OptiNews - Friday 22 to Thursday 28 December 2017

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WATCH: Charlie Austin’s mixed day after catching Jonas Lossl in the face

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WATCH: Charlie Austin’s mixed day after catching Jonas Lossl in the face

Charlie Austin scored a goal, kicked Jonas Lossl in the face, missed a sitter and limped off injured in Southampton’s 1-1 draw against Huddersfield.

Austin scored his fifth goal in his last five Premier League starts for Southampton, but he also had an afternoon filled with unfortunate incidents.

In the 32nd minute, eight minutes after his goal, Austin caught Lossl around the nose when chasing a loose ball.

Questions were raised over whether the striker should have been sent off, with Charlie Nicholas in the Soccer Saturday studio saying: “He’s lucky it’s not a red card”.

On the hour mark, Austin missed a golden opportunity to put Southampton 2-0 up, but he failed to convert past Lossl despite being in plenty of space.

And his afternoon was compounded further when he injured his hamstring after firing a shot on goal which Lossl parried away.

Hit the video above to see Austin’s mixed day at St Mary’s.

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@SouthamptonFC - Southampton FC

“We can’t hide!”

#SaintsFC’s @jackstephens_18 on turning things around: http://sfcne.ws/JSPostHTH

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 24/12/2017 08:32:04

| | What the Match of the Day pundits made of Huddersfield Town’s draw with Southampton FCICHUDDERSFIELD |

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90 in 90: Saints 1-1 Huddersfield

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Highlights: Saints 1-1 Huddersfield Town

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WATCH: Southampton 1-1 Huddersfield

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Charlie Austin could face a suspension after catching Jonas Lossl on the nose as Southampton drew 1-1 with Huddersfield at St Mary’s.

Austin fired Saints into the lead but later avoided sanction despite catching Huddersfield keeper Lossl in the nose in a bad-tempered south coast affair.

The striker could face retrospective punishment from the Football Association for his actions, with a three-match ban a possibility, while Lossl managed to play on undeterred after lengthy treatment.

Austin’s fifth strike in five starts was cancelled out by Laurent Depoitre’s third goal in as many games, however, as the Terriers fought back for a share of the spoils.

Saints frontman Austin later hobbled off with a leg issue as injury cut short his mixed afternoon. The draw left Southampton with just one win in 10 Premier League encounters, maintaining pressure on manager Mauricio Pellegrino.

Hit the video above to watch highlights of Southampton’s 1-1 draw with Huddersfield.

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Austin’s mixed day

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Charlie Austin scored a goal, caught Jonas Lossl in the face, missed a sitter and limped off injured in Southampton’s 1-1 draw against Huddersfield.

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 24/12/2017 09:32:17

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| Wagner blasts Austin over Lossl clashIRISHINDEP |

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#SaintsFC’s @chazaustin10 has been charged with violent conduct by The FA. More details: http://sfcne.ws/CACharge

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Southampton 1-1 Huddersfield

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Highlights from Southampton’s 1-1 draw with Huddersfield in the Premier League.

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Even Santa needs a little help at times! :innocent:

#SaintsFC was proud to help @SFC_Foundation bring some festive joy to d… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/944870225333198848

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We rank every club’s all-time Boxing Day record in England

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Burton Albion are England’s most successful team on Boxing Day…

The Brewers have won four of their five fixtures on December 26 since breaking into the top four tiers for the first time in 2009, equating to a league-high 80 per cent win rate - bad news for Leeds who travel to the Pirelli Stadium live on Sky Sports.

We checked every Boxing Day result in the top four tiers since 1888 for the current 92 clubs to discover which team reigns supreme on football’s most festive matchday.

Only Forest Green failed to make the table, having never played a professional Boxing Day fixture, and will travel to Exeter for their maiden outing this year.

MK Dons are the second most successful side on December 26 with eight wins from 12 Boxing Day fixtures - equating to a 66.7 per cent win rate.

England’s most decorated champions Manchester United claim third spot with 51 wins from 93 fixtures (54.8 per cent win rate), followed by Oxford United and Morecambe (both 50.0 per cent).

Premier League newcomers Brighton (49.3 per cent) and Huddersfield (46.8 per cent) have both excelled on Boxing Day, as have Preston (46.6 per cent), Liverpool (46.0 per cent) and Nottingham Forest (45.3 per cent).

