Tag: weekend

  • Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

    Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

    [ad_1]

    1) Moreno at forefront of Emery revolution

    People are no longer ignoring the massive turnaround Unai Emery has performed at Villa Park. There were not many personnel changes in January: the teenage striker Jhon Durán was signed from Chicago Fire, Bertrand Traoré was recalled from loan at Istanbul Basaksehir and, most important, Alex Moreno joined from Real Betis. Lucas Digne has been deposed from the defence and Villa have only lost twice in Moreno’s 15 appearances, with the Spaniard quickly becoming integral to the system. He is popular off the pitch, too, ingratiating himself with fans with a recent interview in English, smiling throughout despite not yet having a full mastery of the language. Moreno will enjoy the prospect of facing Antony, which will be a key battle with the Villa man keen to test the Brazilian’s defence as well as attack. Will Unwin

    2) Smith v Dyche in game they cannot lose

    It is hard to shake the feeling that if there is a loser in this match that team will be staring at the end of the road when it comes to their top-flight status. Time is running out to escape the drop. Bournemouth and Wolves provide shining examples of teams given a shot in the arm by a new manager and Dean Smith must hope he can mirror the impact of Gary O’Neil and Julen Lopetegui, respectively. Victory for Leicester would give Smith a hugely credible seven points from a possible nine since defeat at Manchester City in his opening game. Similarly, Sean Dyche badly needs to give Everton some hope to cling on to, with Thursday’s hammering at home to Newcastle the latest low. There is no denying the magnitude of the occasion at the King Power Stadium. Ben Fisher

    Sean Dyche talks to Michael Keane during Everton’s 4-1 defeat by Newcastle
    After a decent start under Sean Dyche, Everton are second bottom and woefully out of form. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

    3) Timid Leeds need to find fight

    After their trip to the Vitality Stadium, Leeds face Manchester City at the Etihad, so they will be desperate to get a win at Bournemouth. Things are very tight at the bottom and two more wins for any side could provide their salvation. Leeds took the lead against Leicester in midweek but rarely looked comfortable with it. Having conceded 11 in their previous two home games, there is reason to be trepidatious. Javi Gracia needs superior game management from his players and a calming influence to keep everything together. They like to sit deep and that invites the opposition on. As West Ham showed last week, a pressing game can reap rewards against Bournemouth, who struggled to cope with the Hammers in midfield. Whether Leeds have the confidence to play that way is another question: two midfielders sitting deep and Jack Harrison, Brenden Aaronson and Luis Sinisterra pressing could be the best route towards safety. WU

    4) A lament for Saturday 3pm games

    Newcastle have not staged a 3pm Saturday kick-off at St James’ Park in 2023 and will not this season. In one sense that represents a positive – television executives are so enamoured with Eddie Howe’s side they scramble to book up their matches – but it is also an enormous shame. There remains something special about Saturday 3pm games – and they are a lot more fan-friendly, particularly if you are an away supporter, than 8pm on a Monday night or 4.30pm on a Sunday. Southampton fans can perhaps count themselves relatively lucky to have a 2pm Sunday start, offering realistic travel options. But for those who do not travel by the supporters’ coaches, which depart St Mary’s at 5am on Sunday, the return choices are: the 6.55pm flight from Newcastle airport (one hour to Southampton but the last seats were selling at £272 on Thursday), the 5pm train from Newcastle central station (six hours and two changes with off-peak single seats selling at £198.90, although those who bought in advance could have paid a “bargain” £94.30 single rate) or drive (332 miles to St Mary’s and a minimum of six hours). Louise Taylor

    5) No let-up for Forest now

    Nottingham Forest were spiralling towards the Championship until they caught Brighton, perhaps bruised by their Wembley near miss, on an off-night. Now fresh life has been breathed into their relegation battle but the result will need backing up when they visit a similarly revitalised Brentford. Thomas Frank’s side may have had to park any realistic thoughts of Europe but looked far from demotivated in winning at Chelsea: they have already surpassed last season’s points total and their model is one that Forest, should they stay up, might usefully pursue if they want a less hair-raising campaign next time around. “Where we are now is impressive and every point we get now will be more impressive,” said Frank, who sounded like a man intent on making sure the Bees have cemented a top-half place a month from now. Forest can expect to be matched for guts regardless of their greater need: Steve Cooper will need to see bundles of wit and guile from his players, as displayed on Wednesday night, if their getaway is to gather pace. Nick Ames

    Nottingham Forest players celebrate their victory over Brighton
    Nottingham Forest players celebrate their victory over Brighton. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

    6) Wolves have time to plan ahead

    Under Julen Lopetegui, Wolves have transformed into a functional and confident team, two traits lacking before the World Cup break. The former Spain and Real Madrid coach has an impressive CV but the Wolves job looked a tough one. Lopetegui has, however, proved himself an adaptable coach. There were some smart additions in January that allowed him to play the formation and style he preferred but he has also got the best out of those struggling under his predecessor. Wolves are almost certainly safe and Lopetegui can plan for next season in the Premier League in the final five matches. One fringe player who is yet to find consistency since his arrival is Pablo Sarabia. The Spain international started the season alongside Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappé and Neymar, so has great pedigree. Now the pressure is somewhat alleviated, Sarabia may feel free at Wolves and prove to the fans what he can offer them from the wing going forth. WU

    skip past newsletter promotion

    7) Any way for Fulham to stop Haaland?

    Arsenal could do with a favour from a former Manchester City player. If Tosin Adarabioyo starts in central defence for Fulham on Sunday he will have the unenviable honour of trying to get in Erling Haaland’s way. Adarabioyo is an elegant, improving defender and he has been a good signing since joining from City in 2020. But, assuming he gets the nod over Issa Diop, the 25-year-old will need the performance of his life against his old side. Haaland was in devastating form against Arsenal on Wednesday, bullying Rob Holding, and his goals look like powering City to the title. He could be just too quick and strong for Fulham’s defence. Jacob Steinberg

    8) Richards eyes chance to prove worth

    Chris Richards made his first appearance under Roy Hodgson at Wolves in midweek. He started the match at full-back and finished it in central defence. The American has made only nine league appearances since his summer move from Hoffenheim because of the form of Joachim Andersen and Marc Guéhi, coupled with injury problems. He suffered the disappointment of missing the World Cup but has recovered physically from the leg issue that ruled him out. Before Molineux, he was last seen for eight minutes away to Brentford in mid-February, before five matches as an unused substitute. Despite his lack of minutes in recent months, he was able to complete the 90 against Wolves. Aged 23 and shown to be adaptable, Richards looks as if he could be an important member of the Palace defence for years to come and this could finally be the time to take his chance with a run of games at the end of the season. WU

    Chris Richards shows Diego Costa he is no pushover in Palace’s defence
    Chris Richards shows Diego Costa he is no pushover in Palace’s defence. Photograph: David Rogers/Getty Images

    9) Where Spurs go from here

    There is a way for Tottenham to demonstrate they do possess some substance and it is not with the token gesture of reimbursing those fans who endured last weekend’s gutless humiliation at Newcastle. Nor is it via an improvement in front of a home crowd against Manchester United in Ryan Mason’s first game of his second spell as caretaker manager. That was the minimum requirement for a team that were seemingly equipped to improve on last season’s fourth-placed finish when the campaign began. It is by going back on the road again, to another hostile environment and in-form opponent with European qualification on its mind, and delivering a performance as far removed as possible from St James’ Park. That will serve as a more genuine apology from Spurs’ players to their travelling support. Few might expect victory at Anfield, a ground where Spurs have won once in the league in 30 years, but a show of commitment, organisation and desire would be a start. Andy Hunter

    10) Eyes beyond the prize

    With Manchester City likely to claim a fifth title in six years, now seems a sensible time to wonder where English football is going. The deployment of clubs to further the geopolitical ends of human rights-abusing nation-states is a miserable situation, because no supporter should ever have to wonder whether their lifelong affiliation has become morally unjustifiable; what the point of it all is. The game should have been protected against this by the FA, the Premier League and the UK government, but dazzled by mammon, they did nothing, and we now seem to have a proxy for the Qatari royal family trying to buy Manchester United. This should bother everyone, for two reasons: first, the prospect of the country’s richest club backed by an unlimited exchequer could ruin whatever vestige of competitiveness remains, and second, if Qatar are allowed to own two clubs – United and PSG – who might contest the same competition – the Champions League – what’s to stop them owning everything? Daniel Harris

    [ad_2]
    #Premier #League #weekend
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • JK Braces For Dry Spell Till Weekend, Wet Weather To Follow Until April 20

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR: Mainly dry weather is expected to continue in Jammu and Kashmir till April 15 even as the minimum temperature recorded an increase at most places on Thursday, officials said.

    A meteorological department official here said that from April 16-17, generally cloudy weather with intermittent light rain and thunderstorm or lightning scattered to fairly widespread places was expected in J&K.

