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News and buildup to the day’s football action Premier League things to look out for | Email matchday live Ange Postecoglou is, it’s fair to say, happy to be back in work. The Forest boss spoke to TNT Sports, pre-match: “Great to be back as it was unusual for me to be out of work. A long summer, but a great time with the family. “A great opportunity, it is no secret – in a good place with where the squad is at. Some great opportunities this year - back in Europe. It didn’t take long for me to say ‘yes’ as I thought it is a great opportunity. “I didn’t want to make so many changes today. I wanted to keep it fairly consistent. We lost Ola, but Morato comes in. “Until you get to know the players, it is hard to make an accurate assessment. Some guys have a hell lot of potential to improve as well. “When you walk in the dressing room and the feeling I sense is it’s a united group. I’m looking forward to working with them. “I don’t see anyone in the squad who won’t be able to play the football that I want to play. “I want to leave a mark and leave an impact. That’s what we will try and do. A great experience [Spurs’ Europa League win] last year and learnt a hell of a lot last year. “The squad that Nottingham have put together is well-equipped to handle that. ” Preston XI: Iversen, Storey, Gibson, Hughes, Valentin, Devine, Whiteman, Mc Cann, Small, Dobbin, Jebbison. Subs: Walton, Offiah, Lindsay, Vukcevic, Armstrong, Thordarson, Frokjaer-Jensen, Carroll, Smith. Middlesbrough XI: Brynn, Ayling, Lenihan, Jones, Brittain, Morris, Hackney, Targett, Kaly Sene, Conway, Whittaker. Subs: Mc Laughlin, Strelec, Browne, Nypan, Silvera, Edmundson, Hansen, Kante, Patterson-Powell. Oxford XI: Cumming, Phillips, Davies, Helik, Long, Currie, Placheta, De Keersmaecker, Brannagan, Krastev, Lankshear. Subs: Ingram, Vaulks, Mark Harris, Luke Harris, Spencer, Prelec, Mills, Goodrham, Dembele. Leicester XI: Stolarczyk, Choudhury, Okoli, Vestergaard, Luke Thomas, Soumare, Skipp, Fatawu, Ramsey, Mavididi, Ayew. Subs: Begovic, Faes, Ricardo Pereira, James, Winks, De Cordova-Reid, Monga, Carranza, Daka. Charlton XI: Kaminski, Ramsay, Jones, Bell, Edwards, Coventry, Docherty, Apter, Carey, Campbell, Kelman. Subs: Maynard-Brewer, Burke, Gillesphey, Bree, Fullah, Rankin-Costello, Knibbs, Leaburn, Olaofe. Millwall XI: Benda, Leonard, Crama, Cooper, Bryan, Neghli, Luongo, Cundle, Emakhu, Ivanovic, Coburn. Subs: Crocombe, Sturge, Taylor, Ballo, Kelly, Grant, Bangura-Williams, Harding, Mazou-Sacko. ‘The Prem’ is certainly not the only thing that matters to me, Peter. As well as Charlton v Millwall we also have Oxford v Leicester and Preston v Middlesbrough kicking-off at 12. 30pm in Championship. First up in League One we have Bradford v Huddersfield and Northampton v Blackpool, then in League Two it is Accrington Stanley v Colchester and Crawley Town v Cheltenham. I know that the Prem is the only thing that matters, but the local derby at Charlton could get a bit salty, Millwall could bring a few. Some more thoughts on Arsenal, even with Saliba, Saka and Rice not starting that is a good starting XI. Arteta has been saying Liverpool have the strongest squad, but position-by-position for me Arsenal have more depth. Slot is one centre-back injury away from some pretty funky decisions. How do you see it? In September 2023, Ange Postecoglou secured a creditable 2-2 draw for Tottenham at Arsenal in his first north London derby. It was a moment – six Premier League games into his tenure – when people wondered whether his team might be the real thing. In September of last year, after another derby against Arsenal, this one at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, the manager came out with his famous comment about how he always won silverware in his second season. And here we are again. Postecoglou versus Arsenal in the early weeks of a season; the plot-lines crackling. It is a little sleepy around the stadium at the moment; too early in the day, perhaps, for any Ange-baiting from the Arsenal support. That will change. It is rare that a visiting manager transcends a game here but that is the unmistakable vibe around Postecoglou’s Nottingham Forest debut. He has succeeded a very popular guy in Nuno Espirito Santo at a club where a major power battle has just played out, Edu (the ex-Arsenal sporting director) getting