Gary O’Neil

#PLStories- Gary O’Neil accepts red card but bizarrely claims Wolves deserved to beat the Hatters instead of draw #WOLVESFC

Watch more of our videos on Shots!and live on Freeview channel 276Visit Shots! nowWolverhampton Wanderers boss Gary O’Neil bizarrely claimed that he felt his side deserved to emerge triumphant from their 1-1 draw at Kenilworth Road yesterday.The visitors were on the back foot for almost all of the first half in which they were reduced to 10 men following Jean-Ricner Bellegarde’s red card, as Luton dominated proceedings, going closest when Carlton Morris’s 20-yard rasping drive smacked against the post.Town then fell behind early in the second period, Neto breaking away to score a fine individual goal, as home stopper Thomas Kaminski made an important double save, but following that the Luton keeper wasn’t unduly tested.Referee Josh Smith sends off Wolves defender Jean-Ricner Bellegarde - pic: Liam SmithHatters drew level through a disputed penalty midway through the second half and almost won it, Chiedozie Ogbene flagged offside when tapping home from close range.The stats showed Town had the upper hand throughout, with 20 shots, three on target as opposed to three from the visitors, all of them on target.Hatters also won 10 corners to one from Wolves, having 55 percent of possession, but despite that, O’Neil said: “I’m extremely disappointed with the first 20, 25 minutes, but we knew today would be a test of mentality and being ready to go."Luton were aggressive, went man for man and we lost every duel."Every time it went into our forward players, it bounced off them, every time it went into theirs, it stuck."When it dropped into midfield they were faster to it, so I’m extremely disappointed with the first 20, 25 minutes, so much so that we had to change shape and try and get a foothold, which I thought we did."We saw off that terrible spell and managed to make the game slightly more even."We suffer a crazy moment from Jean and from that moment it’s going to be a tough hour or so."I asked a big question from the players at half time and they managed to produce second half to be fair."To come from the first 20 minutes, and lose a man, to respond the way they did and fight the way they did to the very end and deserve to win the game was a big effort from them.”One thing O’Neil didn’t really have any complaints with was the decision to send off Bellegarde late in the first period, the French defender dismissed for kicking out at Luton skipper Tom Lockyer.The former Bournemouth manager added: “I only saw it back on the iPad when they were doing the check."It looked like there was a coming together and it looked like a kick out a little bit."I’ll watch it back to have a clearer look at it but if he has kicked out I can understand the red card."Jean is very disappointed about it, he apologised to the group, apologised to me, it’s just something we can’t have."I spoke a lot about trying to fix some of the craziness within the group and that’s an extreme version of it."You can’t be successful in football matches if someone does that."The fact we leave with a point after that, is one hell of an effort from everyone, but more often than not it someone does something like you’re going to walk away with no points, which we can’t afford to do.”
Roberto De Zerbi

#PLStories- Roberto De Zerbi feels lucky after worst performance yet winning against Bournemouth 3-1 #BHAFC

The win sees Albion move up to third in the Premier League following an emphatic brace by super-sub Kaoru Mitoma. De Zerbi said: “Today we played one of the worst games of my time (here). Two, three or four times we were lucky. Bournemouth were great in the first half. "We were better in the second half, but still not at our best level. "When you play with the young or new players, they need time to understand the new ideas on the pitch. “We won with character, passion, behaviour and not with the style of play. It's a very important part, maybe the most important. De Zerbi also highlighted the significance of Mitoma to the team and emphasised the need for him to be rested to ensure his performances remain consistent, crediting Albion owner Tony Bloom in the process for retaining the Japanese winger’s services for the season. “The credit is to Tony Bloom, not me. I think Mitoma is one of the most important players but sometimes he needs to stay on the bench to rest, to play better the next game.”
Andoni Iraola

#PLStories- Andoni Iraola frustrated by officiating in Brighton loss and lack of penalties #AFCB

