We are back! The first weekend of the 2025-26 European club soccer season has delivered a bounty of talking points and drama for us to unpack -- though only the Premier League, LaLiga and Ligue 1 have officially kicked off, with Italy's Serie A and the German Bundesliga joining the fun this coming week.
We got a big clash in England that saw Arsenal escape Manchester United with a 1-0 win and three points to begin their campaign -- and more woe for Ruben Amorim.
We got a dominant start for Barcelona against nine-man Mallorca (though Hansi Flick still found something to be upset about), as well as Bayern Munich claiming the Supercup over VfB Stuttgart in the traditional curtain-raiser to the German season. Liverpool began their title defense with a 4-2 win over Bournemouth that made it clear their defending is a work in progress, Tijjani Reijnders put on a show for new club Manchester City, and Chelsea looked a little tired (and no wonder, given their Club World Cup exertions) in a scoreless draw with Crystal Palace.
- The best tifos of the Premier League weekend
- Reaction: Arsenal beat Man United in clash of depth, errors
- Liverpool overcome emotional night to beat Bournemouth
Here are Gab Marcotti's musings and reactions to the most memorable moments of the weekend.
OK, so the numbers say that Manchester United have lost eight of their past 13 league games at home, which is obviously horrendous. But not all defeats are created equal, and United supporters who wondered with trepidation what their team might look like with the new signings and -- more importantly -- with a full preseason under Ruben Amorim got their answer on Sunday.
It wasn't same ol' same ol' at all. They looked sharp and aggressive, Bryan Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha showed they are quick learners, and on balance, United had the better chances (David Raya came up big for Arsenal on more than one occasion) despite the 1-0 defeat.
As for Ricky Calafiori's goal, on another day it would never have stood, but it was given due to a combination of factors -- namely Altay Bayindir not being particularly good, VAR not intervening (I get the "high bar" concept, but in a crowded penalty box there are some things a ref simply won't see clearly) and English football electing to do its own thing when it comes to keepers in the six-yard box.
(No, it doesn't mean you can't challenge the keeper, but there's a middle ground between not being allowed to touch him at all and deputizing your big center back to body him whenever a corner comes in. The mere fact that we've reached the point that teams defending set pieces have to deploy an additional defender simply to screen the attacker who might interfere with the keeper is, when you think about it, absurd. What's next: Putting an attacker to screen the defender, who is supposed to screen the attacker who challenges the keeper? At that point, why not put a defender to screen the attacker, who screens the defender, who screens the attacker that challenges the keeper? You see where I'm going with this: It doesn't add anything to the game, other than having people barge into each other in the hopes a keeper spills the ball. Is this why we love the game?)
Gab Marcotti and Julien Laurens debate whether Altay Bayindir was fouled by William Saliba during Arsenal's 1-0 win over Manchester United.
There's still a long way to go, of course. I don't particularly like the Mbeumo and Cunha deals at those prices, but they were very effective (as was -- ahem -- Mason Mount) in disrupting the Arsenal buildup as well as turning the screws on the opposing back four. Bruno Fernandes in midfield means deploying your biggest attacking threat far from goal, which is sub-optimal. (Then again, if you stick him further forward, who's going to pass from midfield?)
Bayindir is obviously not a solution between the posts, but then if André Onana plays like he did last season, he's not either. Casemiro looks up for it, Patrick Dorgu had his moments and the back three looked fine. In fact, if you take out Calafiori's finish, Arsenal were limited to an xG of 0.4 over the 90 minutes.
The latter stat, of course, is also down to the Gunners' performance, which was far from impressive. In the battle of new center forwards who could easily have ended up on the opposite team, Viktor Gyökeres was outpaced by Benjamin Sesko, who came on for the last 26 minutes. Despite playing more than twice as many minutes than Sesko (60 to 26), Gyokeres managed fewer touches in the opposition box (three to Sesko's four) and not a single shot on goal (to Sesko's two). He obviously needs time to bed in, and to be fair to him, other than a few Martin Ødegaard moments, Arsenal weren't great at getting him the ball.
Martín Zubimendi didn't look fully match-fit either, which didn't help, but more generally, Arsenal looked like a side putting substance over style after taking the lead. It's fine, of course, until you remind yourself of the number of points they lost from winning positions last season, in part because rather than pushing forward and imposing themselves, they looked to manage the game.
It's only Week 1, so you don't want to be hasty with your takes. What seems clear, though, is that given Gyokeres' skill set, you'd expect Mikel Arteta to tweak his team's approach: more crosses, more playing in transition, getting teammates closer to him.
Barcelona began their LaLiga campaign with a 3-0 away win against Mallorca on Saturday, but boss Hansi Flick wasn't happy with the way they played. "I didn't like the game," he said. "The points are important, but I didn't like the way we played at 50-percent intensity with two extra men and the two-goal advantage."
Ian Darke and Steve McManaman praise Lamine Yamal following his late goal during Barcelona's 3-0 victory over Mallorca in their first LaLiga game of the season.
