Match Preview: West Brom v Blackburn Rovers
October 31st, 2008
Venue: The Hawthorns
Date: Saturday, 1st November
Kick-off: 1500
By Oli Price,
West Bromwich Albion boss Tony Mowbray will frantically want to put an end to his side’s three-match losing run when Blackburn Rovers visit The Hawthorns on Saturday.
Goals continue to be a problem for the Albion as they have scored only eight times in their ten opening Premier League matches of the campaign, and Tony Mowbray made known this week that a new striker will be his foremost priority when the transfer window reopens in January.
Narrow victories against Middlesbrough and Fulham had lifted the Baggies into mid-table, but heavy defeats by Manchester United and Hull City and a narrow loss at Newcastle United mean Mowbray’s side have been dragged back into a relegation dogfight
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Battles on the field
Ryan Donk v Benni McCarthy
Match Preview: Stoke City vs Arsenal FC
October 31st, 2008Venue: Britannia Stadium
Date: Saturday, 1st November
Kick-off: 1500
By Oli Price,
Stoke City had a good result in midweek when a Ricardo Fuller header ensured that they beat a below-par Sunderland side to move out of the Premier League relegation zone. Pulis said after that win: “I think that is probably the best we have played this season for 90 minutes.
“We have had good spells, but I don’t think we have played as consistently through a game and I felt we really deserved to win.
Liverpool 1-0 Portsmouth – Match Report
October 31st, 2008It needed a Steven Gerrard penalty to make sure Liverpool did not waste the tremendous victory they achieved at Chelsea at the weekend.
That win put Liverpool top of the Barclays Premier League, and a slip-up tonight against Portsmouth would have been a disaster for the Anfield men.
Tony Adams, in his first match in command of Pompey following Harry Redknapp’s departure, saw his side push Liverpool all the way.
But Gerrard’s spot-kick with 15 minutes left kept Liverpool top and extended their unbeaten run to 16 matches this season.
Liverpool made four changes from the side that claimed top spot in the Premier League by beating Chelsea on Sunday.
Daniel Agger, Javier Mascherano, Robbie Keane and Albert Riera were all rested to the bench, with Sami Hyypia, Jermaine Pennant, Ryan Babel and Lucas coming into the side.
New Pompey boss Tony Adams also made changes from the side that drew with Fulham last time out.
Jermain Defoe and Richard Hughes were on the bench, with Sean Davis and John Utaka in midfield and former Liverpool striker Peter Crouch on his own up front.
There was an air of expectancy around Anfield following the Stamford Bridge success and Liverpool had Pompey under pressure from the start with some fine, flowing, football – much of which was aimed at getting Pennant into space on the right.
The passing was quick and the movement the same, with Liverpool looking like they were going to grab the lead plenty of times in the opening spell.
After 10 minutes Pennant and Alvaro Arbeloa combined to find Dirk Kuyt just outside the box, and his fierce low drive was superbly turned away and onto a post by David James.
Lucas saw a header fly over the bar and Xabi Alonso sent a 20-yarder swerving wide of the left-hand post.
But slowly, Pompey’s resilience took the edge from Liverpool’s approach play.
Crouch was the sole target for much of Pompey’s forward movement, winning consistently in the air but missing his strike-partner Defoe.
The visitors’ first chance was headed wide by Younes Kaboul from Lassana Diarra’s free-kick, and then Papa Bouba Diop missed a sitter.
Diarra’s chip found the big midfielder unmarked six yards out, but he planted his free header straight into Jose Reina’s grateful hands.
Liverpool responded with a Gerrard shot into the wall from a tapped free-kick, the ball dropping for Jamie Carragher to test James from 25 yards.
Kuyt had a couple more chances in the half, but Liverpool ended the first-half looking for inspiration.
Diarra was booked for a trip on Gerrard just outside the box after 49 minutes, but Alonso planted the free-kick into the wall.
Portsmouth were beginning to look comfortable, Sylvain Distin and Kaboul assured at the back.
Liverpool needed sharpness, urgency and accuracy with their passing. Hyypia saw a header flash wide and Lucas had an effort deflected past the target, but too many mistakes in possession from Ryan Babel and Pennant continually hindered the home side’s progress.
