NEWS

English Premiership Football Preview Week 17

Written by Christopher Rose
Published December 17, 2005

The Match of the Day for this week's Premiership round isn't until Sunday, when Arsenal host Chelsea in one of the most important fixtures this season, a game that will be hugely influential on this season's title race.

Victory for Arsenal throws the title race wide open; a win for Chelsea will massively disappoint the chasing pack. With both teams having massive European matches to ponder in February, against Real Madrid and Barcelona respectively (and what thrilling prospects they are too, I can't wait!), victory will be vital to both teams' moral and self-belief. Having fallen behind in the table, Arsenal's need is greater and I'm going to call a home win.

Saturday games don't lack interest however, as Aston Villa will hope in vain to get anything from the visit of an improving Manchester United in the lunchtime game; in the afternoon, Everton v Bolton will be a fullblooded and skillful battle that could go either way but I expect Everton to pinch it; Fulham v Blackburn is another exciting prospect and I believe Blackburn are going to pick up some welcome away points.

The basement battle of Portsmouth v West Bromwich Albion, Pompey's first home game after the return of Harry Redknapp, will be a fascinating test of which of these new boys have best learned the art of Premier League survival and I believe West Brom, under former Manchester United and England captain Bryan Robson, are learning faster and will win.

In the other Saturday games, West Ham United entertain Newcastle United but the only thing to unite these two skillful battlers will be the tied result and Wigan Athletic should return to winning ways against a suddenly vulnerable Charlton Athletic. Manchester City stuttered last week whilst Birmingham prospered but I see nothing but role reversal today and the Sky Blues soaring to victory in the late game.

Before this week's football is brought to a close by the battle of the London titans, earlier Sunday the third London team, the increasingly impressive Tottenham Hotspur, make a visit to moody Middlesbrough, but I predict only depression for the North East of England as Spurs win in style.

This preview also appears on my secondary blog About Manchester United.

photo of me A lifelong fan of Manchester United and a passionate lover of music and science fiction, I live in Antequera in the heart of Southern Spain. In addition to serving here as Comments Editor and Blogcritics Forum Admin/Moderator, I also publish a variety of independent online sites. These currently include a bunch of intermittent blogs covering everything from dieting to robots and, most recently, Eurocritics Magazine. My wife and I also run an affordable luxury villa rental in Spain if you're thinking of a holiday!
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
English Premiership Football Preview Week 17
Published: December 17, 2005
Type: News
Section: Sports
Filed Under: Sports: Football (English)
Part of a feature: English Premiership Preview
Writer: Christopher Rose
Christopher Rose's BC Writer page
Christopher Rose's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
Articles in this series
BC articles by Christopher Rose
Sports: Football (English)
All Sports Articles
Christopher Rose's personal weblog
All News articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — October 13, 2006 @ 07:20AM — lewis west

i think that this website is ok no to great but for a professional and logit website i think that it really lacks in quallity becase its jjust borin nothing to catch your eye and i wonted to no what games arwe bein played in hand but o wel
sfe inabit
lewis

#2 — October 13, 2006 @ 07:53AM — Ruvy in Jerusalem

Chris,

Nice job. What would be helpful to a reader not thoroughly familiar with how Eglish football works, would be a guide to the Premier League and its teams (and a brief paragraph on how one stays in the Premier League) and the something about the secondary teams (and what a secondary team needs to do to rise to premier status).

If these questions sound like nonsense to you, remember that I follow Israeli football and American baseball and football, and in spite of the fact that European games are broadcast here every Sunday night, I generally do not follow European football that much. On most Sunday nights, I'm out with a rifle and pistol watching over people trying to get a tramp home...

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/41147)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments