The weekend in European club football had everything as as the Premier League, LaLiga, Bundesliga, Ligue 1 and Serie A all provided plenty of tasty talking points.

From Paris Saint-Germain getting upset by Nice to Bayern Munich battling Leverkusen to a draw, from Manchester United falling to Brighton to Inter Milan walloping AC Milan. Things ended Sunday with more frustration for Chelsea, a historic first win for Heidenheim, and Arsenal gritting their teeth to pick up an impressive win at Everton

– Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)

Let’s get into it.

SUNDAY REVIEW

The Sunday lead: Arsenal fail to convince, but win again

Leandro Trossard kept Arsenal within touching distance of Premier League leaders Manchester City with a second-half winner at Everton to extend the Gunners’ run of winning while failing to impress.

With manager Mikel Arteta dropping goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale in favour of David Raya — marking the on-loan Brentford keeper’s first appearance for the club — the surprise selection paid off when substitute Trossard sealed victory with an angled shot beyond Jordan Pickford after being teed up by Bukayo Saka on 69 minutes. The win also took Arsenal to within two points of City, who sit on top with 15 points from five games as the only team not to drop a point so far this season.

Arsenal have yet to rediscover the form that saw them top the table for the majority of last season, but their success in terms of finding ways to win while struggling to shine will be seen as a positive by Arteta. His team slumped badly towards the end of last term, with dropped points enabling City to overtake them in the title race. This season, Arsenal have enjoyed narrow wins against Nottingham Forest, Crystal Palace and Manchester United, plus a home draw against Fulham, prior to Sunday’s trip to Goodison, where they’d not won since 2017.

It was more of the same against Sean Dyche’s limited Everton side with chances few and far between for both teams. Arsenal dominated possession but rarely created a scoring chance, but Trossard still managed to claim all three points with his goal.

With neighbours Tottenham next up at the Emirates in next Sunday’s North London derby, this win means Arsenal can go into the clash with Ange Postecoglu’s side two places behind, but level on points with, their old rivals. — Olley

Liga F strike ends: can Real Madrid now rival Barça?

Liga F kicked off at the second attempt this weekend after the players agreed a new minimum wage with the league — starting at €21,000 for the current campaign — and ended their strike. The competition began in a familiar style, with champions Barcelona beating Madrid CFF 2-0, but there is some hope there may be a closer title race this season as Real Madrid continue to improve.

Goals in each half from Caroline Graham Hansen and Asisat Oshaola helped a Barça side featuring six players who won the World Cup last month with Spain pick up all three points. Madrid CFF are the only side to beat Barça in Liga F over the past two seasons, but they never looked capable of providing another upset on Saturday.

On Friday, an ever-improving Real Madrid officially opened the new campaign with a 2-0 win at Valencia. Colombian sensation Linda Caicedo set up the opener for Athenea del Castillo, with France’s Naomie Feller adding the second. There was also a debut for Australia international Hayley Raso, a summer signing from Manchester City.

Last season, Los Blancos finished 10 points behind Barça, who only dropped five points, but there are signs they are getting closer to the European champions slowly. Levante and Atletico Madrid are among the other clubs hoping to sneak into an unlikely battle for top spot over the next nine months. — Marsden

Chelsea drop more points

Ogden: Chelsea look a mess

Mark Ogden dissects the problems at Chelsea after their 0-0 draw away vs. Bournemouth.

Fourteen shots, one real chance, no goals scored and nothing gained. That’s the review of Chelsea’s 0-0 draw at Bournemouth. Until this collection of amortized talents look like a team, dismal performances will continue. — Tyler

Dybala magic lifts Roma’s mood

In case you were wondering what it would take to finally kick start Roma’s season, you have your answer. Paolo Dybala is the answer to your wonders and the answer to the Giallorossi‘s issues so far this season. The Argentine genius scored twice on Sunday — his second goal was an absolute beauty — to give Roma their first win of the season in style against Empoli (7-0), after one draw and two defeats to open the 2023-24 campaign.

