West Ham’s bizarre decision to sign Hugill continues to confuse

As reported by The Sun, West Ham are ready to move Jordan Hugill to a new club this summer just months after signing him in the January transfer window.

What’s the story?

Hugill signed on a last day of the January window but has gone to make just three substitute appearances for the Hammers, failing to even make a single start under David Moyes.

It’s a bizarre situation and it seems that the club are ready to call time on his spell at the London Stadium already.

The Sun reckon the striker, who is rated at £7.2m by Transfermarkt, could be sold or loaned out in the summer as the club look to bring in more talented striking talent to push on from an immensely disappointing season.

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Why did they sign him?

With just eight goals in 28 Championship appearances this term, Hugill wasn’t exactly the most inspiring of signings for Hammers supporters to begin with and his lack of action so far demonstrates that Moyes may not rate him highly enough to compete in Premier League action.

The move appeared to be an attempt from decision makers at the club that they were taking recruitment seriously and in every sense it’s a bit of business that has all the hallmarks of a panic buy.

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Cutting their losses with the player this summer may demonstrate that Moyes is slowly growing in influence at the club and is set to take over control of transfers, which given the Hammers’ track record in recent windows could only be an improvement.

Irons fans will certainly be hoping the next striker signing can do more than make the odd substitute appearance.

Should Leicester now be planning for the worst?

When 2-0 down at the Lane last weekend, Leicester fought back bravely to make it 2-2. At 4-2 they did the same thing, but this time they fell short.

Losing the game 4-3 isn’t the end of the world, and maybe after the International break, Leicester will come back full of hope after their exploits. Maybe it was a moral victory to some extent.

But that game almost sums up their season.

The Foxes did wonderfully well to gain promotion, and on the back of a wonderful season, Nigel Pearson gained an awful lot of respect and well-wishers. But he also gained the full backing of the Leicester board, who allowed him to spend big money on club record signing Leonardo Ulloa, and break it again to sign Andrej Kramaric.

Even with the club deep in a relegation battle, the Leicester top brass dug into the club’s coffers to give Pearson the money he needed to bring in one of Europe’s stellar youngsters, Kramaric. The Evening Standard had linked him to Chelsea and Juventus, but it was the Foxes who took a gamble the player in the hope he could score the goals to keep Leicester up.

But with nine games to go, the situation is now looking desperate.

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Pearson presumably still has the backing of the board. If they were considering giving him the chop they’d have done it when he argued with a fan in the stands, got in a ruckus with Palace’s James McArthur, or lambasted the ‘arrogance’ of a referee.

No, the board seem happy to stick with their man, and may even now stick with him through relegation.

After 10 straight defeats before Christmas, Leicester looked dead and buried, but they managed to stop the rot with a win away to Hull. Since then they’ve been close to those above them, but never actually managed to pull themselves to safety.

Now they are firmly at the bottom again, and although they do have a game in hand over the teams above them, that game is against Chelsea. It doesn’t look good for the Foxes.

But if the rest of the season is anything to go by, they’ll fight manfully to stay up. It’s not just the players who have given it their all this season in an attempt to survive.

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The fans have stuck by their team, the board have done all they can by giving Pearson money to spend, and the manager himself has protected his players admirably.

The Spurs game at the weekend typified Leicester’s attitude. The team looked dead and buried only to give themselves hope. Then they looked dead again, but they still kept fighting until the end. It was a case of too little too late, though. And their season is dangerously close to mirroring this one game.

If they do go down you can bet they’ll go down fighting, and although they look dead and buried right now, they might be closer to safety than you think come the end.

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In danger of having too many cooks at Manchester United?

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson has once again broached the somewhat thorny issue of when he plans to finally step down from his position in charge of the club by revealing that he plans to become a director at Old Trafford, but would this simply create a power vaccum and leave his successor little chance of success with such a commanding figure of authority just down the hall?

Having been manager of the club for 27 years and led United to 12 league titles, 5 FA Cups, 4 League Cups and 2 Champions League triumphs, what is clear is that whoever replaces Ferguson at the helm of this European juggernaut is tantamount on a hiding to nothing. It’s not only his success, though, that makes this pretty much an impossible act to follow, but his presence and both are intertwined so closely that unless Ferguson is gone for good, he will continue to loom large over the next man in the dugout.