At the other end of the table, Fleetwood Town and AFC Wimbledon (both 20.0 per cent) have only claimed one victory from five fixtures, while Newport County have only won 10 from 49 (20.4 per cent) and QPR have only managed 19 from 71 (26.8 per cent).

West Brom have played 101 Boxing Day fixtures over the last 129 years - more than any other club - followed by Wolves (98), Aston Villa (97), Manchester City and Derby County (both 95).

The most goals ever witnessed on Boxing Day was when Tranmere Rovers thrashed Oldham 13-4 in 1935. However, Oldham achieved the biggest winning margin 27 years later with an 11-0 victory over Southport in 1962.

Check out the table below to see where your club ranks…

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 24/12/2017 10:32:30

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| Fee Agreed – Liverpool to Finally Sign €78million StarSOCCERISMA |
| | Van Dijk’s future to become clear as Southampton prepare to sellFOOTBALLLONDON |

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Read Southampton

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| Who was your man of the match vs Huddersfield? | Southampton put in another disappointing performance in front of their supporters as they were held to a 1-1 draw … 24-12-2017 |
| Charlie Austin charged by the FA with violent conduct | Southampton Football Club have confirmed on their official website that the FA have opted to charge Charlie Austin … 24-12-2017 |

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The Ugly Inside News for Southampton

New content from (- The Ugly Inside News for Southampton)

| Pellegrino Evasive About Van Dijk Absence | The big talking point ahead of kick off against Huddersfield Town was the absence of Virgil Van Dijk, the Dutchman … 24-12-2017 |

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Top or bottom at Christmas? Premier League omens revealed

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It’s official: Manchester City will be top and Swansea City will be bottom of the Premier League table at Christmas. But will they finish up there come May?

Few would bet against City failing to win the Premier League from this position and Pep Guardiola’s men can take confidence from the fact seven out of the past 10 teams top of the Premier League at Christmas have gone on to win the title.

Only Liverpool (twice, in 2008/09 and 2013/14) and Arsenal (2007/08) have slipped from being top on December 25, while City have won the league on both occasions they’ve been in first place at this time (2011/12 and 2013/14).

When it comes to the race for the Champions League qualification spots, the current top four will be rightly optimistic about securing their place in Europe’s elite club competition - but history suggests a word of warning for the team in fourth, who this year are Liverpool.

While 82.5 per cent of teams in the top four at this point go on to finish in the top four, only four teams in fourth place on Christmas Day have qualified over the past 10 years.

Arsenal (2016/17), West Ham (2014/15), Tottenham (2012/13), Chelsea (2011/12), Aston Villa (2009/10) and Manchester City (2007/08) are the ones who missed out, while Villa also slipped out of the top four in 2008/09.

Looking at the other end of the table, 50 per cent of teams who have been bottom of the league at Christmas since 2007 have finished last.

Aston Villa (2015/16), West Ham (2010/11), Portsmouth (2009/10), West Brom (2008/09) and Derby (2007/08) failed to climb off the foot of the table by May. Will Swansea join them?

While Hull in 2016/17 and Reading in 2012/13 - both bottom at Christmas - managed to climb up from 20th place, they were both ultimately relegated, so the Swans will look instead to Sunderland in 2013/14 and Leicester City in 2014/15 for inspiration.

It’s not all doom and gloom for teams currently in the relegation zone, though. While 50 per cent of teams in the bottom three at Christmas have gone on to be relegated over the past 10 years, the only season where every team who were in the drop zone at Christmas went down was 2012/13, when Wigan, Reading and QPR were unable to recover and slipped into the Championship.

This news will give the current bottom three - Swansea, West Brom and Bournemouth - hope. In fact, Swansea have survived the drop after being in the bottom three at Christmas in two of the last three seasons. They will be hoping to continue the trend with a strong second half of the campaign.

Wigan Athletic survived the drop more times than any team in the last decade, maintaining their top-flight status despite being in the bottom three at Christmas three times in five years before eventually going down in 2012/2013.

So it seems there are strong correlations between Christmas positions and where teams end up at the end of the campaign. And that’s likely to be even more pronounced this year, with all of the teams having played two games more than they normally would have at this point.

But with half of the season’s fixtures still to play and a January transfer window fast approaching, teams will still be optimistic of ending the campaign on a high.

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Premier League half-term report: How do your team rate this season?

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Manchester City have enjoyed a record-breaking start to the season, six clubs have changed their manager, and Burnley are battling for a European place.