However, the scoreline and the performance still didn’t make Jose Mourinho smile. The Portuguese looked grumpy at the Olimpico on Sunday night for most of the game despite his team’s first victory, though they needed it so badly. Despite decent recruitment this summer — Romelu Lukaku and Renato Sanches on loan, Houssem Aouar and Leandro Paredes on permanent deals — the start of the campaign had been poor. Mourinho’s side were 19th in Serie A at kick off (Empoli, their opponents, were 20th) and not winning this one would have been embarrassing.

To make Sunday even better, we saw Lukaku’s first goal for Roma. Until his goal late in the game, it felt at times that the Belgium international wasn’t even on the pitch. He hardly touched the ball, didn’t get any chances or decent service, but when Andrea Belotti found him in front of goal, his finish was clinical.

This team plays for Dybala, is built around Dybala and on Sunday, Dybala was the star once again. But there is definitely room for another king in Rome. — Laurens

Madrid fight back to maintain 100% record in LaLiga

Real Madrid aren’t making life easy for themselves this season. Yes, they have maximum points so far, the only team in LaLiga with five wins out of five, but Sunday’s 2-1 victory over Real Sociedad was the third of those — the others came against Almeria and Getafe — where they’ve started slowly, gone behind inside the first 15 minutes and had to recover.

At halftime at the Santiago Bernabeu, with Madrid 1-0 down, Jude Bellingham wasn’t the player everybody was talking about for once. Instead, it was Real Sociedad’s Take Kubo, who looked the game’s best player. The Japan winger was the architect of La Real‘s opener, his ball allowing Ander Barrenetxea to finish at the second attempt. He had another brilliant goal disallowed, and ended the half with three chances created, plus one devastating nutmeg of Toni Kroos.

Yet Madrid weren’t fazed. They had 10 shots of their own in the first half, including forward Joselu’s effort off the crossbar. And they wasted no time in restoring order after the break. Federico Valverde had them level just 40 seconds into the second half, his shot flying in off the post, before Joselu’s expertly placed header made it 2-1 after an hour.

The good news for Madrid is that they’re top of the table, without coming close to playing their best football, and with key players like Thibaut Courtois, Éder Militão and Vinícius Júnior out injured. Next weekend’s Madrid derby — despite Atletico’s inconsistent form — will be their biggest test yet. — Kirkland

News of the day

  • Mason Greenwood made his first appearance for Getafe on Sunday, coming on as a second-half sub in their 3-2 win over Osasuna.

  • Sheffield United manager Paul Heckingbottom has hit out against Premier League referees following their dramatic late defeat to Tottenham on Saturday. “The officiating is appalling,” he told Sky Sports in his postmatch interview. “It’s not about the football decisions, just game management.”

  • Monaco missed a chance to go top of Ligue 1 with Sunday’s 2-2 draw at Lorient, but the real story was the return to football of defender Benjamin Mendy. The former Man City player last played in August, 2021, before standing trial on rape and attempted rape charges in England.

And finally, on Sunday…

Tiny Heidenheim enjoy a piece of history

Nobody’s expecting much from FC Heidenheim in the Bundesliga this season. Why? Because this season marks their first ever in the German top-flight, and Sunday saw them make a bit of club history. Having been originally formed in 1846 and re-formed in 2007, their 4-2 win over Werder Bremen was their first-ever victory in the top tier of the Bundesliga, a neat story for the tiny club from Baden-Württemberg.

Midfielder Eren Dinkci, on loan this season from — you guessed it — Werder Bremen, scored twice against his parent club to pace Heidenheim to victory, with a Tim Kleindienst and Jan-Nicklas Beste also tallying. Yet Heidenheim’s manager, Frank Schmidt — who also made history this weekend as the longest-running manager in German league history when celebrating 16 years in charge — was rather sardonic about the memorable win.

“There was nothing cheesy about today’s win, it was just an awesome game of football,” said Schmidt.

We couldn’t agree more. — Tyler

Missed the action on Saturday? Keep reading for all the talking points.


