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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Simon Burnton

Nottingham Forest 1-1 Newcastle, Burnley 2-2 Aston Villa, Crystal Palace 2-2 Everton – as it happened

A footballer in red shoots while challenged by a player in black and white stripes, as the goalkeeper in yellow reacts.
Elliot Anderson of Nottingham Forest scores his team's first goal while under pressure from Lewis Hall of Newcastle United. Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images

And that’s all from me! Now follow West Ham v Arsenal with Rob Smyth here:

Or Chelsea’s Women’s FA Cup semi-final against Manchester City, where the half-time whistle has just blown with Chelsea 1-0 up, with John Brewin here:

And finally, Ed Aarons saw Everton take and lose the lead twice at Crystal Palace:

David Moyes’s European dream is now hanging by a slender thread. Against a Crystal Palace side who have been otherwise distracted by their Conference League exploits, Everton were unable to take their opportunity to close the gap on their rivals as Jean-Philippe Mateta came off the bench to deny them victory.

It could have been even worse for Moyes had the referee, Tom Bramall, awarded a penalty when James Garner hauled down Jørgen Strand Larsen just before half-time or Adam Wharton’s shot not struck the outside of the post in the 90th minute. A frantic finish that saw Dean Henderson deny Iliman Ndiaye in stoppage time before Mateta missed a great chance to win it for Oliver Glasner’s side meant Everton stretched their unbeaten run against Palace to 11 matches.

Much more here:

Ben Fisher was at the City Ground to see Nottingham Forest share the spoils with Newcastle:

For Nottingham Forest, just how precious might Elliot Anderson’s late equaliser at home to Newcastle prove? Vítor Pereira’s side knew they had to match or better West Ham’s result later against the Premier League leaders, Arsenal, and if West Ham fail to win at the London Stadium, then Forest’s mood will improve again and relegation fears will subside. In a game devoid of quality, the Newcastle substitutes Jacob Ramsey and Harvey Barnes combined to give Eddie Howe’s side a 74th-minute lead, but the former Newcastle youngster showed great endeavour to level.

Much more here:

Elliot Anderson has a chat, after scoring the equaliser for Nottingham Forest:

It was a good point. We weren’t at our best today but when you’re not at your best it’s good to pick up points. It was tough out there, with the heat, everyone seemed really tired. A tough first half for both teams I think. But it finished well.

We’ve made a U-turn and we’ve done really well. The manager’s came in and he’s brilliant. It was a tough game midweek but we’ve dusted ourselves down, bounced back and we’ll focus on the league. One thing the manager said, he admires how much fight is in this group.

He’s asked whether it was particularly good to score against his former club:

Yeah. There’ve been a few things going on recently … yeah, it felt really nice.

The match reports start rolling in, starting with Will Unwin’s from Turf Moor:

It was always going to be difficult to follow up the glories of booking a Europa League final place for Aston Villa but the draw at Burnley fell even below those expectations. This was supposed to be the day Villa all-but-secured Champions League football by beating an already-relegated team but instead went through the motions at Turf Moor.

Villa are four points clear of sixth-placed Bournemouth with two games remaining but this felt like a missed opportunity, even if they do have the further backup of facing Freiburg in Istanbul for a place at Europe’s top table. Jaidon Anthony and Zian Flemming sandwiched goals from Ross Barkley and Ollie Watkins, ensuring Villa cannot afford to completely rest for the remainder of the domestic season.

Much more here:

The leading Premier League scorers, with Ollie Watkins, Jean-Philippe Mateta and Flemming among the afternoon’s movers:

Zian Flemming, scorer of the second Burnley goal, the 100th of his career, has a chat:

It’s been hard. And I think today we’ve finally been able to like give them something. Still a bit disappointed we didn’t get the win because there were some chances, but we have to be happy with a point against a very good side. It’s not as if we’ve reinvented the wheel and done things drastically different. Jacko’s just tried to bring some calmness in a really hectic situation for us. Losing your manager four games before the end of the season gives everyone, I don’t know, no direction maybe. The way we went about it today as a team, it just felt good.

Final scores in the Premier League: they're draws!