the vote of confidence from Evangelos Marinakis rather than Nuno. Postecoglou’s preferred approach is the polar opposite to that of his predecessor. And he must get it to click immediately. Good thing Ange has never taken the easy path. Eberechi Eze starts for the Gunners, as does Cristhian Mosquera with William Saliba out. Declan Rice is on the bench as Mikel Merino gets the nod ahead to play alongside Martín Zubimendi. For Forest, Douglas Luiz could get his first minutes as he’s named on the bench alongside fellow new(er) arrivals Bakwa and Savona. Arsenal XI: Raya, Timber, Mosquera, Gabriel, Calafiori, Zubimendi, Merino, Odegaard, Eze, Madueke, Gyokeres Subs: Arrizabalaga, Hincapie, White, Martinelli, Trossard, Nwaneri, Rice, Lewis-Skelly, Dowman Nottingham Forest XI: Sels, Williams, Murillo, Milenkovic, Morato, Anderson, Sangare, Gibbs-White, Ndoye, Hudson-Odoi, Wood Subs: Victor, Mc Atee, Hutchinson, Boly, Luiz, Kalimuendo, Bakwa, Savona, Yates Hamid Shahriari has emailed in saying he is getting giddy about a young winger who has arrived in West London from Shakhtar. Let’s hope this one has more of an impact than the last: I’m looking forward to seeing Kevin (Santos Lopes de Macedo) at Fulham. Honestly, in the opening weeks I didn’t expect Fulham to maintain the form of last season, but Marco Silva has shown some great games. Especially at the Bridge against Chelsea (of course the site of the latest hard-done-by-VAR incident). Now they have a Brazilian winger from Shakhtar added to their squad. Young, dangerous and attractive with quick dribbling. The Ukrainian club 2024/25 player of the season, will definitely add something entertaining to Silva’s spectacular Fulham. I love it when Brazilian’s have really normal English names and Kevin is a fine example. Rob shared Jacob Steinberg’s excellent piece on the tumultuous state of play at West Ham earlier, comparing the Irons, where there are little signs of a meddling chairman getting out of the way, to Spurs, where such an event has just occurred. It is odd isn’t that this is framed as the start of a post-Levy era? By all accounts he left coaches to do the coaching, as he well should, so we probably won’t really start seeing the impact of his successors until January or even next summer. I still think the odds of Spurs suddenly loosening the purse strings are slim, but maybe I’m wrong. I was very surprised more teams weren’t in for Elliot. Great player and had an exceptional summer at the Under 21 Euros, usually the player of the tournament is hot property. A move to a smaller pond (sorry Villa fans), should suit him. Kind of wen unnoticed but I really feel Aston Villa have got an absolute bargain in Harvey Elliot, which I feel must be wondering why he isn't getting a look in for the England squad. He's a fantastic player and, used right, will be a big player for Villa this season, starting today. I'm also wondering at what point David Moyes will be reverting to type and a win for Aston Villa could bring David down from the reverie he seems to be floating in currently, high on the new stadium buzz. He'll be soon instructing Grealish to drop deep and tuck in. We are about half an hour away from getting the team news at the Emirates, notably Ange Postecoglou’s first selection as head coach of Nottingham Forest. Here’s a ‘triffic video from my colleague Will Unwin explaining the downfall of poor Nuno Espírito Santo and the dramatic return of ‘Big’ Ange. Never let anyone tell you otherwise, Guardian live blog followers are the most-knowledgeable around. This from Paul Whitbread on West Brom v Derby is fantastic stuff: Today’s championship fixture at the Hawthorns is a repeat of West Brom’s first ever fixture at the stadium, 125 years to the day. The club specifically requested the EFL schedule the game for today. Baggies will be Boinging, Rams will be bouncing. I have to hold my hands up here, that had completely passed me by. The Textor-Marinakis relationship produces another curveball. Given that Cuiabano was also pursued by Brighton this summer, I assumed he was Premier League ready. I'm not sure how up to date the Guardian is. There will be no debut for Cubiano today, he has gone back out on loan to Botafogo An email from Gary Naylor: The Jack Grealish Invitational XI (aka Everton) have a curiously pivotal match this afternoon. Win, and Evertonians will feel a long-forgotten swell in