    From April 18-19, he said, the weather is likely to be generally cloudy with intermittent light to moderate rain (light snow over higher reaches)/thunderstorm/lightning at fairly widespread places in Kashmir division and a few places in Jammu division.

    From April 20-21st, he said, generally, cloudy weather with intermittent Light rain, thunderstorm, or lightning at a few places was expected. “From April 22-25, weather is likely to be mainly dry weather.”

    Regarding the temperature, the MeT official said that Srinagar recorded a low of 7.2°C against 7.4°C on the previous night and it was 0.4°C below normal for the summer capital.

    Qazigund, he said, recorded a low of 6.0°C against 4.4°C on the previous night and it was 0.5°C below normal for the gateway town of Kashmir.

    Pahalgam, he said, recorded a low of 3.2°C against 2.5°C on the previous night and it was 0.4°C above normal for the famous tourist resort in south Kashmir’s Anantnag district.

    Kokernag recorded a low of 9.1°C against 7.5°C on the previous night and it was 3.0°C above normal for the place, the officials said.

    Gulmarg recorded a low of 4.4°C against 3.6°C on the previous night and it was 2.9°C above normal for the world-famous skiing resort in north Kashmir’s Baramulla district, he said.

    In Kupwara town, he said, the mercury settled at 6.2°C against 5.8°C on the previous night and it was 0.1°C below normal for the north Kashmir area.

    Jammu recorded a low of 18.8°C against 17.9°C on the previous night. It was 0.4°C below normal for J&K’s winter capital, he said.

    Banihal, he said, recorded a low of 8.3°C (below normal by 0.1°C), Batote 12.8°C (above normal by 2.3°C), Katra 18.0°C (1.5°C above normal), and Bhaderwah 8.7°C (1.7°C below normal). Ladakh’s Leh and Kargil recorded a low of minus 0.8°C and 3.1°C respectively, he added.

    [ad_2]
    #Braces #Dry #Spell #Weekend #Wet #Weather #Follow #April

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • From Yami Gautam’s Lost to Anil Kapoor’s The Night Manager: Best shows/films to watch this weekend

    From Yami Gautam’s Lost to Anil Kapoor’s The Night Manager: Best shows/films to watch this weekend

    [ad_1]

    Mumbai: The weekend is just knocking on our doors, and so it is the time to binge-watch those web series/films that you were planning to enjoy with your partner or even solo. So, have a look at the list of best shows/films to watch this weekend.

    ‘The Romantics’

    Helmed by Smriti Mundra, ‘The Romantics’ celebrates the legacy of filmmaker Yash Chopra. It features 35 leading voices of the Hindi-language film industry and dives into the history of Bollywood through the lens of the Yash Raj Films’ impact over the past 50 years in making Bollywood globally known.

    ANI 20230217110224

    ‘Lost’

    The film is an emotional social thriller representing a higher quest, a search for lost values of empathy and integrity. Inspired by true events, ‘Lost’ is the story of a bright young crime reporter in a relentless search for the truth behind the sudden disappearance of a young theatre activist. An investigative thriller that kept the IFFI viewers on the edge of their seats, ‘Lost’ is written by Shyamal Sengupta and the dialogues are by Ritesh Shah.

    ANI 20230217105943 2

    Helmed by Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury, the film streaming exclusively on the OTT platform Zee5 from February 16, 2023.

    ‘The Night Manager’

    The series is an official Hindi adaptation of John le Carre’s novel ‘The Night Manager’, produced by The Ink Factory and Banijay Asia.

    Helmed by Sandeep Modi ‘The Night Manager’ stars Anil Kapoor, Aditya Roy Kapur, Sobhita Dhulipala, Tillotama Shome, Saswata Chatterjee, and Ravi Behl in lead roles and streaming exclusively on OTT platform Disney+ Hotstar.

    ‘Farzi’

    The story revolves around a life of a small-time con artist Sunny (played by Shahid), who finds himself drawn into the dark while creating a perfect con. However, a fiery and unconventional task force officer (played by Vijay Sethupathi) has made it his mission to rid the nation of the threat he poses.

    ANI 20230217110411

    Helmed by the acclaimed director duo, Raj and DK, the crime thriller marks the digital debut of Shahid Kapoor and Vijay Sethupathi and is all set to stream exclusively on the OTT platform Amazon Prime Video from February 10, 2023. The series has received a positive response from the audience.