In an interview with twentyfour7magazine, Ferguson said: “There’s no getting rid of me. I will probably become a director. Nobody knows. Neither do I. It won’t be a doctor that tells me to quit. That’s a long time away (being a director at the club), I hope.

“The role Bobby Charlton has played at the club has been fantastic. He has been a tremendous support to the manager and a lot of the players. I think Bayern Munich is the perfect model. It’s no problem having a replica of that for this club who have had so many great players over the years and who are now ambassadors now like Andy Cole, Bryan Robson, Peter Schmeichel. There are quite a few of them here now and that’s a role we should be using as well.”

By referring to Bayern Munich, Ferguson is obviously pointing to the fact that club legends Uli Hoeneß is chairman and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge is the chairman of the executive board in what represents a complex and bureaucratic system which has helped ensure the club has become one of the best run and financially sound in the entire world. As models go, Bayern isn’t a bad one to reach for, but when it comes to Ferguson taking up a similar position at United, it just looks not only impractical but overbearing.

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The aforementioned figures at Bayern were certainly legends at the club as players which has facilitated, like Franz Beckenbauer before them, a voice in the running of the club, but that is not to say that it is an environment without conflict, and various managers over the years have found the inner wranglings and behind closed doors power struggles impossible to work with. Could Ferguson really promise to stay out of all team affairs if he saw something that he didn’t like? A club with two masters would only serve to create and cause confusion when they should be speaking, listening and leading with one voice.

Ferguson is not just any other figure to Manchester United, he is the man who has transformed them from a sleeping giant into a world powerhouse and the richest club in the world just ahead of Real Madrid. The reason Charlton, like Hoeneß and Rummenigge found it easier was that they were never closely linked to team affairs after they retired and it’s a completely different kettle of fish because their opinions on certain matters concerning the team wouldn’t be sought with quite the same vigour or have been lent quite the same measure of weight.

It’s extremely likely that Ferguson will be heavily involved in picking his successor, with David Moyes, Jose Mourinho and Pep Guardiola the favourites for various reasons, but every principle they come to encompass between them the 71-year-old Scot possesses. He’s able to hold the club together and its various strands, from youth-team development (an area of weakness for Mourinho), to European experience (an area of weakness for Moyes) to battling in an environment unfamiliar to your methods and having to change styles to suit the players at your disposal (a Guardiola weakness soon to be tested at Bayern).

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Much like Liverpool had to eventually ban Bill Shankly from the training ground for frequently turning up and talking to the players after he stood down as the club’s manager only to discover he missed the job too much and took the leap too early, Ferguson’s presence could destabilise the new era that comes in after he’s finished. Dario Gradi tried and failed numerous times to step up to board level at Crewe only to be roped back into management when a new boss failed and you can see something very similar happening at United.

Nobody is telling Ferguson to retire right now, or even next season, because as he steers his side to yet another record-breaking league title, he clearly has something to offer and will continue to do so for a few more years yet, but when it comes to him taking a senior role within the administration of the club after he retires, unless it is merely a hand-holding exercise and a ceremonial post, unlike the ones at Bayern he mentions, then it could have a toxic effect on his legacy with visions of a man who simply didn’t know when to move on, let go and call it a day.

PL25: When Henry and Arsenal reminded one and all of their potential greatness

To celebrate 25 years of the Premier League each week in Football Fancast we’re going to be looking back at a memorable game that took place on the corresponding date. This time out we revisit a sensational reclamation of legendary status and a place in the history books.

There have been books written about Arsenal’s 2003/04 season of invincibility. Three years ago a film covering the unsurpassed achievement received a cinematic release. Outside the Emirates stand statues of the main protagonists.

Such cultural testimonies are deserving of an extraordinary 10-month spell of beautiful, enthralling football that avoided the taste of league defeat even once.  More so they rightfully celebrate an artistic masterpiece created by Arsene Wenger in his element that was granite to the core with Jens Lehmann and Sol Campbell and Gilberto Silva and made fantastical by the devilment of Freddie Ljungberg, Robert Pires, Dennis Bergkamp and Thierry Henry.

Yet when viewed as a whole it is all too easy to forget the toil behind the triumphs; the reserves of faith and fortitude that were dug deep down into to ensure that history was made. It is all too easy instead to think back on only the imperious fare that saw Henry glide his way to 39 goals across all competitions; to Bergkamp twinkling and scheming and the Gunners in another gear to all around them.