SATURDAY REVIEW

The Saturday lead: Liverpool again offer reasons for optimism or worry (depending how you look at it)

Liverpool haven’t always been convincing this season but briefly on Saturday, after beating Wolves 3-1 at Molineux, they were top of the table with 13 points from a possible 15.

Wolves took the lead against the Reds, just like Bournemouth and Newcastle did in previous weeks already this season, but again Jurgen Klopp’s side came back to win.

Liverpool, who handed 20-year-old Jarell Quansah his first Premier League start in defence, were lucky they were only 1-0 down at half-time but in the second half, their attacking power was too much for the home side. Luis Díaz changed the game after coming on at the break, Cody Gakpo got the equaliser and Mohamed Salah chipped in with two assists. Klopp was also able to bring £85 million striker Darwin Núñez off the bench with the score at 1-1.

After missing out on the top four last season, it’s difficult to know what aims Klopp should be setting for Liverpool this season. Is securing a swift return to the Champions League enough or can this team emulate the class of 2019, 2020 and 2022 and push for the title?

They have only kept one clean sheet this season but they have the attacking talent to rival any other team in the league. –Rob Dawson


Saturday talking points around the leagues

Man United are flailing, but the club can’t turn on Ten Hag now

Manchester United are in trouble, but they have no option but to back manager Erik ten Hag. They’re a club seemingly lurching from crisis to crisis off the field, and things aren’t going much better on it, but they’ve staked so much on Ten Hag that they can’t panic now.

The Dutchman has been central to a transfer policy that has seen former players Lisandro Martínez, Antony, André Onana and Sofyan Amrabat arrive at Old Trafford, plus many others with links to Dutch football, while he’s also been given licence to lay down the law to the squad. Cristiano Ronaldo was cut loose last season after his spat with Ten Hag, and £73 million forward Jadon Sancho might have played his last game for the club following his very public row with his manager.

If Ten Hag is not the right man for this job, then who is? For the first time in the Premier League era, United have lost three of their first five games but club leadership can take solace in the fact that last season began with defeats to Brighton and Brentford and Ten Hag managed to turn things around.

Ten Hag, the 53-year-old former Ajax boss, needs some respite quickly, but it won’t get any easier with a Champions League trip to Bayern Munich to come on Wednesday. — Dawson

How can Man City get the best out of Phil Foden?

James Olley wonders what Phil Foden’s best role is after an underwhelming performance in Man City’s win vs. West Ham.


Guardiola’s influence palpable as Man City winning machine rolls on

Manager Pep Guardiola’s powers of persuasion came to the fore as Manchester City beat West Ham 3-1 at London Stadium on Saturday.

It appeared likely at one stage that both Bernardo Silva and Kyle Walker would leave the Premier League champions this summer. Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain were courting Silva while Bayern Munich pursued Walker only for both players to sign new deals with Man City following lengthy conversations with Guardiola, who was desperate for the pair to stay. Saturday proved why.

While only Rodri, with 129 touches, got on the ball more than Walker’s 105 touches as City dominated play in east London, Silva provided the moment of quality to unlock a spirited and compact West Ham side, lifting a 76th-minute finish over Alphonse Areola to put the visitors 2-1 up. They had to come from behind after James Ward-Prowse’s 36th-minute header threatened an upset with the Hammers taking the one clear chance that came their way.

But Jérémy Doku marked his second City appearance with a fine goal just 41 seconds into the second half before Silva struck and Erling Haaland ended an afternoon in which he looked more human than he has in a while with a late third.

Haaland had as many shots (9) as completed passes and ended with an individual xG of 2.47, underlining the quality of chances he spurned. Ultimately, it didn’t matter as City maintained their perfect start to this Premier League campaign.

There was a reminder, however, that Guardiola, back in the dugout after a minor back operation, can’t always get his own way as Lucas Paquetá opposed his City side. City had two offers rejected this summer for Paqueta, who wanted to make the move, and he made a point of embracing Guardiola before and after the 90 minutes here.

Guardiola lingered a little longer than the standard post-match interaction with an opponent, appearing to whisper something into the Brazilian’s ear. We may never know what was said but West Ham will hope it isn’t as effective as his words to Silva and Walker. — James Olley


Inter Milan firmly secure upper hand in derby vs. AC Milan

Inter have made beating their neighbours and arch rivals AC Milan a bit of a habit now — think Champions League semifinals, Coppa Italia semifinals and Italian Super Cup all last season, as well as many of their head-to-heads in the league in the last few years. As of Saturday, the Nerazzuri have won the last five Milan derbies in a row for the first time in their whole history.

Yet, their demolition of their crosstown rivals on Saturday was on another level — a 5-1 margin with maximum efficiency, brilliance, directness and ruthlessness. It was manager Filippo Inzaghi’s Inter at their best, and their biggest win in the derby. Furthermore, it was first time they scored five times since March 1974 when they also won 5-1.

And Inter fans have a new hero. Marcus Thuram scored a fabulous goal to make it 2-0 before the break, coming inside onto his right foot and placing the ball in Mike Maignan’s top corner. He was also involved in his team’s first one after five minutes.

An early first-half goal, a late first-half goal and the game was pretty much over already. Milan tried after the break to come back but everything Inzaghi tried worked and his players continue their perfect start of the season with a fourth win in as many league games with 13 goals scored and just one conceded! A hugely impressive start for Inter while this defeat will hurt AC Milan a great deal. –Julien Laurens


Bayern Munich’s grip on the Bundesliga is in jeopardy but they can still build

Bayern Munich needed a spark. Yes, the long-standing Bundesliga champions came out of the international break in second place on goal difference, but their uneven play and questionable transfer window offered valid reason for concern. Friday’s visit of league leaders Bayer Leverkusen offered a golden chance to reassert themselves as the best team in Germany, and while it ended in a dramatic 2-2 draw, manager Thomas Tuchel & Co. have something solid on which to build.

An early Bayern Munich lead — thanks to Harry Kane’s reflexive header at the back post after just seven minutes — gave way to a dominant opening 20 minutes, but Leverkusen didn’t wilt. Alejandro Grimaldo scored his first Bundesliga goal with a superb free-kick to level things on 24 minutes, though Leverkusen couldn’t press their advantage as they ended the half seemingly in control.

Leverkusen’s summer signing Victor Boniface, who already has four goals in three career Bundesliga appearances, got the better of Bayern centerback Dayot Upamecano time and time again only to squander his chances. The one shot he did get beyond Sven Ullreich was disallowed for offside as the second half saw both teams have chances to take the lead.

Kane was denied by Lukas Hradecky’s foot after a sweeping Bayern move, Boniface flashed a pair of shots narrowly over the bar and Florian Wirtz hit the post for Leverkusen, but with four minutes left, the hosts would lead again. A flowing move down the left was capped by Leon Goretzka’s late goal into the box and confident, sweeping finish on 86 minutes, which had everyone in the Allianz Arena (and watching on TV) realizing that Bayern had “done it again.”

Then, in the first minute of injury time, a clumsy collision by Alphonso Davies on Jonas Hofmann in an harmless position on the left edge of the box gave Leverkusen a chance to equalize from the spot. Substitute Exequiel Palacios duly dispatched it beyond Ullreich, sealing Leverkusen’s comeback for a 2-2 finish, leaving Tuchel again searching for answers.

The draw was what both sides deserved, but both sides will invariably draw different conclusions. For Leverkusen, it was vindication that this squad has the talent and tenacity to challenge for the title. For Bayern, it was a point well-earned ahead of a Champions League date with Manchester United, and a chance to regroup before league games with Bochum and RB Leipzig to close out the month of September. At this early stage of the campaign, it should offer confirmation that things aren’t as bad as they seem. –James Tyler

Dawson: Atmosphere at Ten Hag’s Man United disintegrating

Rob Dawson reacts to loud boos at Old Trafford after Erik ten Hag’s decision to sub Anthony Martial on for Rasmus Hojlund.


