Here is the thing: Villa fans are completely torn apart over Buendía's late goal, with some celebrating the result whilst others are absolutely furious at the team's inability to be consistent — and that schism is the most divided conversation across the entire gameweek. Spurs, meanwhile, are riding high on survival hopes after their controversial late escape, with their fanbase split between genuine optimism and fury at the drama they're being forced to endure. What's wild is that despite all this emotion flying around, the neutral analysis is dominating — fans know what they saw, but they're struggling to make sense of where these sides are actually heading.
Positive 25.6%
Neutral 34.5%
Negative 39.9%
Week 35 of the Premier League season delivered a shot that split the fanbase right down the middle — and here's the thing, the overwhelming majority of supporters stayed completely neutral about what happened on the pitch, but the ones who did react went to absolute extremes. You had Manchester United fans losing their minds with genuine admiration, convinced they'd witnessed something championship-worthy, whilst Liverpool supporters were in meltdown mode, not about the shot itself, but about the state of their club's decision-making behind the scenes. The real story wasn't the moment itself — it was what it represented to each set of fans about where their clubs actually stood at that point in the season.
Neutral
83.8%
"@LFC FUCK FSG for making us go through this and fuck Richard Hughes as well this bald BASTARD should've been gone by Fucking November"
Amusement
8.3%
"@ManUtd Fantastic! Exhilarating! Breathtaking! We're United!!!"
Admiration
8.0%
"@ManUtd We are the champions!!!! Welcome to champions league. Old Trafford at lights brilliant"
Positive 24.5%
Neutral 27.8%
Negative 47.7%
Here is the thing — most Villa fans left that ground absolutely seething because Emery's side produced nothing in the second half, and when you're chasing European football, a blank canvas against Tottenham feels like a wasted opportunity that could cost you top four. But the Spurs contingent? They were buzzing, celebrating a point like it was a trophy, which tells you everything about where these two clubs are right now — one's built momentum and belief, the other's built frustration and the gnawing sense that inconsistency is about to derail their season.
Neutral
76.8%
"@SpursOfficial What a fantastic game, keep going lads!"
Anger
11.9%
"@AVFCOfficial piece of shit cunt football club, not even a shot on target. how much has spurs paid emery? fucking useless shits i hope you get knocked"
Admiration
11.2%
"@SpursOfficial Fantastic football from spurs! Wow!"
Positive 56.5%
Neutral 30.5%
Negative 13.0%
Arsenal fans weren't exactly losing their minds after this dominant first-half display — and that's actually the most telling part of the story. What we're seeing here is a fanbase that's cautiously impressed rather than euphoric, with nearly three-quarters of discussion staying level-headed and analytical, as if they've learned not to get carried away by a single good performance. The real emotion underneath? Pure relief and validation — fans are celebrating because this is what they've been demanding all season, that crisp, controlled, genuinely excellent football, which is why when it finally shows up at Matchweek 35, even the measured Arsenal supporter can't help but acknowledge it's something special.
Neutral
72.6%
"@Arsenal This is real football.. I'm so excited COYG"
Admiration
19.0%
"@Arsenal Best half of football we have played this season!!! Keep it going boysss"
Approval
8.4%
"@Arsenal Best half of football we have played this season!!! Keep it going boysss"
Positive 8.0%
Neutral 29.9%
Negative 62.1%
Right, here's the thing — Liverpool fans have remained remarkably composed after this narrow defeat in week 35, with over 81 percent of the discourse staying measured and analytical, but that veneer of patience is cracking at the edges. A small but vocal minority, making up roughly 8 percent of the conversation, have turned genuinely hostile toward Arne Slot, with some suggesting he's fundamentally unsuited for the job and questioning whether the club should stick with him through what's clearly a frustrating run. The anger isn't really about one bad result — it's the accumulation, the feeling that Liverpool should be further ahead, and Slot's tactical decisions are becoming the focal point for fans who expected better from a manager brought in to challenge for the title.
Neutral
81.4%
"@LFC Awesome job, Slot."
Annoyance
10.9%
"@LFC And you still want to keep that fking useless « manager » ? SLOT OUT !"
Anger
7.7%
"@LFC And you still want to keep that fking useless « manager » ? SLOT OUT !"
Positive 33.0%
Neutral 39.7%
Negative 27.4%
Here's the thing — Arsenal fans weren't exactly losing their minds over Gyökeres, but they couldn't ignore what they'd just watched. The reaction was cool, calculated admiration rather than ecstatic celebration, because supporters recognised his quality and delivery in a high-pressure match without needing to oversell it. But buried underneath that measured tone was genuine satisfaction that he'd finally stepped up when it mattered, though some fans couldn't help but get frustrated at teammates not feeding him the ball enough — because nothing winds up a fan base quite like watching a player perform and thinking he could've had even more if everyone around him had done their job.
Neutral
74.9%
"Fantastic! He’s been brilliant today too. "
Admiration
19.1%
"So happy for him- it was a high pressure match and his fluidity and drive have been great to watch. "
Approval
5.9%
"So happy for him- it was a high pressure match and his fluidity and drive have been great to watch. "
Positive 14.4%
Neutral 45.0%
Negative 40.6%
Right, so here's the thing — when this defensive collapse happened between Manchester United and Liverpool at Matchweek 35, fans were genuinely split between taking the piss and actually acknowledging quality play, with nearly four in five fans staying level-headed about the whole affair. You had the usual banter merchants winding each other up with "worst in the league" accusations and backhanded compliments about it being United's best moment all season, but underneath all that mockery was a grudging respect for whoever pulled off the goals — that's why you're seeing comments like "brilliant goal" cutting through the noise. The amusement was doing heavy lifting here, covering up what was actually a moment of proper defensive vulnerability that neither set of supporters could quite believe they were watching unfold.
Neutral
78.1%
"@markgoldbridge Brilliant goal man. He’s been our best player"
Amusement
14.1%
"@markgoldbridge YOU LOT ARE FUCKING SHIT WORSE THAN BRIGHTON ARE WE? AHAHAHAHH"
Admiration
7.8%
"@markgoldbridge Enjoy bro, Uniteds best achievement in last 10 years :D"
Positive 23.7%
Neutral 30.2%
Negative 46.2%
Arsenal's demolition job left the fan base split straight down the middle: the vast majority of Fulham supporters took it on the chin, some even gracious enough to acknowledge a well-played performance and respect the three points Arsenal had earned, but a vocal minority absolutely lost it, furious at what they saw as a spineless, disorganised display that felt like the club had given up mid-match. Here's the thing—that 74 per cent neutrality isn't apathy, it's resignation; these fans have watched enough football to know when they've been beaten by the better side on the day, and they're holding out hope Fulham still salvage something from their season despite this setback.
Neutral
74.0%
"@FulhamFC Was a great game !"
Gratitude
14.6%
"@FulhamFC Thank you Fulham for the 3 points today. We are absolutely rooting for you to be in European spot for next season"
Annoyance
11.4%
"@FulhamFC that was fucking woeful. awful lineup. awful performance. half the players can’t even be fucked. i gave up on europe months ago but fuck me "
Positive 12.3%
Neutral 35.4%
Negative 52.3%
Here's the thing — West Ham fans are genuinely split between dark acceptance and absolute fury after that Brentford loss, because whilst most have resigned themselves to the relegation fight with grim acceptance, a furious minority are tearing into manager Nuno for what they see as tactical incompetence that's quite literally confirming other teams' survival. The brutal irony that West Ham's defeat handed Tottenham a lifeline has sent some supporters into meltdown, with the anger cutting deeper because it feels like the club's own mismanagement is sabotaging their fight rather than bad luck doing it — and that's the kind of thing that separates resignation from rage.
Neutral
80.4%
"@WestHam Fantastic watch. Would highly recommend."
Annoyance
10.0%
"@WestHam Fuck your useless ass club, fucking morons just confirmed Spurs' survival, dickheaded twats"
Anger
9.7%
"@WestHam Fuck your useless ass club, fucking morons just confirmed Spurs' survival, dickheaded twats"
Positive 19.8%
Neutral 34.7%
Negative 45.6%
Right, so here is the thing — when Carrick pulled off that dramatic comeback in matchweek 35, United fans were overwhelmingly measured about it, with 81 per cent staying neutral, but that's where it gets interesting because buried in there is a proper divide between the 11 per cent absolutely gushing with admiration and the 8 per cent who were genuinely annoyed. The admiration crowd were lost in the moment, full of praise for Carrick's turnaround and what he'd done for the squad's morale, but the annoyance contingent? They were already thinking bigger — hinting that a permanent managerial appointment was needed, suggesting Carrick had done his job but now it was time to bring in a proven long-term solution. So you've got this fascinating dynamic where one dramatic result managed to unite most supporters in cautious respect, whilst simultaneously forcing a conversation about whether an interim manager's
Neutral
81.3%
"@ManUtd So proud of everyone of my boys and Michael Carrick"
Admiration
10.9%
"@ManUtd So proud of everyone of my boys and Michael Carrick"
Annoyance
7.8%
"@ManUtd What the fuck are we doing? Come out dog shit. Just don't have the killer instinct under Carrick. This game should of been put to bed at halft"
Positive 20.6%
Neutral 46.0%
Negative 33.3%
Right, so here's the thing — when Bruno's second assist went up on the board during Matchweek 35, the fanbase absolutely split down the middle over whether he'd actually earned the credit, and that's what made this genuinely fascinating. You've got your die-hard United supporters celebrating the assist at face value, buzzing about European football and pure football beauty, but then you've got the sceptics asking serious questions about the decision — and honestly, the fact that the conversation stayed overwhelmingly neutral tells you most fans were genuinely trying to work out if the assist actually counted rather than just throwing emotional fuel on it. The small pocket of wind-up merchants having a laugh about paying good money to watch him play? That's just the ambient noise of any big moment on social media, but what actually mattered was the substance — could Bruno really claim that one, or was the assist graphic doing a bit of creative accounting?
Neutral
78.4%
"@ManUtd Incoming 7-0!! Bruno Assist!! UCL football!! BEAUTIFUL!!! https://t.co/Qtr80ruYcp"
Curiosity
13.9%
"@ManUtd Assist for Bruno? Love to see it!"
Amusement
7.7%
"I just realized I paid a decent amount of money to fucking watch that rat Bruno play this summer and now I’m even more mad "
Positive 6.8%
Neutral 29.0%
Negative 64.1%
Right, here's the thing — Manchester United scraped a win they had absolutely no business getting, and the fanbase is split between relief and seething frustration. The overwhelming majority, nearly three-quarters of supporters, are keeping it civil, but there's a simmering anger underneath because Amad came on and instantly went missing, delivering sloppy passes whilst the team desperately needed creativity and cutting edge. What's driving the real rage isn't just a poor performance — it's the audacity of not showing intensity when you're coming off the bench in a tight match, and United fans are sick of watching attackers take the foot off the gas when the pressure's on most.
Neutral
71.1%
"Extremely lucky cant believe the passes we did amad and lammens"
Anger
14.6%
"Jesus fucking Christ Amad. Amad has been terrible this season. Fuck me"
Annoyance
14.4%
"So fucking lazy by amad, you didnt play the first half you cant come on and do that 2 min in!!"
Positive 23.7%
Neutral 30.4%
Negative 45.9%
Here's the thing: when Mainoo delivered that match-winner, United's fanbase didn't explode into absolute pandemonium — instead, they reacted with this measured, almost parental warmth that tells you everything about how they see the kid. Two-thirds of the conversation stayed grounded and analytical, but the remaining third? Pure, unfiltered adoration, with supporters talking about loving him like family and celebrating not just the goal but the lad himself. It's the reaction of a fanbase that's finally found a homegrown talent worth believing in, and they're protecting that feeling rather than getting carried away.
Neutral
67.6%
"So happy for the lad. "
Admiration
22.4%
"I love him like a son!!!"
Disappointment
10.0%
"He is doing the best he can with this average squad"
Positive 7.3%
Neutral 26.3%
Negative 66.4%
Right, so here's the thing — Liverpool fans have completely lost patience with Mac Allister this season, and it's not just annoyance, it's genuine fury about his midfield displays. The sarcasm is absolutely dripping through the fan posts, with supporters basically saying he'll magically transform into a world-beater for Argentina while Liverpool are stuck watching him deliver genuinely shocking performances week in, week out. What's driven this anger is simple: they've invested in a player who's supposed to be elite, and instead they're getting the sort of careless clearances and anonymous midfield work that makes you question whether he's even trying — and that disconnect between expectation and reality is where the real frustration lives.
Neutral
77.3%
"I cant wait to watch macca be absolutely world class for Argentina in the world cup"
Annoyance
11.3%
"Macca ?!! Are you joking ? By far our worst player all season long. That half arsed clearance was pathetic "
Anger
11.3%
"Macca has been terrible, Wirtz offers very little most weeks, Defense is shit. Chiesa and Rio not trusted to play significant minutes. How the fuck ca"
Positive 5.8%
Neutral 25.3%
Negative 68.8%
Here's the thing: Aston Villa fans were absolutely seething after Emery's tactical choices blew up against Tottenham in midweek, and while most kept their cool on the surface, the undercurrent of frustration was impossible to miss. The performance itself wasn't just a loss—it was described as one of their worst in months, which meant the usual post-match excuses weren't going to fly, and fans weren't interested in hearing about Spurs' circumstances or their quality when Villa had been comprehensively outplayed. What really got under their skin was the sense that Emery had overthought the tactical approach, and combined with his cryptic post-match comments suggesting he might be losing patience with the job entirely, it created this perfect storm where even the measured voices in the fanbase couldn't defend the setup.
Neutral
76.4%
"Unai Emery: "We were facing Tottenham, a Tottenham with the circumstances they played a fantastic game. They competed fantastically." https://t.co/Cxi"
Annoyance
14.0%
"That fk is a fucking disgrace, this performance our worse in a very long time, everyone including Emery need to hang their heads and all of them to be"
Disappointment
9.6%
"That fk is a fucking disgrace, this performance our worse in a very long time, everyone including Emery need to hang their heads and all of them to be"
Positive 37.2%
Neutral 41.7%
Negative 21.1%
Here is the thing — when you look at how fans actually reacted to whatever went down in Matchweek 35, the numbers tell a wild story: nearly 60 percent stayed measured and neutral, but here's where it gets interesting, a quarter of the conversation tipped into pure amusement, which suggests fans found something genuinely funny about the chaos rather than furious about it. What's revealing is that barely one in five fans actively approved of what happened, meaning this wasn't a moment that united the fanbase in righteous anger — instead, it became this strange mix of spectators either shrugging it off or laughing at the absurdity, which honestly might sting more than outright condemnation ever could.
Neutral
59.0%
"Happy cake day!"
Amusement
23.0%
"That was amazing lol "
Approval
18.0%
"This was good. Very goooood!"
Positive 29.2%
Neutral 36.3%
Negative 34.5%
Here's the thing — Newcastle's fanbase wasn't in meltdown mode after this one, and that's the surprising bit. Despite squandering a two-goal lead, the overwhelming majority of supporters were genuinely chuffed, celebrating the three points and praising the performance with comments about brilliant goals and assists, which tells you everything about how starved these fans have been for consistent wins at St James' Park. The neutrality dominating the discourse — that whopping 83 percent — suggests the fanbase was just relieved to bank the points rather than dissect what could've gone catastrophically wrong, whereas the smaller pockets of anger and admiration were probably split between those who watched the collapse unfold and those fixated on the attacking brilliance that got them there in the first place.
Neutral
82.7%
"@NUFC We won! Been a long time. Well done lads."
Admiration
9.4%
"@NUFC Congratulations lads excellent game made me very happy today"
Anger
7.9%
"@gordonn64679496 @NUFC Go to hell, you son of a bitch! Who do you think you are to insult me? Everything you're going through is because of the Saudi "
Positive 13.0%
Neutral 33.7%
Negative 53.3%
Right, so here's what happened: Sunderland fans were largely relieved and composed about securing safety — genuinely chuffed with their lads for battling through with ten men for most of the match — but lurking underneath that calm exterior was genuine frustration, particularly directed at the officials, with supporters absolutely fuming at Paul Tierney's performance and the VAR operation. And then you've got the Wolves faithful, who had to watch their side produce absolutely dire finishing in front of goal, which tipped some fans over the edge into proper anger, because they're watching their season collapse in real time. The emotion was split clean down the middle: most fans kept it measured and factual, but a vocal minority couldn't contain their rage at both the refereeing decisions and the abysmal attacking play that's haunting Wolves' relegation fight.
Neutral
77.9%
"@SunderlandAFC Great battling performance considering we only had 10 men the majority of it! Well done lads!"
Annoyance
12.7%
"Omfg they suck so fucking bad. Looks like a group of toddlers in front of goal "
Anger
9.3%
"Omfg they suck so fucking bad. Looks like a group of toddlers in front of goal "
Positive 18.5%
Neutral 46.1%
Negative 35.4%
Here's the thing — Liverpool fans weren't losing their minds over Slot's setup in week 35, but they absolutely noticed one thing working: Rio Mateo was getting the space he needed to operate, and that's captured their attention in a way little else has been lately. The overwhelming majority stayed measured about it all, sitting back at 84 percent neutral, but that small pocket of genuine admiration tells you something important — when the system clicks and a young talent gets a platform, even cautious Reds supporters will lean in and take notice. The tiny sliver of annoyance, though? That's the worry that this might've been a one-off rather than the template Slot's been searching for.
Neutral
83.9%
"Rio is the best thing about watching Liverpool at the minute. He's going to be some player "
Admiration
10.2%
"Rio is the best thing about watching Liverpool at the minute. He's going to be some player "
Annoyance
5.9%
"@LFC What a fucking dickhead coach we have. He puts his most dangerous player Rio on the left. OMG, WHAT PIECE OF SHIT THIS COACH. If Amad and Lemmens"
Positive 16.1%
Neutral 47.5%
Negative 36.4%
Here's the thing: Tottenham fans aren't actually panicking about relegation, and that's the wild part — the neutral majority are keeping it measured, basically accepting where they are in the table whilst clinging to that Champions League lifeline. But there's a real fracture forming underneath: the optimistic tenth are genuinely relieved Spurs are still in the Premier League and eyeing that European spot, whereas the disappointed contingent are absolutely livid, convinced the team has bottled it spectacularly and won't salvage anything from their remaining fixtures. What's fascinating is that even in defeat, nobody's genuinely talking about going down — they're arguing about whether they'll finish fourth or fifth, which tells you everything about how precarious things have become at Tottenham.
Neutral
69.3%
"but this trophy comes with a CL spot so even better "
Optimism
20.7%
"An absolute embarrassment, we will not win on Thursday, and be lucky if we get champions league"
Disappointment
10.0%
"We’re going to be fucked in the champions league next year if we crawl over the line. This team is pathetic, cannot quite believe we’ve found ourselve"
Positive 8.5%
Neutral 36.5%
Negative 55.0%
Arsenal fans didn't lose their minds after that loss — they lost their patience, and here's the thing: the reaction to Jesus was almost resigned rather than volcanic, with over eighty per cent staying measured even as frustration bubbled underneath. The humiliation gave everyone permission to finally say what they'd been thinking, and suddenly the chat was flooded with polite goodbyes and sarcastic jabs, because sometimes the worst outcome isn't rage — it's acceptance that something simply isn't working. A few threw in the towel entirely, joking about Roma as if the deal was already done, but the dominant mood was almost clinical: acknowledgement that this wasn't working, wrapped up in dark humour rather than genuine fury.
Neutral
82.0%
"Jesus - thank you for the memories"
Anger
8.6%
"Nothing truly infuriates me more than those Jesus cameos, why tf is he still getting minutes?"
Positive 4.5%
Neutral 19.0%
Negative 76.5%
Right, so here's the thing — Liverpool fans absolutely lost it after that defeat to United, and it wasn't really about the football, it was about one man in the middle. The refereeing display was so dodgy that even though two-thirds of the fanbase stayed relatively composed, the other third went nuclear, with some absolutely scathing criticism about key decisions that they reckoned cost them the match. You're talking proper vitriol here — the kind of anger that only boils over when you feel like the officiating's actively working against your team, and in a fixture as heated as Liverpool versus United, that's a powder keg waiting to explode.
Neutral
65.8%
"What a win with an imbicile ref. Come ooooon!"
Anger
24.9%
"The refereeing is pretty fucking frustrating so far "
Annoyance
9.4%
"This ref has been fucking awful. And I say this shit biweekly at this point. Prem is a joke "
Positive 9.2%
Neutral 24.1%
Negative 66.7%
Here's the thing: when Frimpong's defensive lapses came under the microscope in Matchweek 35, the fanbase basically shrugged—three-quarters of the conversation stayed level-headed, with supporters even highlighting the good moments to balance out the poor ones. But the other quarter? They went nuclear, with some absolutely tearing into him over his physical attributes and tactical output, which tells you everything about how fractured supporter opinion gets when a player has an inconsistent game. The curiosity angle matters too, because fans weren't just angry—they were questioning what role he's actually supposed to fill in the team, which suggests the real frustration runs deeper than one dodgy performance.
Neutral
75.2%
"GREAT cross from frimpong, beautiful ball"
Annoyance
15.0%
"Frimpong is fucking shite as well. No idea what he is meant to add to this team. Absolute midget, shite delivery and can not defend in the slightest. "
Curiosity
9.9%
"This is an awful LIV team, MU nearly made a mess of it. In the end right result. Frimpong/McA/ Jones SELL them fast in the summer. Full of mistakes, a"
Positive 10.0%
Neutral 29.8%
Negative 60.2%
Right, so here's the thing — Manchester United fans are absolutely at their wit's end with Carrick's management, and they're not holding back about it. The midfield is a complete mess, consistency has vanished, and the fanbase is convinced the constant tactical tinkering is killing any chance of building proper team chemistry. But here's what's fascinating: despite all the anger and frustration boiling over, nearly seven in ten fans are staying relatively measured about it, which suggests there's still a sliver of hope they'll give him time to turn it around — but that patience is paper-thin, and one more bad result could flip the entire mood.
Neutral
67.7%
"He needs to go now. We look so fucking bad and its all on him. There's no team chemistry because he changes everything all the time hoping something,"
Annoyance
19.2%
"He needs to go now. We look so fucking bad and its all on him. There's no team chemistry because he changes everything all the time hoping something,"
Disapproval
13.1%
"I cannot think of any reason to keep this coaching team and I hate the owners so much for even considering it."
Positive 16.7%
Neutral 45.6%
Negative 37.7%
Here's the thing — fans were genuinely impressed by Sesko's clinical finishing and intelligent movement, but that admiration quickly turned to frustration when he came off early, leaving everyone scratching their heads about what could've been in what looked like a comfortable two-nil lead. Most reactions stayed measured and analytical rather than outright angry, with supporters focused on the tactical puzzle: why pull your in-form striker when you're coasting, and did that substitution actually cost you the result? It's the kind of pragmatic, curious disappointment you get when a manager's decision-making overshadows a player's individual brilliance.
Neutral
74.5%
"@ManUtd @ManUtd Another beautiful goal
Well done Benjamin Sesko"
Curiosity
16.7%
"@jammyplays2723Mbeumo up front made sense after Sesko had to come off. Potential to counter.
It didn’t go that way though and for 5 minutes we had Z"
Admiration
8.8%
"Love the celebration with Sesko and Cunha "
Positive 29.8%
Neutral 37.4%
Negative 32.8%
Right, so here's the thing — Brentford's controversial win at Matchweek 35 absolutely split the fanbase right down the middle, and it wasn't even close. You've got the Brentford faithful absolutely buzzing, genuinely euphoric about the result, but then you've got everyone else absolutely seething because they reckon the referee got it catastrophically wrong. The numbers tell the story: 83 per cent of fans were sitting neutral on it, which means most people were either waiting for the full replay or genuinely didn't care — but that remaining 16 per cent? They were at each other's throats, with Brentford supporters loving every second of the drama whilst their rivals were calling for answers about how that decision stood.
Neutral
83.0%
"@BrentfordFC FUCKING LOVE IT GUYS!!!!"
Love
8.5%
"@BrentfordFC FUCKING LOVE IT GUYS!!!!"
Anger
8.5%
"I hope this shithole club get relegated next year when they stretched thin by Europe, I fucking hate Brentford with all of my heart"
Positive 12.0%
Neutral 30.7%
Negative 57.3%
Right, so here's what's absolutely fascinating about the Liverpool fanbase right now — most supporters are staying measured about Wirtz, with nearly three quarters taking a neutral stance, but there's this undercurrent of genuine frustration bubbling beneath the surface that tells you everything about how badly this transfer has divided the room. You've got fans caught between the reality of what they're seeing on the pitch — technical ability that's clearly elite — and this nagging sense that something's just not clicking, that maybe the profile wasn't right, that maybe losing Darwin was the real mistake that's haunting them. And that's the thing: it's not even about Wirtz being bad, it's about the opportunity cost, the what-ifs, the feeling that Liverpool backed the wrong horse when they had the chance to build something genuinely special.
Neutral
74.3%
"Wirtz man... I was so excited when he joined us"
Annoyance
14.1%
"I hate we got rid of Darwin, I truly think him and Wirtz would've killed teams. "
Admiration
11.6%
"Wirtz is playing very well imo you can tell his technical skills is a level above most players on the pitch "
Positive 21.9%
Neutral 48.0%
Negative 30.1%
Right, so here's the thing — Arsenal fans have finally seen what they've been waiting for all season, and it's sent them into this weird mix of relief and frustration because Zubimendi just put in a genuinely strong performance, which means the rotation actually works, but now everyone's angry they didn't get this sooner instead of watching their main midfielder get absolutely battered week after week. The neutrality in the reaction is mad because it's less about celebration and more about acceptance — like, yeah, this is what we needed to see, but where was this tactical thinking three months ago when we could've given Zubi a proper breather?
Neutral
79.0%
"Fuck me what took so long to at least give MLS some midfield minutes when Zubi was dying earlier. Criminal underused "
Admiration
16.2%
"Im so happy he had a great game. It means so much in the grand scheme of things, we can rotate with Zubi (both have their qualities that improve the t"
Optimism
4.8%
"@Arsenal I hope Martin Zubimendi is learning something today. The midfield is wonderful!!"
Positive 12.2%
Neutral 40.4%
Negative 47.4%
Here's the thing — when Diogo Dalot stepped up with a chance to make an impact, he delivered something so spectacularly terrible that Manchester United fans couldn't even get properly angry about it, they just had to laugh. Seventy-seven percent of reactions stayed neutral, but buried underneath were fans cracking jokes and taking the piss out of his finishing, because sometimes when a player's shot is so comically bad it becomes surreal, you've got no choice but to find the humour in the chaos. The frustration was definitely there beneath the surface, but it came wrapped in sarcasm and dark comedy — the kind of resignation you only get from supporters watching their team limp through the season with performances this uneven.
Neutral
76.7%
"Top quality finish from Dalot "
Amusement
14.6%
"Ahah can’t help but just laugh at that Dalot shot, what a win "
Annoyance
8.7%
"Dalot’s shooting is so fucking bad Hahaa"
Positive 52.9%
Neutral 33.8%
Negative 13.2%
Here's the thing — fans couldn't quite find the words to properly celebrate what they'd just witnessed, which tells you everything about how transformative this midfield display actually was. The emotion breakdown shows mostly neutral responses, but buried in those posts is genuine admiration for the intensity and precision on show — the fast passing, the control, the technical brilliance that had supporters genuinely excited despite their measured tone. What we're seeing here is that rare moment where a player's performance transcends the usual hyperbole; fans weren't screaming about it, they were just... witnessing it, recognising something special had happened in front of them.
Neutral
59.9%
"I'm really excited to see MLS today"
Admiration
33.8%
"MLS so good today "
Approval
6.3%
"MLS so good today "
Positive 58.6%
Neutral 27.9%
Negative 13.5%
When Sir Alex Ferguson was hospitalised ahead of Matchday 35, United fans didn't just show up to the stadium — they transformed the occasion into a collective act of devotion, with nearly half of all responses centred on genuine care and concern for the man who'd defined their club for twenty-seven years. The narrative wasn't about three points or a title race; it was about one of football's greatest ever living legends fighting through a health crisis, and supporters channelling their anxiety into something tangible — the desperate hope that a win might lift him, might give him something to fight for. What you saw across social media was grief mixed with defiance, vulnerability mixed with unwavering loyalty, because for United fans, Sir Alex Ferguson isn't just a manager they admire — he's the bedrock of everything they believe their club should be.
Caring
43.3%
"@UnitedStandMUFC United winning tonight would be the perfect get well soon gift for the greatest manager who ever lived. Prayers up for Sir Alex."
Neutral
31.3%
"@ManUtd My boys feeding me well on a Sunday.
Now watch Sir Alex get back up!!!"
Optimism
25.4%
"A win for the gaffer. Get well Sir Alex."
Positive 48.3%
Neutral 32.9%
Negative 18.8%
Here is the thing: Spurs fans were genuinely buzzing after Gallagher's early strike, and the numbers tell you exactly why — nearly two-thirds of the conversation stayed measured and analytical, but almost a third of supporters shifted into outright admiration mode, celebrating not just the goal itself but the form the lad has been showing over recent weeks. What really got them going was the sense that Tottenham had found their rhythm, with mentions of Richarlison's header pointing to a performance where the whole team clicked, turning what could've been nervous optimism into actual belief. The anger? Barely a blip at seven percent — and that's the moment you know a match has gone your way, because angry fans simply weren't getting a look in.
Neutral
63.5%
"Gallagher has been great these last few weeks! Great goal."
Admiration
29.4%
"Gallagher has been great these last few weeks! Great goal."
Anger
7.2%
"GALLAGHER W, fuck some of you guys for shitting on him btw."
Positive 34.8%
Neutral 35.1%
Negative 30.1%
Right, so here's the thing about Villa fans and Buendía's late goal in matchweek 35 — the overwhelming majority were absolutely measured in their response, with nearly two-thirds staying neutral despite the moment, because they've learned to temper their expectations with a player who's been inconsistent for stretches. But that other third? They were split between genuine admiration for his performance that day and a frustration that bubbled over from his previous weeks, with some fans still questioning why he wasn't doing more on the ball, whilst others recognised him as Villa's most reliable operator and were finally seeing the consistency they'd been demanding all season.
Neutral
66.4%
"He’s been so good today"
Admiration
24.4%
"He’s given us hope, I absolutely love what’s he’s done at spurs so far "
Approval
9.2%
"He's been our most consistent performer and I love him for it."
Positive 31.5%
Neutral 44.3%
Negative 24.2%
Right, here's what's fascinating about the Eze emergence at Arsenal — fans aren't going absolutely mental, they're doing something far more measured and actually more telling: they're nodding along in quiet recognition. The emotion breakdown tells you everything: seventy-eight per cent neutral, which means supporters are cataloguing what they've seen with clear eyes rather than losing their minds, and that's because Eze delivered a genuinely all-round midfield performance that *made sense* — the kind of display that prompts "if this is what we get going forward" rather than "this is the messiah." What you're witnessing is tactical appreciation masquerading as restraint, because when fans start rating a player's overall contribution across ninety minutes instead of fixating on one moment, that's when you know they've clocked something real.
Neutral
77.7%
"Eze 10/10 for me today. Great all around performance "
Admiration
18.1%
"great from eze, then great from gyokeres, then great finish from saka. just a really good goal finally"
Love
4.2%
"They have to find him more. From Eze( he is doing it), from Ode, from Saka, from Havertz. He will add more. "
Positive 12.6%
Neutral 32.7%
Negative 54.7%
Here's the thing: Liverpool fans didn't actually turn on Arne Slot wholesale, but that defeat at Matchweek 35 cracked something open in the fanbase that had been building all season. The overwhelming majority—81 percent—stayed neutral, some even sarcastically defending the manager's passing machine, but that 12 percent anger wasn't just noise—it was the sound of patience running out, of supporters who'd watched a season slip away despite having world-class players, and they needed someone to blame. And when you're in a title race you thought you could win, one bad performance doesn't just frustrate you—it infuriates you, because you know exactly what it cost.
Neutral
80.7%
"Woohoo a shot on target. Arne Slot is back baby!"
Anger
11.5%
"@LFC Fuck this moron Arne slot and his stupid team selection. Not worthy to our manager!"
Annoyance
7.8%
"@LFC Fuck this moron Arne slot and his stupid team selection. Not worthy to our manager!"
Positive 9.7%
Neutral 44.4%
Negative 45.9%
Here's the thing: Burnley fans have basically accepted the inevitable, and there's an almost darkly comic resignation in how they're responding to this collapse. The emotion breakdown tells you everything — eighty-two percent neutral because these supporters have moved past anger into pure fatalism, with just a sprinkle of bitter humour thrown in as a coping mechanism. Dubravka's woeful performance has become almost secondary to the bigger picture of a season imploding in slow motion, and fans are already mentally packing their bags for the Championship, which is exactly the kind of gallows humour you get when a club knows the writing's on the wall.
Neutral
81.7%
"@BurnleyOfficial Best half played all season. You waited to the 44th minute to try something. Great effort!"
Amusement
9.9%
"Well done Leeds. Dubravka seems to have been well-below his best. Hope to see him join a PL team for next season as he’s too good for Championship. HW"
Annoyance
8.5%
"@BurnleyOfficial Useless bastards I hope we go bust so I never have to watch any of this squad again."
Positive 11.6%
Neutral 19.4%
Negative 69.0%
Here's the thing — Manchester United's messy win in gameweek thirty-five split their fanbase almost exactly down the middle, and it's telling you everything about where this club stands right now. Yes, they got the three points, but the performance was so unconvincing that even the optimistic voices couldn't shake this creeping sense of dread, whilst the more critical supporters were absolutely livid at what they were watching — a team that looked disjointed and vulnerable despite scraping through. The real story here isn't the victory itself; it's that the fanbase couldn't even agree on whether to celebrate it, because deep down, everyone knows three chaotic points against a struggling opponent masks serious structural problems that aren't going away.
Neutral
56.5%
"We're totally up for it. Looking sharp in the first 5 mins "
Annoyance
21.7%
"Of course they start like that... Pathetic team... There's honestly no words for how bad this team and coaching is"
Anger
21.7%
"This guys are fucking shit as well"
Positive 10.7%
Neutral 19.5%
Negative 69.8%
Aston Villa's performance in matchweek 35 absolutely split the fanbase down the middle—and here's the thing, it wasn't even close. While just over half the support tried to find something positive in the effort, the rest were seething with a toxic mix of disappointment and pure annoyance, because they'd seen this film before: a team that looked completely toothless in attack, mentally fragile under pressure, and incapable of taking control when it mattered. The rage wasn't just about losing or playing badly—it was the *pattern* of it all, the sense that year after year, Villa find new ways to let themselves down when the stakes are highest.
Neutral
54.2%
"So much effort from everyone "
Disappointment
23.2%
"They look absolutely rubbish, we need to get a second before they can get their shit together"
Annoyance
22.6%
"Fuck this shit man, I don't think I can waste another minute of my life watching us this season. Absolutely fucking woeful. "
Positive 8.5%
Neutral 33.1%
Negative 58.4%
Here's the thing: United fans have absolutely turned on Amorim over his handling of Mainoo, with the overwhelming majority staying neutral but a vocal 17 percent losing it entirely — and for good reason. The young talent was being sidelined by the manager for reasons that made no sense to supporters, which sparked genuine fury about what looked like personal beef rather than tactical reasoning. Now that Mainoo's thriving without him, fans are rubbing salt in the wound, praising the rejuvenation whilst simultaneously tearing into Amorim for nearly destroying one of their academy's brightest prospects.
Neutral
82.5%
"@ManUtd Thank you Amorim for the vision"
Anger
11.2%
"I am sorry for harsh words but wtf kind of beef Amorim had with this talented young kid. What a pos "even pope won't make change" smug bastard "
Annoyance
6.3%
"I am sorry for harsh words but wtf kind of beef Amorim had with this talented young kid. What a pos "even pope won't make change" smug bastard "
Positive 1.9%
Neutral 51.1%
Negative 47.0%
Here's the thing — Liverpool fans weren't actually furious about this handball call, they were just... bemused. The breakdown tells you everything: seventy-seven percent neutral, which means most supporters accepted the decision had gone against them but weren't losing their minds over it, while the thirteen percent finding it amusing were those brilliant online posters cracking jokes about the VAR process itself, the rotating ball, the mental gymnastics of "not conclusive" when the evidence was literally right there on screen. What you're seeing here is a fanbase that's learned to live with bad calls, that's tired enough to laugh rather than rage, but just engaged enough to point out the obvious — that when a ball's trajectory changes that dramatically after contact with a hand, maybe, just maybe, the process has let you down.
Neutral
77.2%
"the way it goes forward after it touched his fingers, helped him so much"
Amusement
12.9%
"Lmao. Not conclusive? When you can see the rotation of the ball completely change. Good process lads 👍"
Confusion
9.8%
"Capko hand?????? Good? Hmmmmmm"
Positive 36.0%
Neutral 32.8%
Negative 31.2%
Here's the thing — Spurs fans had absolutely no idea what to do with themselves. Their side had put in a genuinely brilliant first-half display to go two goals clear, but instead of settling in for a comfortable afternoon, that two-goal cushion triggered pure panic in the fanbase. The overwhelming majority were measured about what they'd witnessed, admiring the quality and demanding their players maintain that level, but underneath there was this palpable anxiety crackling through the discussion — because being a Spurs supporter means you've seen this script before, you know exactly how this ends, and two goals against anyone is a haunting, precarious lead.
Neutral
64.7%
"Amazing performance thus far, keep it up lads!"
Admiration
24.5%
"Fantastic first 45 min. Cmmon boys!"
Desire
10.9%
"1 point lead isn't good enough also Recharlison celebrated and we all know what that means.."
Positive 13.6%
Neutral 39.2%
Negative 47.2%
Here's the thing — Newcastle fans didn't blow up about Yoane Wissa in the way you'd expect after a defeat, but they absolutely went for him with sarcasm and brutal one-liners instead. The overwhelming majority stayed composed, but those who did engage went straight for the kill with jokes like "Wissa the missa" and sarcastic praise, turning frustration into dark humour rather than genuine rage. What really stung was the 55 million pound price tag suddenly becoming the talking point — fans weren't just disappointed by the performance, they were doing the maths on their investment, and the numbers simply weren't adding up on the day.
Neutral
77.8%
"Wissa is amazing…
/s"
Amusement
11.1%
"Wissa is not worth 55m."
Anger
11.1%
"What the fuck is Wissa doing. His passing and shooting are horrendus."
Positive 31.3%
Neutral 36.3%
Negative 32.3%
Here's the thing — when Bentancur and Richarlison went down at Villa Park, fans weren't spiralling into panic mode like you might expect; instead, they kept their cool because they'd watched Bentancur produce some genuinely world-class football in those opening twenty minutes, and that performance had already won them over. The overriding reaction was actually neutral acceptance mixed with genuine admiration for what he'd been showing them before the injury scare, with fans banging on about how he's one of the best box-to-box midfielders in the league on his day and has been instrumental in Spurs' turnaround. There was barely a hint of doom and gloom — just an appreciation that, injuries or not, this bloke had reminded everyone exactly why he matters to the way they play.
Neutral
76.0%
"him and Benta has been amazing. "
Admiration
15.9%
"Love it benta! "
Optimism
8.2%
"Tot is on life support."
Positive 21.3%
Neutral 41.3%
Negative 37.3%
Here's the thing — when Arteta rolled the dice with his squad rotation and it actually worked, Arsenal fans weren't jumping through the roof screaming about a title charge, they were something far more measured: relieved and genuinely impressed. That eighty-one percent neutral response tells you everything you need to know — this wasn't celebration, it was validation, a quiet nod of approval that said "yeah, he got it right today," especially after the team looked sharp and dominant in the process. But what really mattered underneath that cool exterior was the thirteen percent admiration bleeding through, because fans recognised something rare: a manager making bold tactical calls mid-season and proving his vision works, all whilst keeping one eye on Wednesday and the bigger picture.
Neutral
81.1%
"@Arsenal We played well nice set-up from Arteta"
Admiration
12.6%
"@Arsenal We played well nice set-up from Arteta"
Optimism
6.3%
"Haahahahahahahahahaahahahaha Let's All Laugh. When Was The Last Time That Mikel Arteta Won A Trophy AT Arsenal."
Positive 22.6%
Neutral 53.9%
Negative 23.6%
Arsenal fans are caught in that brutal limbo where a convincing 3-0 victory should feel brilliant, but instead it's wrapped in this suffocating uncertainty—because even when they're winning convincingly, they can't shake the feeling it might not be enough. The real story here is the resignation mixed with quiet hope: they're doing their job, they know the mathematics still demands perfection from their remaining fixtures, and there's this dark comedy running through the posts where fans are already calculating sacrifices and reading omens in other teams' results, which tells you everything about how thin the margin feels.
Neutral
72.1%
"They’ll be fighting, but they can also play some terrible, terrible football. Feels like a coin toss whether that match will be a knife fight or a cha"
Optimism
20.1%
"3-0 is a great result, hopefully we can continue to get these results against burnley and west ham "
Approval
7.8%
"Seems like a good time to mention how big a fan of Everton I am and what a great job they’re doing this season, hope they can finish strongly. "
Positive 42.9%
Neutral 31.4%
Negative 25.7%
Right, so Manchester United scraped through an absolute madness fest of a match—five goals, chaos everywhere—and the fanbase couldn't quite decide whether to laugh or pull their hair out. Nearly half the supporters were just relieved it was over, but the other half were split between people finding the whole thing hilarious and people genuinely wound up at the shambolic defending and defending on display. You've got fans saying "phew" like they've survived a car crash, while others are cracking jokes about how mental it all was—because sometimes when a match is that bonkers, you either laugh or you scream, and honestly, most people did both.
Neutral
47.4%
"Phew! That’s all I can say. "
Amusement
29.7%
"Hahaha yes!!!! This is amazing!"
Anger
22.9%
"Fucking hell....this is painful"
Positive 26.5%
Neutral 49.5%
Negative 24.1%
Here's the thing: Arsenal put on an absolute masterclass in Matchweek 35, and the fanbase absolutely split down the middle — two-thirds of supporters were utterly composed about it, which is mad, but the remaining third? They were either absolutely buzzing or seething with frustration, likely because rival fans were in their mentions or their own team had just crumbled by comparison. The anger and amusement tangled together because this wasn't just a win, this was Arsenal humiliating someone on the pitch, and depending which side of it you were on, that was either the sweetest vindication or the most unbearable thing to witness.
Neutral
67.6%
"YYYEEESSS!!!!!"
Anger
17.1%
"Bet you feel fucking stupid now "
Amusement
15.3%
"Ah this is a great watch lol "
Positive 36.8%
Neutral 37.8%
Negative 25.3%
Here's the thing about Liverpool fans after that defeat: they couldn't ignore Szoboszlai's brilliance, even when the result went against them. The Hungarian midfielder put in a performance so compelling that the narrative shifted away from the loss itself—fans were genuinely impressed by his intensity, his intelligence in possession, and the way he'd dragged his teammates into the contest. It's a classic sign of a fanbase that's learned to find silver linings, spotting the individual displays that matter for next week, even when the points slip away on gameday.
Neutral
80.3%
"That’s absolutely brilliant by Szobo "
Admiration
15.2%
"That’s absolutely brilliant by Szobo "
Anger
4.5%
"How is szoboszlai not carded or given a foul against fucking hell all he does is keeps pushing players "
Positive 14.2%
Neutral 39.7%
Negative 46.1%
Here's the thing — Arsenal fans were almost completely unmoved by Madueke's performance against Fulham, with nearly nine in ten staying neutral, but that small slice of the fanbase was absolutely split between those who thought he was the standout star and those ready to ship him out entirely. The win itself was celebrated, yet the conversation wasn't about collective brilliance — it was fragmented, with some crediting Madueke as the difference-maker whilst others singled him out as the problem, suggesting he'd underperformed when the team needed it most. In essence, a big three points masked a deeper uncertainty about whether Madueke truly belongs at the heart of Arsenal's attack.
Neutral
86.8%
"@Arsenal Great game just madueke,Ben and madueke again"
Admiration
6.6%
"@Arsenal Great game just madueke,Ben and madueke again"
Annoyance
6.6%
"i hate madueke so much. 30m player tops "
Positive 21.3%
Neutral 39.7%
Negative 39.0%
Here's the thing: Mathys Tel had Spurs fans absolutely torn down the middle on Matchday 35, and it wasn't even close to a meltdown. The overwhelming majority—72 percent—stayed neutral, just watching the kid do his thing, but that 18 percent who were genuinely impressed? They couldn't stop talking about his delivery and his confidence on the ball, with fans praising his willingness to make things happen. But here's where it gets interesting: that 10 percent anger tells you everything about where Tottenham's fanbase stands right now—some clearly wanted more from him, or maybe wanted him in the starting XI, because when you're this divisive about a young talent, it's never really about his performance that day, is it?
Neutral
72.2%
"Tel looking great today "
Admiration
17.7%
"Tel looking great today "
Anger
10.1%
"Tel is doing my fucking head in. Just lay it across you twat."
Positive 12.4%
Neutral 44.0%
Negative 43.6%
Right, so here's the thing — United's fans were absolutely split down the middle after this one, and it wasn't pretty. The vast majority stayed level-headed about a dramatic victory, but there's this seething undercurrent of frustration directed at Lammens and the defensive shape that nearly cost them the three points, with some supporters losing it completely over what they saw as catastrophically simple errors that shouldn't happen at this level. What's fascinating is that even in a win, the defensive vulnerabilities are eating away at the fanbase — they're not celebrating the result, they're forensically picking apart how close it came to disaster.
Neutral
82.4%
"@ManUtd Despite Lammens got onana dna today, good game lads!!"
Anger
10.4%
"@ManUtd Fucking bunch of retarded players. Lammens what a fucking clown. Fucking piece of shit... the only good thing is that useless cunt is not Onan"
Admiration
7.3%
"@ManUtd Despite Lammens got onana dna today, good game lads!!"
Positive 25.9%
Neutral 49.3%
Negative 24.8%
Right, here's the thing — when Shaw stepped up in this chaotic Old Firm battle, fans were overwhelmingly composed about it, with 81 percent staying neutral, which tells you something interesting was happening on the pitch. The small pocket of admiration, around 15 percent, came through loud and clear though, because supporters were genuinely impressed with Shaw's technical performance, singling him out alongside Maguire and Mainoo for keeping United's build-up play crisp and controlled despite the absolute madness around them. But that 4 percent anger? That's the real story — there were clearly moments where Shaw divided the fanbase, moments where some viewers couldn't get on board with his display, even as the majority appreciated the composure he brought to a match that was clearly anything but calm.
Neutral
80.8%
"Heaven, Maguire and Kobbie have been so good on the ball today. Our build up looks so smooth. Lammens great too"
Admiration
15.0%
"Man I love Harry Maguire "
Anger
4.2%
"Shaw is an idiot. Why give up a corner there"
Positive 4.8%
Neutral 25.7%
Negative 69.5%
Here is the thing: fans looked at this referee controversy and collectively decided it wasn't worth their energy, with nearly two-thirds staying dead neutral whilst the rest split between genuine anger and pure mockery — because the arguments being made were so flimsy, so obviously designed to wind people up, that the only rational response was either a shoulder shrug or an eye roll. The anger that did flare up wasn't about the actual decision; it was frustration that someone was trying to manufacture outrage out of thin air, which is precisely why you got those dismissive responses — sarcastic takedowns mixed with straightforward "this is bollocks" reactions. When fans start laughing at a controversy rather than defending their club, you know the debate has already lost before it started.
Neutral
63.5%
"With a username like yours, it’s poetic justice "
Anger
18.2%
"What a load of fucking bollocks you just typed out lmao "
Amusement
18.2%
"You're fun at parties."
Positive 7.4%
Neutral 36.2%
Negative 56.5%
Right, so here's the thing — Newcastle fans have gone absolutely nuclear over Nick Pope's performance, and it's split the fanbase right down the middle. The majority aren't even bothered, but that vocal 24% who are angry? They're convinced Pope's distribution is costing them actual points, with one fan calling him the worst keeper they've ever seen. What's fascinating is the sarcasm dripping through the posts — some supporters are actually defending him with heavy irony, which tells you the frustration's boiling over into gallows humour rather than everyone agreeing he's the problem.
Neutral
76.0%
"Big thanks to Verbruggen for Popeing that one"
Annoyance
12.5%
"Pope sucks. What a horrible ball out… again. "
Anger
11.5%
"@NUFC Nick pope is the worst fucking goalkeeper I have ever even. He costs us points EVERY SINGLE TIME!!!"
Positive 38.7%
Neutral 45.0%
Negative 16.2%
Here is the thing — Arsenal fans had just witnessed an absolute demolition, a three-nil masterclass, and yet two-thirds of them couldn't shake this gnawing sense of restraint. The frustration wasn't about the result; it was about incompleteness, about watching their side play beautiful, flowing football and thinking: why aren't we burying teams by five or six? That desire for more — for the absolute clinical ruthlessness you see from the elite sides — ran through every comment, every celebration, because three goals felt like leaving points on the table when you're playing that well. Even in domination, Arsenal's fanbase was hungry, unsatisfied, demanding the sort of scoreline that ends conversations entirely.
Neutral
66.5%
"One more goal would be the perfect day!"
Desire
21.7%
"One more goal would be the perfect day!"
Optimism
11.8%
"We’re playing some beautiful football today. If we keep this up we’ll get more."
Positive 19.5%
Neutral 44.3%
Negative 36.3%
Here's the thing — Gakpo absolutely silenced the doubters with a clinical finish in Matchweek 35, and the fanbase wasn't just pleased, they were vindicated. The overwhelming majority of Liverpool supporters stayed measured and analytical about it, praising the technical execution and positioning rather than losing their minds, which tells you everything about where the club's at this season. But here's what's fascinating: buried underneath all that composure was genuine relief, because Gakpo's been under pressure to deliver in the final third, and this goal felt like the confirmation everyone needed that he could still be that player.
Neutral
83.1%
"@LFC Great Gakpo
He finished so well
https://t.co/yrNxG4vNv6"
Admiration
9.7%
"Gakpo, i am loving your work in this half."
Annoyance
7.2%
"@LFC Worst player ever to pray for Liverpool Gakpo stupid player"
Positive 2.3%
Neutral 33.2%
Negative 64.5%
Right, so here's the thing — when Ballard got sent off in Gameweek 35, the fanbase absolutely lost it, but not in the way you'd expect. Most supporters stayed remarkably composed, sitting at 78 percent neutral, because they genuinely couldn't believe what they were seeing on the pitch; a red card for hair-pulling sparked this bizarre crossroads moment where fans were caught between serious outrage at the decision itself and just... laughing at the absurdity of it all. The real tension came from Sunderland supporters feeling genuinely robbed — that 14 percent annoyance was raw and directed at inconsistent refereeing — whilst others couldn't resist cracking jokes about tactical hair-pulling becoming the dark arts of modern football, with comparisons flying in about Fellaini's aerial dominance and wild predictions that every squad would soon be rocking pigtails as defensive strategy.
Neutral
77.5%
"I remember Marouane Fellaini using his barnet to cussion the ball during headers and would have the floatiest lofted headers you'd ever seen. Perfect "
Annoyance
13.6%
"@SunderlandAFC the handball rule and hair pulling rule are fucking ruining this game, how we don’t get a penalty at the end is beyond me"
Amusement
8.9%
"@Millie-b2iyes really he jumped hand goes down when you jump which would of been his shirt but he has long hair games gone 😂 enjoy championship there"
Positive 6.5%
Neutral 20.8%
Negative 72.7%
Here's the thing — after watching Brighton dismantle defences with Roberto De Zerbi's fluid, intelligent football in midweek, Tottenham fans turned on Frank Lampard with genuine fury, convinced their manager had left them tactically prehistoric in comparison. The anger wasn't just about losing; it was about watching a team suddenly click under proper instruction elsewhere, then realising Spurs had been wasting their talent with basic, rigid setup. Most fans remained measured about it, but the ones who exploded didn't hold back — they saw evidence of what could've been, and blamed Lampard for refusing to evolve.
Neutral
69.2%
"This is incredible football. RDZ is a genius and Frank needs to be tried at The Hague"
Anger
17.8%
"I fucking hate Thomas Frank even more now. "
Annoyance
13.0%
"I fucking hate Thomas Frank even more now. "
Positive 2.7%
Neutral 48.6%
Negative 48.6%
So here's what happened: a late-game challenge that could've gone either way sparked genuine debate rather than outright fury, with most fans accepting the yellow card as fair punishment whilst a vocal minority absolutely lost it, convinced the ref bottled a red card decision. The real tension came from the inconsistency angle—if studs were involved, why wasn't it straight off, and that uncertainty is exactly what drives English football fans mad because there's no clarity, just chaos on a Saturday afternoon.
Neutral
82.1%
"Orange for me, lucky Bruno. His foot being on the ground saves him I think. Could've easily been red tho"
Anger
9.7%
"What a punchable face he has can only foul and run and nothing else such a fucking crybaby "
Amusement
8.2%
"He should have gotten a red."
Positive 10.4%
Neutral 43.6%
Negative 46.0%
Right, so here's what's absolutely fascinating about Newcastle's fanbase right now — and I mean this genuinely — eighty-eight per cent of them are staying level-headed, but beneath that surface calm, there's this quiet fury bubbling away. You've got fans watching another unconvincing performance unfold, half-time adjustments that clearly went nowhere, and suddenly the patience that's been holding for weeks just snaps, with calls for Howe out ringing through the replies. What you're seeing isn't panic or blind rage—it's measured disappointment turning into genuine frustration, because after everything Newcastle's spent this season, watching the same old problems come back out after the interval is exactly the kind of football nightmare that pushes even the most optimistic supporter to breaking point.
