions League at the group stages, it could cost Roberto Mancini his job; although Pep Guardiola’s decision to take over at Bayern in the summer may cause the City owners to stick with Mancini.

Despite costing £24m, Robin van Persie could prove to be a bargain for Utd. His finishing prowess has been the difference for his side this season and much needed at times, as a once solid defence has become porous; but the determination to win back the title after the final day drama of last season and the goals of van Persie is likely to be enough to see them through.

Despite their impressive start to the league campaign, I felt the imbalance in Chelsea’s squad would cause them to falter and that has happened. It was still something of a shock though to see Di Matteo sacked when he was and even more of a shock to see Rafa Benitez take over the reins at Stamford Bridge.

Perhaps, just as surprising is that after starting the season with just 2 strikers, they haven’t looked to rectify the situation thus far in the transfer window. Demba Ba has come in, but Daniel Sturridge has gone to Liverpool and with Fernando Torres looking forlorn once more, it puts a lot of responsibility on Ba.

Tottenham, under Andre Villas Boas, have done better than I expected and although Gareth Bale is their match winner, Moussa Dembele has been the man who’s made them tick; at £15m, he’s been a very good piece of business for AVB. The Spurs squad still lacks a bit depth in certain areas, but despite them too often looking to sit on a lead, the players seem to be taking to AVB’s ideas.

Arsenal fans will be hugely disappointed with their current position and all too familiar lack of consistency. The return to fitness and form of Jack Wilshere and impressive performances of Santi Cazorla are amongst the few bright lights in a largely frustrating season so far. Podolski has a decent goals return so far, but too often ineffective stuck out on the wing, instead of being used in his natural striking role.

Fellow summer signing, Giroud, has struggled to make an impact, but it seems he thrives off crosses and that’s not something Arsenal provide in abundance. The positive end to the Walcott contract saga could give them a lift, but the weakness at left back and defensive midfield continue and it’s hard to see them finishing top 4.

Walcott's contract renewal... one of the few positives for Arsenal this season.

Walcott’s contract renewal… one of the few positives for Arsenal this season.

Everton got off to their best start to the season in 8 years, arguably over achieving by being in real contention for a top 4 finish. The Toffees have a strong starting XI, with Baines, Pienaar and Fellaini being their stand out performers, but the lack of depth to their squad means that should they start to pick up a few injuries, the second half of the season could be tougher for David Moyes men.

After a difficult start to the season, Liverpool are adjusting to Brendan Rodgers ideas and are playing some good football. The wasteful finishing of last season continued early this campaign, but the goals have started to flow recently, especially for Luis Suarez.

The Uruguayan hitman has already reached the 20 goal mark and has been truly outstanding, carrying the burden of being 1 of only 2 senior strikers, following Andy Carroll’s loan move to West Ham and then the only fit striker, once Fabio Borini got injured on international duty. The recent addition of Daniel Sturridge has eased that burden and the Reds are looking better equipped for the send half of the season, but the top 4 is still likely to still be beyond reach.

Swansea’s impressive debut Premier League season has been followed up with a mature campaign thus far under new boss Michael Laudrup, who unearthed arguably the signing of the summer in Michu, an absolute steal at £2m.

Another manager gaining plaudits, is Steve Clarke at West Brom in his first managerial job. The Baggies have continued to be solid, but they’re also playing some good passing football, exceeding the expectations of most, including yours truly.

Martin O’ Neill’s Sunderland endured an arduous start to the campaign, but recent form has dramatically improved; with regular goals from Steven Fletcher and the attacking threat of Adam Johnson, the security of a mid-table finish looks certain; something local rivals Newcastle cannot be so sure of at the moment.

It’s been well publicised that the Magpies form has been disastrous since manager Alan Pardew signed an 8 year contract, but injuries to key players Taylor, Cabaye, Gutierrez and Ben Arfa are more significant than that contract and despite the loss of Ba to Chelsea, Newcastle have too much quality to be relegated and I’m sure will end up mid table.

Of the three newly promoted sides, West Ham have looked the most secure. The experience of manager Sam Allardyce and key squad members means their Premier League status should be safe.

Southampton and Reading have impressed at times, but have also looked naïve in some matches in what is a tough learning curve for both sides; the bizarre sacking of Nigel Adkins could potentially have ramifications for the spirit they will need in order to survive.

Adkins.... bizarrely relieved from his duties at Southampton.

Adkins…. bizarrely relieved from his duties at Southampton.

The impulsive summer spending of Mark Hughes at QPR was a recipe for trouble and their diabolical performances in the opening few months of the season cost Hughes his job. The appointment of Harry Redknapp is a good one, but it’ll be as difficult to shift the average players on over inflated contracts, as it will be to keep the hoops up. However, you wouldn’t rule out them surviving on the final day of the season, with some kind of dramatic twist.

The decline of Aston Villa has been a shocking one; Paul Lambert is a manager of undoubted talent, but a mixture of phasing out the big earners, injuries to key players and having to rely on unproven youngsters is looking too much of a task. Unless Villa an experienced defender and central midfielder, they could quite easily be looking at Championship football next year.

Another team staring relegation in the face is Wigan. Roberto Martinez has received praise for his positive approach and keeping a weak squad up, but this year it’s hard to see them defying the odds again, unless 2or 3 rumoured loan signings materialise.

In short, I think the current top 4 of Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea and Spurs won’t change, but who goes down is a lot more difficult to call, but I think it will be 3 from Reading, QPR, Aston Villa, Southampton and Wigan; I don’t know why, but I have a sneaking suspicion that QPR and Villa will just escape.

So, it’s certainly not been a classic season so far, but the battle for places at the top and bottom promises to make things interesting.

