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Newcastle: Eddie Howe on the threat Newcastle face tomorrow: “Manchester City have lots of threats from lots of different areas of their team so if you focus too much on one, I don’t think that’s right,” he says. “But of course, Haaland is an outstanding goalscorer and can score all different types of goals so we’re going to have to defend really well.
“There’s not one way of doing it. If you press high there’ll be weaknesses and if you drop low there will be weaknesses to that - you have to do what you think is right based on the players you have.”

Manchester City: Pep Guardiola faces the press ahead of Manchester City’s trip to St James’ Park to play Newcastle tomorrow. He says that all his players are fit and available for selection apart from Mateo Kovacic and Rodri. He also tells reports that “the real season starts here”. Grrrr!

Jacob Steinberg
Chelsea: It seems Palmer’s toe is broken. Jacob Steinberg has the latest from Enzo Maresca’s press conference: “Bad news for Chelsea fans, who have been left reeling by the revelation that Cole Palmer’s comeback from a groin injury has been delayed by the forward fracturing a toe in a freak accident at home,” he writes.
”Speaking ahead of his side’s trip to Burnley, Enzo Maresca said: ‘He is not available for tomorrow for sure, Barcelona for sure or Arsenal for sure. Unfortunately, he had an accident at home where he hit his toe but it is nothing important but he won’t be back in the next week. It’s fractured.’ I’m reminded of this …”
Domestic mishap delays Cole Palmer's return ...
Chelsea: Enzo Maresca has revealed that Cole Palmer’s eagerly awaited return to the Chelsea line-up following his recovery from a groin injury will be delayed because the midfielder has hurt his toe in some unspecified accident at home. The Chelsea head coach says he doesn’t know whether or not the little piggy in question is broken.
“I wake up many times in the night to go to the toilet,” he says. “I hit my head and leg and everything. It can happen. He was very close. He was back with us almost with the groin, which is very good news, but he has this small problem. We don’t know it’s fractured. The only thing we know he is not available for this week and next week.”
Palmer will miss tomorrow’s match against Burnley, Chelsea’s midweek Champions League match against Barcelona and next weekend’s visit of Arsenal to Stamford Bridge.

Burnley: Scott Parker says forward Armando Broja “maybe dodged a bullet” with an ankle injury he suffered against England appearing to be less serious than first feared. Broja could yet face former club Chelsea on Saturday having trained since Wednesday but that certainly had not looked like being the case when he left Albania’s World Cup qualifier against England on a stretcher on Sunday.
The 24-year-old’s reaction was understandable given the number of injury problems he has faced in recent seasons, but this time the news appears to be better. “It was his ankle,” Parker said. “I think maybe the mechanism of the injury, I think maybe there was an element of shock for him and obviously a bit of fear there because it looked like he rolled the ankle and felt it was on an ankle that he’s previously done as well.
“I’m sure there was an element of, ‘Oh, I’ve done something serious here’. But while there was initial pain, it seems to have settled down really, really quickly. There’s an injury there, but it’s very, very, very minor and it looks like we’ve maybe dodged a bullet.”
Burnley go into Saturday’s game hovering above the relegation zone on goal difference, with Parker looking for his side to improve on a number of details in their game but generally happy with the progress shown. “We’ve developed and definitely I’ve seen a massive improvement from us,” he said. “They’re just little tiny bits at this present moment in time [we need to work on].”

