Year in review: The highlights of the last 12 months in the Premier League

Manchester City have ended the year as the team to beat in the Premier League. (AP)
Updated 26 December 2017
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Year in review: The highlights of the last 12 months in the Premier League

TEAM OF THE YEAR — MANCHESTER CITY

Odd as it is to select the most expensively assembled team in the history of the Premier League and one that won nothing silver in 2017, it’s statistical fact that Manchester City’s results across the calendar year are markedly superior to any rival. And this is a team that — barring the most cataclysmic of collapses — had the 2017/18 title under wraps. Pep Guardiola’s men have suffered just two League defeats in the year to date, they’ve held to their manager’s vision of how the sports should be played (albeit one that many observers over-romanticize), improved through the course of those 12 months, and entertained with the sheer quality of their football.

MATCH OF THE YEAR — ARSENAL 1 MAN UNITED 3

Let’s consider a couple of candidates here. The most decisive match of the year looks to be one that took place less than two months into the current campaign. Manchester City traveled to Chelsea stripped of Benjamin Mendy and Sergio Aguero by injury yet elected to take the game to the champions by banking on their audacious control the ball in the opponents’ half tactics. Any team plays that way against Antonio Conte at high risk of succumbing to counterattacks, but bolstered by the fatigue induced by Chelsea’s midweek Champions League victory at Atletico Madrid and a first-half injury to Alvaro Morata, City deservedly won. Guardiola’s players are still flying high on the confidence derived from those three points. For sheer unadulterated Premier League entertainment, little stands up to Manchester United 3-1 victory at Arsenal at the beginning of December. Brilliantly ruthless in their pressing and counterattacking, Jose Mourinho’s men went two up inside 11 minutes. Arsene Wenger changed personnel and shape then watched David De Gea deliver the goalkeeping performance of the year to keep the score at 2-1. The best of Paul Pogba’s creativity delivered United’s third before he was controversially sent off for a challenge whose greatest beneficiary was the City side awaiting the following weekend’s Manchester derby.

MANAGER OF THE YEAR — ANTONIO CONTE

There are two options here. Antonio Conte won the Premier League at the first time of asking despite being in more or less constant conflict with Chelsea’s board, and receiving very little of what he asked for in the transfer market. Pep Guardiola had a good second half to a traumatic debut campaign in English football (by some margin the most testing and disappointing of his career), followed by a stellar first half to his second campaign there. Merit points need to be deducted from Conte for being unburdened by European football, and winning just one trophy. Guardiola made more unforced errors in his first year in the Premier League than almost any elite manager who preceded him; the Catalan has also had a degree of backing — both financial and structural — unprecedented in the game. Over the piece, there can be no doubt that Guardiola had delivered the more audacious, aesthetically pleasing and successful (in terms of points gathered) football of the two. Yet when it comes to adding value in the more challenging of circumstances, Conte’s has to be the greater achievement.

PLAYER OF THE YEAR —  KEVIN DE BRUYNE

There is no more dangerous footballer in the Premier League at present than Kevin De Bruyne. The inventiveness and bravery of his passing is matches by a sublime accuracy, demonstrating an ability to place the ball not only where the Belgium international wants, but landing with a speed and trajectory that enables his team-mate to take full advantage of it. De Bruyne has scored 10 Premier League goals in 2017, Pep Guardiola has him running further than most creative midfielders would tolerate, and tackling and fouling when required. He’s adapted his positioning when faced by opponents seeking to close the Belgian out of games, dropping him deeper into a virtual holding midfield role, where De Bruyne still looks comfortable. If the 26-year-old can sustain something close to this form for the duration of the season (something he’s had problems with in the past) England’s Player of the Year awards are only headed in one direction.

GOAL OF THE YEAR — OLIVIER GIROUD

When it came to the 2017 Puskas Award, Kevin-Prince Boateng’s scissor-kick finish for Las Palmas against Villarreal had this observer’s vote — principally because it capped some impressively executed team build-up play with not one, but two moments of extreme individual skill. Within the confines of the Premier League, however, it’s impossible to argue with the Olivier Giroud scorpion kick that took the FIFA prize. Arsenal’s counter against Crystal Palace is quick, precise and involves six players. Giroud’s finish wonderfully inventive. It also has a good back story. “I’m going to have the mickey taken out of me,” said Giroud after taking the global prize. “It was very bizarre, it wasn’t the situation in which I was most at ease. It was part of the curriculum to become a PE teacher. But our teacher considered that kind of dancing a form of art, and the move I did could have been part of a choreography of my dance teacher at the time.”

TEAM OF THE YEAR (4-1-2-3): David De Gea; Antonio Valencia, Toby Alderweireld, John Stones, Marcos Alonso; N’Golo Kante; Kevin De Bruyne, David Silva; Mohamed Salah, Harry Kane, Eden Hazard.


Toney penalty leads Al-Ahli to victory in final moments of Saudi Pro League’s Matchday 15

Updated 27 sec ago
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Toney penalty leads Al-Ahli to victory in final moments of Saudi Pro League’s Matchday 15

  • Al-Ahli defeat Al-Taawoun 2-1 thanks to Ivan Toney penalty in the 14th minute of injury time
  • Al-Shabab end 11-game run without a win after comeback against NEOM

RIYADH: The battle for second place in the Saudi Pro League heated up on the final day of Matchday 15 when the Al-Inma Stadium played host to a tense encounter between Al-Ahli and Al-Taawoun. The hosts, boasting the best defence in the league, came up against a visiting side brimming with confidence after a stellar start to the season under the returning Péricles Chamusca at the helm.

Getting past Al-Taawoun would be no easy feat. The Qassim-based side came into the game well-prepared, with Al-Ahli failing to break past their compact block. The trio of Andrei Girotto, Waleed Al-Ahmed and Muteb Al-Mufarrij proved tough opposition for Ivan Toney in particular.

All signs pointed to a draw as the half-time whistle approached. Roger Martínez had different ideas in stoppage time, as he fended off Roger Ibañez to win the ball in the right channel, squared the ball to Ângelo Fulgini who was brought down by Merih Demiral for a penalty. Martínez coolly finished past Abdulrahman Al-Sanbi, as the Wolves went into the break with the narrow lead.

Al-Ahli, backed by their passionate fans, entered the second half with renewed vigour. With Riyad Mahrez back in SPL action after Algeria’s elimination from AFCON, his creative prowess between the lines gave his side an added impetus.

It would be Wenderson Galeno who played an imperative role in their first goal. In the 62nd minute, he spotted Toney making a run in space behind the full-back, launching a cross that marginally escaped a clearance from Al-Mufarrij, as the Englishman delivered an accurate follow-up to Zakaria Hawsawi to head in the equaliser.

Both sides knew that a draw was not enough. Al-Taawoun would still move into second place with a point, albeit with all of Al-Nassr, Al-Qadsiah and Al-Ahli breathing down their necks. 

Al-Ahli, meanwhile, needed a win after Al-Qadsiah’s dominant display earlier in the evening. Despite numerous attempts, the score remained even.

In the 82nd minute, a dangerous challenge on Martínez by Ibañez saw the defender sent off for the second time in three games. After getting a yellow card earlier in the half, the referee showed no hesitation in giving him his marching orders.

Drama ensued in the final moments of the game when Demiral was brought down in the Al-Taawoun box. After a tense wait for the VAR review, referee Mohammed Hoish ultimately decided on a penalty in the 11th minute of stoppage time to the delight of the home fans. 

Toney, as per usual, converted with confidence as Al-Ahli saw out a 2-1 victory to move level on points with Al-Taawoun and Al-Nassr in second place.

Elsewhere, Al-Qadsiah produced a perfect performance in their home game against Al-Fayha, winning 5-0, with Julián Quiñones bagging a hat-trick. Brendan Rodgers’ side now sit in fifth place with 30 points, just one behind the trio of Al-Taawoun, Al-Nassr and Al-Ahli. 

Meanwhile Al-Shabab, enduring one of their worst starts in the top flight to date, managed to win their first game since Matchday 2. Despite going 2-1 down to NEOM, a four-minute brace by Yannick Carrasco propelled them to a 3-2 victory.

Matchday 16 kicks off on Friday, as Al-Ittihad face Al-Ettifaq that evening, Al-Nassr welcome Al-Shabab on Saturday and Al-Hilal travel to NEOM on Sunday for the round’s headlining fixtures.