The Briefing: Who were winners from Chelsea-Arsenal? Was Slot brave on Salah? Frank gone too far?
Welcome to The Briefing, where every Monday during this season, The Athletic will discuss three of the biggest questions to arise from the weekend’s football.
This was the weekend when Manchester City squeaked a win over Leeds United, Newcastle United put their woes behind them by thrashing Everton, Brighton & Hove Albion moved into Champions League contention and Manchester United impressed in beating Crystal Palace.
Here we will ask if everyone was pleased with Chelsea and Arsenal’s draw, what Mohamed Salah’s omission from the team that beat West Ham United means for Liverpool and Arne Slot, and whether Thomas Frank is picking the wrong fights.
Was anyone (or everyone?) a winner from Chelsea 1 Arsenal 1?
Draws are inherently unsatisfying. The point of this game is to win, so when neither team manages that, even the neutral is usually left feeling a little short-changed.
However, was everyone a winner from Chelsea and Arsenal’s 1-1 draw on Sunday?
Let’s start with us neutrals. There is something about a late afternoon Sunday game at Stamford Bridge that feels quite visceral and exciting: remember all of those games against Liverpool or Manchester United in the late 2000s/early 2010s, when it was basically dark by the time the game kicked off and you witnessed a pair of juggernauts slam into each other? Heady days.
That’s a bit how this one felt, two of the best three teams in the country slugging it out in a game that was aggressive, perhaps lower than you’d like on actual quality football, but nonetheless grittily enjoyable. Plenty may take the opposite view, and will have been unable to properly enjoy a game that didn’t exactly display the slickest play and finest skills, but a game doesn’t have to be ‘good’ to be entertaining.
Then there’s Chelsea. That’s easy: while they have title ambitions and thus will have been gunning for a win, there’s no way they can’t be satisfied with a draw against probably the best team in Europe, having been down to 10 men for two-thirds of the game.
Even Arsenal. Mikel Arteta expressed mild frustration to the media that Arsenal hadn’t won, but acknowledged that it has been a hell of a week, and they’ve come away with seven points from games against Tottenham Hotspur, Bayern Munich and Chelsea. They did it without a bunch of key players, too — they didn’t have either of their first-choice centre-backs against Chelsea, plus started without a specialist striker or their captain and key creator.
And finally, Manchester City. They might have laboured to a 3-2 win against Leeds, a promoted team who look in danger of going straight back down, but the draw means that they are the closest challengers to Arsenal. They’re five points behind, which, considering the fragilities they have shown at various stages and Arsenal’s apparent lack of them, is not too bad.
So if it’s possible for everyone to be satisfied with the outcome of a game, then this one comes as close as any.
Does leaving out Salah mean more to Liverpool than just this win?
We’ll get the caveats out of the way first.
This is not a good West Ham team, despite their hints at something more competent since Nuno Espirito Santo’s arrival. There was also the significant help from one of the more brainless and pointless red cards you’ll see, as Lucas Paqueta managed to talk himself into getting sent off and thus kill any prospect of West Ham mounting a successful comeback.
But after a calamitous run that saw them lose six of their last seven Premier League games, drop out of the title race and put their Champions League qualification in doubt, Liverpool won’t care about the quality of the opposition.
That the win came partly thanks to Alexander Isak’s first league goal since his £125million ($143m) move in the summer is a bonus, as is maybe Florian Wirtz’s best game in a Liverpool shirt — but arguably more significant is that it took place without Mohamed Salah in the team.
It was a weekend for big selection decisions that paid off: Eddie Howe did what many Newcastle fans have been demanding for weeks and dropped Nick Pope, while also picking Anthony Elanga up front, and was rewarded with a 4-1 win. Likewise, Salah was left out of a Premier League starting XI for which he was fit and available for the first time since April 2024. He didn’t come off the bench either, making it the first time he has played no part in a league game for which he was fit and available since June 2020.
Did Liverpool win the game because they dropped Salah? Maybe, maybe not. Their performance was much improved, but their team remains imbalanced, and it’s tough to attribute the victory to any one decision.
This doesn’t mean that Salah should be left out and all of their problems will be solved, but what it does mean is that by taking this tough decision, Arne Slot has ensured that Salah can just be regarded as another player now. He is a sacred cow no longer. Maybe he’s in the team, maybe he’s not, just like Hugo Ekitike or Cody Gakpo or Isak. That frees Slot to make decisions based on the needs of each game, rather than being dictated by a player’s reputation or the disparity between how good he used to be versus how good he appears to be now.
Has Thomas Frank picked an avoidable fight with his own fans?
On the one hand, it’s nice to see a manager stick up for a player who has seemingly been singled out for criticism. When players get abused, it’s the manager’s job to help pick them up,
On the other, you wonder how wise it is for that manager to seemingly pick a fight with his club’s fans, when so many of them are unhappy not so much with that individual player, but with the manager himself.
After goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario’s embarrassing mistake that handed Harry Wilson the chance to score Fulham’s second goal in their 2-1 win against Tottenham on Saturday, a significant proportion of the home fans specifically booed the goalkeeper. And Frank wasn’t happy.
“I didn’t like how the fans reacted to that,” Frank said. “They booed at him straight after and also three or four times when he was on the ball. That is unacceptable. They can’t be true Tottenham fans.
“Booing after (the game), fair. No problem. But when we are playing, we need to be together. If we turn it around, we need to do it together. That is hugely important.”
The immediate frustration with Vicario will be fleeting. The bigger problem is results, and Frank’s are terrible at the moment, particularly at home: they have played seven games at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium this season and won just one. Only Wolverhampton Wanderers, already well on their way to a fairly ignominious relegation, have a worse record on their own patch. It’s a hangover from last season: since March, Tottenham have earned 10 points at home.
So you can see why the fans are annoyed. Yes, they were irritated at Vicario’s blunder and perhaps didn’t express that constructively, but in reality, that was a funnel through which they were expressing their broader dissatisfaction.
At best, you could say that Frank misread the mood from a place of good intention. But more likely is that he has picked an avoidable fight with a group of fans who, in some cases, are even pining for Ange Postecoglou. And that sort of thing rarely ends well.
Coming up…