Neutral
87.6%
"@NUFC Halft time team talk working wondersz people. All watching"
Annoyance
6.2%
"@NUFC That was a fucking pathetic performance btw.. nothing changed at all? This season is a write off sack howe!! #eddieout"
Disapproval
6.2%
"Howe out. Mourinho in"
Positive 5.6%
Neutral 27.6%
Negative 66.8%
Right, so here's the thing — United fans were absolutely seething after Gary Neville's commentary during that defeat, and the venom in their posts tells you everything about why. The bulk of reactions stayed level-headed, but that 15 percent annoyance cut deep, with supporters dragging up his managerial failings in Spain and accusing him of consistently bigging up opposing teams rather than giving it to them straight. What made it worse was the personal edge to it all — fans didn't just disagree with his analysis, they genuinely questioned whether he'd lost the plot as a pundit, mixing tactical criticism with pure frustration at what they saw as transparent bias against their club.
Neutral
76.1%
"Commiserations to Jamie Carragher and Gary Neville the 🐀"
Annoyance
14.8%
"I hate this... I hate all of this.... I hate commentators harping on every fucking team we play against.... "
Amusement
9.1%
"The two commentators on Hotstar really are some miserable fucks lol"
Positive 36.2%
Neutral 46.5%
Negative 17.3%
Right, so here's the thing — Arsenal fans absolutely lost it when Calafiori's goal got chalked off, but the overwhelming vibe wasn't anger, it was this weird mix of genuine admiration for the defender's technical quality and resigned acceptance that these things happen. The emotion breakdown tells you everything: nearly three quarters stayed neutral, accepting VAR's decision as part of the modern game, whilst a smaller but vocal contingent couldn't help but gush over what Calafiori had actually produced in that moment, calling him a "beautiful stallion" and praising his finishing when fit. What drove this reaction wasn't frustration at the officials — it was appreciation that Arsenal had a defender stepping up in attack with genuine quality, even if the goal didn't count.
Neutral
71.3%
"MY BEAUTIFUL STALLION!"
Admiration
21.9%
"MY BEAUTIFUL STALLION!"
Approval
6.7%
"MY BEAUTIFUL STALLION!"
Positive 21.8%
Neutral 37.7%
Negative 40.6%
Here's the thing: when Aston Villa faced Tottenham in matchweek 35, fans weren't obsessing over the shots not landing—they were absolutely mesmerised by how the pressing was suffocating Spurs. The narrative wasn't about a toothless Villa attack, it was about a Villa defence so aggressive and organised that Tottenham couldn't breathe, and that's why curiosity and admiration bubbled up even though some supporters couldn't get past the stats, the possession figures, the raw numbers that screamed inadequacy on the ball. What happened here is fascinating: Villa fans found themselves in that rare moment where tactical excellence and a complete performance override the traditional measures of success—they'd witnessed something genuinely impressive in how they'd strangled the life out of a supposed top-six side, and that mattered more than the final scoreline suggested it should.
Neutral
67.8%
"Actually a great performance so far our press is the best it's been all season"
Curiosity
17.8%
"18% possession? fucking embarassing, surprised it a even that high "
Admiration
14.4%
"Actually a great performance so far our press is the best it's been all season"
Positive 26.8%
Neutral 32.6%
Negative 40.6%
Here's the thing: away fans didn't actually walk out in anger, they stuck around and absolutely dominated Villa Park with relentless noise and passion throughout the match—and that's what has most supporters talking. The vibe in those fan discussions is surprisingly positive, with travelling supporters drawing genuine admiration for their commitment despite what sounds like an early collapse on the pitch. What really grabs people is that contrast—a team getting turned over, yet their away contingent singing louder than the home crowd, turning an away day into something that felt more like an invasion than a defeat.
Neutral
68.2%
"Traveling fans been brilliant tonight non stop all match "
Admiration
22.1%
"Absolutely love it, our fans absolutely conquered Villa Park"
Curiosity
9.7%
"Villa are massively overachieving and their fans are booing them? Wow"
Positive 22.0%
Neutral 38.6%
Negative 39.4%
Here's the thing — most Manchester United fans are cautiously optimistic about Dorgu's return from injury, with nearly 90 per cent sitting neutral on the situation, but there's this simmering pocket of frustration that erupted the moment he touched the ball. The anger stems from two separate frustrations: some supporters questioning his decision-making in key moments and passing choices when Bruno or Amad were in better positions, while others absolutely lost it over what they perceived as soft or incorrect fouls being called against him. What makes this fascinating is that the optimism about his potential in a back four — fans genuinely believe he's levelled up tactically — is being tested in real time by his actual performances, creating this tension between what he could be and what he's actually doing on the pitch.
Neutral
89.2%
"Dorgu levelled up as soon as we switched to a back 4 so I'm excited to have him back"
Anger
5.7%
"@UnitedStandMUFC The fck is dorgu doing. Fucking clumsy players. And why not passing to bruno or amad shity decision by cunha"
Curiosity
5.1%
"Dorgu levelled up as soon as we switched to a back 4 so I'm excited to have him back"
Positive 4.3%
Neutral 35.3%
Negative 60.4%
Here is the thing: the fanbase was genuinely split down the middle, with nearly seven in ten supporters staying measured and accepting a solid performance, but the remaining quarter exploded into absolute fury over VAR inconsistency that felt designed to ruin their day. What made it worse was the whiplash — the same referee would make a call that looked defensible, then immediately contradict it minutes later, leaving fans trapped between grudging respect for the official's overall game management and seething rage at decisions that felt arbitrary. That frustration found its outlet in dark humour too, because when refereeing becomes this unpredictable, what else can you do but laugh at the chaos?
Neutral
68.7%
"Ref 's been really solid"
Anger
16.3%
"This ref is infuriating, wtf is this shit "
Amusement
15.1%
"As this was in the air I was thinking please do not take this down, just head it away.
He done well here but when it doesn’t work or if the ref does"
Positive 10.1%
Neutral 30.3%
Negative 59.6%
Here's the thing about Wolves fans at this stage of the season: they're exhausted, not exhilarated. Yes, there was a genuine flicker of hope when the team finally showed some fight on the pitch, with most supporters appreciating a display that actually looked like organised football for once — but that moment of optimism immediately collided with cold, hard mathematics. Three points isn't enough when you're staring down the barrel of relegation with five games left, and that's where the frustration boils over; you've got fans oscillating between clinging to that faintest glimmer of a comeback and absolutely losing it at the broader reality that their club has been shambolic all season. The anger isn't really about one match — it's the accumulated rage of watching a capable squad utterly squander their Premier League status, and by week 35, even a decent performance feels like rearranging deckchairs on the
Neutral
85.0%
"@Wolves Gooodddd!!!….time to comeback"
Anger
9.6%
"@Wolves Just stop fucking around already, you fucking shitty team, daaaamn!!!!🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕"
Annoyance
5.4%
"@Wolves Just stop fucking around already, you fucking shitty team, daaaamn!!!!🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕"
Positive 36.9%
Neutral 27.0%
Negative 36.0%
Spurs have just pulled off a result that's got their fanbase absolutely buzzing — and here's the thing, it's not even just the win that's got them fired up, it's what it *means* for their survival hopes down the stretch. The vast majority of supporters are staying measured, knowing one result doesn't save a season, but there's this undercurrent of genuine joy bubbling through, because after weeks of doom and gloom, they've finally got something to cling to. Now, the scepticism isn't gone entirely — there's still that nagging anger about how they got into this mess in the first place — but right now, in this moment, Tottenham fans are allowing themselves to believe again.
Neutral
75.4%
"COME ON YOU SPURS!!!!!!!!! Great victory"
Admiration
13.1%
"I'm so happy for Spurs ❤❤❤❤❤❤"
Anger
11.5%
"I really fucking hate Spurs and I forget just how much until we play them. "
Positive 49.3%
Neutral 31.1%
Negative 19.6%
Here's the thing: when Mainoo struck that late winner, the fanbase response was almost clinical in its restraint — seventy per cent of the discourse stayed level-headed and focused on the football itself, recognising this as a genuine quality performance rather than getting swept up in hysteria. But underneath that measured surface, there was something more potent brewing: nearly a quarter of fans were openly admiring what they were watching, and a smaller but vocal contingent were dropping declarations of love because they'd just witnessed their academy product deliver exactly when it mattered most. The real driver wasn't just the goal — it was the timing of it, the manner of it, and the fact that Mainoo looked sharp, composed, and absolutely in control, reminding everyone that this lad belongs at the very top level.
Neutral
70.4%
"Massive win! Mainoo is looking fresh and sharp as he did before the Euro"
Admiration
22.5%
"Mainoo you are amazing!!!!❤❤❤"
Love
7.1%
"Mainoo you are amazing!!!!❤❤❤"
Positive 56.4%
Neutral 33.5%
Negative 10.1%
Arsenal fans have finally got something to get genuinely excited about in midfield, and it's not flashy dazzle or marketing hype — it's graft. Lewis-Skelly put in a performance that reminded people of Thomas Partey at his best: intelligent positioning, physicality, composure under pressure, the kind of display that makes you sit up and think this kid actually belongs at this level. The reaction was measured but unmistakably warm, fans recognising they've witnessed something credible rather than a flash in the pan, which for an academy player breaking through at a top-four club is exactly the kind of catalyst that builds genuine belief.
Neutral
65.1%
"Lewis skelly was excellent today. Very impressive"
Admiration
28.6%
"@Arsenal Lewis skelly God bless you for that performance you did really well"
Love
6.3%
"Love hearing the "49 Lewis-Skelly" chant. He deserves it, and it's such a clever revamp of the old song!"
Positive 58.5%
Neutral 33.2%
Negative 8.3%
Here's the thing — when Kobbie Mainoo struck that winner for Manchester United, the fanbase absolutely lit up, but not in the way you'd expect from a dramatic, last-minute heroics moment. Instead of pure bedlam, what we're seeing is this fascinating blend of measured appreciation mixed with genuine admiration for the lad's quality, with nearly three quarters of the reaction staying composed and analytical rather than losing it entirely. The emotion that does come through is respect — fans recognising they've got a young, home-grown talent who's delivering consistently, and that matters more to them right now than the frenzied screaming you'd normally associate with a match-winning goal.
Neutral
73.3%
"@ManUtd @meksclint Beautiful game. Kobbie was excellent again"
Admiration
17.6%
"@ManUtd Good game 🎯🎯 kobbie congratulations champ"
Approval
9.1%
"@ManUtd Good game 🎯🎯 kobbie congratulations champ"
Positive 29.3%
Neutral 60.0%
Negative 10.7%
Arsenal fans weren't exactly losing their minds here, but they were genuinely impressed by what they saw from Declan Rice in midfield — and here's the thing, that's actually telling you everything you need to know about where the club's at right now. Yes, there's admiration in the air, real recognition that Rice had put in a commanding defensive shift, but the overwhelming vibe was measured approval, almost clinical: fans clocking that he'd done his job properly at exactly the moment the team needed him most, particularly with that European tie looming. It wasn't euphoria; it was the sound of a fanbase saying, 'Right, this is the Rice we paid fifty-five million for — keep it up.'
Neutral
76.6%
"@Arsenal Sexy football is back baby! LETS GOOOO. Rice as CDM is solid."
Admiration
17.4%
"This is the perfect time for this performance. This should energize the team and crowd going into the home leg of the ucl semis. Now rest Rice and ke"
Approval
6.0%
"This is the perfect time for this performance. This should energize the team and crowd going into the home leg of the ucl semis. Now rest Rice and ke"
Positive 30.7%
Neutral 47.0%
Negative 22.3%
Arsenal fans are split between cold pragmatism and genuine heartache over their missing star's uncertain return, with 84 per cent sitting in neutral territory but watching carefully for cracks. The sadness runs deep—nine per cent openly grieving what they've lost without him—while the rest find dark humour in the chaos unfolding, whether that's tactical blunders or the bizarre scenes playing out around the club. Here's the thing though: this isn't just about missing one player, it's about what his absence reveals about Arsenal's entire structure, and fans are starting to wonder if the corporate machine has grown too big to get the best out of its stars.
Neutral
83.8%
"Absolute school boy errors fucken hell, turning this off "
Sadness
9.4%
"i missed him so much. star boy !!!!!!"
Amusement
6.9%
"The guy in the button up was fucking wasted lol"
Positive 37.4%
Neutral 22.9%
Negative 39.7%
Here's the thing — United's dramatic comeback in matchweek 35 barely moved the needle with their fanbase, and that tells you everything about where they are right now. Nearly three-quarters of the reaction was just... neutral acceptance, the kind of response you'd give to a decent Sunday league performance, whilst only a fifth of fans actually felt genuine admiration for what should've been a thrilling turnaround. The anger lurking in the background, though small at eight percent, suggests some supporters are asking the deeper question — why does it take a last-ditch comeback to get a win against opposition they should be dismantling?
Neutral
71.2%
"Great goal, come on!"
Admiration
20.9%
"Great goal, come on!"
Anger
7.8%
"This shit guy always scores against us. Got away there"
Positive 40.8%
Neutral 30.3%
Negative 28.9%
Here's the thing: Leeds fans were absolutely buzzing after matchday 35, and it wasn't about the ref at all—it was pure, unadulterated relief that their side had produced something genuinely special on the pitch. The overwhelming majority of discussion stayed neutral and factual, but when the emotion did kick in, it was admiration for the quality of football rather than anger at officiating decisions. That one goal had clearly done the job, delivering a moment of beauty that mattered far more to supporters than whatever controversial calls might have gone either way in the ninety minutes.
Neutral
79.7%
"@LUFC LETS GO . Happy Friday"
Admiration
12.0%
"@LUFC One of our goals of the season that, beautiful"
Anger
8.2%
"@LUFC Fucking shambolic display. 1-0 or not, that was pathetic"
Positive 55.9%
Neutral 31.9%
Negative 12.3%
Here's the thing — Mainoo's winner against Liverpool wasn't just three points, it was a full narrative arc compressed into ninety minutes. United fans were overwhelmingly measured about it, staying neutral on the surface, but underneath that composure was genuine admiration and love bubbling away, especially because the kid had just signed a new contract that very week. What made it really resonate wasn't the goal itself, it was watching a homegrown academy prospect deliver when it mattered most, with the squad rallying around him like they genuinely believed in what he represented — and that authenticity, that sense of a young lad coming through at Old Trafford, hit different.
Neutral
70.3%
"The perfect birthday gift, kobbie signing a contract then scoring the winner against Liverpool what a week"
Admiration
17.4%
"Kobbie that was amazing ❤❤❤"
Love
12.3%
"Kobbie that was amazing ❤❤❤"
Positive 13.9%
Neutral 37.3%
Negative 48.8%
Brighton fans were absolutely gutted watching their defensive structure collapse against Newcastle, and the reaction was split between those who could barely muster the energy to criticise and a smaller but vocal contingent who were genuinely furious—one supporter calling it the worst performance they'd ever witnessed. The majority stayed eerily calm, which sometimes says more than rage, because this wasn't just a loss, it was a performance so fundamentally broken that fans couldn't even find the words to properly express their disappointment. What made it worse was the defensive discipline unraveling in real time, turning what should have been a competitive fixture into something that felt like a complete capitulation.
Neutral
78.8%
"@OfficialBHAFC Yeah.. great start.."
Anger
12.4%
"@OfficialBHAFC Just fuck off. Worst performance I have ever had to waste watching in my life"
Disappointment
8.8%
"@OfficialBHAFC that was fucking disgraceful"
Positive 17.2%
Neutral 35.9%
Negative 47.0%
Here is the thing: Brentford fans were caught in this fascinating middle ground heading into Matchday 35, because Mbeumo was showing genuine signs of sharpness after what felt like weeks of invisibility, yet nobody quite trusted it would stick. The overwhelming majority of supporters—three quarters of the conversation—kept things measured and analytical rather than getting carried away, acknowledging his improvement without making grand promises about what comes next. But there was this thread of real hope underneath it all, this hunger for him to finally deliver a goal that would prove the form was genuine, because when your best attacking talent goes quiet for stretches, it gnaws at you as a fan.
Neutral
74.4%
"Mbeumbo has been great so far."
Admiration
14.0%
"Mbeumbo has been great so far."
Disappointment
11.6%
"Mbuemo has had another bad game. He hasn’t had a good game since AFCON."
Positive 24.0%
Neutral 49.5%
Negative 26.6%
Here's the thing: Arsenal fans were absolutely clinical about this one, staying remarkably level-headed despite serving up what they genuinely believed was their most complete performance of the entire season. The overwhelming neutrality in the reaction isn't apathy—it's confidence, a measured acknowledgement that this is the standard they expect moving forward rather than some shock upset. But there was real appreciation bubbling underneath, with supporters clocking that this demolition of Fulham wasn't just about the three goals; it was about the football itself, the tempo, the control, the kind of performance that gets people talking about what's possible if Arsenal can repeat it when it matters most.
Neutral
86.3%
"@AFTVMedia What a half! Best half I can remember"
Admiration
8.5%
"@AFTVMedia What a half! Best half I can remember"
Approval
5.2%
"@AFTVMedia What a half! Best half I can remember"
Positive 3.2%
Neutral 26.2%
Negative 70.6%
Right, here's what happened: a handball decision went against United in matchweek 35, and the fanbase split into two camps—most supporters stayed relatively calm about it, accepting the call even if they didn't love it, but a vocal minority absolutely lost it, convinced VAR was either incompetent or actively conspiring against them. The real frustration wasn't just the decision itself; it was the theatre of it all—fans watching replays on their screens that the VAR team apparently wasn't using, which made the whole thing feel backwards, like the technology was adding confusion rather than clarity.
Neutral
75.7%
"It’s cool how they show the replay to us and not the VAR. good process "
Anger
14.7%
"Fuck this VAR looking for a potential handball. What a waste of time. "
Annoyance
9.6%
"VAR a difference maker ffs"
Positive 33.9%
Neutral 38.2%
Negative 28.0%
Here's the thing — Tottenham fans are absolutely losing their minds over De Zerbi, but it's way more measured than you'd expect given how badly things fell apart before he arrived. About three-quarters of the fanbase are sitting back watching objectively, recognising the tactical improvements without getting carried away, while nearly a fifth are properly embracing the romance of it all — comparing him to Pochettino, calling him beautiful, genuinely believing this could be the start of something special. The six percent who are still annoyed? They're the pragmatists, the ones who've been burned before and won't celebrate until there's actual silverware on the shelf.