It cost to be so good. To be so good they had to go right to the precipice of losing everything.

The Good Friday of 2004 was one such afternoon. A week earlier they had been spoken of as treble chasers but an FA Cup semi-final loss to Manchester United put paid to that and then three days prior to a visit of Liverpool in the league came a crushing Champions League exit courtesy of Chelsea. Doubts emerged large and foreboding. Critics began to sharpen their pencils. And here, with a peerless season only eight games off and Chelsea refusing to give up the chase seven points behind them here was a Liverpool side – Gerrard, Owen and all – who were firmly in the hunt for a top four spot.

Worse yet, just five minutes in, Gerard Houllier’s men took the lead with a close range header from Sami Hyypia. Of course Arsenal remained calm – you simply don’t amass 22 wins and 8 draws consecutively without possessing indomitable self-belief – and duly restored order with a typically classy finish from Henry on the half hour mark.

But when Michael Owen capitalised on the longest slide-rule pass in living memory from Gerrard on 42 minutes that’s surely when the past seven days would have arose gurning and taunting. In the dressing room at the break that’s when the fear would have crept in. First the treble dream was snatched from them. Then their Champions League hopes. And now Liverpool had their tails up and Arsenal’s proud unbeaten record was in serious jeopardy.

Their response in the second period revealed not only their muster but why this was a special team. It was a stylish blitz that started from the get-go with Robert Pires levelling the score with a poke following some lovely movement and inter-play and from there the home side immediately took command. It was as if this second equaliser whooshed all of the joy and arrogance back into them, replenishing the side with faith. Almost from kick-off they retrieved possession and serviced Thierry Henry who loitered just outside the centre-circle.

The Frenchman tippy-tapped forward, shoulders hunched with intent and when faced with Didi Hamann decided to take the long route past him relying on a burst of pace. With a white-shirted wall ahead of him that season’s PFA Footballer of the Year (by a country mile) identified Jamie Carragher as his victim and slalomed past with ease leaving him only with the keeper to beat. From there a remarkable solo goal was inevitable.

“Who would argue that this is not the world’s hottest striker?” the commentator Peter Drury squealed, a claim posed as a question that gained further credos later in the game when Henry completed his hat-trick.

On Easter weekend 2004 Arsenal’s credentials and aspirations were put to the sword. They responded like Invincibles en route to legendary status.

What happened next?

Arsenal won and drew their way into the history books becoming the only English side in the 21st century to prevail through an entire season undefeated.

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Liverpool endured a campaign of frustration exiting every competition early on but at least securing Champions League qualification. In June, Gerard Houllier gave way to Rafa Benitez and a new era at Anfield was born.

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Why this potential strike duo could fire Liverpool into Europe

Liverpool’s strike force needs some urgent attention in the January transfer window and if the club managed to pull off a double swoop for Divok Origi and Gonzalo Higuain, they’d suddenly have all the firepower they need to really push up the table.

Technically, Origi is already a Liverpool player but he is currently on loan with Ligue 1 side Lille. The French team are very reluctant to let the 19-year-old leave in January but Liverpool appear to be determined to get him back at Anfield as soon as possible. It is believed Liverpool would have to pay a fee of around £4.6m to Lille to end Origi’s loan early. The young Belgian was very impressive in last year’s World Cup finals, scoring the only goal against Russia in the group stage to help Belgium qualify for the knockout stages of the competition.

Origi possesses a great deal of pace and can take players on as well as being good in the air. He kept Lukaku on the bench at the World Cup so there is no doubting what he can bring to Liverpool. So far this season, the Reds have lacked a finisher up front and the goals have really dried up compared to last season’s devastating front pairing of Luis Suarez and Daniel Sturridge. Although Origi is certainly talented, he is not exactly prolific. The striker has only scored three league goals in 17 appearances this season. However, at just 19, he possesses a lot of talent that suggests he will be more than able to adjust to the rigours of Premier League football, as well as being another star for the future at Liverpool.

The other striking target linked with a move to Anfield is Napoli’s Gonzalo Higuain. The 27-year-old is one of the best out-and-out strikers in world football and his goalscoring record clearly proves this. Over the course of his career, he averages around a goal every two games. He bagged 15 goals in 35 River Plate appearances, an excellent 107 goals in 190 games for Real Madrid and he currently has 26 goals in 49 appearances for Serie A side Napoli.

