Key events
Nuno to stay in charge for Forest at Palace
Per PA Media’s Jonathan Veal:
Nuno Espírito Santo looks set to be in charge of Nottingham Forest for Sunday’s Premier League clash at Crystal Palace.
Nuno poured fuel on speculation his job was under threat on Friday saying “where there’s smoke, there’s fire”. The Portuguese, who signed a new contract in June after guiding Forest to European football for the first time since 1995, admitted that his relationship with owner Evangelos Marinakis had deteriorated, due in part to the arrival of global head of football Edu Gaspar.
His outspoken performance at the pre-match press conference for the Palace game, which came a week after he publicly criticised the club’s summer transfer activity, is understood to have stunned officials at the club.
But Nuno is expected to take Sunday’s game at Selhurst Park unless there is another dramatic turnaround in the build-up to the contest. Forest trained on Saturday morning and they will travel to London later in the day.
A Spurs fans are in “didn’t fancy him anyway” mode. Plenty of sense spoken here, mind.
Getting a bit tired of the ‘no no.10, no creativity’ argument at Spurs. Bentancur, Sarr, Bergvall, Gray, Romero, Kudus, are all capable of defence-splitting passes, all three of the wingbacks are basically attackers.
There are signs, too, of a switch in style to something more direct and speedy, with three at the back and Palhinha in front giving a springboard for the other six players to shift forward.
For what its worth, I never really expected Eze to join, he was always batting his lashes at Arsenal, and the whole Gibbs-White thing was basically agent shenanigans. Neither I nor the other Spurs fans I know (all admittedly on the, ahem, mature side) feel remotely humiliated about his not signing.
Big Ange for Forest?
That’s the rumour.
It is most definitely the rumour. Could there be a manager less suited to Forest’s squad than Ange?
Transfer talk:
West Ham need something to happen. They’ve little room for manoeuvre, it seems.
Do Manchester need a new goalie? Does a fish need a bicycle?
The one (of many) that got away for Eddie Howe, Hugo Ekitike, who Newcastle will face on Monday in what they’re calling the Alexander Isak derby.
“There’s no doubt I really like Hugo and have done for a number of years. He’s got really good qualities and he showed that in his first Premier League game. He had a really good debut against Bournemouth. He’s got really good movement, intelligent, good in the air, scores goals, scores off both feet. Our job will be to keep him quiet. He is going to be a threat this year.”
It’s been a tough window for Eddie and Newcastle:
“I’ll be pleased when it’s here – pleased if we have what we want. Whenever you go through a window, there are ups and downs. It feels like there’s been quite a few downs in this one, but also quite a few positives as well.
“The players we’ve signed are very good players who will add a lot to the squad, a lot in terms of the ability, athleticism, fresh energy I’ve spoken about previously. There are big positives for us. Of course, there’s one big challenging situation that’s not resolved. From that side, I can’t wait for the end of the window because we can get back to focusing on the football matches.”
Arne Slot has paid tribute to Federico Chiesa. We’re in “like a new signing” territory here.
“I see a totally different Federico now than from large parts of last season. It is completely normal because he missed out on the whole pre-season and then came into a Premier League rhythm in terms of the amount of games and in terms of intensity.
“If he is more available then he has more chances to impact our results or his playing time. But then it is about him staying as fit as he is at the moment. He is in a much better place now and as we can all see when we needed a goal and I looked at the bench I only had him and Rio (Ngumoha), a 16-year-old, as attacking options.”
The fans’ song about him has been a hot debate this week on the socials.
More on that Coventry stadium story, such good news for the club.
Owner Doug King: “Today is a defining day for Coventry City Football Club. For too long the question of stadium ownership has cast uncertainty over our future. By bringing the Arena under the Club’s ownership, we are safeguarding not only the present but for future generations. This is our home, and it now belongs to the football club and its supporters.
“This is more than a transaction. It is a statement of ambition and belief in Coventry. The Arena will always be a symbol of our city’s strength and creativity, and as owners we can invest in facilities, fan experience, and wider opportunities for our community. We are proud to finally call this stadium our own.”
Now to put up a statue of Mark Robins to accompany that of Jimmy Hill.
As Arsenal ready for the evening’s meeting with Leeds Leeds Leeds, the name on everyone’s lips – even if he is unlikely to play – is Eberechi Eze, who they won the signature of in an East North London tug of love.
Richard Lapworth gets in touch: “Looking forward to Sunderland’s first away game of the season at Turf Moor. I think we should take all three points given we’re a much more feisty team now with more experienced players. Ha’way the Lads.”
After West Ham’s showing last night, has Sunderland’s confidence lessened a tad?
John Brewin
Good morning, and here we go for the second round of the Premier League. And the third round of the EFL. Fourth for some of them, in fact,
That’s your lot from me. John Brewin is here to keep you informed and intrigued ahead of the today’s action.
He may also be making an appearance at Football Weekly Live with Max and Barry at the Troxy in London on 11 September at 7.30pm (BST), so be sure to cop some tickets for that – whether you attend in-person or online.
