| Back of the net
By Ian McCullough
The Christmas period is usually the benchmark to work out who is going
to be in the title shake-up at the end of the season and who is going down.
In the Premiership the Abramovich millions look to have secured another
title already for Chelsea.

While Manchester United lurch from one crisis to another on and off the
field and Arsenal endure a year of consolidation that only a man as highly-revered
and well-respected as Arsene Wenger can get away with the Blues’ biggest
challenge seems to be coming from Liverpool.
Rafael Benitez and Jose Mourinho’s sides produced another classic encounter
last week in the Champions League which saw no goals scored, little quality
in terms of passing and possession and with only a horror tackle from Michael
Essien enough to get people excited.
We shouldn’t be surprised though for that is what has happened in nearly
every game played between these two teams over the last 14 months. Some
are claiming that it could be the start of an era of two new teams battling
it out for the Premiership crown with Arsenal and United being cast as the
has-beens to these new kids on the block. Let’s hope not.
The fact is, Jose Mourinho is more entertaining than his team. Yes they
are a good side but they were beautifully described in one recent article
as being to football what Coldplay are to music; you know they are good
but you can’t get excited by them.
The same can be said of Liverpool. They have a superb manager in Rafa
Benitez who can only be admired after the Reds’ Champions League triumph
and transforming Jamie Carragher into something resembling a top-class central
defender.
However, effective as it may be it isn’t good to watch and at the end
of the day that is what football is all about. Liverpool and Chelsea are
being cast as two clubs who don’t like each other and just like Manchester
United and Arsenal sparks will fly and it will be compulsive viewing. Well
this will not happen.
The memories of a decade of brilliant entertainment from the Gunners
and the Red Devils were what gave the Premiership its self-appointed tag
as the best league in the world.
The quicker it returns to the way it was the better. Both sides are too
big and have too much talent in their ranks to be out of the race for the
Premiership for long — let’s hope so for entertainment’s sake.
It was a quiet weekend for Irishmen in front of goal with no-one finding
the net in the Premiership, the Championship, League Two or in Scotland.
However, in League One Doncaster’s Paul Heffernan continued his fine
recent form to grab his 10th of the season. The big Dubliner hit his side’s
third in a 3-2 win over MK Dons.
Under-21 international Kevin O’Connor found the net for the fifth time
to save Brentford from defeat to Chesterfield in the 1-1 draw at Griffin
Park.
Sean Foley has been tipped by many to make the grade at Aston Villa and
the young Dublin-born midfielder has been impressing on the south coast
at Bournemouth. He hit the target for the second time in four games for
the Cherries but it was not enough as they slumped to a 2-1 reverse at Hartlepool.
Ian McCullough’s Team of the Week
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S Given
(NewcastleUtd)
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G Doherty
(Norwich)
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K Cunningham
(B’ham)
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G Coughlan
(Sheff W)
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S Finnan
(Liverpool)
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S Foley
(B’mouth)
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K O’Connor
(Brentford)
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M Doyle
(Coventry)
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D Duff
(Chelsea)
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A McGeady
(Celtic)
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P Heffernan
(Doncaster)
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