Football Weekly podcast: Top two in tip-top form and Torres looking tasty

On your brand new Football Weekly podcast, James Richardson is joined by Barry Glendenning and James Dart to drool over a weekend of spectacular and plentiful goals for Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester United in the Premier League, and look ahead to the Champions League clash between Arsenal and Barcelona.

Jimbo tells us about an exciting weekend – no, really, it was on the lively side- in Serie A, while Sid Lowe interrupts his holiday to bring us up to speed on La Liga.

John Ashdown takes us through the latest Championship news, including the recent off-field trouble at Newcastle United, Roy Keane’s potential exit at Ipswich Town and P Diddy’s interest in Crystal Palace. Plus, we ask, will it be woeful West Ham United or Hull City who join Portsmouth and (almost inevitably now) Burnley in English football’s second tier next season?

Finally, we get all excited about Sven-Goran Eriksson, who once again has managed to find himself gainful employment after being named the new coach of Ivory Coast. How does he do it?

Have a listen and post your comments on the blog 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.

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Football Weekly podcast: Manchester United in pole position

Manchester United sit on top of the Premier League today after beating Liverpool, while Chelsea dropped more points against Blackburn Rovers. On your brand new Football Weekly, James Richardson, Sean Ingle, Paolo Bandini and Fernando Duarte analyse the various machinations of the title race. Can the Blues regain their confidence? Are the Red Devils utterly unstoppable? And will Arsenal still have a say, or will the Champions League prove too much of a distraction?

Plus, at the bottom of the table, we ask: who’s more ill-equipped to get their team out of trouble – Brian Laws at Burnley, or Hull City’s, ahem, ‘football management consultant’ Iain Dowie?

Elsewhere, we pay tribute to Roy Hodgson’s formerly plucky and now formidable Fulham. After brushing aside Juventus, can the Cottagers go all the way in the Europa League?

Finally, never mind the caveats, Sid Lowe throws caution to the wind and indulges in the Lionel Messi love-in. Is the 22-year-old the best player ever to have kicked a pig’s bladder, or is he flattered by the current weakness of La Liga?

Have a listen and post your comments on the blog 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.

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Interactive Chalkboards: Analyse the weekend’s Premier League action

A shot-shy Dimitar Berbatov, why Alessandro Diamanti frustrates at West Ham and Mikel Arteta v Tim Cahill

Berbatov: silky, intelligent and shot-shy

Wayne Rooney’s absence for Manchester United meant Dimitar Berbatov played as a lone striker. While he was heavily involved in United’s build-up, the Bulgarian has none of Rooney’s thrust and only managed to one shot – blocked – in 90 minutes. Although United won, if Rooney’s injury keeps him out against Milan this week, Berbatov will need to perform as well inside the area as he does in the build-up.

Diamanti fails to sparkle for West Ham

Alessandro Diamanti polarises opinions at West Ham like no other player. While he offers the sort of unpredictable creativity and set-piece prowess that few other strugglers possess, he can be maddeningly inconsistent. Nothing sums this up more than his frustrating day against Bolton as he gave the ball away with worrying frequency in a shambolic defeat. Even though he scored West Ham’s consolation goal, his wastefulness was irksome.

Why Cahill’s absence isn’t affecting Everton

When Everton lost Tim Cahill to injury, they gained Mikel Arteta. They struggled without the Spaniard earlier this season, but Cahill’s absence has not hurt them too much. Although Cahill scores goals, he rarely gets involved in play and Arteta ran the show against Hull – and scored twice. With Cahill – and Marouane Fellaini – Everton tend to rely upon long balls too much. Packing the midfield with the likes of Arteta, Steven Pienaar and Leon Osman makes Everton an attractive side to watch.

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