Liverpool and Arsenal emerged from the second round of Premier League fixtures with their perfect records intact as reigning champions Manchester City surrendered theirs in controversial fashion.
There were maiden wins, too, for promoted duo Norwich and Sheffield United, while Newcastle’s new head coach Steve Bruce was left still awaiting his first point in the job.
Here, the PA news agency takes a look at another eventful weekend in the English top flight.
So near and yet so VAR
Tough game! Learning to get used to external factors! keep working! #mancity #AL14 pic.twitter.com/1Q3zlj11Fd
— Aymeric Laporte (@Laporte) August 17, 2019
VAR and the new interpretation of the handball rule are going to be talking points throughout the season, and they certainly were at the Etihad Stadium on Saturday. Manchester City thought they had snatched a 3-2 victory deep into stoppage time when Gabriel Jesus fired home, only for the goal to be chalked off on review because the ball had clipped Aymeric Laporte’s arm during the buildup. The decision may have been correct, but City boss Pep Guardiola felt doubly aggrieved having seen Spurs’ Fernando Llorente score against his side in the Champions League last season after the ball flicked off his hand.
Frank’s still got the blues
What did you make of the first half? ? #CHELEI https://t.co/aCXiSOueLK
— Chelsea FC (@ChelseaFC) August 18, 2019
Frank Lampard, who tasted victory so many times as a Chelsea player, is still waiting to do so as the club’s manager. It all started so well for the Blues as midfielder Mason Mount responded to criticism by Jose Mourinho to open the scoring against Leicester on his home debut, only for Wilfred Ndidi, the man Mount had robbed to open his account, to make amends with a bullet header. Having started brightly, the London team wilted and had to settle for a 1-1 draw.
The good, the bad and the ugly
Aston Villa are going to have to sharpen up if they are to avoid being drawn into a survival fight after enduring mixed fortunes as they attempted to open their top-flight account against Bournemouth. Villa were 2-0 down on their own pitch after just 12 minutes before they launched a fightback which came up just short. Summer signing Tom Heaton conceded a second-minute penalty with a rash challenge and fellow newcomer Douglas Luiz left a ball for Harry Wilson to thump home a deflected second. Luiz redeemed himself with a sumptuous second-half strike but it was not enough.
Auba the moon
Arsenal could be a force this season if they can keep striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang fit and in form. The Gabon international scored the winner at Newcastle last weekend and repeated the feat this time around as the Gunners beat Burnley 2-1, creating space for himself before beating keeper Nick Pope at his near post with an astute finish.
Doom and gloom for the Toon
Steve Bruce scored two own goals on his debut for Norwich as a player, but his return to Carrow Road as Newcastle’s head coach proved even more demoralising. Teemu Pukki’s hat-trick helped the Canaries romp to a 3-1 victory over the Magpies to hand Bruce further evidence that filling Rafael Benitez’s shoes is going to take some doing.