the breast - genuine optimism for the season to come. Lose, and we’ll be deflated, if not completely flattened, the spectre of another ‘business-as-usual’ season looming large. It’s going to be a draw then, isn’t it? Given that Villa are yet to score this season, if Everton put it in the net there is every chance it’s three points rather than one. Like most, I’m very much enjoying the Grealish renaissance at the Ev. Hopefully he’s shaken off any lasting effects from his ‘Grealfields’ birthday celebration during the international break and continues his fine form. Personally, I’m intrigued to see what Woltemade brings to the almighty Prem. He was the joint top-scorer in the Under 21 Euros this summer, along with Harvey Elliot. Elliot of course is another player who could be making his debut today. Get in touch and let us know who you’re intrigued to see in pastures new either via the email link at the top of below the line. The Guardian was lucky enough to have World Cup winner Philipp Lahm writing in our pages this weekend. The former Bayern man penned an intriguing insight into two of the most high-profile German arrivals in the Premier League, Florian Wirtz and Nick Woltemade. It’s fair to say that Newcastle’s new striker doesn’t get the most favourable review: Woltemade is unpredictable, his dribbling, passing and shooting are not found in the textbooks; they are unique, with no international comparison. Unlike other top players, his centre of gravity is rarely at the centre of the movement. He thrives on his free spirit and self-confidence and seems to want to reinvent the game at No 9. On to more serious matters, we’ll get a first glimpse at some men who moved jobs just before the international window in their new threads today – exciting stuff. First up Forest could give debuts to Nicolò Savona, Cuiabano, Dilane Bakwa and maybe John Victor, although should the Brazilian goalie get a shot that would be very harsh on Mats Sels. Thanks Rob and hello to all the matchday livers out there. Here’s a little reminder to get your fantasy teams done nice and safely before the deadline. Time for me to tag in Tom Bassam for the next couple of hours. Bye! Manchester City v Manchester United (4. 30pm) Here’s Jamie Jackson on After Fergie, the reality TV show that is still gripping the nation in its 13th season. Soap opera, wall-to‑wall media coverage, a sporting Truman Show and real-life panopticon. Ruben Amorim, like those before him, blinks in the glare of the endless fascination with Manchester United’s leading man, and may wonder whether this is the impossible job. Three games into a first full campaign the 40-year-old seemed to believe so. The desultory 12-11 Carabao Cup penalty shootout defeat at Grimsby followed a 1-0 loss to Arsenal and 1-1 draw at Fulham. Three matches, zero wins, and the executioner’s song began to wail for the Portuguese’s job security. So is it reasonable to consider Amorim’s position under threat three league games into a season? Certifiably not. Is this simply life for the gent in the hottest of football seats? Certainly. There were a handful of games last night in the BF leagues. Bundesliga Bayer Leverkusen beat Eintracht Frankfurt 3-1 in Kasper Hjulmand’s first game as manager. Leverkusen were down to nine men by the time Alex Grimaldo, who also opened the scoring in the first half, sealed victory in the 98th minute. Ligue 1 Marseille beat Lorient 4-0, with Manchester United alumni Mason Greenwood and Angel Gomes among the scorers. Lorient are having a rough time of it; their last match before the international break was a 7-1 defeat at home to Lille. La Liga Peque scored an 85th-minute equaliser for Sevilla in their 2-2 draw with Elche. Championship fixtures (3pm unless etc) As well as the south coast ding-dong tomorrow, there are some interesting fixtures today, including a lunchtime trip to Preston for the early leaders Middlesbrough. Stoke v Birmingham also has a sniff about it, and I don’t mean oatcakes. And the überweirdos among you will have noticed that, in six of the seven 3pm games, the name of the home teams begins with S or W. Charlton v Millwall (12. 30pm) Oxford v Leicester (12. 30pm) Preston v Middlesbrough (12. 