Neutral
74.8%
"De zerbi you beautiful beautiful man!!"
Admiration
19.3%
"De zerbi you beautiful beautiful man!!"
Annoyance
5.9%
"I was ambivalent until De Zerbi came in. Now they can get fucked."
Positive 8.1%
Neutral 33.9%
Negative 58.1%
Right, here's the thing about Ben White in this one: the fanbase is genuinely split, but not in a dramatic way — most Arsenal supporters are staying relatively measured about his performance, with over eighty per cent maintaining neutral ground, which tells you the frustration hasn't boiled over into a full-blown crisis. But dig beneath that surface and you've got a real undercurrent of concern bubbling up — the eleven per cent expressing sadness, the eight per cent seething with anger, they're all pointing at the same problem: White's decision-making and defensive solidity have looked genuinely dodgy when Arsenal needed him most. What's fascinating is the fans aren't even demanding he gets dropped; they're disappointed because they know what he's capable of, which might actually sting worse than outright rage.
Neutral
81.1%
"Some of whites attempts of passing are fantastic "
Sadness
11.0%
"White is beyond cooked. It's really sad to see."
Anger
7.9%
"White looks bad, what the fuck are these passes when you have pitch opened so bad?"
Positive 40.0%
Neutral 41.1%
Negative 18.9%
Newcastle fans have been absolutely vindicated watching Osula deliver the goods this season—and the emotion is deliberately measured, almost matter-of-fact, because what they're witnessing isn't shock, it's confirmation. Yes, there's genuine admiration for his performances rippling through the fanbase, but here's the thing: the overwhelming response is neutral, clinical even, suggesting supporters always believed in him and are simply watching their faith get validated week after week. This isn't euphoria or surprise—it's the satisfaction of being right all along.
Neutral
69.3%
"OSULA IS SO GOOD, IM SO VINDICATED."
Admiration
24.0%
"OSULA IS SO GOOD, IM SO VINDICATED."
Approval
6.7%
"OSULA IS SO GOOD, IM SO VINDICATED."
Positive 35.3%
Neutral 38.0%
Negative 26.6%
Here's the thing: Tottenham fans were watching their side crumble in late-season chaos, but Richarlison emerged as this raw, unpolished bright spot — a player whose technical limitations barely mattered because his work rate and passion cut through the despair like nothing else on the pitch. Most supporters kept it grounded and realistic about his flaws, his dodgy first touch, his occasional brain fade moments, but they couldn't help themselves from loving him anyway, because in those dark days, effort and commitment became currency worth more than silk. That's why you see this mix of exasperation and genuine affection — fans swearing at his risky passes one moment, then celebrating his sheer determination the next, because sometimes a player who gives absolutely everything becomes exactly what a struggling team needs to cling to.
Neutral
75.2%
"Richy!! No fucking back heel passes in our area. Fuck"
Admiration
14.7%
"Fuck yeah Richy!! Loving how we've come out this half."
Amusement
10.1%
"Richarlison is genuinely world-class on his day."
Positive 8.2%
Neutral 33.7%
Negative 58.2%
Right, so here's the thing — Aston Villa's fanbase was genuinely split on Sancho's performance in that match, and it created this bizarre tension where most supporters stayed relatively measured about it, but a vocal minority absolutely lost it, launching into absolute tirades about how Manchester United had stitched Villa up with a dud signing. What made it properly fascinating was that underneath all the anger and frustration sat this weird undercurrent of dark humour, with fans almost enjoying the theatre of it all, even as they watched their team drop points — because let's be honest, there's a certain comedy to publicly tearing into a player when things go wrong, especially when he's supposed to be the creative spark.
Neutral
70.4%
"Sancho gives me life"
Annoyance
16.5%
"Holy shit United absolutely robbed you with Sancho, he’s unbelievably shit and stupid as well my god "
Amusement
13.0%
"Sancho and pace.
I actually laughed. Cheers. "
Positive 7.7%
Neutral 38.3%
Negative 54.1%
Right, here's the thing — Emery rolled the dice with his squad rotation against a struggling Spurs side, and the gamble absolutely imploded, leaving the fanbase caught between cautious acceptance and genuine frustration. You had supporters initially optimistic about seeing fresh faces and tactical flexibility, but when the performance turned uninspired and flat, that neutral sentiment curdled into disappointment, because they'd backed the manager's call and it looked naïve. And it gets worse — the injury crisis clearly rattled confidence in the depth available, so fans weren't just annoyed at the result, they were worried about whether this squad had the quality to cope without their first-choice XI.
Neutral
74.1%
"excited to see some change in the line-up, abraham hattrick masterclass incoming"
Disappointment
14.3%
"Have to say this team of the whole squad is fit can do really well btw
Why the heck everyone is getting injured "
Annoyance
11.6%
"Have to say this team of the whole squad is fit can do really well btw
Why the heck everyone is getting injured "
Positive 11.7%
Neutral 52.5%
Negative 35.8%
Here's the thing about Zirkzee's impact off the bench in gameweek 35 — fans weren't exactly losing their minds, but they couldn't ignore what they'd just witnessed. The overwhelming majority stayed measured and analytical, recognising he'd delivered genuine quality in a limited window, with that final pass drawing particular praise as a moment of genuine craft. What's fascinating is the confidence in those comments: supporters weren't hedging their bets or overthinking his role, they were simply stating fact — he'd done the job asked of him and done it well, which for a player fighting for minutes in a congested fixture schedule, was exactly what he needed to demonstrate.
Neutral
86.3%
"Zirkzee looked nice as a sub, best 20 min. MOTM."
Admiration
7.3%
"That final pass from Zirk was spectacular 👌 "
Confusion
6.5%
"After Amad's mistake you could immediately sense the fear creeping in. Terrible sub. Why isn't Zirkzee getting chances? "
Positive 12.3%
Neutral 79.3%
Negative 8.4%
Here's the thing — when Erik ten Hag got sacked and Ruben Amorim rolled in as Manchester United's new manager, the fanbase basically shrugged and got on with it. The overwhelming majority of supporters were completely neutral about the whole affair, which tells you everything about how disconnected they'd become from Ten Hag's tenure by that point. You did get the occasional wind-up merchant pointing out that Liverpool had lost their own coaching staff, but mostly what dominated was an eerie calm — fans weren't heartbroken, they weren't raging, they were just... ready for the next chapter.
Neutral
91.9%
"@ManUtd @empriv93z ON VA LE FAIRE ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️"
Amusement
4.6%
"@LFC Cuando os vais slot y edwards y hughes ehhhhh 😡😡😡😡😡"
Love
3.5%
"@ManUtd @empriv93z ON VA LE FAIRE ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️"
Positive 36.5%
Neutral 38.8%
Negative 24.7%
Here's the thing — Arsenal fans have clocked something genuinely remarkable about Trossard this week, and they're trying to work out whether he's actually reinvented himself or we're just seeing the player they always knew was in there. The reaction is overwhelmingly measured and appreciative rather than hysterical, with nearly seven in ten fans taking a straight, analytical line on his display, though there's real admiration bubbling underneath because they recognise a genuine shift in his impact on the pitch. What's fascinating is how subdued the celebration is — no wild excitement, just fans noting with quiet satisfaction that a struggling player has flipped a switch, and that's almost more telling than if they were losing their minds.
Neutral
69.4%
"Trossard has been amazing today. Like a new player. "
Admiration
23.1%
"Trossard has been amazing today. Like a new player. "
Amusement
7.5%
"The Hathaway-Trossard correlation is a real thing, guys. "
Positive 28.8%
Neutral 51.4%
Negative 19.8%
Here's the thing — Tottenham fans were genuinely impressed by Porro's defensive shift in matchweek thirty-five, and it wasn't exactly the kind of performance that gets you jumping off your seat, which is precisely why their reaction was so telling. The conversation stayed grounded and measured, with supporters recognising straightforward, professional defending rather than getting carried away, but there was real appreciation there for a player who stepped up when it mattered. What made it interesting wasn't wild celebration — it was relief, almost, that Porro had brought genuine defensive substance to a match where Spurs clearly needed it.
Neutral
79.4%
"Porro has been massive well done lad"
Admiration
12.2%
"Porro getting forward into some nice positions, great to see"
Positive 14.5%
Neutral 38.7%
Negative 46.8%
So Crystal Palace fans were largely unfazed by their Conference League involvement, with three quarters of the fanbase hitting neutral — but here's the thing: that mask slipped the moment they examined the actual performance, because what emerged was a crushing disappointment wrapped in structural incompetence, particularly the absolute shambles of their set-piece defence which kept getting dragged into the conversation. The anger wasn't really about competing in Europe; it was about the sheer casualness of their defending and the laughable attacking output, with one shot on target summing up everything wrong about how they played, and when you couple that with players being openly questioned as League Two standard, you've got a fanbase that's frustrated less by ambition and more by the mediocrity of execution.
Neutral
75.5%
"@CPFC Superb performance today lads. Devenny and Johnson proving they’re League 2 players."
Disappointment
14.7%
"@CPFC We're the most pathetic team in the league at defending set pieces, it's an absolute joke, over 40% of goals conceded! How have we not sorted th"
Annoyance
9.8%
"@CPFC ABSOLUTELY FUCKING EMBARRASSING! I don’t care if we are resting players the rest are fucking wankkkkkkkkkkkkk!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Positive 1.2%
Neutral 26.9%
Negative 71.9%
Right, so here's the thing — in what should've been a straightforward afternoon of football, one referee absolutely lost the plot with his whistle, and the fanbase couldn't believe what they were watching. You've got nearly a fifth of supporters proper fuming because the inconsistency was so blatant it felt personal, with players getting away with obvious contact one minute and getting pinged for nothing the next. But the wild part? More than two-thirds of fans stayed relatively calm about it, treating the chaos almost like a punchline — because honestly, when a ref's decisions become this random, all you can do is laugh or you'll lose your mind completely.
Neutral
69.1%
"Lmfao ref with the basketball screen, perfectly executed "
Anger
18.7%
"hehhhh what the fuck ref, that was a foul bro"
Confusion
12.2%
"I mean that is just a foul "
Positive 71.3%
Neutral 13.5%
Negative 15.2%
Right, here's what's happening at the Emirates: Arsenal's faithful have absolutely had their faith restored after what was quite clearly a masterclass in the first half. This wasn't just a decent performance—this was the best football they'd produced in weeks, and the fans knew it, with overwhelming admiration pouring through the posts as people recognised something genuinely special unfolding in front of them. The emotion is pure relief mixed with genuine respect for what they were witnessing, because after a period of inconsistency, seeing your side play with that level of quality and control is exactly the kind of performance that reminds supporters why they bothered showing up in the first place.
Admiration
55.0%
"My wonderful boys, so so happy with the first half"
Neutral
34.9%
"Fuck me. What a half. "
Approval
10.1%
"Good game, was a pleasure to watch. Best game they played since a while "
Positive 13.5%
Neutral 31.2%
Negative 55.3%
Arsenal fans have collectively refused to let VAR complaints overshadow what was clearly a dominant performance, with nearly three-quarters staying neutral whilst a frustrated minority tried to stir up negativity in the aftermath. The real tension here isn't about officiating — it's internal, with supporters actively calling out the perpetual doom-mongers in their own community, essentially saying: we've won convincingly, we've made good substitutions, so why are you still looking for reasons to complain? What you're witnessing is a fanbase that's finally learned to protect its own peace, unwilling to let the serial complainers wreck the mood of a victory that deserved to be celebrated.
Neutral
72.2%
"Positivityyyyy"
Anger
14.4%
"Its this sub man, it's fucking toxic. People can't just be happy to win."
Amusement
13.4%
"Fuck… i woke up my neighbours for no reason lol "
Positive 3.0%
Neutral 53.3%
Negative 43.8%
Right, so here's what happened — a key player's injury status became this murky, frustrating mess right in the middle of the season, and fans were genuinely confused about whether he was actually available or not. The whole thing got worse because The Sun broke the story about a groin injury, which immediately made everyone sceptical about the reliability of the information, leaving supporters stranded in this grey zone of uncertainty. Most fans just wanted clarity and the player fit, but instead they got radio silence from the club, a tabloid bombshell, and the depressing sight of him limping about — which basically killed their week and their hopes for those crucial fixtures.
Neutral
79.6%
"I would unironically love if Danns was fit now "
Sadness
13.6%
"Yes. Hurt like he'll and ruined my week but yes."
Curiosity
6.8%
"where was old POPADOM legs . is he injured AGAINlol ."
Positive 9.6%
Neutral 26.5%
Negative 63.9%
Here is the thing — Arsenal fans absolutely went to war with Ben White after his display, but the numbers tell a strange story because most of them weren't actually angry, they were just bewildered. The majority response was heavy sarcasm and resignation, the kind of emotional shutdown that happens when a defender you've backed for years suddenly looks like he's playing in slow motion, and you realise mid-match there is nothing you can do about it. But wait, buried underneath all that resignation was genuine fury from a vocal minority who'd seen enough — they wanted him off the pitch immediately, no excuses, no debate.
Neutral
84.3%
"What a sequence of play from Ben White :D"
Anger
8.7%
"Take Ben white off he’s fucking terrible lads "
Curiosity
7.0%
"whats going on with Ben White? his gameplay is just weak"
Positive 8.6%
Neutral 37.7%
Negative 53.7%
Liverpool fans have turned on Frederico Chiesa after yet another late collapse that's left the squad's Champions League hopes hanging by a thread, and the Italian winger is taking the brunt of the blame—not because he's a bad person, mind you, but because his performances have been genuinely dire when it matters most. What's fascinating here is the resignation in their anger: this isn't raw fury, it's the exasperation of people who've already written the ending, already decided he's not good enough, and are just waiting for the club to catch up. Even the more sympathetic voices acknowledging he seems like a decent lad can't mask the central truth that's emerged from this collapse—Chiesa has become a symbol of Liverpool's failure to compete in the final third when the stakes are highest.
Neutral
77.2%
"can’t wait to see the back of chiesa "
Anger
11.4%
"Absolutely shit, you mean, Gakpo is our worst attacker. I cannot believe he's better than Chiesa, or even Rio."
Amusement
11.4%
"@LFC @LFCUSA Keep playing Gakpo … funnily always fit to play. I wish we would start Chiesa someday."
Positive 7.4%
Neutral 72.2%
Negative 20.4%
So here's the thing — when that goal went in during gameweek 35, the Premier League's official app immediately sparked absolute chaos in the fan discussion, because nearly four in five supporters were just celebrating the moment on pure instinct, but a small but vocal minority started asking the uncomfortable question: did the official assist classification actually get it right? The confusion and disapproval, though minor at 12 and 11 percent respectively, reveals something telling about how fractured these decisions have become — fans are no longer trusting the automated systems to get the basics correct, and when the app contradicts what they've just watched, it creates this credibility gap that spreads like wildfire through the comments.
Neutral
76.9%
"What an assist!"
Confusion
12.4%
"Is that an assist? Let’s go!!!"
Disapproval
10.7%
"PL app doesn’t have it as an assist. Lame."
Positive 11.3%
Neutral 44.4%
Negative 44.4%
Right, here's the thing: even though the goal got ruled out for offside, most fans couldn't actually be bothered about the decision itself — they were too busy marvelling at how good their team had looked in the build-up, which tells you everything about where they've been this season. The anger was reserved for their own player for the positioning error rather than VAR doing its job, and honestly, that's the most British response possible — complain about your own lad's stupidity whilst simultaneously praising the football that created the chance in the first place.
Neutral
76.0%
"Doesn’t matter that it’s offside. Fantastic header and this is the best we’ve looked in months "
Anger
15.5%
"How is he offside again. How useless can he be wtf"
Amusement
8.5%
"Man was offside 6 times in 40min or something... Terrible "
Positive 15.3%
Neutral 12.7%
Negative 72.0%
West Ham supporters absolutely lost it after this one, with nearly 40 percent of the fanbase left gutted by what they saw as a relentless parade of VAR decisions going against them — and here's the thing, they weren't just annoyed, they were genuinely furious, convinced the officials had stitched them up at every turn. The frustration boiled over because of two specific flashpoints: penalty appeals they reckoned should've been given, combined with a broader sense that those same decisions had been weaponised against them all season, making this loss feel less like a defeat and more like a conspiracy playing out in real time. And it gets worse — even the neutral voices watching acknowledged something felt off about the officiating, meaning West Ham's rage wasn't just emotional noise, it was grounded in a legitimate grievance that transcended the usual post-match bitterness.
Disappointment
38.6%
"Unbelievable run bad bullshit game. You couldn’t have scripted a more go against us at every opportunity match. Infuriating"
Neutral
36.4%
"Yeah this is not our day. How is one of them not a fucking pen?! I've seen them given against us all season. And to add insult weve hit the post about"
Annoyance
25.0%
"Unbelievable run bad bullshit game. You couldn’t have scripted a more go against us at every opportunity match. Infuriating"
Positive 41.3%
Neutral 46.5%
Negative 12.3%
Here's the thing — when Bournemouth got the job done in Matchweek 35, their fanbase wasn't going absolutely mental, but they were genuinely buzzing with approval and affection for what they'd just witnessed. The emotion breakdown tells you everything: eighty-six percent neutral reaction suggests most fans were documenting the moment rather than losing their minds, but that eight percent approval and seven percent admiration? That's the hardcore supporters who absolutely loved what the team delivered, the kind who'll declare undying loyalty to the club because consistency and fighting spirit matter more than hyperbole.
Neutral
85.8%
"@afcbournemouth @BenPawlowski21 @premierleague I. LOVE. THIS. TEAM"
Approval
7.5%
"@afcbournemouth @premierleague Fantastic win! 🍒🍒🍒"
Admiration
6.7%
"@afcbournemouth @premierleague Fantastic win! 🍒🍒🍒"
Positive 14.4%
Neutral 32.7%
Negative 52.9%
Right, so here's the thing — most fans are sat on the fence, keeping their powder dry until next season actually kicks off, but there's this vocal minority absolutely fuming about what's unfolding at the club. The anger isn't random either; it's about believing the club is doubling down on the wrong decisions heading into next season, which has got some supporters genuinely questioning whether they can even be bothered to turn up and watch it all happen again.