    ‘Cirkus’

    Helmed by Rohit Shetty, ‘Cirkus’, which was released on December 23, 2022, and starred Johnny Lever, Varun Sharma, Pooja Hegde, Sanjay Mishra, Ashwini Kalsekar, Mukesh Tiwari, and Siddharth Jadhav among several others.

    ANI 20230217110422

    Set in the 1960s, ‘Cirkus’ trailer revolves around Ranveer in a dual role, with both the twins unaware of each other’s existence. Varun Sharma too plays a double role in this family entertainer. Now the movie is streaming on Netflix.

    Happy binge-watching!



    [ad_2]
    #Yami #Gautams #Lost #Anil #Kapoors #Night #Manager #showsfilms #watch #weekend

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

    Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

    [ad_1]

    1) Tricky assignment for City at Forest

    With Arsenal travelling to Villa Park for Saturday’s early kick off, Manchester City will have the opportunity to capitalise on any slip-up from Mikel Arteta’s side when they take on Nottingham Forest in what might, on paper, seem a fairly straightforward assignment at the City Ground. It is one they should not take lightly following their win at the Emirates, as Forest are unbeaten in seven league matches at home, taking 15 of the past 21 points available. City’s shortcomings are few and far between but before their win over Arsenal they had lost back-to-back matches on their league travels, the two defeats coming after another away loss at Southampton in the Carabao Cup. Any show of complacency after their statement midweek win could be brutally punished. Barry Glendenning

    2) More than a club

    Aston Villa have big plans. Owners Nassef Sawiris and Wes Edens eventually want Unai Emery to restore Villa into European competition but they are also determined to make their mark across the globe. This week Villa confirmed their plans to buy a 46% stake in Portuguese club Vitoria SC, who are fifth in their domestic division, for an initial £4.9m. Sawiris says plans have been in place for two years to strike a deal, which signals a significant step in the expansion of their V Sports portfolio, which includes ZED FC in Egypt. A multi-club model encourages the sharing of scouting networks, coaching methodologies and youth development strategies. Villa, however, undoubtedly remain their focus with victory over Arsenal in Saturday’s early kick-off top of the agenda. Ben Fisher

    3) Howe’s thin squad seek atonement

    Newcastle’s solitary Premier League defeat of the season came at Anfield and Eddie Howe’s team should be suitably keen to atone for that narrow, contentious, reverse when they are reunited with Jürgen Klopp and co at St James’ Park. Howe is looking a bit light in the midfield department: Bruno Guimarães serves the final game of his three match suspension and Joe Willock is sidelined by a hamstring injury. With Jonjo Shelvey now sold to Nottingham Forest and no replacement signed the likeliest midfield trio will be Sean Longstaff, Joelinton and the promising but inexperienced Whitley-Bay born 20-year-old Elliot Anderson. The other difficulty is that, in recent weeks, Howe has often preferred Joelinton to Allan Saint-Maximin and Anthony Gordon for a starting role on the left of the front three. Newcastle may remain creditably hard to beat but a run of five draws in their last six Premier League games suggests a certain lack of quality in depth within the squad. With next Sunday’s Carabao Cup final against Manchester United fast approaching and a Champions League place to challenge for there could not be a better time for Anderson to confirm his rich potential. Louise Taylor

    Anthony Gordon (left) has yet to start a game for Newcastle.
    Anthony Gordon (left) has yet to start a game for Newcastle. Photograph: Serena Taylor/Newcastle United/Getty Images

    4) Ideal time for a Saints miracle?

    And now over to Stamford Bridge, where a team with a manager who needs more time meets a team with an ex-manager who wasn’t given the luxury. While Nathan Jones’s sacking has denied us a Dali-esque Match of the Day montage featuring ticking clocks, cracked hourglasses and alternate shots of him and Graham Potter looking miserable, there is still plenty of potential for angst. Chelsea, fresh off the back of their midweek Champions League defeat to Borussia Dortmund, have two wins scattered across their past 13 league games, meaning they can ill afford to drop points against rock-bottom Southampton. Their opponents, meanwhile, are without a permanent manager and four points adrift of safety, though they may take some solace from the fact that one of their four league wins this season – a 2-1 victory at St Mary’s in August – came against Chelsea. There’s no better time for a miracle turnaround than now. Will Magee

    5) Ten Hag’s strength in depth on view

    The odds say Manchester United will not end a 10-year title drought this season, but knowing victory over Leicester on Sunday will leave them no more than five points off the top (if Arsenal and Manchester City win on Saturday) shows the excellence of Erik ten Hag’s work so far. A microcosm of this was offered in last Sunday’s win at Leeds that came without Casemiro (suspended) and Christian Eriksen (long-term injured) and with the maligned Harry Maguire in central defence and the one-paced Wout Weghorst in attack. If the Foxes are beaten at Old Trafford, Ten Hag will have coaxed his team to seven points from the nine available during Casemiro’s three-game ban. That will be the best fillip before Thursday’s Europa League playoff second leg against Barcelona and Sunday-week’s Carabao Cup final against Newcastle, when United aim to end a six-year spell without a trophy. Jamie Jackson

    6) A second chance to shine for Porro?