30pm) Coventry v Norwich Sheff Wed v Bristol City Stoke v Birmingham Swansea v Hull Watford v Blackburn West Brom v Derby Wrexham v QPR Championship The weekend’s big game takes place at high noon midday tomorrow: Southampton and Portsmouth, together again after 13 years in different leagues. Ben Fisher spoke to Portsmouth midfielder John Swift about the prospect of a bucket-list experience. Burnley v Liverpool (Sunday, 2pm) Liverpool have had to rely on their considerable attacking options to bail them out of a couple of situations this season and head coach Arne Slot knows they remain key to their success. The defending champions have won all three of their fixtures so far but required late goals against Bournemouth and Newcastle after twice conceding two-goal leads, which pointed to defensive frailties. Against Burnley on Sunday he will again need those resources up front - now bolstered by British-record signing Alexander Isak - against a team they will find hard to break down. Liverpool have scored eight goals, the most in the top flight, without creating that many clear-cut chances and Slot was asked how he hoped to improve that. “To implement as best as possible the way we want to play, ” he said. ”But in the end the final third, it is also the form of your wingers mainly because of their playing style you end up more on the sides. The better they are, the bigger threat they are, the more chances we will generate and then nine out of 10 times it is about scoring. “If you can score an early goal that normally helps you in a game like that. There are a lot of factors going into a game like this but as always we are hoping that our attackers make the difference and that is what they have to do every single game. ”

But while Slot wants them to score the goals he also wants his attackers to improve their work-rate and defensive capabilities. “If we lose the ball if we are really good in our counter-pressing that can create chances as well, ” he added. “That is for me the biggest lesson of our game against Arsenal: in the first half we weren’t front-footed enough in terms of our pressing. In the second half we were and as a result we deserved to score in the second half. ” Talking of Fitba, this piece, from the consistently excellent Nutmeg, is terrific* * Opinion, not fact Scottish Premiership As well as the big game at Easter Road, Rangers host high-flying Hearts at Ibrox with Russell Martin still looking for his first league win. Rangers have drawn all four Premiership games under Martin, including a forgettable derby a fortnight ago. Arsenal v Nottm Forest x Big Ange (12. 30pm) Will Unwin looks at Nottingham Forest’s surprise decision to sack Nuno Espírito Santo and replace him with Ange Postecoglou. Scottish Premiership “Oh matchday live, how could you? ” thunders says Simon Mc Mahon. “You forgot about about Dundee United’s trip to Easter Road to face Hibs at 5. 45pm, so please, allow me. United manager Jim Goodwin this week signed a new deal, and Ivan Dolcek, one of this summer’s 14 new faces at Tannadice, was named Scottish Premiership Player of the Month for August. Add in the fact that our last game was a 2-0 schooling of Dundee at Dens and it’s easy to see why there’s a lot of positivity from United fans at the moment. “Tonight’s game should be a cracker, as Hibs are unrecognisable from the shambles that they were a year ago; credit to David Gray for turning that round, and indeed the Hibs board for sticking with him. The Saturday teatime football market is a crowded one today, but you could do worse than grab a couple of dozen cans of Mc Ewan’s Export and watch the action from the famous old Edinburgh stadium. ” If you want to get published on here, and I suppose we all do, just write comments and emails like Simon Mc Mahon’s. Thanks for your comments below the line, some of which are interesting. But please may I reiterate: we only want civil comments. Disagreement and criticism are fine, abuse and nonsense are not. And slanderous ones are just plain dumb. West Ham v Tottenham (5. 