It has been a typically eventful first half of the Premier League season, but who is exceeding expectations and who is underachieving?

This has been the season Manchester City’s owners were dreaming about when they finally put Pep Guardiola in place at Etihad Stadium.

Their magnificent play has been inspired by the world-class pair of Kevin de Bruyne and David Silva, the youthful brilliance of Leroy Sane and Gabriel Jesus, and the flourishing of Raheem Sterling.

Some of the football produced has been close to perfection - the Premier League’s untouchables and looking like Champions League favourites.

The questions now are: How many records can they break? And how many points will they win the title by?

Manager: After a transitional first season, this is Guardiola’s City - helped by replacing flawed goalkeeper Claudio Bravo with the excellent Ederson - and he is once again showing he can produce winning football with a purist approach.

Manager Jose Mourinho would have been hoping to be closer to a title challenge after his £75m summer outlay on Romelu Lukaku - but while both the striker and Manchester United have performed perfectly creditably, they have paled in Manchester City’s shadow.

They have felt the loss of Paul Pogba to injury and suspension for key games and have disappointed in crucial fixtures at Liverpool and home to Manchester City.

Their qualification for the Champions League knockout stage was impressive, but their league campaign is threatening to be an anti-climax.

Manager: Managing United has often appeared to be a joyless experience for Mourinho this season and the old caution got the better of him at Anfield and at home to Manchester City.

Will probably still win a trophy. And there is no question the embarrassing Carabao Cup loss at Bristol City will be a blow to Mourinho and United as he has always made this tournament a target. He will have seen it as a chance to strike a blow at Manchester City, now the chance has gone.

They have not touched the heights of Antonio Conte’s first season in charge. Still very consistent and right on course for a top-four place but just missing the sparkle of that superb title campaign.

Tiemoue Bakayoko has struggled to emulate the influence of Nemanja Matic in midfield, although striker Alvaro Morata looks a fine acquisition and playmaker Eden Hazard continues to shine.

They have looked efficient rather than spectacular and a mixed Champions League group performance has left them facing Barcelona in the last 16.

Manager: Conte has not quite been as settled as last season. Speculation around his future has cooled for now but he will need a big, and preferably successful, second half of the season. Do not put it past him.

Magnificent going forward and have arguably made the signing of the season in the brilliant Mohamed Salah - but still capable of the damaging defensive meltdown that undermines them, as they proved at Arsenal.

They have been superb to watch but can again forget this being their year for the Premier League title. They could, however, be a real wildcard in the Champions League.

What will January bring? Will playmaker Philippe Coutinho stay? Will Southampton defender Virgil van Dijk arrive? Big month.

Manager: Jurgen Klopp has an admirable commitment to attacking football but cannot escape criticism for some strange selections, notably when leaving Coutinho and Roberto Firmino out of the Merseyside derby draw with Everton.

An outstanding Champions League campaign cannot mask the deficiencies of what has been a somewhat disappointing Premier League campaign so far - purely because they’ve not touched the heights expected after last season’s excellence.

Spurs have struggled for consistency playing home games at Wembley and have failed in the big games away, losing at Manchester United, Arsenal and Manchester City.

Harry Kane is getting the goals but Dele Alli has fallen well below what had been expected of him.

Manager: Mauricio Pochettino is a high-class operator, as proven by his astute tactical approach to a draw in the Bernabeu and victory at Wembley against Real Madrid - but will hope for an even stronger second half of the season to maintain a top-four challenge.

Once again they have shown flashes of the sort of quality that raises hopes - but also too many of the frailties that mean they will once more fail to mount a serious title challenge.

The Gunners were outstanding in victory against Spurs but exposed when thrashed 4-0 at Liverpool and in losing 3-1 at home to Manchester United.

A big January is on the horizon, with speculation sure to continue about the futures of forward Alexis Sanchez and midfielder Mesut Ozil, who are both out of contract at the end of the season.

Manager: Arsene Wenger seems to have the same old problems and inconsistencies that have characterised Arsenal in recent years and does not look any closer to solving them.

One of the stories of the season, and a tribute to the superb work of manager Sean Dyche and his players.

They lost star man Michael Keane to Everton in the summer but simply shrugged it off. Magnificently organised, disciplined and with a faultless team spirit. They are mean at the back and getting the goals to win games.

Manager: Dyche remains incredibly underrated - does the cement-grinder voice also mean he is underestimated? - and has built a team in his own image and likeness. It is amazing other clubs have not tried harder to lure him away from Turf Moor, but he is also on to a good thing at a fine old club so no-one at Burnley is complaining about that.

Leicester have appeared revived under Claude Puel following the early season sacking of Craig Shakespeare. They still have the familiar threats of Jamie Vardy and Riyad Mahrez but Demarai Gray is relishing more game time and Ben Chilwell gives an added attacking dimension from left-back.

England defender Harry Maguire has settled well and it all adds to up a solid base for the second half of the season.

Manager: A surprise choice to succeed Shakespeare after being sacked by Southampton in the summer, Puel’s approach has given the lie to his reputation for dour football and he seems more positive second time around in the Premier League.

A catastrophic start to the season after spending about £150m - but not replacing striker Romelu Lukaku - ended with Everton in the relegation places and Ronald Koeman sacked in October.

The Toffees’ fortunes plummeted further during a chaotic search for a replacement but the appointment of Sam Allardyce and the rejuvenation of Wayne Rooney means things are looking up heading into the January transfer window.

Manager: Not the name anyone had in mind as Koeman’s successor, but as time and bad results went on Allardyce became the preferred candidate for major shareholder Farhad Moshiri.

A huge bonus to get arguably the biggest club job of his career at 63, Allardyce has settled well to his task and has said and done all the right things - particularly shoring up a leaky defence.

The Hornets made a superb start under new manager Marco Silva but the season has veered off course somewhat since Everton’s move for the Portuguese - which he never distanced himself from - was rejected.

Suddenly there have been damaging defeats at Burnley and Crystal Palace, and particularly the 4-1 loss at home to Huddersfield Town.

Let’s put it in perspective, however, as this has still been a good first half of the season for Watford and Richarlison has looked a real talent on occasions. Recent results, however, are becoming a cause for concern.

Manager: Silva is highly rated despite being relegated with Hull City last season, but he will need to further prove his work in the second half of the season. Was he unsettled by the Everton speculation? He insists not but results have tailed off after that saga.

Portrayed as relegation candidates (yes - guilty as charged), the Terriers are right up for the fight led by a charismatic manager in David Wagner and a home support generating one of the finest and most passionate atmospheres in the Premier League.

The home win against Manchester United and results like the 4-1 victory at Watford suggest this is a team and a manager determined to spend more than one season in the top flight.

Manager: Jurgen Klopp’s best man shares many of his friend’s qualities, but this is a manager in his own right. He plays to his strengths, organises his side and clearly has the full support of his squad. In other words, good management.

It was always going to be hard work to keep Brighton up, and a lack of goal threat suggests this will be a lengthy slog if survival is to be achieved.

The Seagulls are solid and well-disciplined under Chris Hughton but may need to find inspiration from somewhere. They may just feel, however, that there are three worse teams than them in the division.

Manager: Hughton is experienced, organised and has been around the block. He can be guaranteed to keep a calm head and spirits up, which may be needed.

It has been a stuttering start under Mauricio Pellegrino following the summer departure of Puel. Southampton have had difficulty scoring goals and look very unlikely to emulate last season’s top-eight finish.

Will the Saints board finally cash in on the £70m-rated Van Dijk in January? The Dutch defender has been back in the side after the acrimonious failure of a move from Liverpool in the summer but has not been at his best and was dropped at Chelsea.

Manager: An understated character who has had a difficult start to life in the Premier League. How Pellegrino fares in the future may be shaped by the expectations of Southampton’s hierarchy.

The rot set in at Stoke City last season and has been eating away to the point where Mark Hughes had a real crisis on his hands, which has at least been eased with a vital win against West Bromwich Albion.

Once formidable home form had crumbled, defensive solidity had been replaced by the worst record in the Premier League and manager Mark Hughes’ recent record in the transfer market does not stand up to close scrutiny.

Not a great combination but the whole club will feel better, albeit briefly, after a crucial victory.

Manager: Hughes struggled to arrest a dreadful slide and his suggestion that fortunes will eventually turn still needs to be backed up with a consistent run of results to calm an anxious fanbase. Needs some good results. Fast.

Here we go again - never far away from a drama (or a relegation) at Newcastle United.

Early season optimism has been replaced by a sense of crisis and unrest after a run of defeats set against the backdrop of £300m takeover talks between owner Mike Ashley and businesswoman Amanda Staveley. How the whole club needed that win at West Ham.

Rafael Benitez will not be fooled. He needs funds freed up quickly for January or Newcastle will struggle.

Manager: Benitez is hero-worshipped on Tyneside but has looked increasingly careworn and frustrated (as he has before in his managerial career) as the politics continues behind the scenes. Will only be truly satisfied when a takeover is concluded - and maybe not even then.

Palace started the season with seven straight defeats without scoring a goal, the fourth of which saw manager Frank de Boer sacked having only been appointed in the summer.

Roy Hodgson struggled initially but an outstanding win over champions Chelsea got Palace’s season up and running and they now seem to be heading in the right direction.

Manager: It is redemption time for Hodgson after his humiliating resignation as England manager following their Euro 2016 defeat by Iceland.

He is utilising his trademark defensive organisation and bringing the best out of Wilfried Zaha. If his mission was to keep Palace up, he is now on course.

The Hammers looked lost and lethargic under Slaven Bilic but in David Moyes they have a manager on a mission to rebuild a battered reputation after three successive failures at Manchester United, Real Sociedad and Sunderland.

He has shown flashes of his old self and made sound choices by replacing the fading Joe Hart with Adrian and getting the best out of the maverick Marko Arnautovic.

West Ham looked to have sealed up that leaking defence but their home defeat by Newcastle United will have reminded everyone of the work still needing to be done.

Manager: A shock choice to replace Bilic, Moyes appears to have the glint back in his eye and, after a sticky start, put West Ham back on course until that poor defeat by Newcastle. As the team’s confidence rises, so will his.

Bournemouth have endured a poor start - looking likely to concede too often - and may need Jermain Defoe to roll back the years once more if winter is not going to lead into a struggle in spring.

Manager: Eddie Howe has been disappointed with his team too often this season, but he has also been tactically naive on occasions. The approach against Liverpool more or less guaranteed defeat - had he not watched how Everton and West Bromwich Albion frustrated Jurgen Klopp’s side?

Principles yes - but there must also be pragmatism.

The days of August and two league wins from two seem an age away - they have had no top-flight victories since and have endured a mixed start under new manager Alan Pardew after he succeeded Tony Pulis.

Pardew needs to find a way of injecting menace into a shot-shy side in January, although summer signing Oliver Burke has started to show signs of promise.

Manager: Pardew is only just in the door at The Hawthorns and this most confident of characters has a big job on his hands. Has a “boom and bust” record as a manager - the Baggies will hope for boom.

Dismal season and another December managerial sacking as Paul Clement was 2017’s version of Garry Monk in 2015 and Bob Bradley a year later.

There had to be sympathy for Clement, left with a side shorn of the goals and inspiration of Gylfi Sigurdsson and Fernando Llorente, who were sold expensively in the summer. Swansea look prime relegation candidates.

Whoever takes over will need some smart work in the January market and somehow find better from Renato Sanches, who has been a desperate disappointment since his loan move from Bayern Munich.

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 24/12/2017 11:32:44

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| Liverpool Handed Blow In Pursuit Of Van Dijk As League Rivals Leapfrog The Reds In The RaceTHEKOPTIMES |
| | Bad for Manchester City: Liverpool’s Virgil Van Dijk deal101GREATGOALS |

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The Ugly Inside News for Southampton

New content from (- The Ugly Inside News for Southampton)

| Saints V Huddersfield Town The Verdict | This was not a bad performance, but it was characterised by a lapse of concentration that cost us very dearly. 24-12-2017 |

Older content…

| Pellegrino Evasive About Van Dijk Absence11 hours ago |
| Southampton 1-1 Huddersfield Town - Player Ratings and Reportsa day ago |
| Saints V Huddersfield The Preview2 days ago |
| The Ugly Inside TV ! Saints V Huddersfield Preview.2 days ago |
| Eric Black Resigns From Saints3 days ago |
| Southampton Away Travel Xmas Market Stall For That Footballing Gift3 days ago |
| The Ugly Inside TV ! Saints V Huddersfield Opposition View4 days ago |
| Fulham Allocation Almost Sold Out4 days ago |
| The Cost Of Supporting Saints Away Over Christmas Revealed4 days ago |
| This Is No Time For Negativity4 days ago |

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Summary of non-mainstream articles: 24/12/2017 12:32:56

| | Liverpool reportedly handed blow in hopes of signing top target | FutnSoccerFUTNSOCCER |

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