Neutral
75.3%
"Looking forward to hearing this with you all next year."
Annoyance
12.3%
"I won’t watch it, no fucking way am I watching another season of this dogshit football. "
Excitement
12.3%
"So looking forward to watching another season of this"
Positive 15.6%
Neutral 33.3%
Negative 51.0%
Right, here's the thing — Brentford fans were genuinely divided over that Mavropanos VAR call, with nearly half the fanbase absolutely livid at the decision whilst the other half stayed relatively measured about it. The anger was raw and immediate, with fans venting genuine frustration at what they saw as a questionable call from the officials, but there was also a slice of dark humour running through the discourse, because let's be honest, controversial VAR decisions have become so routine in the Premier League that some supporters have stopped taking them seriously. What's fascinating here is that despite the emotional split, there was actually a thin consensus underneath — nobody was truly satisfied, which tells you everything you need to know about how contentious that moment actually was.
Neutral
46.3%
"Much better!"
Anger
40.7%
"please don't do this shit anymore "
Amusement
13.0%
"Oh dear..."
Positive 11.0%
Neutral 49.0%
Negative 40.0%
Right, here's the thing — when Casemiro had those defensive lapses in Matchweek 35, the fanbase absolutely split, but not in the way you'd expect. Yes, there was genuine anger simmering beneath the surface, but what actually dominated the conversation was this weird mix of resignation and dark humour, with fans sarcastically celebrating his ability to be in the wrong place at the right time. The overwhelming majority stayed calm about it — eighty-one percent neutral — because deep down, everyone knows Casemiro's been the glue holding this midfield together all season, so one dodgy performance couldn't dismantle years of credibility in their eyes, even if it did expose just how reliant United have become on him doing the dirty work that nobody else wants to do.
Neutral
81.4%
"Case man. We needed that"
Amusement
9.3%
"casemiro one years more pls 😢😢"
Anger
9.3%
"Holy shit Case, that was fucking ass..."
Positive 0.7%
Neutral 48.3%
Negative 51.0%
Right, so here's the thing — when that goal got chalked off for handball in week thirty-five, the fanbase didn't lose its mind, but it absolutely lost patience with the rule itself. Nearly three-quarters of supporters were just sitting there, matter-of-fact, accepting the decision with a resigned shrug, because honestly, they've seen this film too many times before. But what really got under people's skin was the inconsistency; you've got neutrals and rival fans having a laugh at how the Premier League seems to interpret handball differently depending on which shirt you're wearing, whilst everyone else is just exhausted by a law that nobody — and I mean nobody — understands the same way twice.
Neutral
71.4%
"Handball is generous man"
Amusement
15.2%
"When is handball not handball, when Gary Neville is commentating for man u"
Annoyance
13.3%
"This attacker's handball rule sucks."
Positive 53.1%
Neutral 46.2%
Negative 0.7%
So here's the thing: Mainoo's dramatic winner sent Manchester United fans into absolute raptures, but the fascinating part is how measured the overall reaction actually was. The numbers tell you everything — seventy per cent neutral, which means fans were too stunned, too caught up in the moment to muster anything beyond the standard GGMU chants and club allegiance declarations. But that twenty-seven per cent love signal? That's where the real story lives. That's the die-hards, the ones who've been through the pain and the patience, finally getting that cathartic release they've been craving all season.
Neutral
69.5%
"@ManUtd What a win GGMU"
Approval
3.5%
"@ManUtd What a win GGMU"
Positive 26.1%
Neutral 51.4%
Negative 22.5%
Here's the thing: Arsenal fans are walking a tightrope with Dowman, and Matchweek 35 proved it. The vast majority—81 percent—stayed measured and rational, treating his return to the side as a tactical necessity rather than a cause for celebration, but that small pocket of genuine admiration tells you everything about how much they've been missing his sharpness in crucial moments. What's fascinating is the curiosity lurking underneath—fans clearly remember that Everton performance like it was yesterday, and they're desperate to know if he can deliver it again when it matters most in the run-in.
Neutral
81.3%
"This is gonna be interesting dowman come on you never disappoint "
Admiration
13.1%
"Dowman is so good man lol"
Curiosity
5.6%
"why didn't they show that awesome run by Dowman? Criminal!"
Positive 84.2%
Neutral 11.5%
Negative 4.3%
Arsenal's midfield masterclass in week 35 had fans absolutely captivated — and here's the thing, it wasn't euphoria exactly, it was something deeper: pure admiration. Two-thirds of the fanbase couldn't help but respect what they were witnessing, with performances from the central midfielders described as genuinely transformative, the kind of display that reminds you why you fell in love with the club in the first place. What made this different from blind optimism was the specificity of the praise — fans weren't just celebrating a win, they were recognising genuine quality in the middle of the park, a tangible shift in form that suggested something real might be building.
Admiration
64.9%
"Just an all-round enjoyable day. Lovely to see some of the lads finding form and I'm really pleased for MLS and a steady, solid performance. UTA"
Neutral
28.9%
"Great day for it, with MLS and Dowman both performing"
Joy
6.1%
"Just an all-round enjoyable day. Lovely to see some of the lads finding form and I'm really pleased for MLS and a steady, solid performance. UTA"
Positive 15.2%
Neutral 46.4%
Negative 38.4%
Here's the thing—Brighton fans weren't actually furious about Minteh's missed chance, they were mostly matter-of-fact about it, almost resigned, because what really wound them up was the sheer *beauty* of the build-up play that came to nothing. Rutter's dribbling was genuinely special, the kind of passage that should've ended in a goal, and that's what made the miss sting—not rage, but this frustrating gap between what Brighton *created* and what they actually *finished*. Meanwhile, there was genuine admiration floating through the conversation for how Newcastle played it, with Lewis Miley getting real recognition for his display, so the emotion was almost split: respect for both teams' quality, mixed with that hollow feeling of knowing Brighton had the chance and couldn't take it.
Neutral
79.8%
"That was such beautiful dribbling by Rutter too, ffs Minteh"
Admiration
10.6%
"That was such beautiful dribbling by Rutter too, ffs Minteh"
Curiosity
9.6%
"Lewis Miley was outstanding "
Positive 5.1%
Neutral 29.0%
Negative 65.9%
Here's the thing: Aston Villa fans weren't exactly calling for riots after this midfield collapse — most stayed pretty measured about it — but there was a real undercurrent of frustration bubbling beneath the surface, particularly aimed at Ross Barkley and some of the other attacking players who simply weren't delivering the goods when it mattered. The comments reveal a fanbase caught between resignation and annoyance, sardonically accepting that Barkley's still around whilst simultaneously hammering the entire midfield unit for looking sluggish and offering absolutely nothing going forward. What really drove the disappointment wasn't drama or meltdown — it was the cold, hard realisation that Villa's creative heartbeat had stalled, and nobody in that middle third was stepping up to fix it.
Neutral
82.5%
"Boss Barkley still in the prem in 2026, incredible scenes"
Disappointment
10.3%
"@AVFCOfficial Absolutely useless. Mings, Maatson, Bogarde, Tielemans, Barkley absolutely woeful. Shame we can’t substitute 9 players!!!!! 🤬🤬🤬"
Annoyance
7.2%
"@AVFCOfficial Absolutely useless. Mings, Maatson, Bogarde, Tielemans, Barkley absolutely woeful. Shame we can’t substitute 9 players!!!!! 🤬🤬🤬"
Positive 1.5%
Neutral 51.8%
Negative 46.7%
Right, so here's the thing about the Sesko handball row that's got everyone in the comments: most fans are sitting back with a shrug, totally unbothered, treating it like one of those marginal VAR calls that comes and goes every weekend. But dig into the thread and you've got a proper split emerging—some are genuinely wound up about the handball decision, convinced Sesko deliberately altered the ball's trajectory, whilst others are almost amused by how much the VAR team seemed to be hunting for a reason to overturn it, turning what should've been a straightforward moment into this whole circus. The real story isn't the controversy itself, it's how calm everyone's being about it, which tells you everything about where VAR fatigue sits in football right now.
Neutral
85.6%
"@markgoldbridge Yes, it could. Clean sheet, Sesko not injured"
Amusement
7.7%
"I think...the ball really did touch Sesko's fingertips. What do y'all think? 😁"
Anger
6.7%
"Zoom in on that motherfuckers.
Absolutely bonkers this wasn't checked and card given. No hair pull no red card I guess even though the boards could'"
Positive 7.4%
Neutral 31.6%
Negative 61.0%
Villa fans are absolutely fed up—and here's the thing, it's not even fiery anger, it's that cold, calculated frustration of watching your team stumble when they should be climbing. Rogers and Sancho are getting the brunt of it, with supporters openly calling for exits in the summer, but the real temperature check is the resignation in their voices: nobody's raging, they're just done waiting for these players to show up. The defensive frailties have poisoned the well so thoroughly that even decent individual moments are getting sarcastically mocked—a clear sign that trust has completely evaporated and fans are already mentally shopping for replacements rather than backing the current crop to turn it around.
Neutral
74.7%
"@AVFCOfficial Rogers and sancho needs to wake up. Emi Martines is the best goalkeeper in the world. His savings and ball distributing are incredible."
Annoyance
17.9%
"Rogers that touch was incredible (insult)"
Disappointment
7.4%
"Rogers that touch was incredible (insult)"
Positive 30.1%
Neutral 50.7%
Negative 19.1%
Here is the thing — Manchester United fans walked away from this one relatively unbothered, because the emotion dial barely budged across the board. Over half the fanbase sat in neutral territory, which tells you this wasn't some dramatic siege or controversial loss that sets Twitter ablaze, but rather a straightforward win that got the job done without theatre or debate. The laughter and good-natured banter in the comments shows supporters weren't wound up or defensive — they were just content, almost relieved, taking the three points and moving on.
Positive 31.6%
Neutral 39.0%
Negative 29.4%
So here's the thing — when Cunha stepped up in midweek Premier League football, the fanbase wasn't going mad, they were just... impressed. Nearly eight out of ten fans kept it measured and straightforward, nodding along to solid play rather than losing their minds, but there's a real undercurrent of genuine admiration bubbling underneath, with supporters actively praising the technical quality of his passing and movement. What you're seeing isn't hysteria, it's respect — the kind of thing you get when a player quietly does his job brilliantly and the crowd recognises craftsmanship when they see it.
Neutral
78.1%
"Yes Cunha! Great start!"
Admiration
15.2%
"Great game from Cunha man. Love him."
Amusement
6.7%
"No! Donnarumma!😆"
Positive 33.3%
Neutral 17.8%
Negative 48.9%
Here's the thing — Spurs fans celebrated the win on the weekend, but most couldn't shake a creeping dread, because they know their own club better than anyone: one decent result followed by a catastrophic collapse is basically the Tottenham way. The optimism was there, sure, but buried under nearly three decades of disappointment, which is why you saw supporters simultaneously excited for Thursday and actively bracing themselves for the inevitable meltdown that would make today's victory feel completely hollow.
Neutral
58.7%
"Excited for Thursday!"
Disappointment
27.0%
"I feel like nothing good ever comes from throwing a game, and if we lose thursday it makes today 10x worse. Why pretend, either throw it or dont, dont"
Optimism
14.3%
"Omg, we’re gonna win again"
Positive 12.6%
Neutral 45.2%
Negative 42.2%
Here's the thing: even when Van Dijk's defending fell apart on Matchday 35, most fans stayed weirdly calm about it—77 per cent neutral—because deep down they still recognised what he's capable of, which somehow made it worse. The frustration that did bubble up came from a man who's meant to be the defensive anchor looking lost, sparking comparisons to Liverpool's own rotten defending from years gone by and questions about whether he's actually leading from the back anymore. But the real kicker? Mixed in with the anger was genuine dark humour—fans taking the piss with nicknames and sardonic observations—because the cognitive dissonance of Van Dijk struggling is almost too weird to take seriously.
Neutral
77.3%
"My beautiful Hungarian man"
Amusement
12.4%
"Van dreamer defending like the Barcelona team during that match against Liverpool when we had a competent team and manager"
Anger
10.3%
"What the fuck are you doing Virgil "
Positive 4.4%
Neutral 52.6%
Negative 43.0%
Arsenal fans have been left genuinely baffled by Nørgaard's complete absence from the squad this season, and honestly, the confusion is warranted—the club splashed out to sign him, yet he's barely seen the pitch, leading supporters to question whether there's some untold falling-out with Arteta or if the signing was simply a miscalculation. What's striking here is that the reaction isn't angry or toxic; it's mostly bewildered curiosity mixed with dark humour, with fans cracking jokes about what Nørgaard could possibly have done to deserve this kind of exile, whilst others genuinely hope to see him feature, suggesting there's still belief in what he could offer if actually given a chance.
Neutral
83.6%
"As a swede, I know what he can do :D"
Curiosity
9.1%
"Honestly why did we sign Norgaard? Him playing this little is absolutely criminal"
Amusement
7.3%
"NOOORTH LONDOOON FOREVEEER!!! 🥹🫡"
Positive 25.4%
Neutral 30.6%
Negative 44.0%
Here's the thing: Arsenal fans are absolutely convinced they've discovered football's darkest secret, and it's called April. After a shock defeat in gameweek thirty-five, the fanbase has turned the calendar itself into a scapegoat, with the overwhelming majority staying measured even as pockets of genuine fury bubble up about the team's performance in that specific month. What's fascinating is the anger isn't really about individual players or tactical decisions—it's a collective frustration aimed at fate itself, at the universe conspiring against them when the pressure's highest and trophies are on the line.
Neutral
70.5%
"The merry month of May!"
Anger
16.7%
"Fuck you April 🖕🖕🖕"
Annoyance
12.8%
"Fuck you April 🖕🖕🖕"
Positive 2.3%
Neutral 13.1%
Negative 84.6%
Villa's attacking impotence in matchweek 35 has fractured the fanbase in a way that exposes a deeper anxiety: nearly half the supporters are clinging to neutrality, almost in denial, whilst the rest are consumed by a toxic blend of shame and fury that's spilling into personal attacks on content creators and each other. The embarrassment cuts deepest because it's not about losing a match — it's about the *manner* of the loss, a complete absence of urgency and ruthlessness when it matters most, which has Villa fans questioning whether their team has the mentality to sustain a genuine title push.
Neutral
48.3%
"SYBAU u clown. You’re nothing but a clout chasing rage baiter."
Embarrassment
27.6%
"This is embarrassing to watch. Everyone should be ashamed of this. "
Anger
24.1%
"SYBAU u clown. You’re nothing but a clout chasing rage baiter."
Positive 20.3%
Neutral 39.8%
Negative 39.8%
Newcastle's win had supporters caught somewhere between relief and bewilderment, because here's the thing — they'd essentially sleepwalked past Brighton through a defensive masterclass that looked less like tactical brilliance and more like absolute chaos that somehow paid off. The goalkeeping errors got everyone talking, with fans more amused than impressed, recognising that sometimes you just need your opponents to hand you three points on a silver platter. It wasn't pretty, it wasn't convincing, but in a tight title race at midweek football, Newcastle fans took what they could get — and that neutral, pragmatic mood tells you everything about how they viewed this one: grateful for the result, but aware they'd got away with something.
Neutral
80.2%
"@NUFC @petemcc_peter Against Brighton a tough team on the best of days, brilliant result!"
Optimism
11.1%
"That Brighton keeper had a few lines before this game mind"
Admiration
8.6%
"@NUFC @petemcc_peter Against Brighton a tough team on the best of days, brilliant result!"
Positive 43.8%
Neutral 35.2%
Negative 21.1%
Here is the thing about Spurs fans right now — they've gone absolutely quiet on the cynicism when it comes to João Palhinha, and that's huge. The midfielder delivered a performance in gameweek 35 that had supporters genuinely lost for words, ditching the usual hot takes for pure, unbridled admiration, with nearly half the fanbase openly praising him as arguably Tottenham's standout player this season. What's driving it is simple: after months of debate about midfield solidity, Palhinha turned up when it mattered most, and the fans recognised it wasn't just competence — it was class, the kind that makes you stop arguing and just say "Fantastic."
Neutral
56.0%
"Fantastic by Palhinha"
Admiration
25.3%
"Fantastic by Palhinha"
Love
18.7%
"God I love Palhinha’s passion. I’m in love with this man"
Positive 10.2%
Neutral 42.5%
Negative 47.2%
Right, so Crystal Palace fans have just taken an absolute battering in matchweek 35, and the response is fascinating because it's split right down the middle between two completely different modes. Most of them—about seven in ten—are staying rational, looking forward to Thursday's cup tie and asking serious tactical questions about getting certain players on the pitch together, which tells you they're trying to contextualise this disaster rather than panic. But then you've got the other 30 percent absolutely losing it, with some hurling abuse and others dishing out grim insults to their opposition, because when you lose that heavily this late in a season, there's only so much restraint fans can muster before the anger just boils over—and that's when you get the proper venom coming out.
Neutral
70.3%
"@CPFC Really want to see more opportunities for the two of them together."
Anger
21.8%
"@CPFC Have that you dirty bastards!!"
Amusement
7.9%
"@CPFCTILLTHEEND @CPFC You've just proved my point cheers 🤣"
Positive 47.2%
Neutral 42.5%
Negative 10.2%
Right, so here's the thing — when this take did the rounds on Matchday 35, the fanbase absolutely united behind it, and the numbers tell you exactly why. You've got approval and neutral responses basically splitting the room dead even at 43 per cent each, which means even the sceptics couldn't actually argue against what was being said, and that's when you know a take has hit different. Add in that 14 per cent of pure admiration, and what you're seeing is fans recognising something that cuts through all the usual noise and debate — a perspective so sharp, so obviously correct, that there's barely any pushback to speak of.
Approval
42.9%
"1000% spot on!! "
Neutral
42.9%
"1000% spot on!! "
Admiration
14.3%
"Which is incredible "
Positive 71.2%
Neutral 22.4%
Negative 6.4%
Right, here's the thing — Tottenham fans have absolutely rallied around their club after a narrow defeat in matchweek thirty-five, and the response is genuinely fascinating because it's overwhelmingly positive despite the result. The emotion breakdown tells you everything: eighty-seven percent neutral sentiment mixed with genuine love for the club shows a fanbase that's accepted the loss but hasn't lost faith, though you've got that lingering eight percent anger that suggests some supporters are frustrated with where Spurs find themselves in the table. What's driving this unity isn't delusion, it's resignation mixed with stubborn pride — fans are saying "let's keep on" and backing their team publicly because, frankly, what else can you do when you're a Spurs supporter in late April?
Neutral
86.7%
"I’m so hype. Let’s keep on. COYS"
Anger
7.6%
"COYG? God I hate we are at that point "
Love
5.7%
"Loving the energy in this thread COYFS"
Positive 4.9%
Neutral 17.1%
Negative 78.0%
Right, so here's the thing — most Villa fans were keeping it measured, sitting at that neutral frustration zone, but buried underneath there's this simmering resentment that Emery bottled it when it mattered most, deliberately throwing away points in a match that could've been massive for their season. You've got a split between the sarcastically grateful contingent who recognise Emery's tactical mastery in securing European football, and then the absolutely livid minority who couldn't contain themselves watching their team capitulate at home without even getting a goal on the board. The real story? Villa fans felt genuinely aggrieved that their manager made choices that felt calculated to surrender — not outright collapse, but something worse, something that looked intentional — which is the kind of betrayal that absolutely boils your blood when you're this close to something special.
Neutral
69.8%
"Unai will forever be remembered as the coach who saved Tottenham from relegation. "
Annoyance
15.1%
"Yep. We're definitely punching. Unai is a genius. It's just so frustrating to be so close to achieving something great."
Anger
15.1%
"@AVFCOfficial GO FUCK YOURSELVES. CANT EVEN SCORE A DAMN GOAL AT HOME. FUCK YOU UNAI AND THIS DOGSHIT TEAM. HOPE YOU CUNTS GET CANCER"
Positive 12.2%
Neutral 42.3%
Negative 45.5%
Right, here's the thing — most fans stayed relatively composed through Matchday 35, but a significant chunk completely switched off when the refereeing decisions started piling up. You're looking at roughly one in six supporters genuinely furious, another one in seven just wound up and exasperated, and the rest maintaining a stiff upper lip about the whole affair. The anger wasn't random fury either — it was the kind of controlled rage that comes from watching a game slip away on what felt like dodgy officiating, with some supporters literally abandoning their screens mid-match rather than stick around and feel their blood pressure spike any higher.
Neutral
68.4%
"Enjoy the win mate"
Anger
17.1%
"Yeah no, I'm turning this shit off. I cannot ruin a hard earned Sunday."
Annoyance
14.5%
"Can’t believe what I’m watching lmao, what a shit show "
Positive 28.1%
Neutral 38.8%
Negative 33.1%
Right, here's the thing — Dan Burn has absolutely captured the imagination of Newcastle's fanbase, and it's not just because he's doing his job in defence. When he stepped up in a crucial moment during gameweek 35, the emotional response was pure, unadulterated joy, with nearly three quarters of the conversation staying measured and analytical whilst the rest of the support base lost their minds celebrating what they saw as a moment of redemption or clutch defending. What's fascinating is that beneath the noise, there's genuine affection for Burn as a personality — fans aren't just appreciating the footballer, they're celebrating how the squad rallied around him, suggesting he's become a proper dressing room favourite who's earned the respect of his teammates. The amusement? That's the banter, the light-hearted edge that comes when a big lad does something unexpected, but make no mistake — this was overwhelmingly a moment where a
Neutral
76.2%
"YESSSSSSSSSS BIG DAN BURN!!!!!!!!! 😁 https://t.co/JIj0TswLmc"
Admiration
15.0%
"I love seeing how happy the entire team is for him. Everyone loves dan burn "
Amusement
8.8%
"Reece James. "
Positive 4.1%
Neutral 30.6%
Negative 65.3%
Here's the thing—West Ham fans were overwhelmingly calm about Pablo's performance, but that surface-level neutrality masked something darker underneath. A small but vocal contingent of supporters absolutely lost it, furious that the striker looked toothless week after week, with some even questioning the decision-makers who brought him to the club in the first place. What made it genuinely interesting though was the pushback from defenders trying to big him up for his work rate, suggesting the fanbase itself was fractured between those ready to write him off and those still clinging to hope.
Neutral
73.6%
"@WestHam So glad we played Pablo!"
Annoyance
16.1%
"Omg Pablo is so fucking garbage man. EVERY WEEK HE LOOKS WORSE HOW???? stop defending this STRIKER "
Anger
10.3%
"Omg Pablo is so fucking garbage man. EVERY WEEK HE LOOKS WORSE HOW???? stop defending this STRIKER "
Positive 5.8%
Neutral 28.1%
Negative 66.1%
Arsenal fans have seized on Tottenham's wobble around the relegation zone with a mixture of genuine schadenfreude and tongue-in-cheek mockery, though the overwhelming majority of responses stayed relatively measured and matter-of-fact rather than truly vicious. What's actually happened here is classic North London Derby banter colliding with the uncomfortable reality that Spurs are genuinely struggling, which means some fans are using gallows humour to cope with the absurdity of the situation—but crucially, many Tottenham supporters online are calling out the mockery as classless, which has triggered the defensive pushback that the humour was never that serious in the first place. The real story isn't the mocking itself; it's how fractured the fanbase narratives are, with neutral observers watching two neighbouring clubs tear each other apart whilst one's fighting for its life in the league.
Neutral
71.8%
"I am sure Arsenal feel joyous over the fact that they can save Spurs next sunday "
Annoyance
17.9%
"Yep, this is why we don't like Arsenal fans."
Amusement
10.3%
"Dumb spud supporters will be begging Arsenal to beat West Ham. How ironic!"
Positive 17.9%
Neutral 41.9%
Negative 40.2%
Here's the thing — Newcastle fans are trying desperately hard to convince themselves this Brighton win actually matters, but you can hear the resignation in their own words. The victory's been met with what can only be described as muted relief rather than genuine celebration, with nearly seven in ten fans treating the result in almost clinical fashion, analysing it like they've already accepted their European fate is slipping away. What's revealing is how quickly the conversation pivots to damage control — talking about finishing seventh instead of sixth like they're negotiating downwards from a dream that's already dead, when just weeks ago this club was harbouring genuine top-four ambitions.
Neutral
69.6%
"@NUFC Three changes by Newcastle against Brighton… this wins means a lot to Newcastle. Hopefully the team can walk away with three points after the ga"
Approval
17.7%
"Always feel that a point away at Newcastle is a decent result regardless of form but getting three points today would be massive and is certainly do-a"
Optimism
12.7%
"Well, that was a game we could have at least drawn. Feels like we can still win out from here; hopefully we don't miss the points we dropped to Fulham"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 23.9%
Negative 76.1%
Here's the thing: when the VAR calls went wrong at Matchweek 35, fans didn't absolutely lose it — and that's actually the telling part. Seventy-two per cent stayed neutral, but that remaining quarter who did speak up weren't just annoyed, they were furious enough to drag Howard Webb himself into the firing line, with accusations of incompetence flying faster than the ball down the wing. The real frustration wasn't about one dodgy decision — it was the pattern, the sense that refereeing standards had become indefensible, and some fans were so wound up they started questioning whether their own team's poor performance was even the root cause, or if the officials had already decided the game before kick-off.
Neutral
72.3%
"piss off. Howard Webb I wanna see you tie yourself in knots trying to defend all the dogshit refereeing in this game."
Annoyance
14.5%
"@WestHam Give the ref MOTM. Disgraceful performance from him. Honestly, how we're losing this game 3-0. Should have had 2 penalties, hit the bar/post"
Disappointment
13.3%
"@WestHam Give the ref MOTM. Disgraceful performance from him. Honestly, how we're losing this game 3-0. Should have had 2 penalties, hit the bar/post"
Positive 66.7%
Neutral 17.9%
Negative 15.4%
Arsenal's stunning comeback in Matchweek 35 split the fanbase right down the middle — nearly half the supporters were processing the sheer emotional whiplash of it all, while a third were absolutely euphoric, celebrating like the team had just clawed its way back into genuine contention. But here's the thing: even as joy flooded in, there was this undercurrent of sadness running through the discourse, with fans wrestling with the reality that it took a miraculous turnaround just to feel something resembling hope again — a reminder of how fragile their season had felt before that moment.
Neutral
48.6%
"fr i feel so bad "
Joy
33.3%
"It's fun again! Great commentary"
Sadness
18.1%
"fr i feel so bad "
Positive 27.6%
Neutral 50.0%
Negative 22.4%
Newcastle's back line completely disintegrated against Brighton—and here's the thing, the fanbase's reaction was almost eerily calm about it, with three-quarters of supporters just accepting the chaos as par for the course rather than losing their minds. That's not apathy, though; buried underneath the resigned sighs and the weary "here we go again" comments is genuine frustration—a 12 percent spike in anger that speaks to supporters watching the same defensive problems play out on repeat, match after match. The real story isn't the collapse itself; it's that Newcastle fans have become so numb to these collapses that amusement actually crept into their response, because what else can you do when your defence implodes like clockwork?
Anger
12.4%
"Here we fucking go again"
Amusement
11.3%
"Except nobody with half a brain cell thought that"
Positive 9.5%
Neutral 31.9%
Negative 58.6%
So Curtis Jones picks up a yellow card in matchweek 35, and here's the thing — the fanbase barely cares about the booking itself because they're too busy losing their minds over how well he's been playing at right back. The reaction is almost entirely neutral praise mixed with genuine admiration for his performance, because when a player is that consistently good, a yellow card becomes background noise. What you're seeing here is fans choosing to celebrate the footballer rather than get caught up in the referee drama — and that tells you everything you need to know about how important his defensive display actually was.
Neutral
73.2%
"Jones has been great at right back again"
Admiration
14.1%
"Jones has been great at right back again"
Amusement
12.7%
"Where on earth was the foul on Jones lmao"
Positive 10.4%
Neutral 44.3%
Negative 45.2%
Here is the thing — in matchweek 35, a late-card decision split the room almost perfectly down the middle, and fans could not quite work out whether they were witnessing brilliant refereeing or a controversial call that changed the game. The overwhelming majority stayed neutral and measured, simply acknowledging it was a reasonable yellow, but a smaller pocket of supporters genuinely admired the official's decisiveness, whilst a tiny fraction sat genuinely puzzled about what had actually warranted the booking in the first place. What you're seeing here is restraint — a fanbase that recognised a tight call when they saw one, rather than descending into the usual chaos.
Neutral
78.2%
"Great yellow "
Admiration
12.8%
"Great yellow "
Confusion
9.0%
"good lili white...👍"
Positive 21.4%
Neutral 45.5%
Negative 33.0%
So here's the thing — Arsenal fans absolutely couldn't decide how seriously to take what just happened when Bernd Leno pulled off a genuinely brilliant save that somehow felt a bit accidental. Most fans, two-thirds of them, just rolled with it as a straightforward moment of class goalkeeping, the kind that wins you matches and keeps you in the fight, but that smaller group? They spotted something funny in it, something almost farcical about the whole thing, which is why you're seeing this brilliant crossover where supporters are simultaneously impressed by the technique and having a laugh at how it actually came about. It's the perfect storm of football moments — legitimate brilliance wrapped up in a bit of chaos, and the fanbase just reflected that split perfectly.
Neutral
68.5%
"That was a great save by Leno. "
Amusement
16.9%
"Dave Saves is actually hilarious "
Admiration
14.6%
"wow what a save from Leno. great move from the boys there"
Positive 5.4%
Neutral 35.1%
Negative 59.5%
Here's the thing: Brentford absolutely dismantled West Ham at the London Stadium, but the scoreline got completely overshadowed by a penalty decision that had fans genuinely baffled—and frankly, split down the middle about whether it was a legitimate call or an Oscar-worthy performance. The majority stayed level-headed about it all, but you had this fascinating undercurrent of confusion and dark humour, with supporters ripping into the decision as "old fashioned cheating" while others couldn't help but admire the audacity of it, comparing it to the kind of dodgy stuff you'd see in old football video games. What made it truly sticky wasn't the goals Brentford put past them—it was that one moment that nobody could agree on, and that's precisely what football fans live for: the argument that overshadows the result.
Neutral
70.5%
"Yeah, still a great dive though"
Confusion
15.4%
"2:38
How is this not a penalty?!!"
Amusement
14.1%
"Lmao that dive was Gal Gadot level acting "
Positive 30.0%
Neutral 26.4%
Negative 43.6%
Here is the thing — when that stoppage time extension landed, fans weren't reaching for their pitchforks like you'd expect. Instead, more than half the fanbase stayed calm and measured about it, because refcam actually showed the referee's decision-making process in real time, and that transparency won people over. The real story though is the admiration surge: a third of supporters actively praised the ref's handling of the match, some even joking they never thought they'd be complimenting officials in 2026, which tells you everything about how starved fans are for clarity and competence in officiating.
Neutral
54.0%
"This is the best referee we’ve had this season imo"
Admiration
33.3%
"Wow refcam is a really great new feature! "
Annoyance
12.7%
"Fucking cunt referee. Why are we still playing"
Positive 28.2%
Neutral 46.4%
Negative 25.5%
Here's the thing: Raya's performance in Matchweek 35 was so dominant that fans couldn't help themselves — they started joking about it, dropping heat maps and affectionate declarations in equal measure. The neutrality dominated the discourse because most supporters were simply accepting what they'd witnessed as fact, a goalkeeper putting on a masterclass, but that 21 percent cracking jokes and the genuine admiration trickling through tells you something crucial: this wasn't just a clean sheet, it was a statement. Fans were caught between treating it as business as usual from an elite keeper and actually wanting to celebrate the man doing the business, which is why you got those lovesick, laughing responses — they'd moved past analysis and straight into pure respect.
Neutral
66.7%
"Can't wait for Raya's heat map XD"
Amusement
21.4%
"I love Raya so much lmao "
Admiration
11.9%
"Raya on form too, so happy we playing well today. Get that deserved golden glove brother!!"
Positive 28.4%
Neutral 23.9%
Negative 47.7%
Right, here's the thing — at Matchweek 35, fans were witnessing something they'd been starving for: actual tactical competence and a fighting spirit that had been nowhere to be found under the previous regime. The emotion was split three ways, but the narrative is crystal clear: 36 percent of supporters were genuinely admiring what they were seeing, flooding the forums with comments like "finally we look like a properly coached football team," because they recognised that the same players who looked lost weeks earlier were suddenly functioning like a unit. The frustration hadn't completely vanished — 16 percent were still venting, probably because hope after years of disappointment stings differently — but the overwhelming sense was relief mixed with genuine optimism, the kind that only arrives when you realise your manager actually knows what he's doing.
Neutral
47.8%
"What a difference a competent manager makes!
We could still get out of this, COYS! "
Admiration
36.2%
"Such a great manager"
Annoyance
15.9%
"Fucking stupid idiot of a manager and we left him there for months to truly let the rot grow. "
Positive 13.8%
Neutral 46.8%
Negative 39.4%
Here's the thing — Arsenal fans are not exactly losing their minds over Noni Madueke, but they're not turning on him either, which tells you everything about where he stands at the club right now. The overwhelming majority of the conversation is just... neutral acceptance, with fans recognising he's a decent option when the team's flowing, but hardly the sort of player who's got the fanbase genuinely gripped or excited about his long-term future. What little enthusiasm does exist is mostly comparative — nostalgia for how he performed under previous circumstances — rather than genuine belief that he's the answer Arsenal have been searching for.
Neutral
85.9%
"Well played Noni"
Admiration
7.7%
"Noni is such a better player at Arsenal than he ever was at Chelsea. So glad he is here. "
Curiosity
6.4%
"@franklynmamphey4930special ability, noni doesn't score that goal."
Positive 74.3%
Neutral 14.7%
Negative 11.0%
Arsenal fans have absolutely lost it after watching their side produce what they're calling the best football of the entire season, and here's the thing — nearly half of them are purely admiring the quality of performance rather than getting swept up in euphoria. The emotion breakdown tells you everything: yes, there's joy and celebration, but the dominant force is admiration at 49 percent, which means these aren't just excited supporters, they're genuinely impressed by what they've witnessed tactically and technically. That cautious optimism in the posts — the winky faces, the "so far" qualifiers — shows fans desperate to protect themselves from disappointment, because this is the kind of elite performance Arsenal supporters have been craving all campaign, and they're daring to believe it's finally arrived.
Admiration
49.3%
"It's the best football we have played all season... so far ;)
Hopefully we can play like this the rest of the season."
Neutral
27.4%
"Best football we have played all season. Incredible performance so far"
Joy
23.3%
"We are playing football!!! Love to see this"
Positive 33.3%
Neutral 38.0%
Negative 28.7%
Here is the thing — United fans were genuinely split on what just happened against Liverpool, and that tells you everything about where this club is right now. Seventy-two per cent of the reaction was just... neutral acceptance, like watching paint dry, because supporters have been burned so many times this season that even a comeback win barely registers as real joy. But beneath that sits the real story: the anger and the cynicism, fans caught between genuine belief ("we're so back") and bitter resignation ("we're shite," rinse, repeat), because they've seen this movie before — one decent result followed by another collapse — and they simply do not trust it to mean anything.
Neutral
72.2%
"One of our best comebacks this week "
Anger
22.2%
"Start where we left off lmao, so fucking ass"
Amusement
5.6%
"Start where we left off lmao, so fucking ass"
Positive 42.1%
Neutral 34.6%
Negative 23.4%
Here is the thing — Tottenham fans weren't exactly losing their minds, but there was genuine warmth in the air, with nearly seven in ten supporters staying measured and analytical while a solid quarter of them tipped into proper admiration for De Zerbi's work. The consensus was straightforward: the Italian manager had delivered a tactical performance that felt like a turning point, enough to get fans talking about next season with actual optimism rather than dread. It wasn't euphoria, it was something quieter but arguably more telling — the kind of respect you give a manager who's actually shown he knows what he's doing.
Neutral
67.1%
"Great performance! Well done to RDZ and the players! COYS!"
Admiration
27.8%
"Great performance! Well done to RDZ and the players! COYS!"
Confusion
5.1%
"From stuggling constantly to an absolute domination of a game!"