Cherries’ wait for a spot-kick long precedes Iraola’s time at the club, failing to be given a penalty in the entirety of last season. Iraola’s men had a few shouts to referee John Brooks for a penalty during their 3-1 defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion. Dominic Solanke went down under a challenge of Pervis Estupinan early on, before Simon Adingra’s hand connected with the face of Marcus Tavernier, also in the first half. On the flip side, both Liverpool and Swansea City have been awarded penalties against Cherries earlier this campaign, the one at Anfield particularly contentious when Dominik Szoboszlai went down under Joe Rothwell’s tackle. “I don’t know what has to happen to be given a penalty,” Iraola told the Daily Echo, after the loss at Brighton. “A slap in the face, clearly. There are people watching on TV and then we concede a penalty, I remember the one at Anfield, a light touch.” Iraola and coach Pablo de la Torre were often seen discussing decisions with fourth official Peter Bankes during the contest, who was in consultation with video assistant Michael Oliver. “We were winning 1-0 and they are key decisions that are very important,” said Iraola. “There was a check they did on Dom after five minutes, a possible penalty. I think it is a push. “But they say it has to be something else for a penalty. But you see the one we conceded at Liverpool. “It is difficult, but I understand this one because it is a push, but it is not enough for a penalty. “But not the second one. The second one he (Adingra) just slaps the face of Tavernier without any reason. “Maybe he lost his mind for one second, but sometimes red cards are like this. “It just costs one second. Now it is probably not the referees, but the ones watching. “I think that if you don’t concede this penalty, you are free in the box to slap players. “This cannot happen. It is not like there is a reason why. I think it is pretty obvious.” Cherries have slipped to 17th in the Premier League table over the weekend, with no wins from their opening six matches. They turn their attentions to the Carabao Cup in midweek, when Championship Stoke City come to Vitality Stadium.
Andoni Iraola

#PLStories- AFC Bournemouth head coach Andoni Iraola on goal against Brighton and positive performance despite loss #AFCB

Dominic Solanke lofted the ball into an empty net after Ryan Christie had pickpocketed goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen, but Cherries were unable to hold on, Milos Kerkez’s own goal levelling scores before the break. Karou Mitoma came off the bench to score twice and turn the game around in the hosts’ favour. Verbruggen saw a lot of the ball in the first period, being tasked with building moves for Brighton. The goalie was allowed to dwell on the ball, but Christie picked the right moment to tackle the Dutchman and set up Solanke for the opener. Cherries anticipated this, according to Iraola, who told the Daily Echo: “We knew when you come here they are going to try and build up. “We have a lot of decisions to make. “We decided to go man-to-man, taking risks and the only free man was the keeper. “We had to decide very well the moment where you have to run to the keeper, otherwise they find the spare man very easily and they are out. “I think we did really well, not only on this play, but overall during the game. We lost because of other reasons.” It took Brighton just 15 seconds to take the lead in the second half, leaving a shellshocked Cherries struggling to find a response. “I think we had the chances, especially with Antoine, the two chances he had for us,” continued Iraola. “He was very good from the bench. “Also the one that they cleared from the line and we had some chances there. “But it was much more difficult, because when they don’t have the need to attack you, they can play with the ball, they can attract you and it is much more difficult to play against Brighton once they are winning. “For me the key is having the first half where we were winning, you have to make more damage.”
billy gilmour chelsea

#PLStories- Brighton’s Billy Gilmour reveals why he will keep going for shooting a goal #BHAFC

