Football Weekly podcast: Beckham’s World Cup over

It’s a sad day in podland, and not just because Phil Brown has been relieved of his duties at Hull City.

On your brand new Football Weekly, we sing an ode to David Beckham, whose World Cup dream is over in the wake of a potentially career-ending achilles injury (although that cut under his eye looks fairly nasty too). James Richardson and a dangerously sleep-deprived Rob Smyth shed a tear.

Before we get to that, proper journalist Owen Gibson looks ahead to Chelsea’s Champions League clash with Internazionale. Plus, there’s all the usual gubbins about the Premier League title race – could it all come down to goal difference? – and the fight for fourth place. Can Tottenham Hotspur really hang on in the face of the crumbling challenge from Liverpool, Aston Villa, and Manchester City?

Finally, Sid Lowe tells us about a weekend of hat-tricks and theatrics in La Liga, and Rafa Honigstein rounds up all the action from the Bundesliga.

Have a listen and post your feedback below. We’re also on iTunes, Facebook and Twitter, and if you enjoy this type of thing, get your daily dose of fooball with our tea-time email, The Fiver.

James RichardsonBen GreenRaphael HonigsteinSid LoweOwen GibsonRob Smyth

Wayne Bridge poised to return for Manchester City against Hull City

• ‘Wayne can play on Saturday’ says Roberto Mancini
• Patrick Vieira could make his debut at KC Stadium

Roberto Mancini has confirmed that Wayne Bridge is in line to make his comeback for Manchester City at Hull on Saturday.

Bridge has been out for two months after injuring his knee against his former club Chelsea, since when his life has been turned upside down by the alleged relationship between his former girlfriend and John Terry.

Mancini has spoken with the 29-year-old left-back about his return but feels Bridge is in the right state of mind to play and intends to include him at the KC Stadium.

“Wayne can play on Saturday,” Mancini said. “He has been working with us for 10 days now and there are no problems.”

Mancini is trying to avoid discussion of Bridge’s personal situation for fear of dragging the matter out longer than necessary.

“The private side is not important,” Mancini said. “He has been working very well on the pitch. That is what is important. He is a fantastic man and a fantastic player.”

Meanwhile, Mancini confirmed Patrick Vieira could also make his delayed City debut after overcoming a calf problem sustained before his move from Internazionale last month.

Joleon Lescott is set for a place on the bench after the £22m defender shrugged off his own knee injury.

Manchester CityHull CityPremier LeagueRoberto Manciniguardian.co.uk

Premier League: Manchester City 1-1 Hull City

Seven games, seven draws, and again Manchester City’s performance left much to be desired. It remains to be seen how long the sheikh will tolerate such a disappointing return on his eye-watering investment. The fans are already losing patience, and booed their team off at the final whistle.

To nobody’s surprise, City were the better team, and had the initiative throughout, but yet again they were unable to translate possession and chances into goals, and suffered for it when Jimmy Bullard celebrated his return to Hull’s starting line-up with an 80th-minute equaliser from the penalty spot.

Mark Hughes, under mounting pressure, looked greyer than ever at the end. In mitigation, Hull have been transformed from a relegation ragbag into hard-grafting competitors over the past month, and they were impressively combative from the first minute to the last. Their manager, Phil Brown, would appear to have survived his personal crisis, which had its roots in that injudicious half-time rant at his players on the pitch in the corresponding fixture last season. After that, he was deemed to have “lost the dressing room”, in phone-in parlance, and Hull won just one of their last 22 league games, finishing within a point of relegation.

After an ominous start, Brown seems to have turned things around in the nick of time, and the Tigers are scrapping in tooth and claw fashion, which augurs well for their battle to stay up.

City have altogether loftier ambitions, of course, but seven points from as many matches is scarcely top-four form, and with such an array of attacking talent at their disposal they should be demolishing, not dropping points against, bottom-half opposition.

Their goal came in added time at the end of the first half when Shaun Wright-Phillips, set up by Carlos Tevez, let fly from 20 yards and Anthony Gardner’s maladroit attempt at a headed clearance took the ball beyond Matt Duke’s reach at his left-hand post. Hull would have been level within two minutes of the resumption, but for the goal-line clearance with which Joleon Lescott repelled Richard Garcia’s shot from the right, with Shay Given beaten.

Their indefatigable spirit was finally rewarded when Lescott fouled Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink and Bullard beat Given from the spot.

Premier LeagueManchester CityHull CityJoe Lovejoyguardian.co.uk