Make no mistake about it, Higuain will bring goals to any side he plays for and if Liverpool can get hold of a striker who is entering the prime stages of his career, it would be an excellent signing for Brendan Rodgers. A bid of around £30 million will encourage the Naples club to part with their star striker. Liverpool are hoping that the sale of the controversial Mario Balotelli will raise enough funds to lodge a successful bid for the Argentinian striker.

If Liverpool only manage to bring one of these strikers in this month it would still great news for the club as there will be more options for Brendan Rodgers to choose from. Couple that with the imminent return of Daniel Sturridge and Liverpool suddenly have a competent strike force again. Many fans will be excited about the prospect of Higuain joining the club and Origi’s early arrival from France would be a boost to the Merseysiders’ European push.

If these transfers go through, Rodgers will feel that he has enough firepower to really push his team up the table. It has been a difficult first half of the season for Rodgers’ men but a successful January could change their fortunes. A rested Sterling returning to form the effective partnership with Daniel Sturridge and the potential of at least one new striker added to the mix in January will put Liverpool in a much healthier position than the one they occupy now.

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There is the potential for fortunes to change at Anfield as long as Rodgers gets it right this time.

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Was the glory of a Barcelona move worth it for Alex Song?

It’s taken until January, the midway point of Alex Song’s first season at Barcelona to really put in a good performance. Has he finally displayed his qualities at the Camp Nou, or was it a reflection of the opposition? One way or another, Song had his best game for Barcelona against Cordoba in the Copa del Rey on Thursday night.

But it’s not enough. It never will be enough. Is this really what the player wanted? It was reported by a number of outlets that Song had become too big for his boots at Arsenal, considering himself well above the regular routines and rules in place for everyone else. There’s no doubting that he thought himself as a soon-to-be Barcelona player last year well before his move, or at the very least an ex-Arsenal player.

He was bought into the club because Javi Martinez was deemed too expensive, and that’s perfectly understandable; while the former Athletic Bilbao player has started brightly at the Allianz Arena, Bayern Munich certainly feel an incredibly heavy fee was spent on the player. But it doesn’t disguise the fact that big money was spent on Alex Song too. He was promised and showcased to be the versatile player that would fill in comfortably at both centre-half and in the midfield. Since his arrival and up until his most recent game, neither of those promises have come to fruition.

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For starters, Song has had to ditch his devil-may-care attitude and really pick up the tactical importance of being a Barcelona player. No more wandering off out of position and casually jogging back when possession was lost: no one, team-mate or coach would stand for that sort of attitude. And you could see as much in his early appearances for the club; Song had a knack for picking out a pass and his technique had been very good at Arsenal, but something was holding him back and forcing him to play the simple passes that make up Barcelona’s game.

However, that was all from a midfield position. At centre-back, he’s been nothing short of a huge disappointment. It’s largely due to the fact that Barcelona’s central defensive partnership need to play a very specific game, but it’s also because Song isn’t a natural centre-back. Playing in that position at various stages of his Arsenal career didn’t necessarily mean he should have been purchased with the idea of using him in defence. With Barcelona’s lack of numbers at the back due to injury—remember, Eric Abidal has also played very well at centre-back in the past — a natural defender should always have been high up on the agenda.

So was it worth it? It’s obviously too soon to tell, but Alex Song will never displace anyone in Barcelona’s midfield three as a matter of talent or application. It’s very difficult to think of a better holding midfielder in the game at the moment than Sergio Busquets, and finding a player who plays the game exactly as Barcelona need Busquets to do is bordering on impossible.

Song was also given licence, either by Arsene Wenger or himself, to push further up the pitch and play a role in the build up of goals. But again, that’s not his natural game. And again, he won’t displace anyone in the Barcelona team for that position.

For Song, and like Alex Hleb, Martin Caceres and a few others in recent years, it will remain a case that he simply won’t be good enough to make a lasting impression at the Camp Nou. He’s a good player, but one who perhaps didn’t think about the huge likelihood of warming the bench for much of his Barcelona career, however long it may be.

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He doesn’t bring anything to the team that isn’t already there, and with La Masia heaving with talent waiting for their chance, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see Barcelona move Song on come the end of the season.

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Shakespeare tips Davies for bright Everton future

Everton first-team boss Craig Shakespeare has said that Tom Davies is ‘very keen to learn’, and has backed the teenage midfielder to continue improving.

