Chelsea, Spurs Seek Striking Options As Man United Turn Up The Heat
18th January 2019
Elsewhere, Manchester City travel to manager-less Huddersfield while Premier League leaders Liverpool host Crystal Palace
- Chelsea and Arsenal clash in the Premier League this weekend, with both managers looking nervously over their shoulders at a charging Manchester United as Tottenham adjust to life without the injured Harry Kane
- Unai Emery's side are now level on points with sixth-placed Manchester United, who have won all five league matches under the temporary leadership of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer
- Chelsea hope to have Gonzalo Higuain signed up in time to feature at the Emirates, but will the Argentine solve the Blues' striking woes?
LONDON, United
Kingdom- Chelsea and Arsenal clash in the Premier League this weekend, with
both managers looking nervously over their shoulders at a charging Manchester
United as Tottenham adjust to life without the injured Harry Kane.
Arsenal have lost three of their past six Premier League
matches to fall six points behind Chelsea in the race for a top-four finish.
Unai Emery's side are now level on points with sixth-placed
Manchester United, who have won all five league matches under the temporary
leadership of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.
Elsewhere, Manchester City travel to manager-less
Huddersfield while Premier League leaders Liverpool host Crystal Palace.
AFP Sport picks out some of the main talking points ahead of
the weekend fixtures in the Premier League.
Can Emery stop Arsenal slide?
Unai Emery led his side on a 22-game unbeaten run between
August and December as Arsenal mounted a strong challenge for a return to the
Champions League.
But the feel-good factor has vanished at the Emirates and
United now trail fifth-placed Arsenal only on goal difference.
Mesut Ozil, the club's biggest earner, is being frozen out
and there are reports that head of recruitment Sven Mislintat could be on his
way out of the club.
Former Arsenal midfielder Emmanuel Petit said Emery needs to
completely rebuild the squad and fears the mood could quickly change against
the manager, describing the game as a "must-win".
"This team is not good enough to fight for the
title," he told the Daily Mirror. "This team is strong enough to
fight for third or fourth place and that's it. They've been like that for years
and years. You don't have to be a magician to understand that.
"I was thinking, 'OK, you sacked Arsene Wenger for good
reasons'. But then I was expecting a revolution at the club. But it's not
happened."
Will Higuain solve Chelsea goal drought?
Chelsea hope to have Gonzalo Higuain signed up in time to
feature at the Emirates, but will the Argentine solve the Blues' striking woes?
Former Arsenal favourite Olivier Giroud and Atletico Madrid
bound Alvaro Morata have scored a paltry six Premier League goals between them
this season, with Eden Hazard leading the way on 10.
Higuain, 31, has struggled at AC Milan this season, on loan
from Juventus, with just eight goals in all competitions -- prompting doubts
over whether he is the man to make the difference.
But Higuain enjoyed his most prolific season under Sarri at
Napoli in 2015/16, prompting a 90 million euro move to Juventus.
Sarri will hope Higuain's arrival will not only guarantee
goals, but improve Hazard's mood by allowing the Belgian to return to his
favoured berth wide on the left.
Kane injury gives Pochettino striking headache
Tottenham manager Mauricio Pochettino has lost talisman
Harry Kane until March and is also without forward Son Heung-min for a crucial
part of the season.
Kane's injury and Son's participation in the Asian Cup leave
Pochettino short of options up front.
Spanish striker Fernando Llorente is likely to come into the
side for Sunday's match against Fulham, with Lucas Moura another option, even
though he is returning from a thigh injury himself.
No side has conceded more goals in the Premier League this
season than Fulham, so Pochettino's men should have enough to bounce back at
Craven Cottage.
But with Spurs involved in four competitions in the next
month, Tottenham may finally have to spend some money in the transfer market to
provide cover for Kane.
Can Solskjaer make himself indispensable?
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer is gunning for his seventh straight win
since he took over as interim manager from the sacked Jose Mourinho and has a
clutch of winnable fixtures to look forward to, starting with Brighton on
Saturday.
The Norwegian has not put a foot wrong at Old Trafford since
he arrived last month and has forced himself into the reckoning to be the next
permanent manager.
Premier League meetings with Burnley, Leicester and Fulham
are also on the horizon before a stiffer test against Liverpool on February 24.
Following his side's statement win against Spurs last
weekend, Solskjaer is now the bookies' favourite for the job, ahead of
Pochettino.
Premier League
fixtures
Saturday (1500 GMT
unless stated)
Wolverhampton v Leicester (1230), Bournemouth v West Ham,
Liverpool v Crystal Palace, Manchester United v Brighton, Newcastle v Cardiff,
Southampton v Everton, Watford v Burnley, Arsenal v Chelsea (1730)
Sunday
Huddersfield v Manchester City (1330), Fulham v Tottenham
(1600)