    The omens look bleak for West Ham as they travel to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday. With Antonio Conte continuing his recuperation from surgery following a post-operation check-up, his place in the technical area will be taken by his assistant Cristian Stellini, who boasts a perfect record as his boss’s stand-in. Unceremoniously dropped after an underwhelming debut against Leicester City last weekend, the deadline day signing Pedro Porro sat out Tottenham’s midweek defeat against Milan but could get another opportunity to impress. “The team has to help a player like Pedro who arrives now and needs time to play in this type of league,” said Stellini after Harvey Barnes had given the Spanish wing-back the runaround. Whether or not his new teammates come to his aid this weekend remains to be seen. BG

    skip past newsletter promotion

    Pedro Porro struggled on his Spurs defeat at Leicester.
    Pedro Porro struggled on his Spurs defeat at Leicester. Photograph: Matt West/Shutterstock

    7) Everton look toothless without DCL

    Sean Dyche has asked for a repeat of his Goodison Park debut, requesting fans park their protests against the Everton board for 90-odd minutes to back their team to record another vital home win in the bid to avoid relegation. Everton can climb out of the drop zone at Leeds’ expense with a repeat of their Arsenal triumph but their ineffectiveness without the injury-prone Dominic Calvert-Lewin was again laid bare during a timid derby defeat at Liverpool on Monday. Leeds’ caretaker manager Michael Skubala is also in the discovery process after starting his reign with two difficult assignments. He drew encouragement from phases of both games against Manchester United but, with Southampton to follow the trip to Goodison Park, admits Leeds “need to pick up points” in a hugely significant game at the bottom of the table. Andy Hunter

    8) Mitoma is a problem

    If Fulham are to take anything from their visit to Brighton, one suspects they will need to find a way of shackling Kaoru Mitoma. A revelation this season, the Japanese winger has scored in three of his past four games and it took a splendid save from Vicente Guaita to stop him extending that run as Brighton were held at Crystal Palace. “Maybe there are less players who come directly towards me to rob the ball,” said Mitoma of the different methods teams are coming up with to nullify his impact. “More often now they block the vertical lane and try to force me inside. I was able to deliver in that type of play but I would like to focus especially on breaking through vertically and getting in a cross, and then the quality of the cross is also important.” Over to you, Marco Silva. BG

    Champions League teams pay tribute to victims of earthquake in Turkey and Syria – video

    9) Palace look to find their punch

    The team third in the five-game form table hosts joint-bottom at the Brentford Community Stadium. Everything around Crystal Palace feels rather flat and it is hardly an ideal time to face an opponent that is, by contrast, buoyant. A relegation battle looks unlikely but Palace’s progress under Patrick Vieira appears to have stalled, even if they are generally competitive on the pitch. There is a sense they will have to muddle through the next three months before attempting a summer rebuild, but that is hardly an appetising prospect. If they cannot match last season’s fluency then at least they can have a go at rivalling Brentford’s punchiness: Thomas Frank’s team are operating with supreme knowhow in both boxes and a repeat of last week’s performance at Arsenal would probably be enough to deepen Palace’s torpor. Almost exactly a year ago these teams ground out a goalless draw in the same fixture and it says plenty that Vieira might well sign up for that now. Nick Ames

    10) New faces look to make it count

    One of Wolves’ January recruits, João Gomes, was the match-winner for Julen Lopetegui last time out and the Spaniard’s side entertain another team whom attacked the transfer window in an attempt to steer clear of trouble. Bournemouth spent more than £50m on adding six new faces, with Dango Ouattara and Hamed Traorè particularly impressive in their draw against former manager Eddie Howe’s Newcastle last weekend. Gary O’Neil will know his players must replicate that performance if they are to have any chance of picking up their first victory since the World Cup at Molineux. “I am very pleased to see the club doing well and back in the Premier League,” Howe said. “I hope they continue to go from strength to strength. I think they have the players and manager to stay up.” BF

    [ad_2]
    #Premier #League #weekend
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )