Erling Haaland delivered another masterclass in ruthless finishing with two goals on Sunday as Manchester City beat high-flying Bournemouth 3-1 and climbed into second place in the Premier League.
The big Norwegian struck twice on the break in the first half at Etihad Stadium, moving Pep Guardiola’s side six points behind leaders Arsenal with 19 points, while Bournemouth fell to fourth in the table on 18 points.
Haaland, who tops the Premier League scoring chart with 13 goals in 10 games, broke the deadlock in the 17th minute, heading the ball forward from just past the halfway line and then barrelling down on goal before coolly slotting home past Djordje Petrovic.
Bournemouth hit back through Tyler Adams, who stabbed the ball in from a corner in the 25th minute. But the visitors were not level for long as Haaland restored City’s lead eight minutes later, beating the Bournemtouh defence before going around Petrovic to slot home from a tight angle. Nico O’Reilly struck from just inside the box to add a third for City in the 60th minute.
Spirited West Ham grab long-awaited home win over Newcastle
West Ham United bounced back from conceding an early goal to beat Newcastle United 3-1 on Sunday to claim their first home victory in the Premier League since beating Leicester City back in February.
Newcastle took the lead in the fourth minute, Jacob Murphy scoring to finish off a counter-attack after West Ham’s Jarrod Bowen hit the woodwork at the other end, but that was as good as it got for the listless Magpies.
Strikes from Lucas Paqueta, Tomas Soucek either side of an own goal by Sven Botman secured West Ham a 3-1 win and finally gave the club’s long-suffering fans at the London Stadium something to cheer about with a display full of verve and creativity.
The result left them in 18th place in the table on seven points, five behind Newcastle in 13th.
Bowen looked like he had won a penalty in the 11th minute but a lengthy VAR review showed that Mailck Thiaw got a touch on the ball and the decision was overturned.
Undeterred, Paqueta levelled for the home side with a dipping drive in the 35th minute, and Nuno Espirito Santo saw his side take a rare lead into the break after Newcastle defender Botman turned the ball into his own net in first-half stoppage time.
Without an away win all season, Newcastle boss Eddie Howe made a triple change at the break, replacing attackers Nick Woltemade and Anthony Gordon and defender Emil Krafth with Jacob Ramsey, William Osula and Fabian Schaer, but it made little difference.
West Ham midfielder Freddie Potts had a goal ruled out for a marginal offside in the build-up but with Newcastle offering so little in attack, it proved not to be costly.
Instead it fell to Soucek to wrap up the three points, bundling the ball home deep into second-half stoppage time to secure West Ham’s first win under Espirito Santo and only their second victory of the season.
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