The Albion midfielder saw his rasping shot against Newcastle end up in a finish for hat-trick man Evan Ferguson after it was fumbled by Nick Pope. He is currently with the Scotland squad as they prepare to face England in a friendly on Tuesday. Gilmour has impressed for the Seagulls early in the season but would love to add a goal or two to his game. Speaking on media duty with the national squad, Gilmour said: “It’s coming! “Two weeks ago against West Ham I came off the pitch and my dad said, ‘How many times? Do you want to just take a chance and shoot!’ “So, going into the game against Newcastle, the first time the ball was bouncing I checked back and thought ‘I just need to shoot here’. It ended up in as an assist. “Hopefully it will come soon. The most important bit is just trying to get a result and trying to help the team, for sure. “It used to be my trademark when I was growing up, edge of the box, hitting it first time, and it would go in. “But then I’ve been first team and I’ve just never scored a goal. Hopefully I can change that.” While Gilmour's dad had reservations, Albion boss Roberto De Zerbi has been pleased with the player's efforts. He maintained his recent good form by helping Scotland to a comfortable 3-0 win in Cyprus on Friday as they edge close to qualification for Euro 2024.
James Milner

#PLStories- James Milner hails Evan Ferguson and Brighton progress #BHAFC

But it is the Irish teen’s willingness to work in that respect which has impressed his senior team-mate as well as the goals. Ferguson fired in a hat-trick against Toon to secure a 3-1 win. There was as much focus on the defending he faced as there was on his finishing. Newcastle didn’t get close for the first two goals. They got a bit nearer for the third and it resulted in a deflection to wrongfoot Nick Pope. But Milner saw something else in that regard which impressed him as he watched from the substitutes’ bench. The former Liverpool man said: “It was pleasing to put in a performance like that, although there are still things to work on. “Evan set the tempo early on. He closed down and blocked a ball going forward. “That might seem a minor thing looking at the game overall, but it sets a tempo. “It shows his intent without the ball. And anyone who knows him so far in his young career, he is an unbelievable finisher. “He is a goalscorer. And when he is doing the ugly side of the game too and being the first line of defence, he was outstanding. “He is still so young but what a player for us and the ceiling is very high for him.” Ferguson snapped up a rebound for his first, then curled home from outside the box before seeing this third ricochet in of Fabian Schar. Milner said: “The first one – that was the sign of a goalscorer. “That natural movement in the box, sniffing it out the chances in the box, being on the move expecting a slip. “He scores all types of goals and it’s up to us to keep his feet on the ground and keep driving him and keep pushing him. “The manager is on him hard as well, because he knows how good he can be and wants him to improve. “He is a great lad with a great attitude and he can only get better. “For the second one, they almost offered him a chance to put it in the corner – and he did! “The more he scores like that, he might get closed down a bit quicker. “But it was a great and clam finish, and another finish of a goalscorer.” Around the interview area on Saturday evening, anyone from the Albion side who put himself forward for questions was being asked the same thing. Who does Ferguson remind you of? Who would you compare him to? Roberto De Zerbi saw some likenesses to Christin Vieri. Pascal Gross was not willing to offer a comparison. Milner has been around far too long to be tempted into mentioning any names as he spoke about an 18-year-old still some way short of the first anniversary of his first Prem goal. He said: “I don’t really want to compare him to anyone because as soon as I do that it puts pressure on him. “I want to make sure his head doesn’t get too big! “But he’s a top talent and has started his career fantastically well. “Hopefully he has a long one ahead doing the same thing. “When you compare him to other players, that puts more pressure on him than we need to at this moment. “He is at a fantastic place right now with great players around him, a great bunch of lads that will push and support him, and a manager that wants him to prove all aspects of his game.” Amid the exciting group of young players, De Zerbi has also assembled a lot of experience. And experience of good things. Success. Doing things the right way. Milner said: “When I was a young player (at Leeds United) it was the likes of David Batty and Dom Matteo that kept my feet on the ground. “Very old school, probably more than now although I still have a bit of that old school in me. “There are no tea cups being thrown around now. “But now it is our job to push Evan and advise him. “He will have ups and downs.” Ferguson has already had his hiccups. A costly missed penalty for Republic of Ireland under-21s, a couple of injuries. Those injuries were, thankfully, not as bad as they first looked although the second, sustained at Chelsea, denied him a Wembley outing in the FA Cup semi-final. He appears to have taken those setbacks in a mature way and come back strongly. The glimpses we see on social media of him trading mickey-takes with Lewis Dunk suggest someone who is confident and comfortable in his surroundings. Milner likes what he sees from the set-up in general. He said: “I am learning a great deal from the manager. “It’s great to be here, a great bunch of lads and the manager has such a passion for the game. “He pushes you every day and wants maximum effort and concentration and attention to detail. “That is massive and I am really enjoying it. I was excited to come here and you never stop learning, off players, the manager and coaching staff. “It is a lot different from what I did for a long time under Jurgen Klopp and I am enjoying it immensely. “It is exactly what I hoped for in this later stage of my career, to keep learning and improving and seeing different ways of playing.”
Andoni Iraola

#PLStories- Andoni Iraola reveals loan move of Jaidon Anthony to Leeds United was not controlled by him #AFCB

Anthony had featured regularly under new boss Iraola, starting three of the first four games this season. However, after Cherries moved late to sign winger Luis Sinisterra on loan, Anthony was suddenly deemed surplus to requirements, shipped out to Leeds United in the Championship for the rest of the season. Iraola explained earlier in the summer how he has little to do with transfer dealings, leaving that to the likes of Richard Hughes and Neill Blake. Asked how much of a say he had in the shock Sinisterra and Anthony swap deal, Iraola told the Daily Echo: “It is a situation that happened on the last day of the window. “The club thought that we could be stronger adding a player like Luis Sinisterra. “He was on Saturday (at Brentford) watching the game. Now he is going with the national team, so we will not have him for the next 10 to 12 days. “But it is another player we have who can make the difference, starting from wide. It is a good addition for us.” Quizzed on if he supported the idea of Anthony going to Leeds, Iraola added: “It is a decision he had to make. “I tried to help him as much as I could, because Jaidon, I love him as a person and as a player. “Of the four games he has been with me, he has started three. He was very good in pre-season. “But he had to take the decision, because we have a lot of options there out wide. “It is the decision he finally took and I hope the best, because he deserves it. “I know he is going to play very well there in Leeds and I hope he returns next season even better as a player.” Luis Sinisterra joined Cherries on deadline day (Image: PA) Anthony was with Cherries’ squad in the team hotel, getting ready to face Brentford in the Premier League the following day, before his sudden departure. Detailing his conversations with the 23-year-old, Iraola said: “I tried to be as honest as I could, because he deserves it. “I had no problem if he was to stay here, no problem at all. “And you can see because he has played with me, he has started. He is a reliable player. “You tell him to do this, he will do it or he will try to do it. He will make mistakes, like everyone else, but he is a very reliable player. “He had to take the decision knowing the players he will be fighting for in his position. “The option he had also I think was really good, to a very good team. “He decided to take that route. It’s a loan, so I hope he comes back with us, for sure he will, like a better player. “As a person, he is a top, top guy. I think he deserved all the honesty, as much as I could. “I tried to help him, but he was the one with the final decision.”
Roberto De Zerbi

#PLStories- Roberto De Zerbi reveals behind the scenes planning and coaching to improve Brighton attack #BHAFC

And he revealed how the second goal was a case of planning paying off. De Zerbi saw his side bounce back from a defeat by West Ham to enjoy a 3-1 win at the Amex. The Seagulls boss said: “I am happy for the reaction after the defeat to West Ham because we didn’t deserve to lose that game. “We didn’t play a great game against West Ham but I think it was enough to win. We were unlucky. "Today we played one of the best games in my time because we have to consider the opponent and the opponent is one of the best in the Premier League. Incredibly physical. “I am very happy.” De Zerbi revealed the part played by Billy Gilmour on the second goal resulted from careful planning and hard work during the week. He said: “We are working a lot. We are having a lot of meetings to speak about the details on the pitch. “The second goal was fantastic because we worked on that situation. “When the ball is with the centre-back, he has to find the right position, the right body shape, the player between the lines has to move in the right way, they have to keep the right position. “It’s fantastic when you can see your work and the improvement of the players during the game.”
Thomas Frank