Now, I'm all for coaches demanding 110 percent and all that jazz, and I get that Flick knows his players and what motivates them best, but this felt weird. Barca scored early with Lamine Yamal's surgical pass finding Raphinha, and then went 2-0 up with Ferran Torres in the 23rd minute. (They got more than a bit lucky with that second goal, which came with play continuing despite Mallorca's Antonio Raíllo getting struck in the head by a Yamal shot and collapsing to the ground ... so much for head injury protocols.) By the 39th minute, Mallorca had two players sent off and it was, evidently, game over.
Now, 11 vs. 9 -- especially when you're already two goals up -- isn't football. It's a whole other thing. And demanding that your players execute and run into the ground in those conditions -- when it's August in Mallorca -- is a little silly. You're not going to drop points, and you're not really going to learn anything because you won't probably play 11 vs. 9 again this season. Why not take your foot off the gas a little, conserve energy and avoid injury?
And, maybe, while you're at it, celebrate some of the good things we saw at 11 vs. 11? Like Yamal already in top form. Or Torres showing (again) he can do the job as stand-in for the absent Robert Lewandowski. Or Ronald Araújo -- who is tapped for more minutes than many would like after Iñigo Martínez's departure -- looking competent against Vedat Muriqi.
They celebrated with gusto, which is what teams managed by Vincent Kompany tend to do when they win. But the fact is this 2-1 win could have easily gone either way, with Deniz Undav and Nick Woltemade coming very close for Stuttgart. When your 39-year-old keeper has to come up huge more than once -- well, that's suboptimal. Especially when said keeper (Manuel Neuer, in case you've been living under a rock) has started fewer than half of Bayern's league games over the past three seasons for one reason or another.
There's an issue at right back, whether it's Sacha Boey or Konrad Laimer who should start, and of course, Josip Stanisic is a center back masquerading as a left back down the other flank. (Alphonso Davies will be back from injury, yes, but that won't be until December at the earliest), but the real issues are in the front four, where there's a Jamal Musiala-sized hole to be filled. Michael Olise can do a job there, but the pieces around that part of the pitch have to work, and there's little reason to think Serge Gnabry has much of anything left. I guess that's why Bayern have been so aggressive in their pursuit of Woltemade, though Stuttgart appear to have shut the door on that effort.
Gabriele Marcotti and Julien Laurens dive into the latest news and gossip, analyze matches with special guests, and give their perspective on the world of football. Stream now
How will Bayern fix it? Well, if Woltemade (or another signing such as Christopher Nkunku) doesn't materialize, you're either looking at one of the youngsters (such as Tom Bischof or Lennart Karl) or, once Aleksandar Pavlovic is fit, you adjust your team into a formation that's something closer to a 4-3-3. After all, it's not written in stone that you have to go 4-2-3-1 even when Musiala isn't there.
There were bright spots. Jonathan Tah has fit in seamlessly at the back and Dayot Upamecano showed why he's a good match against someone like Woltemade. Harry Kane scored, Luis Díaz looks sharp and motivated (and also scored, commemorating it with his former teammate Diogo Jota's PlayStation celebration) and the oft-criticised Leon Goretzka linked well with Joshua Kimmich in midfield. But there's no escaping that with Thomas Mueller, Kingsley Coman and Leroy Sané gone and only Diaz coming in so far, they're down several bodies in the final third.
Gab Marcotti and Julien Laurens debate if Tijjani Reijnders will be the signing of the season after scoring on his Manchester City debut.
10. Tijjani Reijnders shines in Man City's demolition of Wolves: Tijjani Reijnders was one of the best players in Serie A last season with Milan, so maybe we shouldn't be surprised that he would notch a goal and an assist -- and, really, the way he set up Oscar Bobb for Erling Haaland's opener ought to be worth one more assist -- in Saturday's 4-0 win. Conventional wisdom in Italy (and among some of the analytics guys) was that however gifted and productive, Reijnders was a "tweener" -- not quite a midfield playmaker, not quite a guy who can play in the hole. I'm glad Pep Guardiola saw right through this. Reijnders adds dynamism to a City side that already look more sprightly than it did last season. (Pep's decision to start Bobb and Jérémy Doku wide also suggests he's looking for directness.) Haaland getting off the mark straight out of the gate is also a good sign. Now just wait until Rodri comes back, which is expected after the September international break.
9. Nico Williams on fire to start the season for Athletic Club: He had the world at his feet after the Euros, but Bilbao watchers will tell you last season wasn't Nico Williams' finest. Maybe it was the crazy transfer valuations and the links away from the club; maybe it was just the fact that he was a 22-year-old who, in many ways, is still unpolished. That said, he delivered a statement performance in Athletic's 3-2 win over Sevilla. He won and converted a (generous, to say the least) penalty, delivered two assists and was a constant menace while on the pitch. It seems clear that Bilbao are making him the centerpiece of their attack (at least while Oihan Sancet is out) and he is seizing the opportunity. It's early, but this could be the year he consolidates his status.
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