Cole Palmer fires Chelsea to victory over Newcastle, West Ham pile more pressure on Ten Hag

Chelsea’s Cole Palmer celebrates scoring their second goal against Newcastle United. (Reuters)
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Updated 27 October 2024
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Cole Palmer fires Chelsea to victory over Newcastle, West Ham pile more pressure on Ten Hag

  • The Blues got back to winning ways with Palmer at the heart of their best work

LONDON: Cole Palmer inspired Chelsea to a 2-1 victory over Newcastle as West Ham piled more pressure on beleaguered Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag with a dramatic win by the same scoreline on Sunday.
Tottenham were beaten 1-0 at Crystal Palace, who picked up their first win of the season.
Chelsea had been beaten in the Premier League for the first time since Enzo Maresca’s first match in charge at Liverpool last weekend despite an impressive performance.
The Blues got back to winning ways with Palmer at the heart of their best work.
The England international had a goal marginally ruled out for offside inside the first five minutes.
Palmer was the creator for the opening goal, despite not being credited with the assist, as his sumptuous ball over the top freed Pedro Neto, who picked out Nicolas Jackson to slot in his sixth goal of the season.
Newcastle are now winless in five league games as the pressure mounts on Eddie Howe ahead of a rematch against Chelsea in the League Cup on Wednesday.
The Magpies did get back on level terms before half-time as Alexander Isak tapped in Lewis Hall’s cross at the end of a well-worked move.
Palmer took just two minutes into the second period to make the decisive impact with a driving run forward and powerful finish that beat Nick Pope at his near post.
Newcastle should have left London with a point, though, as Isak botched a huge chance to level 15 minutes from time after rounding Robert Sanchez.
Ten Hag was left to rue a familiar lack of ruthlessness as United’s fourth league defeat in nine games will spark further speculation on how long he will be given to turn the Red Devils’ fortunes around.
The visitors should have been out of sight by half-time at the London Stadium.
Alejandro Garnacho hit the woodwork inside two minutes and Edson Alvarez also headed off his own crossbar.
But it was Diogo Dalot who missed the biggest chance when the Portuguese international somehow fired over with the goal gaping after rounding Lukasz Fabianski.
Under-fire West Ham boss Julen Lopetegui showed his disgust with the Hammers’ first-half display by making three substitutions at the break.
Crysencio Summerville was one of those introduced and he slid in to open the scoring against the run of play on 74 minutes.
Casemiro brought United level nine minutes from time with a header from point-blank range.
But there was late drama when VAR intervened for a foul on Danny Ings by Matthijs de Ligt.
Jarrod Bowen smashed in the resulting spot-kick to take West Ham above United, who sink to 14th in the table.
Palace began the day in the relegation zone but were good value for the three points at Selhurst Park as Tottenham’s struggles on the road continue.
Eberechi Eze’s deft flick teed up Jean-Philippe Mateta to fire home the only goal.
Eze had a second ruled out for offside in the second half, but Tottenham, without injured captain Son Heung-min, were toothless in attack.
Spurs have won just once in five away league games this season as they slip to eighth, four points off the top four.


Lando Norris with “most to lose” as F1 title decider looms in Abu Dhabi

Updated 6 sec ago
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Lando Norris with “most to lose” as F1 title decider looms in Abu Dhabi

ABU DHABI: Lando Norris is the Formula 1 title favorite ahead of a three-way decider in Abu Dhabi — which also means he has the most to lose.
He and teammate Oscar Piastri are each looking to win their first title, but Norris saw his comfortable 24-point lead entering last week’s Qatar Grand Prix whittled down to 12 by the end of it as Red Bull’s Max Verstappen surged back into the fight.
“Of course, I have the most to lose because I am the one at the top,” Norris said Thursday. “I’ll do my best to stay there till the end of the year, a few more days. At the same time, if it doesn’t go my way, then I’ll try again next year. It’ll hurt probably for a little while, but that’s life.”
Norris fastest — but not by much
The only way Norris can lose the title is if he finishes Sunday’s race outside the top three. His pace in Friday’s first practice session suggested that’s unlikely as was fastest ahead of Verstappen, though only by .008 of a second. Charles Leclerc was third, 0.016 off the pace for Ferrari.
Still, the session wasn’t a reliable guide to race pace. It was held in daytime, not under lights, and only 11 of the 20 regular drivers took part. Piastri was among those to give up his car as teams pushed to meet a rule requiring them to field young or inexperienced drivers in a certain number of practice sessions each year.
Norris has denied he’ll ask Piastri to help out to at least ensure one McLaren driver becomes champion if it seems Verstappen will take the title.
Verstappen’s chances were revived when McLaren botched a strategy call in Qatar, one race after Norris and Piastri were disqualified in Las Vegas.
Relaxed Verstappen
The one contender who’s been in a final-race decider before, Verstappen said he’s “just enjoying being here” in a season where his title defense often seemed impossible.
“I have four of those at home, so it’s nice to add a fifth,” he said Thursday, looking at the trophy standing next to him.
“I’ve already achieved everything that I wanted to achieve in F1 and everything is just a bonus. I just keep doing it because I love it and I enjoy it and that’s also how I go into this weekend. Have a good time out there, try to maximize the result.”
Verstappen was 104 points off the lead at one stage, and wrote his chances off again when he wasn’t competitive in qualifying for the Brazilian Grand Prix, three races ago.
Piastri clings on
Piastri had a 34-point lead in August and seemed on target to become the first Australian champion in 45 years. He hasn’t won in eight races since.
With only a slim shot at the title, Piastri could face the dilemma of whether to sacrifice his own bid for Norris. “I don’t really have an answer until I know what’s expected of me,” he said.
Piastri showed good pace to take second spot in Qatar last week, though he was left “speechless” after a race dominated by McLaren’s wrong strategy call.
“Obviously, I need a fair few things to happen this weekend to come out champion,” he said, “but I’ll just make sure I’m in the right place at the right time and see what happens.”