#PLStories- Thomas Frank praised Brentford mentality after Bournemouth draw #BRENTFORDFC

Mbeumo’s fourth of the season cancelled out goals from Dominic Solanke and David Brooks after Mathias Jensen put Brentford in the lead for Brentford in the first half. And Frank praised his team’s second-half display which saw them extend their unbeaten start to the season, with six points on the board. “First half we were good but second half we were fantastic,” Frank said. “I think we ran over Bournemouth in the second half and we created chance after chance. "The only chance I can remember from Bournemouth was the goal, and that was a mistake from Rico (Henry). "But the mentality in this team is incredible. What character. They never give up, they will never die. "After we got a more than well-deserved equaliser, we still went for it, with centre-backs Nathan Collins and Kristoffer Ajer still overlapping. "I am very proud of the team's performance. "If we play this 100 times, we win it 98, draw one, that was (Saturday), and lose the other time, because there were so many big chances."
Jaidon Anthony

#PLStories- AFC Bournemouth’s Jaidon Anthony on assist for David Brooks against Swansea in League cup #AFCB

Anthony provided a fantastic assist for Brooks to equalise after Cherries trailed 1-0 in Wales thanks to Matt Grimes’ first-half penalty. The away side then took a lead through Hamed Traore, before the hosts again levelled scores via Jamie Patterson. In the end it was substitute Ryan Christie who had the last say, finding the bottom corner in the 90th minute to send Cherries through to the next round. Discussing his assist for Cherries’ first, Anthony insisted that Brooks deserved the credit for applying the finishing touch. He told the Daily Echo: “It was a good ball and to be fair it's not an easy finish either, on his weak foot. “I think he's had a really good pre-season and a start to the season in front of goal. “I'm happy he could put it away and help us to win.” Brooks’ goal came about after Cherries won the ball high up the pitch, with Anthony believing the strike to be representative of the way Andoni Iraola wants Cherries to play. “I think the manager wants us to be aggressive in every game,” explained the 23-year-old. “It's a perfect example of the high press and what that can do. “Win it back and then attacking pass, and we get the goal - happy days. “The most important thing was getting through to the next round. “The first half, we knew we weren't at the races and we knew we had to react in the second half. “I think obviously the second goal is probably a bit unfortunate, but I think we deserved what we got in the end.” The draw for the third round will be made on Wednesday evening, following the conclusion of second round ties. Teams will not be regionalised, meaning Cherries could be handed another lengthy trek. Sides competing in Europe enter at this stage of the competition, with third round ties being staged the week commencing Monday, September 25.
Andoni Iraola

#PLStories- Andoni Iraola on first win as AFC Bournemouth boss in league cup #AFCB

Cherries had to come from behind to triumph 3-2 in south Wales, Ryan Christie netting a stoppage-time winner after earlier strikes from David Brooks and Hamed Traore. Matt Grimes had put the hosts ahead from the penalty spot in the eighth minute, a lead they held until half-time. It marks a first victory for the Spaniard since joining the club over the summer, after three Premier League games so far without a win. Ryan Christie fired home a late winner (Image: PA) Asked if the feeling was relief at eventually getting over the line against Championship opposition in Swansea, Iraola told the Daily Echo: “I think it was a game with two very different parts, two very different halves. “I think we started very bad. Probably the worst way to start, conceding a penalty and we were very slow to move the ball in the first half. “We only had to improve in the second half. I think the rhythm was different in the second half. “We moved the ball much quicker, the rhythm was much higher. And then we were in control of the game. “I think we should have probably won the game earlier, but in the end this is the cup and sometimes you have to suffer.” Iraola’s frustration with the first-half display was evident by his triple substitution at the break. “It was about not only the names and the subs, it was about the attitude, the willingness to attack the spaces, to be more direct, not receive the ball only facing our goal. “To be more aware of the situations, open the game and the pitch a little bit more. “I think especially with Milos (Kerkez) and Jaidon (Anthony), we were opening the left wing very well and then we could find Junior (Traore) and Philip (Billing) inside and from there we were much better.” Although Iraola made seven changes to the starting line-up which had faced Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday, it was a strong selection full of players who have featured in the league this season, aside from debutant Andrei Radu in goal. Discussing the importance he places in staying in the cup competitions, Iraola said: “In the end it is not that you make changes or play a weaker team in the cup and they give you an extra (free) weekend. “No, they are not giving you anything. “At the end, it is also a way of very good training for us and in the next round also we will try to win the game, because at the end you never know when a good run can happen. “You have to try it every single year.”
Roberto De Zerbi