Serie A also opens its doors for business this weekend. The reigning champions are Napoli, who begin their season away at Fabio Grosso’s promoted Sassuolo later today. Kevin De Bruyne could make his competitive debut for Antonio Conte’s side, who will now be without the injured Romelu Lukaku for a while. At least Scott McTominay is still around.
Here’s Nicky Bandini’s scene-setting preview:
While Chelsea were busy putting balls in West Ham’s net last night, Bayern Munich were very much doing the same to poor RB Leipzig. Harry Kane scored a hat-trick in the Bundesliga’s curtain-raiser at the Allianz Arena, while Luis Díaz also got on the scoresheet on his debut.
Other challengers to Bayern’s crown get their campaigns under way later today, with Bayer Leverkusen at home to Hoffenheim and Borussia Dortmund in Hamburg to play St Pauli.
Coventry City secure ownership of CBS Arena
The Coventry City owner, Doug King, has completed the purchase of the Coventry Building Society Arena from Frasers Group, the club has announced. This is the first time Coventry have owned the stadium since it was opened 20 years ago this week.
Coventry played their first match at what was formerly the Ricoh Arena against QPR on 20 August 2005. In a nice act of symmetry, QPR are today’s visitors to the CBS Arena in the Championship.
Coventry said: “This milestone secures long-term stability, safeguards the future, and opens new opportunities for growth on and off the pitch.”
The club have previously spent time playing their home matches at Northampton’s Sixfields and Birmingham’s St Andrew’s owing to past financial difficulties.
Let’s return to the situation at Nottingham Forest:
By publicly berating the coach while wearing a mahoosive white T-shirt, Marinakis has basically told any self-respecting potential managers to stay well away from the club. Who wants to work for an interfering micromanager in any walk of life? Forest will become the next Watford if Nuno leaves
That clash on the pitch between Nuno and Marinakis at the end of last season was quite the spectacle – and perhaps the manager felt his authority was undermined, especially given it was in the view of the public.
As for becoming the next Watford, that may not seem entirely enticing at the minute, with the club firmly wedged in the Championship’s midtable. You might get an FA Cup final hammering by Manchester City out of it, though.
Bournemouth and Wolves both started the season by shipping four goals each, albeit to Liverpool and Manchester City.
Andoni Iraola could hand debuts to Ben Gannon-Doak and Amine Adli, signed from Liverpool and Bayer Leverkusen this week for around £50m altogether. Vítor Pereira could field his new right-wing-back, AKA the fastest man in Serie A last season, Jackson Tchatchoua.
Bournemouth predicted lineup (4-1-4-1): Petrovic; Smith, Diakité, Senesi, Truffer; Adams; Semenyo, Scott, Tavernier, Brooks; Evanilson
Wolves predicted lineup (3-4-3): Sá; Doherty, Agbadou, T Gomes; Hoever, André, J Gomes, Møller Wolfe; Munetsi, Strand Larsen, Bellegarde
Brentford are another side hoping to bounce back from an opening-weekend defeat. Keith Andrews will come up against Unai Emery today as Aston Villa visit the Gtech Community Stadium.
Dango Ouattara, Brentford’s record signing, could make his debut today following his £42.5m move from Bournemouth this week. Villa, meanwhile, could hand a first start to their £30.5m new forward, Evann Guessand. After being sent off against Newcastle, Ezri Konsa is suspended on his return to his former club.
Brentford predicted lineup (4-2-3-1): Kelleher; Kayode, Collins, Van den Berg, Henry; Yarmolyuk, Jensen; Carvalho, Schade, Lewis-Potter; Thiago
Aston Villa predicted lineup (4-2-3-1): Martínez; Cash, Kamara, Mings, Digne; Tielemans, Onana; McGinn, Rogers, Guessand; Watkins

Will Unwin
It is only the second weekend of the season and Burnley v Sunderland already feels critical in the battle for who stays up. They are separated by a three-point and six-goal gap after the opening weekend saw the Clarets lose 3-0 to Spurs and the Black Cats win by the same scoreline against West Ham.
Home form will be imperative for Burnley if they are to have any chance of staying in the league and they cannot afford to lose against fellow promoted sides. The defensive setup has changed from the one that served Scott Parker so well last season and Richarlison made the most of it. A Kyle Walker home debut should be enough to get Burnley rocking, showing the sort of player they can attract but if without a win, the worries will start to creep in before August is over.
Sunderland will be confident after a busy summer and downing of West Ham. If they double their points tally at Turf Moor, it would see them 15% of the way to the magical mark of 40. Momentum is an asset in football and building it at this stage is essential, especially with another very winnable home game against Brentford next week that could help define Sunderland’s season.
Perhaps the tastiest offering of the Premier League’s 3pm menu comes at Turf Moor. Burnley, on the wrong end of a 3-0 scoreline last weekend, and Sunderland, on the right end of one, do battle. Is it too early to call this a relegation six-pointer?
It could not have gone much better for Régis Le Bris and Sunderland against West Ham. Captained by Granit Xhaka, they looked a confident group in what was their first Premier League game since 2017.