Liverpool sent on Yossi Benayoun for an increasingly frustrated Pennant and soon after Pompey introduced Niko Kranjcar for Armand Traore.
Next into the fray was Riera, for Babel – and Liverpool increased the tempo.
Distin’s block stopped Benayoun when Steven Gerrard had put him clear, and then James saved superbly from Gerrard’s 25-yard effort.
Then after 75 minutes Liverpool got their breakthrough. Hyypia’s header from Fabio Aurelio’s corner was goalbound before Bouba Diop threw two arms into the flight of the ball.
Somerset referee Steve Tanner booked the Pompey midfielder and pointed to the spot, before Gerrard drove home the penalty.
Hughes came on for Diarra with 10 minutes left and four minutes later Defoe replaced Utaka as the visitors sought a point.
Robbie Keane came on for Gerrard in injury-time and almost got on the scoresheet in the final seconds – but there was only one goal in the game.
Middlesbrough 2-0 Man City
October 31st, 2008Afonso Alves proved the scourge of Manchester City once again as his coolly-dispatched 53rd-minute penalty proved enough to secure Middlesbrough the points at the Riverside Stadium.
Brazilian Alves had hit a hat-trick in rather different circumstances in the corresponding fixture last season as Boro struck an extraordinary eight goals past their opponents to round off their campaign.
On a decidedly more chilly evening another nine-goal epic was always a distant dream but that will not perturb Boro boss Gareth Southgate, whose workmanlike side were full value for their points.
They were finally secured in the fifth minute of injury-time when Boro streaked over the halfway line and Tuncay Sanli squared for Gary O’Neil to lash his side’s second into the roof of the net.
Goalkeeper Ross Turnbull made a super series of saves to deny Vincent Kompany, Stephen Ireland and Shaun Wright-Phillips but ultimately City boss Mark Hughes could have few complaints.
Referee Lee Mason pointed to the spot after Daniel Sturridge tangled with David Wheater on the edge of the City box – despite the complaints of visiting players that the incident happened outside the box.
The goal came at a time when City were threatening to take control of the game and build on a bright start which had seen record signing Robinho at the centre of most of their early moves.
The Brazilian fired high and wide in the sixth minute and three minutes later danced his way around the Boro rearguard again before hitting a low shot which Turnbull did well to save at full stretch.
Boro had their first chance in the 12th minute when Stewart Downing dug out a deep cross from the left and found Alves, who aimed a weak header straight at City keeper Joe Hart.
But City continued to look dangerous every time they streaked across the halfway line, and in the 18th minute it was Micah Richards’ turn to direct a rising shot which Turnbull plucked out of the air.
Boro continued to have their moments in an open game, Alves setting up a chance for Andrew Taylor which was blocked by Tal Ben Haim, and Tuncay Sanli’s weak effort gathered by Hart.
Boro came close in the 39th minute when Jeremie Aliadiere’s persistence paid off down the right and he flung in a dangerous cross which missed the head of the lurking Alves by inches.
Turnbull was called into action twice in the opening four minutes of the second half, first parrying Ireland’s low shot in the box then stretching to deny Wright-Phillips’ low effort with his feet.
But Boro grabbed the chance to turn the match in their favour in the 53rd minute when Sturridge and Wheater tangled in the far right corner of the City box and referee Mason pointed to the spot.
Alves stepped up to coolly place the ball high to Hart’s right and give Boro the lead at precisely the time when City had been threatening to take control.
Inspired by the goal, Boro began to get forward with more purpose and the impressive Tuncay was ruled narrowly offside as he squared toward Aliadiere in front of goal.
Turnbull saved Boro again in the 71st minute when he superbly parried a long-range effort from Vincent Kompany which seemed to be heading into the bottom corner, before Sturridge fluffed the rebound.
Boro held on with relative ease and secured the points deep into injury-time when Tuncay squared in front of goal after a swift counter-attack and O’Neil gleefully rifled the ball into the roof of the net.
Fulham 2-0 Wigan – Match Report
October 31st, 2008Andy Johnson opened his Fulham account with two goals to continue Wigan’s freefall down the Barclays Premier League.
The England striker, a


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