Graham Potter Brighton

#PLStories- Graham Potter admits Manchester City deserved win against Brighton #BHAFC #MCFC

ALBION boss Graham Potter admitted Manchester City deserved to win the match despite his side's brave defending. In the first half Albion got men behind the ball and were able to keep the Premier League champions at bay. However, in the second half the Citizens came out knowing a win would take them top of the table and were able to break down Albion's stubborn defence. Two deflected goals from Riyad Mahrez and Phil Foden set the hosts up for victory before Bernardo Silva capped off the scoring in the final ten minutes. Potter believed his side defended well in the match but knows that City deserved to win the match. After the game, Potter said: "They're a fantastic team, we know that. "They played really well, deserved to win to be fair. "We defended really well in the first half with our shape and discipline. "We are disappointed in ourselves with how we were with the ball and we could have been a little bit better. "They make it so difficult. Their pressing is really good. "Disappointed with how we were on the ball. You have to be perfect to come here and get something and we weren't. "In the end, even I think it was a little bit fortunate with how they got their first goals came, you have to say over the course of the ninety minutes they deserved to win."
Sean Dyche Burnley

#PLStories- Mike Jackson believes Sean Dyche sacking can ‘jolt’ Burnley into securing survival #BURNLEYFC

BURNLEY caretaker boss Mike Jackson believes the shock sacking of Sean Dyche last week has made clear to the players the precarious position they find themselves in. The Clarets are no strangers to a relegation battle, but this season’s feels different, with a side who have won only four league games all term showing few signs they are about to dig themselves out of this hole. Dyche paid the price on Good Friday as the club abruptly ended his nine-and-a-half-year reign only months after giving him a new four-year contract. “I think that can be a trigger for a team sometimes,” Jackson said. “It gives them a jolt. They think, ‘This is where we’re at, what do we do as a group now? Do we sit and wallow or do we come together and take on that challenge?’. From what I’ve seen so far that’s what they’ve done.” Jackson, 48, has stepped up from his role as under-23s boss to lead an interim coaching staff that also includes injured club captain Ben Mee, securing a 1-1 draw in Sunday’s match at West Ham. It could have been more – Maxwel Cornet missed a penalty after Wout Weghorst headed Burnley in front – but equally Jackson was grateful to Nick Pope for saving them from defeat after Tomas Soucek levelled. Jackson said he did not know how much longer he would remain in charge – chairman Alan Pace has asked him to take charge at home to Southampton on Thursday night but nothing more has been said, with Wolves due at Turf Moor on Sunday. Ralf Rangnick has arguably seen the interim tag undermine his authority at Manchester United but, given Burnley’s position, Jackson said his own situation was completely different. “I can only go back to what I’ve seen from the group in the last few days,” he said. “If you’d been in that dressing room before the game and seen that group come together, you’d see why I’m answering as I am. “I’ve seen what it meant to them and what they were like after, they were really disappointed they didn’t come away with more. I told them not to be too disappointed because there were some really good signs.” The draw left Burnley three points from safety going into the midweek fixtures, and perhaps needing to win as many games in the final seven fixtures of the season as they have managed all campaign. But Jackson insisted there was every reason to believe they are capable of a great escape. “Definitely I believe it,” he said. “I’m going to say that, but there’s enough within this group. This group have been there before. You see the response the other day and how they all came together. “There’s a lot of football to be played, a lot of points to play for. It’s not going to be defined by tomorrow night. It’s going to be defined in the last game of the season, that’s when we’ll be told if we’re good enough. I think this group is good enough.” Sunday’s draw was overshadowed by a horrible ankle injury for Ashley Westwood, whose leg appeared to buckle underneath him. Jackson said he still did not know the precise nature of the injury, with the midfielder due to see a specialist on Wednesday. “He’s going down to see a surgeon today with the doctor and we’ll know a bit more today on whether he needs further in terms of an operation,” Jackson said. “He’s such a popular member of the group and I think that’s another thing we can tap into, to try and put a smile on the lad’s face when he turns the TV on tomorrow and remember what we’re doing it for.”
Ralph Hasenhuttl

#PLStories- Ralph Hasenhuttl says Saints have higher targets than just staying up #SAINTSFC

RALPH Hasenhuttl insists he will not use the final few games of the season just to give different players a chance in his team, stating: "The best XI should play." Saints look set to comfortably avoid being dragged into any sort of relegation battle, particularly following Saturday's 1-0 victory over Arsenal. That result leaves them 12th in the Premier League, 14 points clear of the relegation zone with six games to play. The first of those comes at struggling, managerless Burnley on Thursday night (7.45pm). Asked if the next few weeks could be an opportunity to give younger players in his squad some game-time now Saints are safe from the drop, Hasenhuttl responded: "I think it is visible that this season we are not speaking about ‘now we are safe’. "I think that is the first time since I am here, we are not saying ‘okay, now we are safe, so that’s it’. "This season we try to focus on higher targets and this is what we said. "We are in this middle part of the table. It is very tight, every club now has the chance in the last six games to climb positions or to lose positions. "This is the goal now. There is no time for looking for who can get the chance now. "I think there should be a very clear message for everybody that the best XI should play and the players that deserve the most to play should get the chance to play." Just four points currently separate Leicester City in ninth and Aston Villa down in 15th. And Hasenhuttl has no fresh injury concerns to worry about ahead of the trip to Turf Moor. "So far, no big issues injury-wise," confirmed Saints' boss. "It gives me at the moment a lot of options for team selection. Not always easy, but better this part we can change a few things and we will see what we do."
Ralph Hasenhuttl

#PLStories- Ralph Hasenhuttl’s message to players chasing new Saints contracts #SAINTSFC

BOSS Ralph Hasenhuttl insists "it's never too late" for his players to prove they deserve a new contract at Saints. The club have a handful of players currently set to leave the club this summer, with some first-team players also about to enter the final year of their deals. Goalkeeping trio Fraser Forster, Willy Caballero and Harry Lewis, along with veteran striker Shane Long, are all due to become free agents in less than three months team. Meanwhile, it is understood Theo Walcott, Nathan Redmond, Oriol Romeu, Moussa Djenepo, Yan Valery are among those who see their deals expire in the summer of 2023. Asked today if Saints were considering offering in-form Forster a new deal, Hasenhuttl said: “Absolutely. “There are a lot of arguments for doing this, and I am sure we will find with him a very good solution for the future. “As I said, I was very happy with he way he reacted when he got the chance to play. “I think he absolutely grabbed the chance with all his effort. A very good argument for him, definitely.” And quizzed by the Daily Echo if most decisions on expiring contracts had already been made, or if that could depend on how the final six games of the season go, Hasenhuttl added: "Decisions in the way that you extend or whatever will be taken very often at the end of the season. "But we have our plan and we have our views about the players. But as always, things can change even in the last two weeks. "They can change and suddenly you think ‘okay, maybe we go again with him'. "It’s important for the players to see that it’s never too late to show up and you are never safe even if you had a good season. "So you should always try to perform to the highest possible level, it helps definitely and gives you good arguments."
Frank Lampard

#PLStories- Frank Lampard believes Sean Dyche’s Burnley exit ‘doesn’t change anything’ for Everton #EVERTONFC #BURNLEYFC

EVERTON boss Frank Lampard says fellow relegation battlers Burnley’s decision to sack Sean Dyche “doesn’t affect” the Toffees. Dyche was axed last Friday by the Clarets, who subsequently drew 1-1 at West Ham on Sunday with Mike Jackson in caretaker charge. With seven matches to play, Burnley are 18th in the Premier League, three points adrift of 17th-placed Everton, who have a game in hand. Lampard’s side were beaten 3-2 at Turf Moor on April 6 then defeated Manchester United 1-0 at Goodison Park three days later, before Burnley lost 2-0 at Norwich the next day in what proved the final game of Dyche’s tenure. Everton return to action by hosting Leicester on Wednesday, with the Clarets then entertaining Southampton 24 hours later. When asked at his pre-match press conference about Dyche’s sacking, Lampard said: “Firstly, Sean Dyche has been an incredible manager of the club. I think that’s been quite a universal reaction to it. "But the club have decided to make a change, and Sean Dyche I’m sure deserves maybe a bit of a rest and then will get a fantastic job because of the level of manager he has shown himself to be. "I wish Sean all the best going forward on that. In terms of what happens to Burnley, what it means in this period, nobody knows. "You can probably go through history and find good reactions from changes, not so good reactions from changes. “It doesn’t affect Everton. I saw a quote this week saying we were let off the hook that it’s happened. I don’t see how. "This doesn’t change anything – Burnley are a good team and used to fighting to stay in the Premier League, and that fact will remain the same.” Clarets on social, plus take out a subscription... Keep up to date with our Burnley coverage on social media by joining us on Facebook and Twitter Gain unlimited access to the Lancashire Telegraph website with a premium digital subscription Or if you want the Telegraph newspaper delivered to your door, get in touch with our home delivery team or call us on 0800 953 0227
Ralph Hasenhuttl

#PLStories- Ralph Hasenhuttl claims Burnley is harder to prepare for (After Sean Dyche Sacking) #SAINTSFC #BURNLEYFC

RALPH Hasenhuttl believes Burnley are a “little bit harder” to prepare for after the Clarets sacked long-serving manager Sean Dyche. Despite the fact Burnley have been stuck in the relegation zone for the majority of the season, there was huge shock that boss Dyche, who had twice taken the Clarets to the Premier League in his ten-year stint in charge, was sacked prior to Burnley’s visit to West Ham. A caretaker management team made up of youth coach Michael Jackson and first-team captain Ben Mee steered the Clarets to a 1-1 draw away at the London Stadium. Reflecting on preparations for Burnley, Hasenhuttl said: “Burnley have a different way of playing football, they are a different opponent, a little bit harder at the moment for preparing, because of the new situation there. “But we know the team, we know the players, some smaller changes they have made in the last game against West Ham. “You can see the differences. “When a manager is there for such a long time, you normally have a team that is absolutely used to what they have done all the time, very clear philosophy. “When somebody like him is gone, it is normal that somethings have broken up a little bit and you do things a little bit different. “You could see they played a little bit more football, and tried to use some spaces a little bit more. “Full-backs a little bit more offensive in some moments. “A few smaller margins they have changed, but the players are still the same, and also the behaviours, that you could feel are still the same. “But in some moments, they tried to change something, so we will see what happens.” Hasenhuttl went on to issue an injury update, revealing that there were currently no new concerns. "So far, no big issues injuries-wise, at the moment it gives us a lot of options for the team selection, which is not always easy. It is better at this part that we can change a few things, we will see what we do. “You have to take care of them and find hopefully a good squad that is competitive.”
Graham Potter Brighton

#PLStories- Brighton boss demands more from players for Manchester City trip #BHAFC

ALBION boss Graham Potter believes Saturday’s win at Tottenham was their best display in his three years at the club – but he has told his players they will need to be even better at Manchester City. A week after the Seagulls beat Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium, they repeated the trick across north London thanks to Leandro Trossard’s 90th-minute winner. The fixtures do not get any easier, though, with Albion heading to Manchester to take on Pep Guardiola’s Premier League pace-setters on Wednesday night. “I was really proud of the players,” said Potter. “It was a really good performance, probably one of the best, if not the best, in my time at the club. “You have to have that level of performance if you are going to get a result at Tottenham. Historically it’s not easy for us to go there and get a win. Brighton and Hove Albion manager Graham Potter, credit Simon Dack “The players gave everything on the day, and that gives you a chance to get a result. Our supporters were brilliant and it was a really good day for the club. “It gives you confidence, I guess. We’ve played some good games this season, we’ve taken a step forward I think. “But the past is the past and you have to start again, against an absolutely fantastic side. I would say we’ll have to be even better than we were against Spurs. That’s the challenge. “It’s very rare you get the opportunity to play against the very best in sport, so while it’s an incredible challenge it’s also exciting. We’ll go there and do our best.” City will host the Seagulls on the back of their gruelling Champions League tussle with Atletico Madrid and the 3-2 FA Cup semi-final defeat by Liverpool. But Potter added: “I don’t think any time is a good time to play them, in terms of how they are as a team. “In the game at the weekend you saw their qualities. You admire them just as much in defeat as when they are winning games. “They had a tough two games against Atletico Madrid in the Champions League, you can’t imagine how tough that is, in between two Liverpool matches. “To recover from 3-0 down at half-time and play the second half as they did, the way they acted was very, very impressive.”
Sean Dyche Burnley

#PLStories- What Premier League managers said after Sean Dyche’s Burnley exit #BURNLEYFC #BHAFC #ARSENALFC #WATFORDFC #WHUFC

BURNLEY’S decision to part company with Sean Dyche shocked the footballing world, but what have his managerial counterparts had to say? "I am massively surprised. I don't know what happened behind the scenes but looking from the outside and as a Brentford head coach, there are a lot of things we can learn from a club like Burnley. “They were promoted, relegated and then promoted again and they have been here six or seven years in the Premier League. It is remarkable what they have done. “I think Sean Dyche deserves a lot of credit and they should build a statue of him outside Turf Moor because what he has done is incredible. “Every season, going into the Premier League with probably bottom three or bottom four budget and then still being able to compete and not just survive, but get at least a couple of top ten places is a fantastic, remarkable job. "Looking from the outside, I think they would have had a better chance keeping him to survive because he knows everything. But of course, I don’t know everything." Graham Potter, Brighton "I feel for a colleague, someone who I have a lot of respect for. It is never nice when someone loses their job of course, but we know these things happen in football. “I don't think he'll be out of work for long because the job he did at Burnley was fantastic. I think it is part of life. Sean is a big guy, he knows how it is. "The reality is there are more people to feel sorry for than Premier League managers but there is a pressure, an expectation. Sometimes it is fair, sometimes it is unfair - it goes with the territory. We know that when we go into it. “We know when results don't go well you are under pressure, you have got scrutiny. But it is part of the thing you sign up for and you have to deal with it." Roy Hodgson, Watford "Of all the people in the league, he would have been one of the ones I would have thought most likely to survive anything like this, so I have no idea what has happened. “Something must have happened because you don't part company with a manager like Sean Dyche after all the fantastic things he has done for that club over the last 10 years - he has built the club. "So I was surprised, shocked and disappointed too because I know Sean quite well and I admire him as coach and a manager. I didn't think that something like this would happen to him." Mikel Arteta, Arsenal "I only have words of praise because what he has done at the club over the last 10 years is phenomenal. "He gave the club a really clear identity, he has managed to keep the team, with one of the smallest budgets, consistently in the league. I wish him the best of luck and as always with colleagues, it is sad when you see those decisions." David Moyes, West Ham "I am shocked and a little bit surprised as well. I think Sean has done such a great job and established Burnley in the Premier League over many years. “Over recent times, Burnley have been a very difficult team to play against and most of that has been done by Sean." Patrick Vieira, Crystal Palace "It was quite surprising. There is no doubt about the work he has been doing at Burnley in the last 10 years, but this is the industry we are living in. “It is difficult to see a manager losing his position, but this is the world that we are in and as difficult as it is, that is the way it is."
Ralph Hasenhuttl

#PLStories- Ralph Hasenhuttl admits difference in performance after beating Arsenal #SAINTSFC #ArsenalFC

BOSS Ralph Hasenhuttl explained how Saints played "a little bit different" to end their winless run, adding: "It was time to show a reaction." Saints' six-game streak without a victory came to a crescendo last weekend with a crushing 6-0 home defeat against Chelsea. Hasenhuttl's response was to make four changes to his starting XI for today's visit of Arsenal, also switching to a more compact 3-4-3 system. That saw the Gunners enjoy 76 per cent of possession and fire in 23 shots during the contest, with goalkeeper Fraser Forster impressing to secure a 1-0 victory, courtesy of Jan Bednarek's first-half strike. Reflecting on the win, Saints' first in the league since February, Hasenhuttl said: "We knew that it was time to show a reaction and also to show that we can play a little bit different. "Today it was a different game. Under 30 per cent possession, I think we’ve never had that this season so far. "We didn’t want to give them a chance for an early ball win. We wanted to be compact, we wanted to minimise the mistakes we made in the last weeks, because you have to I think when you concede 13 goals in the last four games, or whatever. "Then you have to change things, which we did today. I know we can play more football, I know that we can play better, but it was good to know we can defend like this and this was the goal for today. "That you need a team that is really working hard, a goalkeeper who was exceptional today. "Then football can also look like this sometimes, for three important points. When it’s needed, do it and keep on going." Saints sit 12th in the Premier League table, one point off the top half with six games remaining. They head to Burnley on Thursday evening (7.45pm).
Mikel Arteta Arsenal

#PLStories- Mikel Arteta finds difficulty in explaining Southampton loss in top 4 blow #ARSENALFC #SaintsFC

Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta says his side would have beaten Saints “comfortably in any other sport.” Arteta’s side controlled the ball and amassed 19 shots in the second half, but couldn’t break down the stubborn Saints buoyed by another outstanding performance from goalkeeper Fraser Forster. In the end, Jan Bednarek’s clinical finish on the stroke of half-time proved enough to give Saints all three points prompting frustration from the Arsenal manager. Saints players celebrate at full-time. Image by: Stuart Martin “Difficult to explain,” Arteta said. “This is football, not basketball. In any other sport, you win the game comfortably and you’re talking about different things.  “Difficult to explain losing that football match. But at the end of the day, it’s decided in the boxes, they score one goal we didn’t.  “And for the amount of time we spent around their box and the shots we had and the clear-cut chances we had…we didn’t put them in the net because they had an exceptional goalkeeper today and also because we didn’t have enough quality and enough capacity to break them down when we had the numbers and situations open to do so.” After suffering a 6-0 defeat to Chelsea last weekend, Ralph Hasenhuttl set his side up to defend deep with a back five and it worked perfectly as determined defending and inspired goalkeeping kept Arsenal at bay. Saints are now 12th in the Premier League table, one point adrift of Leicester City in ninth. Hasenhuttl's side are next in action on Thursday, April 21st when they head to Lancashire to face Burnley.
Sean Dyche Burnley

#PLStories- Burnley co-caretaker manager Mike Jackson admits late call to take charge of Burnley game #BURNLEYFC #WHUFC

BURNLEY'S sacking of Sean Dyche came as a “shock” to the players, according to co-caretaker manager Mike Jackson. Dyche was the Premier League’s longest-serving manager but his near decade-long reign was ended on Friday with Burnley 18th in the Premier League and four points adrift of safety, with eight games left. The Clarets have only won four matches this season but the decision to dispense with the respected 50-year-old has been widely panned – and was unexpected by those outside of the club hierarchy. Under-23s coach Jackson – alongside academy director Paul Jenkins, under-23s goalkeeping coach Connor King and club captain Ben Mee – will take charge of the team for Sunday’s game against West Ham. “I came in (on Friday) to prepare for the under-23s game and I was told to come into the chairman’s office and was told then,” Jackson told a press conference. “It all came as a bit of a shock and we have to prepare the lads for Sunday. I think it has come as a shock to the players, that is human nature, but they are an experienced group. “For us it’s about the whole club coming together – everyone here, the fans and everybody bunkering in to take away all the noise and concentrate on what we need to do. “I don’t think we are going to change how we play in one day. The strength of this group is they will pull together. We might tinker with a few bits of detail but there will be no change of style.” Sam Allardyce and Wayne Rooney are the early frontrunners to succeed Dyche, with Jackson revealing he has been given no indication of how long he will be at the helm. “No, all we have been asked to do is prepare the lads for the game on Sunday,” he added. “Our full focus is to make sure the group is ready for Sunday.” The trip to the London Stadium marks the start of three games in eight days for Burnley, who welcome Southampton and Wolves to Turf Moor next week. It is a period that could go a long way to determining their season and Jackson, who revealed Mee is unavailable for selection but will be a “voice” in the dugout, is confident they can beat the drop. “Why not? We have to look at it like that, the performances have been fine details,” he said. “We have to try and look at the positives and take the good bits and use them and move forward.” Dyche’s departure brings to an end a reign in which he twice gained promotion to the Premier League and regularly overachieved on a small budget, including a seventh-placed finish in 2018 which earned the club a Europa League play-off place. “I think (Dyche) can be unbelievably proud of what he has achieved,” Jackson added. “More than anything else he has built not only a club but a culture and identity. “That is really difficult to do in football and it takes time and takes someone who knows what they are doing and what they want. “I think the job he’s done, you only have to listen to some of the interviews from other managers and his peers and what they said about him. “The fans will think that I am sure and they have had a great 10 years. I don’t think it will be long before the gaffer and his staff are back in another job.”
Graham Potter Brighton

#PLStories- Graham Potter praises Brighton’s 1-0 win at Tottenham #BHAFC #THFC

And he felt they were worthy winners at Tottenham. Leandro Trossard struck in the 90th minute to secure a 1-0 success. The three points were the first Albion have secured away to Tottenham in the Premier League era. Albion won at Arsenal last week but head coach Potter said: “I thought the performance was a step up. “The players were incredible. “Work rate and understanding and discipline and aggression and quality, everything you need. “It felt like we had a good organisation and then an attitude to just run and defend and then be brave when we had the ball as well. “I thought we asked some questions of Spurs. TOTTENHAM 0 BRIGHTON 1 - HOW IT HAPPENED “It wasn’t like a smash and grab game. “We tried to press high, we tried to win the ball back, we tried to construct our attacks. “We are playing against a lot of world class players and a team that is in a great moment." Albion have bounced back from a run of one point and one goal in seven games to set a club record for away wins in a top-flight season. Potter said: “We knew we had to be good and we were today. “You can see historically how difficult it is for Brighton and Hove Albion to win at Spurs. “It’s a great day for the club. “Three points, clean sheet, 40 points with six games to go. “It’s not so bad considering it was Armageddon three games ago!”