Sunderland fan Richard Lapworth is feeling positive: “I think we should take all three points today given we’re a much more feisty team now with more experienced players.”
Speaking of farcical situations, Nuno Espírito Santo is at risk of winning the sack race at Nottingham Forest. He revealed yesterday that his relationship with the owner, Evangelos Marinakis, had broken down:
It’s not good. I think everybody at the club should be together but it’s not the reality. The reality is that [it] is not what it used to be. It was a good, respectful relationship, but was more based on trust and sharing opinions, and now it’s not so good.
Ange Postecoglou is thought to be in the frame to replace Nuno, whose team face Crystal Palace tomorrow. On paper it looks like a good match – the passionate support, the Europa League, the Greek connection. But when you consider that Postecoglou is very much a trust-the-process man, mate, and that Marinakis is, well, the opposite, it’s hard to see them getting along. Then there’s the Europa League. Of course, Ange won it with Spurs last season but at what cost to their league campaign? It’s not his second season yet, either.
As for Tottenham, it’s looking fine and dandy on the pitch. The Super Cup performance against PSG was promising (mostly) and the dispatching of Burnley on the opening day was smooth enough for Thomas Frank’s first league match in charge.
But off the pitch, well … Spurs continue to be the butt of jokes. Their pursuit of Eberechi Eze seemed nothing short of a farce. Without James Maddison for an extended period and having missed out on Morgan Gibbs-White as well, you fear they may be lacking in the creative department.
Being able to form a low block against City today may suit them, as it did against PSG, with Frank likely to return to a 3-5-2 formation.
Predicted lineup (3-5-2): Vicario; Danso, Romero, Van de Ven; Porro, Sarr, Palhinha, Bentancur, Spence; Kudus, Richarlison
Today’s Premier League fixtures kick off at 12.30pm (BST) with Manchester City v Tottenham.
Pep Guardiola has been playing it down but there must be a sense in the Manchester City camp of wanting to right some wrongs after last season’s humiliating 4-0 home loss to a Spurs side that went on to finish 17th. “It’s just another opportunity – revenge makes no sense,” Pep said this week.
Rúben Dias has signed a new contract through to 2029, Erling Haaland is up and running on the goals front and new signings like the two Rayans – Aït-Nouri and Cherki – are bedding in well. It’s all looking rosy for Pep, you have to say.
Predicted City lineup (4-2-3-1): Trafford; Lewis, Stones, Dias, Ait-Nouri; González, Reijnders; Silva, Cherki, Bobb; Haaland
As for Chelsea, well, things are looking up. But it didn’t look like that for a while. Palmer’s withdrawal from the starting XI was later explained by Maresca as precautionary, with the England international not feeling 100% over the last few days and feeling something in his groin.
Then Robert Sánchez didn’t exactly cover himself in glory for Paquetá’s opener. As good a strike as it was, the Chelsea fans would have had a good grumble behind the goal after seeing Sánchez waft his glove in its general direction. Estêvão, in for the injured Palmer, was chastised afterwards by Maresca for giving the ball away in the buildup to the goal: “We conceded because of him”. It got better, though.
The Brazilian teenager was at the heart of Chelsea’s attacking threat. After João Pedro and Pedro Neto had put them in front, the 18-year-old set up Enzo Fernández’s third with a piercing run through the West Ham defence which, admittedly, was not the sturdiest. After Mads Hermansen did some flapping of his own at two second-half corners, the game was up. Chelsea fans – is this the start of a title charge?
Let’s start with last night, shall we? Chelsea will be waking up this morning feeling a lot better about themselves than after their opening bore-draw against Crystal Palace. Despite losing Cole Palmer in the warm-up and going behind to Lucas Paquetá’s early stunner, Enzo Maresca’s world champions looked very much that, with five goals in reply.
The headlines, though, have been reserved for Graham Potter, whose comeback job at West Ham is not exactly going to plan. The ease with which Chelsea found the net, particularly at set pieces, will no doubt trouble the former Blues manager. The mass exodus that greeted every Chelsea goal and the boos at full-time of this 5-1 defeat were proof of the (exponentially) growing discontent among West Ham supporters.
Just two games into the season and there is talk of a manager’s job under threat and possible relegation. West Ham fans – where has it all gone wrong already?
Preamble
Hello and welcome to Matchday live, where we will be looking back on last night’s drubbing of West Ham by Chelsea at the London Stadium and building up to Saturday’s games in the Premier League and beyond.
Here are today’s top-flight fixtures in full:
12.30pm Manchester City v Tottenham
3pm Bournemouth v Wolves, Brentford v Aston Villa, Burnley v Sunderland
5.30pm Arsenal v Leeds
There is also a full EFL programme, Scottish Premiership fixtures and the start of Serie A and the Bundesliga.
We would like you to get in touch via our dedicated email matchday.live@guardian.co.uk to share your plans, predictions and thoughts for today’s games. And we’d like to hear from West Ham and Chelsea fans on what you made of events last night – good and bad.