Analytics

Wednesday 16 September 2015

Leicester moved to second while Newcastle condemned to the bottom

Leader Manchester City face an in-form Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park without David Silva or Raheem Sterling. To make thing worse, they lost Sergio Augero on the 25th minute through injury. The game seems to be heading for a draw until Kelechi Iheanacho came up with the winner to preserve Manchester City 100% start to the season.

Champions Chelsea poor start to the season just got worse as they lost 3-1 to Everton at Goodison Park. Steven Naismith scored twice in 5 minutes to give the home team a 2-0 lead. Nemanja Matic gave Chelsea hope of a fightback when he thumped in from distance. However, Naismith hat-trick ensure all three points for Everton.

The game of the weekend sees Manchester United hosting their fierce rival, Liverpool. After an uninspiring first half, Danny Blind opened the scoring 4 minutes after the restart. Ander Herrera added a second from the penalty spot. Christian Benteke scored a brilliant bicycle kick to give Liverpool a glimmer of hope which was extinguished within 2 minutes. Making his debut, Anthony Martial beat three defenders before sliding the ball into the net.

Despite their near total dominance, the Gunners went into the half-time only 1-0 ahead, courtesy of a Theo Walcott goal. Stoke had goalkeeper Jack Butland to thank for keeping the scoreline down but he is unable to stop Olivier Giroud from adding a second.

Two teams who were winless faced off at the Stadium of Light and Tottenham came away with the three points with Ryan Mason scoring the only goal of the game.

In the battle between the newly promoted sides, Norwich defeated Bournemouth 3-1 at the Carrow Road. Cameron Jerome opened the scoring with Wesley Hoolah and Matt Jarvis adding further goals. Steve Cook scored the consolidation goal for the visitor.

Watford got their first win of the season, beating Swansea 1-0. Odion Ighalo scored the winner but the home team had to play with 10 men after Valon Behrami was shown a straight red on 64th minutes.

Leicester completed a remarkable comeback to defeat Aston Villa. Jack Grealish and Carles Gil put the visitor 2-0 ahead. Ritchie De Laet pull one goal back before Jamie Vardy equalised for The Foxes. The comeback was completed when Nathan Dyer scored with 1 minute left.

West Brom and Southampton played out a goal-less draw at The Hawthorns.

Over at Boleyn Ground, Dimitri Payet scored twice to condemn Newcastle to the bottom of the table.

Top five performing team *
Manchester City: 7.23
Arsenal: 7.13
Leicester: 6.99
West Ham: 6.96
Everton: 6.94

Top five performing players *
Riyad Mahrez (Leicester): 8.76
David Silva (Manchester City): 8.03
Aleksandar Kolarov (Manchester City): 7.88
Bakary Sako (Crystal Palace): 7.86
Yaya Toure (Manchester City): 7.86




*Statistics provided by WhoScored.com 

Monday 14 September 2015

The Legend - Wayne Rooney

For 45 years, since 1970, Bobby Charlton was England's top scorer with 49 goals. Many had tried unsuccessfully to eclipse the record, with Gary Lineker coming close at 48 goals.

But on 6th September 2015, history was rewritten when England hit San Marino 6-0.

Wayne Rooney scored from the penalty spot to put the Three Lions 1-0 ahead and in the process, he equaled Bobby Charlton's 49 goals feat.

Three days later, again via a penalty, Rooney broke the record and became the greatest goal scorer for England.

 Here is a timeline of Rooney's England career thus far. You can catch all the 50 goals at the end of the article.

  • 2003

    • Feb 12
      Aged 17 years and 111 days, Rooney became the youngest player to play for England when he earned his first cap in a friendly defeat against Australia at the Boleyn Ground.
    • Sep 06
      Aged 17 years and 317 days, became the youngest player to score for England, equalising in a 2–1 away victory over Macedonia in a UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying match.
  • 2004

    • Jun 17
      His first tournament action was at UEFA Euro 2004. Became the youngest scorer when he scored twice against Switzerland. But record was topped four days later.
    • Jun 24
      Suffer an injury as England were eliminated by Portugal in the quarter-final, via penalty shoot-out.
    • Jul
      Named in UEFA's Team of the Tournament for Euro 2004.
  • 2006

    • Jun 15
      Came on as a substitute in England's 2006 FIFA World Cup opening match against Trinidad and Tobago despite suffering a foot injury in April 2006.
    • Jun 20
      Started the next game against Sweden.
    • July 01
      Red-carded in the 62th minute of the quarter-final match against Portugal, again on penalty kicks. Cristano Ronaldo, Rooney's teammate at Manchester United played a big part in the sending off.
  • 2009

    • Oct 14
      Top scored for England in their 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifying campaign with nine goals; one behind the UEFA section's overall top goalscorer, Theofanis Gekas of Greece.
    • Nov 14
      Captained England for the first time in a pre-tournament friendly with Brazil.
  • 2010

    • Jun 27
      England was knocked out in the second round and Rooney finished the tournament with no goals.
    • Sep 07
      Scored England's first goal in their 3-1 win over Switzerland.
  • 2011

    • Sep 02
      Scored twice against Bulgaria in their UEFA Euro 2012 qualification.
    • Oct 07
      Sent-off against in the last qualifier against Montenegro. Punished with a three game ban, meaning he will miss all the group stage matches. Reduced to two games after appeal.
  • 2012

    • Jun 19
      Return for the last group stage match against Ukraine and scored the only goal.
    • Oct 12
      Became England's 5th highest goalscorer after scoring twice in a World Cup qualifier against San Marino.