 

Written by Andy Wales

Follow him on Twitter @AndyArmchair

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Younes Belhanda: Another Hot Talent On His Way To Turkey

Highly regarded Montpellier and Moroccan international star Younes Belhanda is in talks with Fenerbahce over a move to Turkey. The two clubs are in the later stages of negotiations and are still trying to agree a fee that will see the 22 year old swap the blue and orange jersey for the blue and yellow one.

The Turkish giants released a statement saying, “We have begun talks with Montpellier and Younes Belhanda over a move for the player”.

This will come as a blow for Montpellier, who currently sit 12th in the French league. With many players gone, moving or linked with moves away, they are enduring a difficult period and will need to reinvest in the squad.

Last season saw Montpellier crowned French champions for the first time in their history. Belhanda’s impressive performances have seen interest ignited by some of the biggest clubs in Europe, with North London duo Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur among those keeping a close eye on the gifted playmaker.

However it seems as if Fenerbahce will land the Moroccan International and the move will see Turkey inherit two of the finest attacking talents Europe has to offer, as Wesley Sneijder has joined Galatasary from Inter Milan.

After making his debut a little over three years ago, Belhanda has won the French League title and was named in the 2011-2012 Ligue 1 Team of the Year whilst also picking up the Ligue 1 Young Player of the Year award. His pending transfer to Fenerbahce should work out for both the purchasing club and player.

At the tender age of 22, Belhanda has many years ahead of him and a move to Turkish football would possibly raise his profile further and is expected to compete for trophies within the division.

Belhanda is currently on international duty with Morocco at the African Cup of Nations.

 

Written by Farhan Daw

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Wigan: The Latics’ Premier League Romance Could Be About To End

Wigan’s rise from the old Division Two to the top tier in just two seasons and subsequent plucky existence in the Premier League remains a good old fashioned underdog story in a game that looses further touch with common sense by the week.

Chairman Dave Whelan, despite his many outspoken imperfections, would not sack his manager for gaining two promotions in two years with his side sitting fifteenth at the top table, he would probably back him if he guided his team to relegation which seems increasingly likely with Wigan four points and four places below Southampton and staring a return to the Championship down the eye after eight dogged years competing with the very best.

The Latics have won just five times in 23 games and the weekend’s defeat to Sunderland became their eleventh winless game from their last thirteen matches. They are known for being risers to the occasion when it really matters, they had four points less at this stage last year before a great climax to the season eventually kept them up, but as Sunderland condemned them to their seventh home defeat of the season, the most in the league, it looked likely this year could see their stay of execution under the amicable Roberto Martinez finally ended.

Wigan’s football remained as stylish as ever as they slipped to the 2-3 reversal to Martin O’Neill’s in-form team, as expected under Martinez who has refused to compromise his continental roots despite desperate streaks of form that have become habitual at the DW. It has been the strangest of back-stories, the Spaniard landing in the obscurity of an unestablished club in Division Three, they were only elected to the Football League as recently as 1978, who has gone on to become a sophisticated hero in the rugby-fanatical lands of north Lancashire.

Dave Whelan, one of the few remaining working class hero owners involved in the game, has led a one-man crusade against extortionate season ticket prices, they have the cheapest in the Premier League at £250 and remarkably, the 6th cheapest out of the whole 92 clubs in the league pyramid.

It is hard to imagine how a club like Wigan, living on a paltry attendance of an 18,000 average despite the attractive prices, can survive amongst the behemoths of Arsenal, Manchester United and co. but they do, and they do it with fluid football on the pitch to boot, it would take the sternest of hearts to wish the league would lose Wigan who continue to fly the flag for the little guy amongst the rich and powerful.

One wouldn’t expect to find tactical innovation in the unfashionable setting of Wigan, but Martinez’s 3-4-3 is a pioneering system driven by the brilliant James McCarthy in the heart of midfield allows for high pressing and neat passing which is a product of Martinez’s Spanish footballing education.

Against Sunderland however, defensive fragility caused by the recent long term injury to Ivan Ramis which could tip them closer to the brink of relegation, saw an early David Vaughan own goal cancelled out by three strikes that the home side, despite Angelo Henriquez’s late header, had no tangible answer to.

The second half display which saw vast improvement and Martinez “pleased”, had come too late and it left the Latics a meagre five points from the last possible thirty on offer. Attacking has also been a problem despite the neat build-up that Martinez presides over, twenty five goals have been scored in the league but the side remain short of a consistent source of goals.

Arouna Kone, a summer budget signing from Levante, is top scorer with just 6, while Franco Di Santo, despite showing glimpses this season of a talent that once swayed Chelsea to his services, has been once again frustrating in front of goal, he has just four. Martinez will be hoping Manchester United’s Angelo Henriquez produces his proposed talent to bridge the quality gap that has gone missing in losing Victor Moses and hasn’t yet been sufficiently been replaced.

The likes of Mohamed Diame, the midfield powerhouse now at West Ham, Hugo Rodellega and Charles N’Zogbia who have departed for Fulham and Aston Villa respectively in recent years have been relied upon to provide the quality needed for Martinez’s modest outfit to barely survive, but this season such individual threat seems worryingly absent.

Jordi Gomez, Jean Beausejour and Roger Espinoza provide an exotic influence in servicing Di Santo or Kone in attack, in front of the energetic midfield of James’s McCarthy and McCarthur, but there appears to be nobody wiling to step up and make the difference like Moses did last year and form is suffering as a result.

Defeat to Sunderland is just the latest setback in a long line for Martinez and he will set about trying to guide Wigan on another belated change of course back to safety with fourteen games left, yet it is increasingly looking ominous that the small Lancashire will finally lose their flimsy Premier League status after eight years at the top spent proving small clubs can cut it with the best without selling their soul.

It will be sad to lose them.

 

Written by Adam Gray

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