#PLStories- Roberto De Zerbi reveals no surprise in defeat to West Ham #BHAFC

If this game wasn’t a reality check, then what followed from Roberto De Zerbi certainly was. At least that appeared the intention from the head coach after this first defeat of the season. One reality is Albion won’t change their way of playing. They just need to do it better. Another reality is that, ideally, they need to fill a gap or two which were visible to a degree in their two 4-1 wins and more obvious on this occasion. Having (understandably) cashed in their insurance policy, Albion cannot afford to leave the back door unlocked like they did on Saturday. They piled men forward, piled up passes and got into a whole pile of trouble on counter-attacks. Not just how they dealt with those counter-raids but that they were allowed to happen in the first place. This game felt a bit like a 5-1 reverse to Everton late in the last campaign (a game in which Moises Caicedo played, let’s not forget). West Ham had the right plan, the right personnel and, like the Toffees back on that rainy Bank Holiday, a goalkeeper in good form. Counter-attack goals from perennial Amex threat James Ward-Prowse, Jarrod Bowen and Michail Antonio put them out of reach. But the home side, always capable of creating danger, might still have snatched some reward after Pascal Gross reduced arrears. In that Everton game, De Zerbi felt his side were too cavalier in how they chased the game after going behind in the first few seconds. Here, he again said they needed to be more aware of the time available. Defeat came at the end of a week when Albion had been showered with praise. But it was a reminder of the tests posed by the Premier League. De Zerbi said: “We are Brighton and maybe the people are confused when they think of Brighton. “Brighton can lose the game with West Ham. Why not? “They can lose the game against Everton. “Then we want to win against everyone. We are playing with courage, with pride and we want to make our fans happy, winning every game or winning the Europa League. “But we can’t forget we are Brighton. “YOU can’t forget we are Brighton. “YOU can’t forget we lost three big players because we are not honest otherwise and I want to be honest. “I will fight to win every game but for us, for our fans, for our club, we have to be clear and honest.” After losing Julio Enciso to injury, De Zerbi said he wants a No.10 as well as a Caicedo type in midfield and one other player in an unspecified position. The latter may well be a specialist right-back. Here, they had found some momentum after a slow start when poor execution of the right plan caught them out. Adam Webster tried to force a pass but saw the ball cut out by Ward-Prowse, who helped it forward. That was when Webster should have kept it simple as he got to the ball before Antonio, rather than trying a pass back to Bart Verbruggen which fell short. Billy Gilmour got back to block from Ward-Prowse but the ball bounced back for the Hammer to tap in. De Zerbi said: “When we concede the first goal, the mistake by Adam Webster wasn’t the last part with Antonio. “With the pass, he took a big risk. In another way we can play, we move the ball faster to move the opponent right and left but we have to keep the ball. “We can’t lose the ball in that way because we were attacking with a lot of players and the first thing is to keep the ball and don’t lose the ball. “But anyway there was the possibility to defend better after this mistake on the pass. “But Webster is still one of the most important players and it is not a problem.” Alphonse Areola denied Evan Ferguson soon after that goal and early in the second period before Bowen outpaced Pervis Estupinan to reach Said Benrahma’s cross and finish cleverly. Antonio left Webster standing to drive home the third and, after Gross shot into the bottom corner to re-ignite hope, Areola’s saves from Joel Veltman and Ferguson killed hopes of a comeback. There were also penalty shouts for handball and for a clip on Kauro Mitoma, plus a goal-saving clearance by Danny Ings from a Lewis Dunk header, as Albion swarmed towards the North Stand. If you are going to lose, then go down fighting, attacking, giving it your all. Albion certainly did all that. But they should not have dug themselves that hole in the first place. Albion: Verbruggen; Milner (Veltman 72), Dunk, Webster, Estupinan: Gross, Gilmour (Lallana 60); March (72), Welbeck (Joao Pedro 60), Mitoma: Ferguson. Subs: Steele, Igor, Dahoud, van Hecke, Buonanotte Goal: Gross 81. Yellow card: Mitoma West Ham: Areola: Coufal, Zouma, Ogbonna, Emerson: Soucek (Benrahma 39), Alvarez (Fornals 84), Ward-Prowse: Bowen, Antonio (Kehrer 79), Paqueta (Ings 85). Subs: Fabianski, Johnson, Cresswell, Cornet, Mubama. Goals: Ward-Prowse 19, Bowen 58, Antonio 63. Yellow card: Ward-Prowse 24 (foul), Alvarez 45+1 (foul), Kehrer 89 (foul). Referee: Anthony Taylor. Minimum stoppage time indicated: 4+6.
Roberto De Zerbi

#PLStories- Brighton’s Roberto De Zerbi explains Bart Verbruggen debut #BHAFC

The Albion boss handed Holland under-21 international Bart Verbruggen his debut in place of Jason Steele against West Ham. Having made crucial saves in the first two games, Steele remained on the bench against the Hammers. De Zerbi said: “They will play depending on the opponent, depending on the physical condition, but I believe in Bart the same way as Jason. “They will play 50% of the games this year. “We are lucky to have in our squad two great goalkeepers.” Verbruggen, who was blameless on the West Ham goals, said: “Jason was doing really well but the thing is that we have a team where in every position we have more players who can play and make an impact. “I think that’s the biggest strength about this team. “If a person gets replaced, nothing really changes. “Of course everyone has his own characteristics and qualities, but there’s no huge changes. “I know that’s a strength of the team and everybody needs to be ready every week and that’s what I try to do.”
Rob Edwards

#PLStories- Rob Edwards saw signs of real improvement in his Luton side despite Chelsea defeat #LUTONTOWNFC

Town boss Rob Edwards insisted he saw signs of real improvement in his side despite their 3-0 defeat at Chelsea on Friday night.The Hatters were going up against a team that on paper, cost just under the princely sum of £450m to assemble, with two £100m-plus midfielders patrolling the central areas in British transfer record holder Moises Caicedo and Argentina World Cup winner Enzo Fernandez.They dominated possession early on as expected, having the quality to take the lead through a fine solo goal from England international Raheem Sterling, himself a £47.5m acquisition last summer.Luton boss Rob Edwards greets opposite number Mauricio Pochettino at Stamford Bridge - pic: Liam SmithTown weren’t without their spells of pressure though, particularly before and after the break, but crucially they couldn’t find the net, Ryan Giles’ deflected shot saved by Robert Sanchez the closest they came.Sterling then added a second with 68 minutes gone, while Senegalese forward Nicholas Jackson, who cost a mere £31.8m, still far more than Town’s entire squad was put together for, completed the scoring.Despite that, Edwards felt Luton had been better than their opening day 4-1 reverse at Brighton & Hove Albion, saying: “We don't like losing, I’ve got to stress that.“We know we want to win games, we know we want to get points, but I've seen improvement from 13 days ago.“I saw we can compete with a top, top team for massive spells of the game, so that's a huge thing to be proud of and to take positives from.“The lads have reacted so, so well from Brighton."We’re going to be able to take loads from this game and a lot of it are positives, but we know there are areas we need to keep working on and improving, but we were competitive with Chelsea Football Club.“I’m not going to go through the numbers, we all know, they're a huge club who have won the Champions League a couple of times in recent years, so lets be honest, should we be competing with them?“But we did, so loads of good stuff.“Where we've got to improve now, is continue to work really hard, and those moments, at both ends of the pitch are really, really key now.“We did create half opportunities, and one decent one.“You don't get many when you come here, so we've got to try and be a bit more ruthless and then at the bottom end, if we get a little bit stretched we've just got to make sure we close those gaps really, really quickly."They've got the quality to pick someone out, they’ve got the quality to then finish it, but lots to take, lots of positive things.”Town looked like they might be able to cause an upset in the early stages of the second period, as they began to have the better of proceedings, none more so than when Giles went close.Edwards knows it’s moments like that they need to really drive home their advantage at this level, as he continued: “I felt we started the second half really well, very positively."We had the territory, it was in their half, we weren’t able to create loads of chances, but I felt we’re looking strong in this game now, maybe they were ready to have a little bit of a wobble."We had moments to cross, we just lacked that little bit of quality, that little finesse, we didn’t pick someone out."Ryan Giles had a good opportunity that was half blocked, probably our cleanest one“It was a big moment for us, you’re not going to get many chances here at Stamford Bridge, but that was a really well-worked opportunity and really they defended it well as they got the block.“Then the game was going a bit more end-to-end, getting a bit stretched, and clearly then they become very dangerous as well, but because we’re in the game you can't change too much."You’ve got to hope that we can see any dangerous moments out, that second goal probably deflated us a little bit, we've got to make sure that we learn that third one doesn’t come, because even at 2-0 you’re still in the game.”After being breached by Sterling’s close-range finish for the crucial second goal, and then conceding again shortly afterwards, Jackson prodding home, with 15 minutes to go, there was a worry Town could go under and their goal difference take a hit.However, they didn’t and almost grabbed a consolation for the 3,054 away fans to celebrate, substitute Jacob Brown going close, lofting his effort off target when looking to capitalise on some defensive hesitancy.Edwards added: “I’m extremely proud of the group, as I saw full commitment to the gameplan, saw a group that stayed together right to the very, very end, didn't go under, and it competed with a brilliant football team.“I can see a real cohesion in the group, well organised, and a commitment there as well, so there’s a lot of good things, but we don’t like losing, none of us like losing and we want to pick up points.“We're a new group as well, I've got to stress that."There's a lot of new players there experiencing Premier League football for the first time and it doesn't get more difficult than Brighton away and Chelsea away.“Maybe one or two games, but we can take a lot from it, we'll learn and learn quickly, but I think we'll see more improvement in a week's time.”
Roberto De Zerbi

#PLStories- Roberto De Zerbi reacts to Brighton’s 3-1 defeat against West Ham #WHUFC

But he said they lost balance in the 3-1 defeat. Albion had plenty of possession and territory but were hit a ruthless away side who also defended in depth. De Zerbi said: “I’m disappointed with the result. “It wasn’t the best game in my time but I think we didn’t play bad. “We didn’t play a great, great game but we played a good game - enough to get a point. “We conceded the first goal in a bad way, in a stupid way. “I don’t understand yet what happened in the part of the pitch in that situation between Webster and Antonio and we concede a goal. “And then West Ham defended in the last 20 minutes with very small spaces and it became very difficult to find the condition to score. “Anyway, we shot 27 times, we created ten, 11 chances to score. “And in the second half I am disappointed because we lost the balance. “The games are 90 minutes plus extra time and we have not to lose the balance. “But we are Brighton. We have to improve the team, improve the players, improve the understanding of the game.” West Ham keeper Alphonse Areola made stunning saves from Joel Veltman and Evan Ferguson to cut short hopes of a comeback after Pascal Gross made it 3-1. De Zerbi said: “Areola was, I think, the best player on the pitch but West Ham are still a very good team. “In the last transfer market you can understand how many very good players they brought.”