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English Premier League, Sunday Review: Berbatov Hat-Trick Saves Manchester United, Chelsea And City Roll

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LONDON ENGLAND - AUGUST 08:  Dimitar Berbatov of Manchester United celebrates as he scores their third goal during the FA Community Shield match between Chelsea and Manchester United at Wembley Stadium on August 8 2010 in London England.  (Photo by Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)

Dimitar Berbatov's hat-trick helped Manchester United get three points from their rivals, a Liverpool team whose stars continue to struggle.

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English Premier League, Sunday Review: Dimitar Berbatov Hat-Trick Prevents Third Manchester United Collapse

Call Dimitar Berbatov’s opening to the 2010-11 season a personal resurgence, but after his Sunday hat-trick against Liverpool, that description may understate his form. With a league-leading six goals in five matches, Berbatov may be experiencing the high point of his club career - results coupled with the redemption of reversing two years of sub-par play, debunking much of the corresponding ridicule. More important (in the short term), Berbatov’s prevented another Manchester United collapse, leading the Red Devils to a 3-2 victory over their biggest rivals.

For the third time this year, Manchester United lost a lead late, but unlike the draws at Fulham and Everton, United had enough time to comeback and get three points. Their mid-week trip to Scunthorpe United (League Cup) should prevent people from dwelling on the collapse, but as next Sunday’s trip to Bolton approaches, talk should center around how United’s defense will hold-up if up, late, and having to deal with Kevin Davies and Johan Elmander pounding away in the middle of the area.

Fortunately for Manchester United, Rio Ferdinand should be back at that point. Ferdinand was a late scratch on Sunday with an illness, but having been scheduled to play against Liverpool, we can assume Ferdinand will make the trip to Bolton. While experience and leadership tend to be used as analytical crutches, they’re tools that seem appropriate here. I can’t help but think at least one of the Fulham or Everton collapses would have been avoided had Ferdinand played. Having his captain-like leadership at the back to help keep United organized and focus could have prevented comebacks that took advantage of ... well, a lack of organization and focus.

Ferdinand’s presence may not have helped against Liverpool, who failed to score from open play. Steve Gerrard’s goals came from penalty and direct kicks, and while Liverpool played much better in the second half, that was relative to an inept first half. The scoreline flattered the Reds, who at times looked similar to the team that was dominated by Manchester City. While the team deserves credit for scratching their way back into the match, Liverpool has yet to show themselves capable of competing for Europe, let alone restoring the club to a place amongst the league’s elite.

Where Liverpool sits in the league is still unknown, a status we won’t be able to accurately assess until their best players start playing to their normal standards. Fernando Torres’s troubles continue. Steven Gerrard, brace aside, has lacked the dynamism that he showed two years ago. Joe Cole was both un-influential and sometimes out-worked on Sunday. Jamie Carragher’s descent continues.

Some of these players have played this way for so long, we may need to consider whether we're seeing their true value. Is the Steve Gerrard of 2008-09 nothing more than a memory? Was the hype around Joe Cole ever sufficiently grounded in reality? Can Liverpool justify starting Jamie Carragher ahead of Daniel Agger?

But the bigger questions continue to surround Fernando Torres. In a fixture that he has dominated over the last two years, Torres was relatively absent from Sunday’s proceedings. Against United, though, that status seemed less Torres’s problem than Manchester United’s defending and a lack of support from his teammates. Still, Liverpool was missing the player that regularly beat Nemanja Vidic. They were missing the guy who scored in the fifth minute of their last derby. And beyond this fixture, it’s difficult to see Liverpool being viable European contenders if Torres doesn’t approach his expected form.

Whereas Carragher and Gerrard are aging and Cole was probably never as good as the hype, the 26-year-old Torres should be in the middle of his career’s prime. The easiest explanation: Torres isn’t fully healthy, but at some point, we should ask why he’s not getting better.

Chelsea, City Get Results Ahead of Saturday's Meeting

Chelsea’s easy ride is over, but give the Blues credit. They did was well as we could have imagined in their first five matches. While none of the opponents were very good, Chelsea posted a +20 goal difference while accumulating their 15 points.

Their 4-0 win Sunday over Blackpool saw them lead for 88 minutes in their final match before next Saturday’s trip to Eastlands. Be it in league, Champions League or this week’s League Cup, Chelsea will have gone without significant tests before visiting City, a team that took six points from them last season. If Chelsea wins next week, all caveats will be gone.

For their part, City will come into their match with some momentum, recording two, 2-0 wins this week. The second saw City get goals from Carlos Tévez and Yaya Touré in beating Wigan at the DW. The win moves City into fourth place, having only allowed two goals in their five league matches.

Original Story

English Premier League, Saturday Review: Arsenal Drawn Late At Sunderland, Everton Stunned At Goodison

A 95th minute goal from Darren Bent took points from Arsenal, Sunderland drawing the Gunners 1-1 at the Stadium of Light on Saturday.

Cesc Fabregas scored a freakish first half goal when an attempted Anton Ferdinand long ball when off the leg of the pressuring Fabregas and, from around 30 yards out, arced over Simon Mignolet for a goal.

