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The Score: My verdict on every Premier League team after Gameweek 30
Source:Inews

The biggest game of the weekend ended in a stalemate and only three shots on target, but Liverpool were the big winners as they established a lead at the top with victory over Brighton. Now is the time to hit the front.

At the bottom, Nottingham Forest escape the relegation zone but that's of little consolation while they are still failing to win league games. Luton lost, but will not be perturbed by Forest and Everton's form.

Finally, Erik ten Hag's team became the second this season in the Premier League to allow 30 or more shots in multiple matches. The draw at Brentford should confirm his summer fate.

Scroll down for my verdict on every team (listed in table order).

Gameweek 30 results Saturday 30 March

Sunday 30 March

Liverpool When looking for areas where Liverpool would fall short at the start of the season, one part of the pitch was staring you straight in the face. With Fabinho and Jordan Henderson shipped off to Saudi Arabia and Thiago Alcantara as regular a visitor to the treatment room as any member of the club's medical department, the Liverpool midfield needed a complete makeover and what emerged after the summer transfer window closed drew more gasps than shrieks of delight.

Dominik Szoboszlai has showed glimpses of what he could do without ever being to reach the same heights week after week, Ryan Gravenberch faded fast after a positive start, while Alexis Mac Allister, the number six, always seemed pigeonholed into a position he didn't really want to play in.

Another reshuffle was needed, but without spending millions on further reinforcements. What has transpired has given Liverpool a midfield talisman on par with anything Kevin De Bruyne and Martin Odegaard offer their respective title juggernauts, one nobody saw coming.

Mac Allister, with an able number six alongside him, is an altogether different beast - one who few have been able to tame. Against his former club, the Argentine completed his transition from six to playmaker with effervescent ease, helping inspire Liverpool to yet another comeback success. Mohamed Salah was missing chance after chance and needed an opening he couldn't miss. Mac Allister was the one to provide such a pass.

To have this effect, on this team, under this manager, so early into his Anfield career deserves the utmost acclaim. Mac Allister has assisted five goals for Liverpool in the Premier League, equalling his tally for Brighton in a third of the games.

More pertinently, however, four of his five assists for the Reds have been for winning goals, with only Salah setting up more winners in the competition this season. In a campaign where three teams are on course to surpass 90 points, having game changers from deep can have history-making consequences. By Pete Hall

Arsenal Arsenal's approach was understandable. A point was better for them than City given their one-point lead and their recent record in this stadium. Mikel Arteta's first-half dance move was to wave both hands down in front of him as if guiding down a helicopter, a "calm down" message that he doesn't always stick to himself.

If they listened to him often, Arsenal also fouled majestically. In the first half they spread them around with faultless logic to avoid yellow cards, much to the chagrin of those in City blue on the pitch and watching it. Shortly into the second half, Arsenal made three fouls in 2.3 seconds in City's half. Arsenal ended the game with 20 fouls and two yellow cards, one for time-wasting and the other for kicking the ball away. You can't teach that.

Arsenal struggled to cope at times. David Raya's distribution misfired, not helped by him repeatedly slipping over when kicking long. William Saliba has completed 93 per cent of his passes this season but only 12 of 18 before the break. The biggest issue about sitting deep is that, when you get the ball, it tends to be very close to your own goal and thus invites an intense press.

The most obvious way to describe this well-intentioned, high-intensity but ultimately unfulfilling 0-0 draw is that Arsenal got the point that they came for and yet ended Sunday less likely to win the title than when it started. The biggest winners were Liverpool, now with a lead to call their own.

But Arsenal have overcome something; that is why the away end was far the happier. Between November 2017 and April 2023, Arsenal played Manchester City 16 times and lost 15 of them - an FA Cup tie was the exception. They have taken four points off City in the league this season. This is progress. Now to hope that it's worth more than just consolation for not winning the league.

Man City There was a period in the first half - OK, it was most of the first half - where this supposed Mega Massive Title Tussle seemed to get stuck in a loop, a closed cycle of play from which it could not escape, like putting your hand through a desk because all the molecules miss each other.

City passed and Arsenal watched and waited. City passed some more and then some more: across and back, occasionally forward and then back again quickly as if feeling the heat. This wasn't entertainment in the truest sense, excitement only for what might come rather than what was happening. Spoiler alert: it didn't really ever happen.

Guardiola's response to the first-half funk was to bring on Grealish and Doku, those ground-roamers, as the agents of chaos that we longed for like an elixir. Even that became more than a little predictable because both have become a little jaded by this season's experience. Grealish is now the master of standing still with the ball, deliberately doing nothing.

Doku took to life in England by basically being exactly the same player he was in France, a whir of feet that bewitch defenders to take their eyes off the ball until it has gone past them. In recent weeks, Doku seems to be playing without studs and with small weights attached to his ankles. What was once glorious unpredictability is now a frustrating conundrum that his teammates are struggling to cope with.

Aston Villa This has not been an easy first season for Youri Tielemans at Aston Villa. Having had his pick of clubs as a free transfer - and with previous links to almost all of the Premier League's Big Six - Tielemans eventually chose Villa, a move that allowed him to remain in the Midlands without upping sticks and moving his family. But it also saw him join a team that had a multitude of central midfield options.

Had we given up faith in it working out? Perhaps. Between the start of the season and the end of January, Tielemans started only five league games. In the last of those, Tielemans was replaced after an hour with Villa 3-0 at home to Newcastle.

Then the opportunity presented itself again. Injuries to Jacob Ramsey and Boubacar Kamara, at that point both of whom seemed ahead of Tielemans in Unai Emery's thoughts, created a space for regular league minutes. He has started each of Villa's last seven Premier League matches and Villa have won five of those.

He's finally settling in. Against Wolves on Saturday, Tielemans was able to find space in a congested midfield, starting from a deeper role than normal and thus able to play progressive passes into each of the two forwards. He played one superb through ball to Morgan Rogers, who was unable to create a chance. Another went to Ollie Watkins, who missed the subsequent chance.

Now Tielemans is reaping the rewards. If Villa are able to continue this run, taking them clear of Manchester United in sixth, the Belgian may well get the Champions League football that he was always desperate for when seeking a move away from Leicester. He hasn't appeared in that competition since Monaco in 2018.

Tottenham Tottenham have a first-half problem. They sit eighth in a table of half-time scorelines. The minute of their first goal in each of their last six league matches: 61, 46, 77, 50, no goal, 51. Over that same period, Spurs have conceded four first-half goals.

Possibly related: Brennan Johnson has become Tottenham's super-sub. In his last five substitute appearances in the Premier League, covering 164 minutes, he has contributed two goals and three assists. He has a single goal or assist in his last four league starts.

When Johnson comes on, his pace means that the left-sided central defender is minded to offer cover for the left-back. He creates space for others, most notably Son Heung-min. Ange Postecoglou will say that it doesn't really matter when you score your goals if you win the match, and obviously he's right - Johnson can be the secondary threat against tired defences.

But scoring 10 home first-half goals in 15 matches, fewer per game than 10 other teams, is unacceptable given Tottenham's attacking options. Correcting that imbalance would almost certainly guarantee Spurs Champions League football.

Man Utd Until now, Erik ten Hag has been preaching a mantra of sustainability. He has not claimed that anything is perfect, nor that the progression of his tenure is in a straight upward line. Instead, he's said that things are building because the process is good. Finetune what is working well, he says, and we will eventually see the rewards.

But here's the thing: the sustainability thing doesn't wash when there are so many systemic issues with the team. Ten Hag says that allowing so many shots - 31 in the 1-1 draw with Brentford and only Luton Town and Sheffield United have faced more per game - is not a problem per se, using the philosophical defence. But then the reality slaps you across the face: Manchester United have kept three clean sheets in their last 16 league games. You don't get to plead your way out of that.

Ten Hag says that the attack will come together and has bemoaned his injury misfortune, but many Premier League teams have suffered similar fates and his has still scored fewer than Luton. Under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, we used to talk about individuality without a system, a team with no coherent tactical plan other than to rely upon brilliant players producing brilliant moments.

Although Solskjaer's plan was eventually undermined by its diminishing returns, it at least had some merit because United had individuals capable of producing those moments. What do they have now? Bruno Fernandes is perma-frustrated and Marcus Rashford half-broken. Rasmus Hojlund is young and talented, but Manchester United tend to drag those types down over time rather than the vice versa. And all the while, it's hard to see what the plan is to get the best out of them.

Is that not the ultimate damnation of Ten Hag? This supposed tactician and technician, who overachieved with Ajax, uses fight and passion and you-just-need-to-bleed-for-the-cause, those supposed stereotypes of the British firefighter manager, as his only playbook. It sounds a lot like a coach who has run out of ideas.

West Ham I sent the below tweet on 16 March when smarting from Forest's 1-1 draw against Luton Town. I have since made this opinion a tenet of my personality.