Davies joined Everton’s academy at the age of 11, and has progressed through the various youth teams to become an established member of the senior squad.

The 19-year-old’s debut for the first team actually came during the 2015-16 season, but his breakthrough came last term when he made 25 appearances in all competitions.

This term, Davies has scored once and provided two assists in 37 appearances for the Toffees, and has started each of the team’s last five matches.

Shakespeare has claimed that Davies’ willingness to listen makes him easy to coach, with the midfielder being tipped to go from strength to strength.

Shakespeare told Everton’s official website:

“He’s very keen to learn. He wants to analyse his games, wants input from the coaches and we’ve worked on a one-to-one basis with him showing him clips.

“I’m a big believer in that [analysing performances] from all players but particularly with young players – the enthusiasm they have for training relates then to the game.

“With Tom, you can see the enthusiasm that he carries in training – the distance that he covers but also then the enjoyment that he takes out of playing. To work with a player one-to-one is always a pleasure when they have that response and want to learn.”

Davies, who is extremely popular with the Merseyside club’s supporters, has featured in 27 of Everton’s 31 Premier League matches this season, and will hope to be involved in Saturday’s clash with division leaders Manchester City.

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Should Arsenal sell this paradoxical midfielder?

When Arsenal first signed Santi Cazorla in summer 2012, he offered the north London club something uniquely different; ambidexterity, versatility and perhaps most importantly, goals from the middle of the park.

A cut above the likes of Tomaz Rosicky, Aaron Ramsey and Jack Wilshere, the latter duo still finding their feet at top level, he was the cheaper yet equally acceptable alternative to Juan Mata, who Arsene Wenger had somehow surrendered to Chelsea the season previous.

Now however, he’s the playmaking effigy of Arsenal’s most intrinsic flaws and the squad’s dangerous imbalance. With rumours claiming Atletico Madrid, amongst others, are planning a January swoop for the Spain international, I’d argue it’s the right time for the Gunners to sell.

Not that I have anything against the cheeky-faced midfielder, but there are some cold hard truths to consider – particularly, Cazorla turning 30 years of age next week and his contract on the verge of entering its final eighteen months.

Arsenal may as well sell now while there’s still a market for the Spaniard; I’m sure we all remember the debacle of summer 2013 where unimaginable amounts were squandered in transfer fees and wages by letting Denilson, Andrei Arshavin, Park Chu-Young, Sebastian Scquillaci and Andre Santos all leave on free transfers due to a lack of demand. 

Not that Cazorla will necessarily fall into the category of a high-earning clinger-on. Few dispute he’s a quality player and a tactically advantageous one at that, being well acquainted with a plethora of diverse midfield roles. His unique versatility can equally influence the course of any given ninety minutes as it does a whole season.

Yet, we’re still waiting for the Spain international to replicate the incredible output of his debut Premier League campaign. Twelve goals and eleven assists was a haul matching the likes of Juan Mata, Eden Hazard, Wayne Rooney, Carlos Tevez and Steven Gerrard that season, but few would discuss Cazorla in such company now.

His overall contribution remains impressive and consistent – Cazorla currently creates the third-most chances per match of any Arsenal player for example, behind Mesut Ozil and Alexis Sanchez – but it’s nothing unprecedented at a club of Arsenal’s calibre.

In many ways, that highlights the crux of the issue – the paradoxical dilemma at its beating heart.  Cazorla was once Arsenal’s best option in such progressive midfield capacities but now Arsene Wenger’s squad selections are almost burdened with endless like-minded choices for those roles.

Due to his ambidexterity alone – a sensational gift for any footballer – No.10 should be the Spaniard’s definitive position. He can spot passes and execute them on either side of the pitch without the necessity to turn or jostle his feet, maintaining the momentum of attacks.

Unfortunately however, he’s no longer the most talented, the most promising, the most dynamic, the most expensive or the most consistent No.10 in the Arsenal squad. Cazorla’s lost in the purgatory somewhere in between, often resulting in him being pushed out wide, into deep midfield or left out of the starting line-up all together.

Arsenal’s squad contains too many players of the same diminutive, creative mould and at some point over the next few transfer windows, Wenger will have to make some tough choices.

Gunners fans desperately desire that high-quality defensive-mid, but right now, there simply isn’t room for one in a roster that’s already seen seven different players, including Cazorla, feature in central midfield this season, ranging from Rosicky to Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain. They aren’t being played there out of choice; it’s Wenger’s compromise to get as much talent on the pitch as possible. There’s only one No.10 slot, after all.

