Oof. Eek! Yikes. Woof! Tuesday’s final score sheet might show three draws and West Ham edging a mid-table battle, but this was another white-hot night of Premier League action. There were great goals, brilliant saves, hair pulls, late wobbles, Pep talks and some of the worst defending seen in the Barclays multiverse. Where to start? Well, why not at the Potterdome, where the Hammers rediscovered the concept of pressing after the fatally languid Julen Lopetegui era. The result was two goals gleaned from errant Fulham passes at the back, a platform the hosts clung on to as Fulham fought back, recording 21 shots to West Ham’s four but losing the game 3-2. “The best team didn’t win, but we have to be strong at both ends. We gave West Ham two goals,” fumed Marco Silva afterwards. On the subject of giving up two goals, Manchester City were back to their not-so-old tricks at Brentford in a 2-2 draw that sent the Daily’s xG-o-meter spinning off the table, steam shooting out of every auxiliary port. City somehow gained control of a wild game, Phil Foden emerging from hibernation to score twice and make the other teams in the top-four race shift uncomfortably in their seats. Brentford, though, were reliably relentless and forced another late City collapse. Stefan Ortega might have done better with Christian Nørgaard’s stoppage-time equaliser, but we imagine the keeper felt reassured after one of Pep Guardiola’s on-field motivational talks. Over to Chelsea, where Enzo Maresca, Cole Palmer and Marc Cucurella continue to operate a kind of parallel-universe Manchester City where Pep sailed off into the sunset after winning the Treble. Things are no less chaotic on this side of the looking glass; after a clinical Palmer opener, Chelsea fell behind to Bournemouth only for Reece James to stun Stamford Bridge by scoring a stoppage-time free kick without injuring himself in the process. Cucurella had his hair pulled for the 1,057th time in his career, but David Brooks was spared a red card as referee Rob Jones was sent to the pitchside monitor and said thanks, but no thanks – a yellow card will do. The drama! In the end, Chelsea’s 2-2 home draw with Bournemouth felt like a better result than City’s 2-2 draw at Brentford. But was it? We don’t know. Which brings us to events at the City Ground, and the most important but least eventful game of the night. Nottingham Forest, the only team to beat Liverpool in the league this season, led 1-0 through Chris Wood and threatened to move within three points of Arne Slot’s cheerful table-topping strollers – but Slot sent on Kostas Tsimikas and Diogo Jota and saw them immediately combine for the equaliser. The Dutchman stays clear of Guardiola, Maresca – and, indeed, Nuno Espírito Santo – as the Premier League’s leading big bald football brain, thanks to a happy knack of keeping things simple. If you need to avoid losing, Jota is the man to send on – his headed leveller means he has now scored in 51 league games without ever being on the losing side. It could have been even better for the visitors, but Matz Sels produced a number of saves, including a spectacular late dive to keep out Cody Gakpo’s long-range effort and preserve a point. Forest continue to stake their claim as the second-best team in the Premier League, and Liverpool offered fresh evidence that they belong in the top one. They lead Forest by six points with a game in hand, and are seven clear of Arsenal, who face Spurs in a particularly fraught edition of the North Lah’n Derby tonight. What on earth is going to happen in that one? We can’t wait to find out. |