Gyokeres lifts Arsenal nine clear as Man Utd pile pressure on Frank
Arsenal's Swedish striker Viktor Gyokeres (C) celebrates with teammates after scoring their fourth goal during the UEFA Champions League football match between Arsenal and Atletico Madrid at the Arsenal Stadium in north London on October 21, 2025. (Photo by Ben STANSALL / AFP)
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Arsenal moved
nine points clear at the top of the Premier League with a 3-0 victory against
Sunderland, while Tottenham boss Thomas Frank faced renewed calls for his
sacking after a 2-0 defeat at Manchester United on Saturday.
Mikel Arteta's
side went ahead in the 42nd minute at the Emirates Stadium as Martin Zubimendi
fired past Sunderland goalkeeper Robin Roefs at his near post.
Viktor Gyokeres
sealed Arsenal's second successive league win with a 66th-minute strike before
the Swede netted again in stoppage time.
The Gunners, who
haven't won a trophy since the 2020 FA Cup, are chasing their first English
title in 22 years.
After three
successive runners-up finishes in the Premier League, including blowing
significant leads at the top in 2023 and 2024, the north Londoners finally look
set to end their title drought.
Arsenal also
beat Chelsea in midweek to book a League Cup final date with Manchester City at
Wembley on March 22.
Second-placed
City will be under pressure to close the gap by beating Liverpool at Anfield on
Sunday.
Third-placed
Aston Villa are also nine points adrift of the Gunners after a 1-1 draw at
Bournemouth.
Villa took the
lead as Morgan Rogers lashed into the top corner in the 22nd minute.
But Brazilian
teenager Rayan equalised for Bournemouth with his first top-flight goal in the
55th minute.
Manchester
United profited from Tottenham captain Cristian Romero's red card to stretch
their perfect start under Michael Carrick to four games, leaving the
beleaguered Frank under mounting scrutiny.
With the game
still scoreless in the 29th minute, Romero -- who has been vocal in his
criticism of Tottenham's owners lately -- was dismissed after lunging in to
catch Casemiro on the ankle.
Bryan Mbeumo
swept United ahead from a clever corner routine in the 38th minute.
Bruno Fernandes'
close-range finish in the 81st minute ended an eight-game winless run against
Tottenham for United, who cemented their hold on fourth place in the race to
qualify for next season's Champions League.
'We need to deal with it'
Another damaging
defeat for Frank left Tottenham in 14th place -- just six points above the
relegation zone -- as their winless league run in 2026 extended to seven
matches.
"It is what
it is. We need to deal with it," Frank said.
"Cristian
clearly goes for the ball. Unfortunately, the way the rules are, it becomes a
red. He apologised to his team-mates."
Interim boss
Carrick is making his case for the permanent job after masterminding an
impressive turnaround since Ruben Amorim was sacked in January.
Cole Palmer
scored a first half hat-trick as fifth-placed Chelsea won 3-1 at bottom of the
table Wolves.
Matt Doherty
fouled Joao Pedro and Palmer stepped up to send Jose Sa the wrong way with his
13th-minute penalty.
Palmer converted
another spot-kick in the 35th minute after Yerson Mosquera's needless shove on
Joao Pedro.
The England
forward completed his hat-trick three minutes later, drilling home from Marc
Cucurella's pass after more woeful Wolves defending.
Toluwalase
Arokodare got one back for Wolves in the 54th minute, but Blues boss Liam
Rosenior is just the second English manager to win his first four Premier
League games after Craig Shakespeare at Leicester.
West Ham
improved their hopes of avoiding relegation and pushed Burnley closer to the drop
with a 2-0 win at Turf Moor.
The Hammers
struck first through Crysencio Summerville in the 13th minute and Valentin
Castellanos bagged their second in the 26th minute.
Nuno Espirto
Santo's third-bottom side are three points behind fourth-bottom Nottingham
Forest, while second-bottom Burnley are 11 points from safety after 16 games
without a win.
Everton won 2-1
at Fulham thanks to farcical own goal from Cottagers keeper Bernd Leno.
Everton defender
Vitaliy Mykolenko's 18th-minute own goal was cancelled out by Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's
75th-minute equaliser.
In the 83rd
minute, Leno punched an Everton corner into his own net under pressure from
Everton's Jake O'Brien.


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