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So why Cazorla? Why not Flamini or Arteta? Why not Rosicky or Podolski? Why not Mesut Ozil? Fair points indeed, but the only one likely to leave the Emirates any time soon is Flamini when his contract expires in the summer. Rosicky and Arteta recently signed new deals, Ozil cost the club £42million just 18 months ago and for whatever reason, Wenger appears hell-bent on keeping hold of bit-part forward Podolski. If you think Wenger would dare part with Ramsey, Oxlade-Chamberlain or his pet project, Jack Wilshere, any time soon, you probably need to check your medication.

Unfortunately for Cazorla, he’s the wrong man at the wrong time, his age and contract status coinciding with Arsenal’s desperate need for more variety.

That may be an unpopular critique with some sectors of the Gunners fan base but ask yourself this simple question; would you accept Cazorla’s departure in January if it paved the way for a defensive midfielder next summer?

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Bah Humbug at St James’ Park

Newcastle have cancelled their Christmas party after a terrible string of results has left them languishing in the lower reaches of the Premier League table.

The Magpies’ 3-1 home defeat by reigning champions Manchester City at the weekend was their sixth in seven league outings, leaving them in 15th place, just two points above the relegation zone.

The Toon have travelled to Dublin and Glasgow in recent years to enjoy the festive season, but their recent form has left the club undeserving of celebrations this year, according to manager Alan Pardew, who now needs to steer them away from their perilous league position.

“It’s out of respect to our fans and what we have served them this year,” Pardew told the Evening Chronicle.

“There’s no party for us, and the same for the staff. That’s how it should be.

“Trust me, there have been horrible things said about our group and our staff, but we are together, and we are fighting and trying to put it right.

“The fans have to realise this isn’t just a game to us, it’s our livelihoods and our profession. It pays our bills.

“Not only that, we have to have a certain pressure of entertaining our fans, who pay good money to come and watch.

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“Looking at all those factors, we have not done enough this year. That’s why I think it’s right we called it off.”

Newcastle face Queens Park Rangers at St James’ Park on Saturday, knowing they will need a victory to help restore some confidence in a stuttering season.

Allardyce leaps to the defence of "outstanding" Pickford

Sam Allardyce says Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford does not deserve criticism, and quashes any claims of a bust up on the training ground.

Speaking ahead of the Blues’ clash with Brighton on Saturday, Allardyce said Pickford has been one of Everton’s “most consistent and outstanding” players this season, after the goalkeeper came under fire for his performance in the defeat at Burnley.

The 24 year-old England international made a fantastic save to deny a first half header from Ashley Barnes, but was beaten by the same man in the second half when he failed to come out and clear a long ball. Pickford was then crowded out at a Burnley corner, allowing Chris Wood to score the winner.

“There many mistakes before that one that should have been alleviated to not put Jordan in that position of whether he should have been farther out or not,” Allardyce said, as quoted by the Liverpool Echo.

“If he’s made a mistake it’s not really that big a mistake, there were bigger mistakes made before that, that allowed Ashley Barnes to get in.

“So the responsibility lay in front of him a lot more and, let’s face it, he’s been one of our most consistent and outstanding players this year.”

Soccer Football – Premier League – Watford vs Everton – Vicarage Road, Watford, Britain – February 24, 2018 Everton manager Sam Allardyce REUTERS/David Klein EDITORIAL USE ONLY. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or “live” services. Online in-match use limited to 75 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games or single club/league/player publications. Please contact your account representative for further details.

Big Sam also disputed claims from Jamie Carragher that there may be conflict behind the scenes at Everton, after the pundit said he would have throttled Idrissa Gueye for sprinting to confront Pickford after the first goal.

“It’s not nice when it’s on the field of play,” admitted the Blues boss.

“But everybody today, in our politically correct world, think that then there is a real problem and escalate that into a problem.

“That isn’t a problem, that is someone airing their frustration in the right way, as long as it doesn’t go beyond that as a short, sharp burst.”

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Everton will welcome a return home to Goodison Park on Saturday when they face Brighton, after some torrid away results. However, Brighton will be full of confidence after last weekend’s win against Arsenal.

Everton fans, do you think you can beat Brighton on Saturday? Let us know in the comments below…

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