Valencia bring Atletico Madrid back down to earth

From a 7-0 win before the international break to Saturday’s meek 3-0 defeat at Valencia — this was a reality check for Atletico Madrid, and a serious blow to their image as dark horse title contenders. Coach Diego Simeone called it “possibly the weakest game in the time I’ve been at a club” and that’s quite a claim, given that he took over in December 2011.

Atletico’s reputation was built on a rock-solid defence, but that was nowhere to be seen at Mestalla. Neither was the midfield. Captain Koke is injured, Rodrigo de Paul was hurt on international duty with Argentina, Thomas Lemar went off in the first half here, and the deep-lying midfielder who was the club’s number one target during the summer transfer window never arrived.

The Champions League group stage begins this week, as Atletico look to avoid a repeat of last year’s embarrassing elimination. They travel to Lazio on Tuesday, and then there’s a Madrid derby with Real next weekend. This was the worst possible preparation. –Alex Kirkland


The Joaos add wow factor for Barcelona

Barcelona temporarily moved to the top of LaLiga as they blitzed Real Betis 5-0 on Saturday at Montjuic, with João Félix and João Cancelo adding the wow factor on their full debuts and Ferran Torres ending the team’s 866-day wait for a goal from a free-kick.

Felix opened the scoring from a tight angle before helping set up the second for Robert Lewandowski with a delightful dummy. Torres added the third as he scored Barça’s first direct free-kick since Lionel Messi netted against Valencia in May 2021. Substitute Raphinha netted the fourth and Cancelo completed the rout with a brilliant solo effort.

Deadline day signings Felix and Cancelo both came into the side for their first starts for their new club. They were the stars of a first half that saw Barça hit heights they had not previously hit this season. Despite coming through their first four games unbeaten, they had not always impressed, but this was different.

Felix had already had a few nice moments when he delivered the opener with an acute finish. The goal was born from Barça’s press and a thumping Cancelo challenge. The second goal came from a sustained spell of pressure. Cancelo provided an extra body in the middle before Andreas Christensen’s incisive pass, brilliantly left by Felix, was turned home by Lewandowski.

Only the offside flag denied Felix a second goal after the break. The floodgates soon opened, though, as Betis crumbled. Torres fired home a brilliant free-kick, Raphinha put the finishing touch to another good move and Cancelo beat his man before firing low into the bottom corner to seal a memorable evening for Xavi’s side. They move one point clear of Real Madrid, who host Real Sociedad on Sunday. –Sam Marsden


News of the day

  • Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag was met with booing from the crowd as he subbed off Rasmus Højlund for Anthony Martial during his side’s 3-1 defeat to Brighton. Asked about it, the manager unsurprisingly opted to brush it off, saying it was “a positive” because it showed the fans were happy with Højlund’s performance. “It’s good they give this signal, this message,” he said. “It will give Rasmus belief.”

  • Why has Jude Bellingham been off to such a hot start for Real Madrid? Well, he’s talented, sure, but manager Carlo Ancelotti says it’s more than that. It’s the player’s personality that is the reason he has adapted so quickly to life at Real Madrid, Ancelotti said, adding: “Good players with personality suffer a bit less than the others.”

  • Paris Saint-Germain suffered their first loss of the Ligue 1 season as Nice forward Terem Moffi scored two goals and earned an assist to help his side to a 3-2 win in Paris on Friday. PSG, who on Tuesday will host Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League, could have provisionally topped the standings with a win but slipped down to third on eight points.


And finally …

Fifteen Las Palmas players — over half the squad — and two of the club’s physios were left red-faced after missing the team’s flight to mainland Spain for Sunday’s LaLiga game at Sevilla.

A communication breakdown saw the group go for a coffee at a cafe inside Gran Canaria airport when their flight was delayed, only to then arrive late to the departure gate with the plane already preparing for take-off.

Transportation is a major issue for Canary Islands clubs like Las Palmas, with flights to the rest of Spain taking just under three hours.

Fortunately, the club was able to arrange a last-minute charter flight for the players later on Saturday, praising local airline Binter for “managing to find an available plane and crew” to ensure the entire squad could spend the night in Seville ahead of the match. –Marsden