      Captained England for the first time in a competitive game.
  • 2013

    • Feb 06
      Scored in the 2-1 win against Brazil in a friendly game.
    • Mar 03
      Scored once in the 8-0 win over San Marino.
    • Mar 26
      Opened the scoring in England's 1-1 draw againt Montenegro.
    • Jun 02
      Scored against Brazil in a 2-2 draw in the official re-opening of the refurbished Maracana Stadium.
    • Oct 11
      Scored in the 4-1 World Cup qualifier against Montenegro to become England's all-time top scorer in competitive international with 27 competitive goals.
    • Oct 15
      Ended the qualification campaign with a goal agqinst Poland.
  • 2014

    • Jun 19
      Scored to briefly equalised for England against Uruguay.
    • Aug 28
      Named as England's new captain after Steven Gerrard's international retirement.
    • Sep 03
      Scored a penalty against Norway in his first match of his captaincy.
    • Nov 15
      Won his 100th international cap against Slovenia. Scored a penalty to equalise in a 3-1 win.
  • 2015

    • Jun 14
      Score the winner against Slovenia, putting him joint second alongside Gary Lineker in England's all time goal scorers.
    • Sep 05
      Scored a penalty against San Marino to equal Bobby Charlton's record of 49 goals.
    • Sep 08
      Broke the record by netting a penalty against Switzerland.

      Equalled Ashley Cole's as his country 5th highest capped player.

Sunday 6 September 2015

Home comfort no longer an advantage

Whether the club is fighting for the title or fending off relegation, home results are important. With familiar surroundings and the home crowd roaring the team on, the home team certainly has the advantage.

But is this the case? Not, if one look at the results from the first 40 games in the Premier League. It reads, played 40, 9 wins, 14 draws and 17 defeats.

Among the casulties, Chelsea and Stoke City, who have gained a reputation of being hard to beat at home. Between them, they have garnered just a single point.

So, did the teams performed better away from their comfort zone?

Let us take a look at the statistics, provided by WhoScored.com


Shots per game / Possession (%) / Pass Success (%) / Aerials Won / Rating

Manchester City
[home] 18 / 53.2 / 87.9 / 12 / 7.31
[away] 18 / 58.4 / 88.5 / 14 / 7.29

Swansea
[home] 14 / 50.5 / 84.0 / 12.5 / 7.10
[away] 18.5 / 53.8 / 81.8 / 19 / 6.90

Arsenal
[home] 20.5 / 60.8 / 85.4 / 26 / 7.03
[away] 21 / 62.5 / 88.7 / 14 / 7.05

Leicester
[home] 16 / 42.6 / 70.8 / 16 / 7.00
[away] 7 / 40.9 / 65.7 / 20.5 / 6.85

Watford
[home] 14.5 / 55.3 / 79.5 / 21 / 6.93
[away] 9 / 40.9 / 79.7 / 16 / 6.77

Manchester United
[home] 14.5 / 56.6 / 86.1 / 10.5 / 6.91
[away] 10 / 57.7 / 84.0 / 20 / 6.80

Southampton
[home] 20 / 56.0 / 84.9 / 18.5 / 6.90
[away] 14 / 47.9 / 77.2 / 22.5 / 6.99

Aston Villa
[home] 13 / 52.2 / 82.5 / 20.5 / 6.88
[away] 9 / 47.4 / 78.6 / 22 / 6.94

Tottenham
[home] 16.5 / 50.8 / 82.9 / 16.5 / 6.86
[away] 14 / 55.4 / 82.3 / 18 / 6.69

Crystal Palace
[home] 13.5 / 46.8 / 79.8 / 19.5 / 6.75
[away] 12 / 40.7 / 74.0 / 11.5 / 7.04

Chelsea
[home] 18.5 / 55.1 / 82.2 / 17.5 / 6.74
[away] 12.5 / 53.1 / 82.1 / 18.5 / 6.58

Everton
[home] 10 / 53.8 / 81.3 / 15.5 / 6.69
[away] 9 / 48.6 / 81.6 / 14 / 7.06

Sunderland
[home] 8 / 43.1 / 68.6 / 15.5 / 6.63
[away] 9 / 47.9 / 76.3 / 23.5 / 6.68

Liverpool
[home] 15.5 / 56.7 / 83.7 / 20 / 6.60
[away] 11.5 / 45.5 / 75.8 / 25 / 7.10

Newcastle United
[home] 5 / 42.7 / 79.9 / 11.5 / 6.57
[away] 5.5 / 37.1 / 75.4 / 10 / 6.62

Norwich
[home] 18.5 / 51.6 / 80.9 / 10.5 / 6.56
[away] 12 / 48.0 / 76.7 / 16.5 / 6.64

Bournemouth
[home] 8 / 54.9 / 80.0 / 21.5 / 6.52
[away] 14 / 49.6 / 74.5 / 22 / 6.78

Stoke
[home] 10 / 48.0 / 78.8 / 14 / 6.46
[away] 10.5 / 52.1 / 82.8 / 11.5 / 6.75

West Ham
[home] 10 / 54.7 / 78.1 / 23 / 6.45
[away] 10 / 40.9 / 72.1 / 16.5 / 7.28

West Brom
[home] 12 / 40.6 / 78.6 / 11 / 6.43
[away] 10.5 / 45.4 / 79.4 / 18 / 6.96

Looking at the numbers, this is definitely so, with only 7 teams managed a better average home ratings.

Why is this so? A theory is that the home teams have to take the game to the oppositions and in the process, exposed themselves to the counter-attack which the away teams usually deployed.

But whatever the reason, one can be sure that as the season progress, it will be business as usual.