Newcastle: Eddie Howe is rocking the mic and has some injury updates. Anthony Gordon has “worked very hard over the break” to recover from his hip injury and is touch-and-go for tomorrow’s match against Manchester City. Tino Livramento is “very close” after recovering from the knee ligament injury that has kept him sidelined since the end of September and is also in contention for tomorrow’s game. Nick Pope is “fine” after undergoing concussion protocols, while Joelinton and Sandro Tonali are also both fit to face City.
Liverpool: Slot has been asked about Liverpool’s title chances and in light of Andy Robertson’s heartbreaking post-match admission that he spent the day leading up to Scotland’s win over Denmark thinking about and crying over the tragic summer loss of his good pal Diogo Jota, has also addressed the subject of grief.
““I’ve said many times, at this moment in time we are not thinking or talking about it,” he says of Liverpool’s hopes of retaining their title. “Same last season when we were top of the league, it is just about the next game. The best way to judge a league table is after 38 games. The next best, in my opinion, is after 19 games. Let’s see where we are then. For now, the only focus we have is on winning games of football.”
On Robertson’s interview: ““We are always judged, sometimes fair, sometimes not fair. But I saw the interview live and I know that it is an issue for us, which is completely normal. At this moment in time, I always think how must it feel for his wife and his children?
“Because it is so, so, so much harder for them than it is for us. But that we will miss the player and the person is completely clear. Now we play Nottingham Forest, last season there we were 1-0 down and it only took him [Jota] one minute to score the equaliser. So now I am talking about the player that we miss for sure. That we also miss him as a person is also clear.”
On grief: “It is good for us to remember him [Jota] at all times it is possible because of the person and player he was. It is impossible to measure what it does to the players and to our results. The last thing I would do is use it as an excuse. I don’t know. What I do know is that we miss the player, that is 100% sure, and we miss the person, but I cannot measure the impact that has on our results. That is impossible for me to say and we will never use it as an excuse.”

Bradley, Wirtz and Frimpong all out for Liverpool
Liverpool: Hurzeler and Howe must be watching the cricket, because it’s Arne Slot who is the first managerial cab off the rank. He comes bearing mixed tidings for Liverpool fans ahead of their match against Nottingham Forest at Anfield tomorrow.
A quick summary: Alisson has fully recovered from his hamstring injury, but Conor Bradley and Jeremie Frimpong will be out for at least three weeks. Florian Wirtz is also unavailable, while Joe Gomez missed training yesterday but should be OK for today. However, Slot is reluctant to risk him for 90 minutes. “Maybe one or two players have to play in positions they normally don’t do,” he says.
Premier League press conferences: I don’t have today’s schedule to hand but it’s normally a toss-up between early birds Fabian Hurzeler and Eddie Howe to see who is first out of the traps. It’s a state of affairs that ensures football reporters on the Brighton and Newcastle beats have to be up with the lark on Friday mornings.
Brighton’s form this season has been up and down like an Eiffel Tower elevator but their home form is good, so you’d fancy their chances this weekend against a Brentford side who aren’t great on the road under Keith Andrews.
If you haven’t been paying close attention to Newcastle, it may come as a shock for you to learn they could finish this weekend in the relegation zone if they lose at home to Manchester City and results elsewhere don’t go their way. It’s an unlikely scenario but not one that’s totally inconceivable.
The omens for the Mags aren’t great because Howe’s record against Pep Guardiola in the Premier League is little short of dismal. In 18 attempts to mastermind a league win against him as Bournemouth or Newcastle manager, he’s drawn twice and lost 16 times.

Not football: They’re still playing in the final session of the Ashes series opening day in Perth, where England’s seam bowlers have helped their team mount a stirring recovery following a depressingly chaotic and kamikaze first innings with bat in hand. The doyen of over-by-over reporting that is Rob Smyth has the latest from Western Australia, mate …
Premier League fixtures
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Burnley v Chelsea (Sat 12.30pm GMT)
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Liverpool v Nottingham Forest (3pm)
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Bournemouth v West Ham (3pm)
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Wolves v Crystal Palace (3pm)
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Brighton v Brentford (3pm)
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Fulham v Sunderland (3pm)
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Newcastle v Man City (5.30pm)
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Leeds v Aston Villa (Sun 2pm)
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Arsenal v Tottenham Hotspur (4.30pm)
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Man United v Everton (Mon 8pm)

Preamble
And just like that, a chaotic, emotionally charged and often wild international break is over. Selected highlights: Troy Parrott knocking Portugal and Hungary off their respective perches, Erling Haaland propelling Norway to the World Cup, a magnificent seven from Wales, and Scotland sealing their place in the tournament courtesy of a bonkers, late-night, six-goal Hampden Park thriller against Denmark.
After all that excitement it’s back to the weekly grind. The Premier League returns this weekend, kicking off its twelfth match-week with all the glorious, high-stakes drama we love. The big questions, as always: whose star players have survived the past fortnight unscathed.
We’re here to filter through the noise so you don’t have to. The Guardian’s Friday Football blog is open for business, bringing you all the pithiest quotes, rambling monologues and pertinent team news from today’s pre-match press conferences. We’ll be flagging up every significant injury scare, tactical hint, and managerial mood swing ahead of kick-off tomorrow.

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