• The Independent

    Erik ten Hag faces another Ineos inquest and one big change at Man United could decide his fate

    Or maybe, as Erik ten Hag said, they are colleagues with whom he is in constant communication. Sir Jim Ratcliffe, Sir Dave Brailsford, Omar Berrada, Dan Ashworth and Jason Wilcox sat in a row at Villa Park. The new Manchester United hierarchy, the Ineos administration, always intended to make regular assessments of how it is going at Old Trafford.

  • BBC

    'Very worrying for Wolves supporters'

    The fact that I was sitting only a few rows behind the Wolves boss Gary O’Neil on Saturday means I'm not at all surprised about how scathing he was about his team's performance. You could sense the frustration and anger as he watched what seemed more like an NBA game than a Premier League game at times, with absolutely no control in midfield and the action swinging from end to end. Great fun for neutrals like me, but not so much for the Wolves fans, who made their feelings clear to the players after the full-time whistle.

  • BBC

    Brighton's 'desire' made the result feel 'inevitable' - Hart

    Former England goalkeeper Joe Hart praised Brighton's "desire" to come back from three goals down to beat Tottenham, adding that Fabian Hurzeler's side "came out ready to fight" in the second half at Amex Stadium. Brighton were turning balls over in midfield, as Tottenham were in the first half, with Danny Welbeck being that focal point.

  • BBC

    'Villa are a great marker to show how much Man Utd have fallen'

    Are Aston Villa showing Manchester United how it is done by having a manager that is actively working to improve his side in all competitions? Unai Emery's tenure at Villa Park has seen them go from a bottom-half Premier League side to making club history in the Champions League this season, yet United under Erik ten Hag "look to be going backwards rather than forwards".