Arsenal, playing down a man after Alex Song was sent off early in the second half, had a chance to put the match away late when Ahmed El Muhammadi took down Samir Nasri in the Sunderland area. Tomas Rosicky, who had replaced the injured Fabregas in the first half, skied the spot kick, leaving Sunderland within striking distance.

That strike came in the fifth of four announced stoppage time minutes. A ball played into the middle of the Arsenal area eventually found Bent at Manuel Alumnia’s right post. The England international’s finish gave the Black Cats a dramatic draw.

It was a strange game for Arsenal, who allowed Sunderland much of the game’s possession. Even before Fabregas was taken off, Sunderland was controlling the match, generating the better (albeit half) chances. Perhaps that was the tactic. Perhaps Arsenal was flat after their mid-week match. Either way, the Gunners allowed Sunderland to take a point, and while Arsenal moved to within one point of league-leading Chelsea, come tomorrow they could be four back and drawn for second with Manchester United.

Results

Stoke City 1-1 West Ham United
32’ - Scott Parker (West Ham)
48’ - Kenwyne Jones (Stoke City)

Aston Villa 1-1 Bolton Wanderers
13’ - Ashley Young (Aston Villa)
35’ - Kevin Davies (Bolton)

Blackburn Rovers 1-1 Fulham
30’ - Christopher Samba (Blackburn)
48’ - Kenwyen Jones

Everton 0-1 Newcastle United
44’ - Hatem Ben Arfa

Tottenham Hotspur 3-1 Wolverhampton Wanderers
44’ - Steven Fletcher (Wolves)
77’ - Rafael van der Vaart (Spurs) (PG)
87’ - Roman Pavlyuchenko
90’ - Alan Hutton

West Bromwich Albion 3-1 Birmingham City
15’ - Cameron Jerome (Birmingham City)
51’ - Scott Dann (Birmingham City) (OG)
59’ - Peter Odemwingie
70’ - Jonas Olsson

Sunderland 1-1 Arsenal
13’ - Cesc Fabregas (Arsenal)
Red Card - Alexander Song (Arsenal)
90’ - Darren Bent (Sunderland)

Feel Free To Worry, Everton

Newcastle is not as bad as they were last week (though their loss to Blackpool was more Matthew Gilks then their failing), and Everton is not as good as their two minute, end-of-match span against Manchester United - all of which becomes much easier to say after Hatem Ben Arfa’s 24-yard scorcher beat Tim Howard. After Everton spend the last 40 minutes pressing an equalizer, the Marseille loanee's goal gave the Magpies a 1-0 win at Goodison Park.

Everton stays in 19th, still win-less after five matches, and having lost points at home to an inferior side for the second time this season, it’s time for the Toffees (and supporters) to start worrying about two things. First, are the Newcastles and Wolverhamptons of the world truly inferior to Everton? The talent on the respective teams says yes, only adding to the season's disappointing start.

It also magnifies Everton’s second problem: Where do you regain these lost points? In the past, the Toffees have been able to steal them back from the top of the league, but that’s a precarious game to play. "We’re OK losing at home to Newcastle because we can get those points back from Chelsea." Can you? Because you didn’t look too good against Manchester United.

Late Comebacks At White Hart Lane, The Hawthorns

The story was similar for both Spurs and West Brom: give-up first goal at home, go to half time down, score three in the second half, profit.

In London, it was Steven Fletcher, finally returning to the lineup, scoring just before half-time, finishing off a Kevin Foley cross, giving Wolves a lead that held for the next 30 minutes. Then, Alan Hutton - whose substitution for Younes Kaboul may have turned the match - drew a penalty, converted by surprise starter Rafael van der Vaart. Ten minutes later, Roman Pavlyuchenko scored from close range before Hutton added a goal of his own, giving Spurs a 3-1 win.

West Brom’s comeback, responding to an early Cameron Jerome goal, started courtesy of a Scott Dann own goal six minutes into the second half. Brom would take the lead eight minutes later with Peter Odemwingie’s second of the season, and when Jonas Olsson scored ten minutes after that, West Brom had the margin for their first win of the season.

For Birmingham City, it brings back the question we’ve been asking all season, a question that seemed to be answered when they shut-out Liverpool last week. After their defense performed above expectations last season, could the Blues be set for problems in goal prevention, particularly given the loss of Joe Hart? Allowing three goals to West Brom hints yes. Birmingham City’s now allowed eight goals in five games.

Draws at Britannia, Villa Park, and Ewood

West Ham United got their first point of the season, with an early goal from Scott Parker earning the Hammers a draw at the Britannia, Stoke failing to build on an Kenwyne Jones' early second half goal.

Ashley Young and Kevin Davies traded first half goals at Villa Park, with Aston Villa and Bolton playing to a 1-1 draw.

Fulham stayed undfeated, with Clint Dempsey’s second half tally equalizing Christopher Samba’s controversial first half goal (Mark Schwarzer knocked over before Samba's header). The draw is the Cottagers' fourth in five games.

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