The 2pm Premier League games are over, and nobody won any of them. The final scores in full:

Burnley 2-2 Aston Villa
Crystal Palace 2-2 Everton
Nottingham Forest 1-1 Newcastle

And the league table as it stands:

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Arsenal 35 41 76
2 Man City 35 40 74
3 Man Utd 36 15 65
4 Liverpool 36 12 59
5 Aston Villa 36 4 59
6 AFC Bournemouth 36 4 55
7 Brighton 36 10 53
8 Brentford 36 3 51
9 Chelsea 36 6 49
10 Everton 36 0 49
11 Fulham 36 -6 48
12 Sunderland 36 -9 48
13 Newcastle 36 -2 46
14 Crystal Palace 35 -6 44
15 Nottm Forest 36 -2 43
16 Leeds 35 -5 43
17 Tottenham Hotspur 35 -9 37
18 West Ham 35 -19 36
19 Burnley 36 -36 21
20 Wolverhampton 36 -41 18

90+1 mins: Into stoppage time in Nottingham, and there’ll be seven minutes of it!

GOAL! Nottingham Forest 1-1 Newcastle

88 mins: Elliot Anderson brilliantly gathers McAtee’s excellent square pass into his path, carries it towards goal and prods it into the net! The scorer goes down immediately with cramp, but soon rises to pump his fists at the celebrating fans.

Elliot Anderson of Nottingham Forest scores his team's first goal while under pressure from Lewis Hall of Newcastle United.
Elliot Anderson of Nottingham Forest scores his team's first goal while under pressure from Lewis Hall of Newcastle United. Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images

Updated

87 mins: The ball falls to Guimaraes inside the Forest penalty area. He’s got his back to goal, but what can he do with it? Will he hit it with his right foot, hit it with his left foot, or get confused and fall over? He picks option three.

85 mins: Another goal at Grimsby, where Adebola Oluwo has headed in a corner to put Salford 2-1 up. There are five minutes to play in the first half there.

84 mins: Were Middlesbrough the first and only team that Southampton have spied on this season? It seems that several sides think not:

83 mins: So nearly a chance for a second Newcastle goal, but the pass to Wissa is just behind him.

GOAL! Crystal Palace 2-2 Everton!

77 mins: Another equaliser at Selhurst Park, where Tyrick Mitchell’s really very feeble low cross from the left rolls gently just out of the reach of any number of players from either side on its inexorable path to Jean-Philippe Mateta, lurking on the edge of the six-yard box, who thumps it into the net!

GOAL! Nottingham Forest 0-1 Newcastle!

74 mins: We have a breakthrough! It’s Harvey Barnes, a second-half substitute for Jacob Murphy, who runs onto an excellent pass, holds off Morato, waits for Sels to commit himself, and curl into the corner of the net!

Updated

72 mins: Team sheets have been handed in at the London Stadium, where a massive match will kick off at 4.30pm. And here are the teams:

West Ham: Hermansen, Disasi, Todibo, Mavropanos, Wan-Bissaka, Soucek, Fernandes, Diouf, Bowen, Summerville, Castellanos. Subs: Areola, Walker-Peters, Kilman, Wilson, Pablo Felipe, Magassa, Scarles, Potts, Kante.
Arsenal: Raya, White, Saliba, Gabriel, Calafiori, Eze, Rice, Lewis-Skelly, Saka, Gyokeres, Trossard. Subs: Arrizabalaga, Mosquera, Hincapie, Odegaard, Martinelli, Madueke, Havertz, Zubimendi, Dowman.
Referee: Christopher Kavanagh.

Rob Smyth is helming a liveblog for this one, which you can – and indeed should – find here:

69 mins: Absolutely extraordinary goings-on in Czechia. Here’s Reuters:

The Czech Football League Association on Sunday launched proceedings against Slavia Prague after the club’s derby with Sparta was abandoned a day earlier in the closing minutes when home fans stormed the pitch and attacked opposing players.

The association released a statement following an extraordinary meeting, saying it would also open proceedings against Sparta after their fans used pyrotechnics and damaged the stadium. It plans to issue a decision on penalties on Tuesday before the next round of competition.

“The committee also clearly declares that it will pay maximum attention to events of this nature and will deal with them with an emphasis appropriate to their nature,” disciplinary committee chairman Jiri Matzner said in a statement.

Slavia chairman Jaroslav Tvrdik also announced the club would shutter the North Stand from where supporters invaded the pitch until those who attacked Sparta players were identified and hit with a lifetime ban.

He also said the club had suspended striker Tomas Chory and midfielder David Doudera for the remainder of the season for their actions during the match in which both received red cards, adding neither would play for the Czech champions again.