30pm) Two London derbies today, both live on TV. Brentford host Chelsea at 8pm; before that, West Ham face a Levy-less Spurs. Perspective is a funny thing. While Spurs fans are mostly celebrating the demise of the figure widely blamed for holding them back, West Ham’s are wondering if it really would be so bad to have a chair capable of delivering a world-class stadium and the occasional season of Champions League football. Perhaps chants of “We want Levy in” will soon be heard around Stratford. West Ham fans are fed up. Widespread disdain for David Sullivan, the largest shareholder, and the vice-chair, Karren Brady, means there will be anti-board protests before next Saturday’s home game against Crystal Palace. Mutiny is in the air. A boycott of next month’s game against Brentford has been proposed by Hammers United, a vocal fan group, and there is also the drama of West Ham’s official Fan Advisory Board going public with a recent vote of no confidence in the club’s board. “On the idle-chatter front, good sir, ” begins Ian Copestake, “do new manager bounces occur when a club has a new one it didn’t even want? Asking for a friend. ” Have you been sacked on Champo Manager 01-02 again, Ian? Fantasy Football perverts may find this useful. Just know there’s no legal resource if you triple captain somebody based on a duff assumption in one of our graphics. The opening Premier League fixture of the weekend is at the Emirates, where Arsenal meet Nottingham Forest, managed by their old friend Ange Postecoglou. They need a win to get back on track after a frustrating defeat at Anfield before the international break. Depending on your perspective, Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta comments at yesterday’s press conference to: Manage expectations ahead of a fourth consecutive second-place finish Speak an undeniable truth so why are you getting on his back about it Carefully position Arsenal as a team who are fighting against the odds, knowing how central that approach was to the success of George Graham and Arsene Wenger’s sides. Answering a question on the hoof without calculation or forethought. *At the time of writing, har har har har har. Slot defends Isak over Newcastle strike By Will Unwin Arne Slot has defended Alexander Isak over his decision to go on strike in order to force a move away from Newcastle and insisted the same situation would never arise at Liverpool because they would sell any player who made it clear they wanted to leave the club. Isak secured a transfer from St James’ Park to Anfield on deadline day for a British record £125m fee and could make his debut for the Premier League champions at Burnley on Sunday, albeit he is unlikely to start having missed pre-season and the first three games of the season after refusing to train while still at Newcastle, claiming promises made to him there had been “broken”. Asked if Isak’s decision to go on strike reflects badly on the 26-year-old, Slot said: “No, I just look at the club. It’s not necessary at our club, because we also trade players. If a player wants to leave and we get the right money for him, this club has shown so many years now that we then sell. “You can just keep on training here – Lucho [Luis Díaz] and Harvey [Elliott] get their transfers, Tyler Morton gets his transfer, all these players, I can come up with eight, nine, 10 I think in the last window, that just conduct themselves in the best possible way. ” Read more… Sheffield United’s diabolical start to the season continued when they were routed at Portman Road last night. Jadon Philogene scored a hat-trick for Ipswich, who ended a winless start to the season in style. No Women’s Super League games today, with most of this weekend’s program taking place tomorrow. There were two games last night, with two of the title contenders coming from behind to win: Manchester City 2-1 Brighton West Ham 1-5 Arsenal Hello and welcome to matchday life, our one-stop boll- destination for all the build-up to this weekend’s football. We’ll have previews, idle chatter and factual realities for you to digest over the next few hours. If you are so inclined, you can drop us a line with your thoughts on the football – or just to tell us what you’re up to for the day. Leave a comment below the line or email matchday. live@theguardian. com. Keep it civil, please; our nonsense threshold has been breached. Time for a list. We all need a list on a Saturday morning. You haven’t put the effing food caddy out, have you. Here are some of today’s big fixtures. Premier League (3pm unless stated) Arsenal v Nottm Forest (12. 30pm) Bournemouth v Brighton Crystal Palace v Sunderland Everton v Aston Villa Fulham v Leeds Newcastle v Wolves West Ham v Tottenham (5. 30pm) Brentford v Chelsea (8pm) Scottish Premiership Rangers v Hearts (3pm) La Liga Real Socieded v Real Madrid (5. 15pm) Serie A Juventus v Inter (5pm) Bundesliga Bayern Munich v Hamburg (5. 30pm)