“Both players received approval to transfer in the summer. Neither will play for Slavia again,” Tvrdik told the podcast of the Slavia Friends’ Association.

The derby was abandoned on Saturday after hundreds of home fans stormed the pitch in the closing minutes, when Slavia were leading 3-2 at home and seconds away from clinching the Czech League title.

Slavia supporters breached security barriers during stoppage time and flooded the field, with some carrying lit flares and running toward the visiting section. Pyrotechnics were thrown into the stands as players from both teams attempted to leave the pitch.

Czech police intervened to restore order and said they have launched criminal proceedings on suspicion of rioting.

Authorities confirmed that Sparta goalkeeper Jakub Surovcik was among those targeted by home fans and was struck by a flare.

Sparta vice-chairman Frantisek Cupr accepted the apology from Slavia’s Tvrdik but said the rival club also had to accept a share of the blame for the action of its supporters.

“Football suffered a terrible disgrace yesterday, from which we will have to recover for a while,” Cupr said in a statement to iSport. “It doesn’t really matter what the disciplinary committee says, including the result of the match, yesterday we shot ourselves in the foot.”

Updated

67 mins: Newcastle hit the bar! It’s Osula with a free-kick that flicks the head of someone in the wall and crashes into the woodwork.

GOALS! Burnley 2-2 Aston Villa!

61 mins: Two goals in a minute at Turf Moor! Ollie Watkins puts Villa ahead, running onto Emi Martinez’s long pass, chasing it into the Burnley penalty area and prodding it past the keeper. Then within seconds Burnley steal the ball on their left, work it into the middle and to Zian Fleming, in space on the edge of the area, who makes no mistake!

58 mins: Chance! Awoniyi does excellently to turn a hopeful ball forward into a clear shooting chance 15 yards out, but then his finish is a bit tentative, and Pope flings out a foot to stop it.

57 mins: And as I type that Pisa go down to nine men, a straight red for Felipe Loyola.

55 mins: Cremonese have scored again, and now lead bottom-of-the-Serie-A-table Pisa 2-0. Those three points would take them to within one of Lecce in 17th place with two games to go, and no other teams rationally catchable (unless things go very wrong for Cagliari). Cremonese play Udinese away next Sunday and host Como on the 24th, on paper much harder fixtures than Lecce’s, who visit Sassuolo next Sunday and host Genoa on the 24th.

50 mins: Grimsby’s lead didn’t last very long: Kallum Cesay has equalised for Salford.

GOAL! Crystal Palace 1-2 Everton!

48 mins: Everton retake the lead at Selhurst Park! Palace attempt a pass through the Everton backline but a defensive slide-clearance sends the ball back over all the outfield players and releases Beto to run into the Palace penalty area, feint left and right, and pass through the legs of Henderson in the Palace goal!

Updated

46 mins: Peeeeeeep! Back under way in the Premier League. Will anybody win any of these games?

Grimsby’s League Two play-off semi-final against Salford City kicked off three minutes ago – and they’re already winning! Indeed, they’ve been winning for a while – Reece Staunton put them ahead after just 30 secondss.

Half-time reading: here’s a European football roundup, featuring more good news for Cesc Fabregas. It’ll be updated with results in Italy, Spain and France as the day progresses.

Half time!

45+3 mins: We’ve had half of the time, and nobody is winning anything. The halftimely scores in the Premier League are as follows:

Burnley 1-1 Aston Villa
Crystal Palace 1-1 Everton
Nottingham Forest 0-0 Newcastle

GOAL! Burnley 1-1 Aston Villa!

45 mins: An equaliser for Villa, Ross Barkley heading in from a right-wing corner.

Updated

45+1 mins: The last 15 minutes or so at the City Ground have been pretty fun, with Forest belatedly waking up to the fact that a football match was happening around them. But there’ll only be two additional minutes of it.

41 mins: It’s shaping up to be a big day in the 2.Bundesliga: Preußen Münster are down after drawing 1-1 with Darmstadt, and Furth have gone with them after losing 2-1 at Hertha Berlin. Schalke, who secured promotion last week, might have overcelebrated somewhat: after five straight wins, and without a league defeat since January, they’ve lost 3-0 at mid-table Nuremberg.

GOAL! Crystal Palace 1-1 Everton

35 mins: A weak, poor finish from Ismaila Sarr with his left foot hits a defender and rebounds to him, and this time his right-foot finish is neither weak nor poor!

Updated

34 mins: And another! Bakwa now with an excellent cross from the right. Pope comes out but isn’t sure if Awoniyi will reach it and can’t really react when he doesn’t. It bounces off him to Cunha, who briefly has an empty net to aim for, but Pope gets across to get in the way before he can put the ball in it.

33 mins: Chance for Forest! An excellent run from Bakwa takes him to the byline and he pulls back towards Awoniyi, but the ball is hit hard and at a difficult height, and the striker can’t convert.

GOAL! Cremonese 1-0 Pisa! It's Jamie Vardy!

30 mins: News from Italy! Como’s Bulgarian centre-back Rosen Bozhinov won the first booking of the game in the 16th minute, and then the second booking of the game in the 23rd. And Cremonese have made their numerical superiority pay, with Jamie Vardy scoring with his left foot from just outside the box.

24 mins: Action is paused at the City Ground while Matz Sels gets some medical attention. While play is stopped, there’s some Women’s FA Cup semi-final action to be aware of in the shape of a game between Chelsea and Manchester City that kicks off at 3.30pm, being liveblogged here:

The winner will play Brighton, who came back from two goals down to beat Liverpool in today’s early kick-off, thanks to Nadine Noordam’s winner in the fifth minute of stoppage time. Here’s Tom Garry’s report:

21 mins: Here’s a report on the Old Firm clash, courtesy of Ewan Murray:

This felt a hugely significant victory in the Scottish title race. Celtic require only two more of them to successfully defend the league. For the Rangers manager, Danny Röhl, yet another second-half capitulation will only increase murmurings about his capability of delivering success at Ibrox. Rangers will end this season trophyless and third in a two-horse race – remarkably, given the tens of millions spent on assembling their squad.

Celtic have moved to within a point and three goals of Hearts. Next stop for Martin O’Neill and his players is Motherwell on Wednesday evening. With Hearts hosting Falkirk at the same time, there is the increasing possibility of the title being decided when the Edinburgh club visit Celtic Park on Saturday. Supporters of Celtic and Hearts are likely to have run out of fingernails by then.

Much more here:

17 mins: Forest have now had a shot. It’s Bakwa with it, running into the area, checking onto his left foot, back onto his right, back onto his left, and trying to curl the ball into the far corner. But there’s a defender in the way, who heads it wide. From the corner, a first shot on target, in the shape of a timid header easily gathered by Pope.

14 mins: A dominant start for Newcastle at Nottingham Forest, where they’ve had 72% of possession, 100% of touches in the opposition penalty area, and the only shot of the game so far.

GOAL! Burnley 1-0 Aston Villa!

8 mins: Burnley are winning a game! Lesley Ugochukwu is given too much space on the edge of the area and has a shot from 23 yards or so. There’s not a lot of pace on it, but it’s well aimed and Emi Martinez can’t hold it, pushing it out to Jaidon Anthony, who thrashes it into the net!

Updated

GOAL! Crystal Palace 0-1 Everton!

6 mins: An early breakthrough at Selhurst Park, where a corner from the right is flicked on at the near post and drops for James Tarkowski, just beyond the far. He just needs to keep his head and tap it in, and that is precisely what he does.

Updated

4 mins: A tasty cross from the right for Newcastle, but nobody gets on the end of it. Here’s the top of the Scottish Premiership as it stands:

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Hearts 36 32 77
2 Celtic 36 29 76
3 Rangers 36 31 69
4 Motherwell 36 23 58
5 Hibernian 36 14 54

The final whistle has blown in the Old Firm game at Celtic Park, where Celtic came from behind to beat Rangers 3-1 and keep the heat on Hearts. The top two play each other next Saturday in their final game of the season, with both also playing in midweek.

1 min: Kick-off!

Before kick-off a minute’s applause in Nottingham in memory of Henry Newton, their former defender, who died last month at the age of 82.

Players are out, hands have been shaken and huddles are currently huddling. Football imminent.

Right, just a few minutes now before our 2pm kick-offs. And, marginally less importantly, I have finished eating my bagel.

Burnley interim manager Mike Jackson explains why he has made six changes for today’s game against Aston Villa:

I just think it needs freshening up a little bit. I think these guys deserve a chance to show what they can do. It’s got nothing to do with performances, it’s just that I think we need to change it up a bit. We want to see intent. We want to see a team with no fear. And a team that competes with no hesitation.

Nottingham Forest coach Vitor Pereira has a chat with Sky:

Different competition [to Thursday’s shellacking by Aston Villa]. Now is the time to forget about the last game. Today we have a big chance to get three points and to have in our hands, our future. It’s about reaching the 13th position because today with a win we can reach 13th position and this is our target today, this is what we have in our mind.

And you’re playing with a back three?

Yes. Because we came from two games in three days. We travelled to London and to Birmingham. It’s important to have organisation but with our ideas to win the game, to fight, to win the three points. There’s a lot of players injured, important players for us. But in the end, we start with 11 and let’s go.

Updated

Premier League teams!

And we have some teams! Here they all are:

Burnley v Aston Villa

Burnley: Weiss, Walker, Tuanzebe, Esteve, Lucas Pires, Florentino, Ugochukwu, Tchaouna, Mejbri, Anthony, Flemming. Subs: Dubravka, Hartman, Bruun Larsen, Foster, Humphreys, Ward-Prowse, Amdouni, Broja, Laurent.
Aston Villa: Martinez, Cash, Lindelof, Mings, Maatsen, Konsa, Barkley, McGinn, Tielemans, Rogers, Watkins. Subs: Bizot, Buendia, Digne, Torres, Abraham, Sancho, Douglas Luiz, Bogarde, Bailey.
Referee: Anthony Taylor.

Crystal Palace v Everton

Crystal Palace: Henderson, Richards, Lacroix, Canvot, Munoz, Wharton, Kamada, Mitchell, Johnson, Sarr, Larsen. Subs: Benitez, Lerma, Pino, Mateta, Clyne, Hughes, Riad, Devenny, Cardines.
Everton: Pickford, O’Brien, Tarkowski, Keane, Mykolenko, Iroegbunam, Garner, Rohl, Dewsbury-Hall, Ndiaye, Beto. Subs: Travers, Patterson, McNeil, Barry, George, Dibling, Coleman, Alcaraz, Armstrong.
Referee: Thomas Bramall.

Nottingham Forest v Newcastle United

Nottingham Forest: Sels, Jair Cunha, Milenkovic, Morato, Williams, Anderson, Dominguez, Netz, Bakwa, Igor Jesus, Awoniyi. Subs: Ortega, Wood, Moreira, Lucca, Hutchinson, Yates, McAtee, Whitehall, Sinclair.
Newcastle: Pope, Hall, Thiaw, Botman, Burn, Guimaraes, Tonali, Joelinton, Jacob Murphy, Woltemade, Osula. Subs: Ramsdale, Trippier, Wissa, Gordon, Barnes, Elanga, Willock, Alex Murphy, Ramsey.
Referee: Paul Tierney.

Hello world!

There’s a trio of Sunday afternoonly Premier League fixtures for us to get our teeth into today, which should be enough to keep us busy and is just as well given that there’s not much going on elsewhere in the football world to distract from them. Nottingham Forest, top of a last-six-games Premier League form table, play Newcastle, who would be 16th in that same league, knowing that victory would take them above opponents who were a distant 13 points clear of them as recently as late March – and make them all but safe from relegation. “There’s been no end of season feel to our training ground work, that’s really important,” said Eddie Howe. “While there’s still an opportunity, we’ll try and grab it. We’re prepared for a tough game. It’s always difficult going to the City Ground, a stadium full of good atmosphere and good energy. We’re going to have to be at our very best.”

But not even Newcastle find form tables as depressing as Burnley, who have won only one league game since October and have pocketed a single point from their last six matches. Today they host an Aston Villa side whose own league form is not great and who could do with a point infusion to make their spot in the top five – for all that they still have another route into the Champions League – feel a bit more secure, with Liverpool and Manchester City their remaining opponents after today. Burnley have not won any of their last 13 home games and 14 would equal a club record set across two seasons in 2021. The last time Villa lost to a side that had already been relegated was against Burnley, in 2015. And finally there is Crystal Palace against Everton, a game upon which not a lot rides. Palace have won one (one) of their last 22 (twenty-two) top-flight games against Everton.

Beyond the Premier League the most interesting game the world of football has to offer (so far as I can see) is Cremonese v Pisa in Serie A, in which anything but a win against bottom-of-the-table opponents would surely (but not mathematically) condemn Cremonese to relegation. Plus there’s Fiorentina v Genoa! So strap yourselves in, it’s going to be one helluva ride.

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