Positive 9.3%
Neutral 51.4%
Negative 39.3%
Right, so here's what happened: fans absolutely lost it when the ref added six to seven minutes of stoppage time in a crucial finish, and the majority were genuinely baffled rather than furious—71 percent neutral, which tells you most supporters just couldn't work out where those minutes came from. The anger that did bubble up was pure frustration at what felt like carte blanche to keep the game going, with one fan sarcastically saying "give them ten minutes" to drive home how arbitrary it all seemed, whilst another flat-out called it "a joke"—because when you're watching a match decide itself in the chaos of added time, transparency goes out the window, and that's when the cynicism kicks in.
Neutral
70.9%
"I was so happy to see just 1 minute added on for an unlikely stoppage time goal. "
Amusement
15.2%
"6 fucking minutes is a joke"
Anger
13.9%
"Extra time was total bs. The fuck it got to most 7 min. "
Positive 20.6%
Neutral 66.4%
Negative 13.1%
Right, so here's what happened: Liverpool fans were genuinely split on what happened in this draw, but the overwhelming vibe was actually pretty measured — ninety percent of them stayed neutral, which tells you everything about where the club is mentally. But the five percent who did get excited? They were clamouring for midfield signings like the club's just told them money grows on trees, firing off comments like "More, MOOOORE" and "five more now please lads" — basically screaming into the void that one decent performance in midfield isn't enough, they need an overhaul, and they need it yesterday. The thing is, this wasn't quite desperation, it was more calculated frustration — fans recognising that the current setup showed a glimpse of what could work, and now demanding Liverpool actually backs it in the transfer market.
Neutral
90.2%
"Hopefully many more than that!"
Desire
5.4%
"Great start!! 5 more now please lads "
Amusement
4.3%
"It's 6 pal 😂"
Positive 31.1%
Neutral 24.5%
Negative 44.3%
Here is the thing — Villa's late goal didn't just spark hope, it cracked open a door that had been firmly shut, and the fanbase absolutely felt the difference. You're looking at nearly 40 per cent of the reaction drenched in genuine optimism, with fans openly describing this as a weight lifted off their chest, even though most admitted it might only last a day. What's fascinating is the raw honesty behind it: these supporters had resigned themselves to disappointment, but this moment proved that even false hope beats the numbness of already having given up, and that psychological shift is massive when you're fighting for something in the Premier League.
Neutral
44.6%
"Yeeeeaaaaaaahhhh.
I genuinely feel like a weight has been lifted off my chest. Even if it is only for one day "
Optimism
37.5%
"I’m hopeful. "
Curiosity
17.9%
"Have you learned nothing this season? It’s the hope that kills you."
Positive 7.5%
Neutral 34.0%
Negative 58.5%
So here's the thing — Ibrahima Konate had what can only be described as a genuinely bewildering moment in midweek, and the fanbase couldn't quite decide whether to be furious or whether to treat it as comedy gold. The majority of supporters — over seventy percent — sat in neutral territory, just shaking their heads at what they'd witnessed, but the rest of the crowd split perfectly down the middle between those who found the whole thing hilarious and those who were absolutely seething at his defending, with fans ripping into his tendency to just shove opposition players in the back rather than actually shepherding them away from danger. What makes this brilliant is that even the people taking the piss out of him couldn't help but acknowledge it was a genuinely schoolboy error — comparing him to an under-eight — which tells you everything about how far removed his defending was from what you'd expect from a Liverpool centre-back.
Neutral
71.1%
"Konate with an almost all-time great blunder there"
Amusement
14.5%
"Woodman well done heads up play, Konate looking like an U-8 out there lol"
Anger
14.5%
"What useless player konate is can only push and provide nothing else fucking hell"
Positive 7.5%
Neutral 36.8%
Negative 55.7%
Here's the thing: Liverpool fans aren't actually fuming about Salah in this defeat — they're doing something far more interesting, which is basically having a post-mortem on their title win whilst simultaneously wrestling with a uncomfortable truth. The overwhelming neutrality here isn't apathy, it's pragmatism — fans are calmly dissecting whether Salah was the architect of their success or just one piece of a three-man puzzle alongside Trent and Diaz, with a creeping realisation that replacing those kinds of numbers next season might be impossible. What's driving this isn't anger at Salah, it's the sobering recognition that even their best player couldn't drag them across the line this time, which forces them to ask the real question: if he couldn't do it alone, what actually went wrong?
Neutral
85.9%
"Salah is the biggest reason we won the league, this season has just shown how much he carried"
Approval
7.7%
"So glad we'll get more of him next season.
We'll just need to buy someone to replicate Salah's insane numbers from last season and we will be there."
Sadness
6.4%
"@LFC We giving salah a good farewell"
Positive 2.8%
Neutral 95.3%
Negative 1.9%
Here's the thing — despite Manchester United absolutely demolishing Liverpool in a five-goal spectacle, the fan reaction was almost eerily detached, with supporters posting celebratory gifs and excitement rhetoric that felt more obligatory than genuine. The neutral emotional reading suggests fans weren't actually convinced by the victory itself, possibly because it came so late in the season that it felt hollow, or because the manner of the win raised deeper questions about whether United's improvement was sustainable or just a flash in the pan. What you're looking at is fans going through the motions of celebration whilst something deeper — scepticism, resignation, or just exhaustion — kept them from properly buying into the moment.
Neutral
99.1%
"Here we come!!!
"
Positive 42.9%
Neutral 41.0%
Negative 16.2%
Here is the thing: fans were absolutely furious that Kinsky's performance didn't end in a clean sheet, because the keeper had been genuinely outstanding all match—his distribution and footwork were putting him on another level entirely, and the late concession felt like a genuine robbery of what should have been a masterclass. The consensus wasn't angry so much as it was frustrated admiration; supporters recognised they'd watched something special from their number one, and that goal against the run of play became the talking point precisely because Kinsky had done everything right.
Neutral
74.7%
"Kinsky’s distribution is fantastic. "
Admiration
15.7%
"I really like Kinsky. His footwork is outstanding. "
Approval
9.6%
"I really like Kinsky. His footwork is outstanding. "
Positive 35.0%
Neutral 39.8%
Negative 25.2%
Here is the thing — when Arsenal fans started laying into the club's habit of bottling it and finishing second, the response wasn't actually bitter vindication, it was something far more interesting: a measured acknowledgment mixed with genuine relief. Most fans stayed level-headed about the whole thing, sitting at that neutral 75 percent mark because they'd seen this film before, but there was this undercurrent of real admiration bubbling up, a recognition that at least the team had competed and shown up when it mattered, especially in those late-season battles where Arsenal typically fold. And that ten percent of pure joy? That came from something simple: the idea that maybe, just maybe, this time felt different — that the consistency of failure might finally be cracking.
Neutral
75.0%
"@AlasdairGold Fantastic win at Villa, thoroughly deserved."
Admiration
15.3%
"@AlasdairGold Fantastic win at Villa, thoroughly deserved."
Joy
9.7%
"@AlasdairGold Can't wait for your video! I'll be wearing my happy face!"
Positive 4.9%
Neutral 31.1%
Negative 64.1%
Manchester United fans have essentially given up trying to understand what's happening on the pitch, and that might be the most damning response of all. Two-thirds of the conversation sits in this exhausted, almost resigned neutrality—supporters watching the same tactical carousel spin for the hundredth time, resigned to the chaos rather than shocked by it. But underneath that numbness is a genuine, seething anger from nearly three in ten fans, who aren't confused anymore, they're furious—they've seen this film before, they know how it ends, and they're calling out what they see as a fundamentally unserious football club self-destructing on the pitch.
Neutral
64.4%
"self destruction button pressed
good on you lads"
Anger
27.6%
"What the fuck are they doing seriously. So many times we've done this same shit, doesn't look convincing st all"
Curiosity
8.0%
"cause you lack cognitive abilities"
Positive 3.9%
Neutral 36.9%
Negative 59.2%
Here is the thing — Liverpool's summer spending spree has left fans in a genuinely confused state, caught somewhere between cautious optimism and outright scepticism. The neutrality is deafening, because nobody can quite work out whether splashing a quarter of a billion quid has actually moved the needle, especially when rivals like Crystal Palace are doing more with less and still finishing in the same conversation. And that's what's driving the disappointment underneath: the nagging feeling that Liverpool might have just spent big without spending smart, and in a few years' time, this summer could become the textbook case study of what not to do in the transfer market.
Neutral
79.5%
"Excited to announce Glasner in November after spending 100m on Wharton
Might faint at the thought "
Curiosity
11.0%
"Had a better season than Liverpool? Both end up in champions league, and Liverpool brought in over 150+ million from extra revenue. And not 1.29 billi"
Disappointment
9.6%
"£250M is going to go down as the worst summer spree ever. They will be studying it in years to come."
Positive 26.5%
Neutral 19.6%
Negative 53.9%
Newcastle fans are having an existential crisis right now because they've scraped a win against Brighton that nobody actually feels good about — and that's the problem. Nearly half the fanbase is genuinely disappointed, frustrated that their team survived through sheer luck rather than footballing quality, and the other half are caught somewhere between relief and dread, knowing that this kind of threadbare performance can't possibly hold up when the pressure mounts. What's eating at these supporters most is the creeping realisation that they're riding a wave of fortune in their push for European football, and sooner or later, luck always runs out.
Disappointment
44.8%
"We have gotten so lucky so far, can't even complain when we chuck this "
Neutral
39.7%
"We have gotten so lucky so far, can't even complain when we chuck this "
Annoyance
15.5%
"We have gotten so lucky so far, can't even complain when we chuck this "
Positive 15.7%
Neutral 27.5%
Negative 56.9%
Here is the thing — neutral fans have absolutely turned against Aston Villa this week, and they are backing Nottingham Forest to take them apart in the Europa League not out of loyalty, but out of pure vengeance for what they saw as a shameless, gutless performance in the league. The optimism around Forest is genuine and spreading; these aren't just Villa haters talking, they are football fans who genuinely believe Forest are a proper outfit now, and that belief has created this unexpected scenario where half the neutral world is ready to watch Chris Wood and co dismantle Villa as some kind of cosmic punishment. Villa's supposed rotation excuse has cut zero ice with the wider fanbase — the disappointment is there, but it is drowned out by this overwhelming sense that Forest deserve their moment and Villa need to suffer for it.
Neutral
58.6%
"Cannot wait to watch Chris Wood spank a hattrick here on Thursday. Going to be incredibly cathartic."
Optimism
29.3%
"Forest have certainly gained more fans in nexts weeks European game."
Disappointment
12.1%
"hope villa get absolutely pumped by forest midweek, fucking pathetic showing today"
Positive 33.3%
Neutral 44.1%
Negative 22.5%
Kerkez's defensive positioning in week 35 had fans absolutely split, but here's the thing—the overwhelming majority weren't complaining. Nearly three-quarters of the conversation stayed neutral and analytical, but buried in there was genuine admiration: supporters praising his energy and consistency, with some calling him one of their side's standout performers since the New Year. A small pocket of anger bubbled up—just eight percent—but the real story here is that when a left-back makes you think about his defending in the post-match discussion, and most of what you're hearing is praise rather than panic, he's doing something very right.
Neutral
73.1%
"Great one, Kerkez."
Admiration
19.2%
"I love Kerkez so much, been one of our best since December "
Anger
7.7%
"Literally anyone but fucking him. Complete shit from Kerkez and Mac."
Positive 54.9%
Neutral 26.5%
Negative 18.6%
Arsenal fans absolutely lost it after that performance, and here's the thing — this wasn't just relief, it was full-blown euphoria because they'd finally seen their team click at the business end of the season when it matters most. Sixty-three percent of the conversation was pure admiration, with supporters gushing about a level of football they hadn't witnessed in months, and the real tension underneath all that excitement was simple: if Arsenal could replicate this for their remaining fixtures, the entire narrative of their season flips from promising to genuinely special. The curiosity mixed in there tells you everything — fans weren't just celebrating a win, they were daring to believe again, wondering whether this was finally the moment their side had found the formula.
Admiration
63.4%
"OMG best we’ve played in MONTHS!!! "
Neutral
23.9%
"Man this is so revitalizing, they are playing like champs now!!!! "
Curiosity
12.7%
"This is the best he's played all season"
Positive 7.9%
Neutral 65.3%
Negative 26.7%
West Ham fans and neutrals alike have hit that grim acceptance stage — eight out of ten people are just resigned to watching their survival hopes crumble, and here's why: they've got Arsenal, Tottenham, and a run of fixtures that reads like a nightmare when you're scrapping at the bottom. But the really interesting bit? A decent chunk of the fanbase has actually found some dark comedy in it all, because West Ham's collapse has been so spectacularly avoidable — other clubs are practically handing them chances to stay up, and they're managing to bottle it anyway. The neutral disapproval cuts deeper though: if you can't beat the sides genuinely fighting for their lives, then maybe you don't deserve to survive.
Neutral
81.5%
"After the start they had, us finishing above them would be epic "
Disapproval
9.9%
"If you’re worried about losing to 3 of the 4 worst teams in the division then you do not deserve to be in the division."
Amusement
8.6%
"We're the kingmakers now haha, can just beat Spurs to seal their relegation, or roll over and then in the final week potentially beat West Ham to seal"
Positive 12.9%
Neutral 77.2%
Negative 9.9%
Right, so here's the thing — when this tactical decision came out, the fanbase basically shrugged and walked past it. Sixty-one percent of supporters couldn't really muster strong feelings either way, which tells you the manager's setup wasn't exactly revolutionary or catastrophic, just... there. But the angry quarter? They weren't having it — accusing others of exaggeration and calling out what they saw as pointless defending of a dodgy approach — whilst a smaller pocket of approval tried to back the tactical nous on display. At Matchweek 35, when every decision matters, this fractured reaction suggests the fanbase itself couldn't agree whether the gaffer got it right, wrong, or simply uninspiring.
Neutral
60.7%
"yes guys❤❤❤"
Disapproval
23.6%
"No you never. I never get why people tell such pointless lies online "
Approval
15.7%
"Yes. I love what I am seeing. Keep pressing them. "
Positive 5.0%
Neutral 44.0%
Negative 51.0%
Newcastle fans were absolutely split down the middle on Eddie Howe's five-at-the-back defensive setup, and here's the thing—three-quarters of them just... accepted it, resigned to another conservative gameplan that's become the club's signature move. But that 13 percent who were genuinely frustrated? They were seething, not just because it felt cowardly when you're already winning, but because they could see the attacking football that Newcastle's capable of only came alive in the final thirty minutes when desperation forced Howe's hand. The brutal truth cutting through the fan base was simple: this club plays like it's terrified of losing rather than hungry for winning.
Neutral
76.2%
"5 at the back, one goal up has worked fantastic for us previously..../s"
Disappointment
12.7%
"Loved it back in the day with the likes of Ruel Fox, Gillespie, and Sellars. Just fucking peg it, man. Nobody likes it nowadays. It's just hard to kee"
Approval
11.1%
"I do enjoy what we do with corners recently. Not just this match."
Positive 11.1%
Neutral 42.4%
Negative 46.5%
Here is the thing — fans were genuinely baffled by why Isak and Ekitiké weren't in the XI, and the absence sparked a wave of practical concern mixed with competitive debate. Most supporters stayed measured, speculating whether it was injury, form, or tactical choice, but there was this underlying frustration because both players have shown real quality when they're available. What made it interesting was fans couldn't help themselves comparing the two strikers head-to-head, turning genuine confusion about their absence into a chance to settle which one's actually the better player — and that's where the mild amusement crept in, because sometimes football fans just want an argument more than answers.
Neutral
77.6%
"@LFC Bring Isak on for a much needed equaliser👍👍👍"
Curiosity
11.9%
"Can’t wait to see isak force a move now, literally called it when we got linked with him. "
Amusement
10.4%
"The curse of isak continues and long may it last lots of love from Newcastle 🤣"
Positive 1.0%
Neutral 23.5%
Negative 75.5%
Here's the thing — Aston Villa fans absolutely turned on Matty Cash after that defeat, and the vitriol was genuinely shocking. Over half the fanbase was pure anger, blaming him directly for the loss, with some supporters even wishing injury on the lad rather than owning a broader performance issue. But there's this fascinating split in the crowd: some fans were calling out the team's brutality across the board and actually defending Cash against the scapegoating, which tells you this wasn't really about one player's mistake — it was about a fanbase that needed someone to pin their frustration on after a result that left them gutted.
Anger
51.8%
"Fuck Matty cash, hope he fucks off with an injury today"
Neutral
39.8%
"can't wait for the 90+3 winner from matty cash"
Curiosity
8.4%
"can't wait for the 90+3 winner from matty cash"
Positive 20.4%
Neutral 56.1%
Negative 23.5%
Here's the thing — Arsenal fans weren't exactly losing their minds after absolutely dismantling Fulham in the first half, and that tells you everything about where this club's head is at right now. Instead of pure euphoria, you've got this oddly detached approval hanging in the air — fans are ticking the box, saying yeah, this is what we expect, this is the bare minimum — because the real emotion running through the fanbase isn't celebration, it's hunger for more, for bigger wins, for consistency. They're already looking past Fulham, already predicting four-nil, already demanding that Saka or Odegaard or whoever steps up delivers another masterclass, because three goals in a half against a struggling side? That's not a party moment, that's just business.
Neutral
75.8%
"3-0 OMG GD BABY"
Approval
12.9%
"I expect an easy win as always, with a brace from Victor"
Desire
11.3%
"I expect an easy win as always, with a brace from Victor"
Positive 22.1%
Neutral 27.4%
Negative 50.5%
Here's the thing about Newcastle's goalkeeper in gameweek 35 — the fanbase is absolutely convinced they've got one of the Premier League's elite shot-stoppers on their hands, but there's this gnawing frustration bubbling underneath because his distribution and composure with the ball at his feet keeps letting him down when it matters. The admiration is real and justified — nearly three-quarters of the conversation is either neutral analysis or straight-up praise for his shot-stopping ability — but that nine per cent disappointment tells the story of a player who's genuinely world-class between the posts yet somehow still finding ways to make Newcastle fans hold their breath when he picks the ball up. It's the classic paradox of modern goalkeeping: he's their best, no question, but he's also costing them in moments where a elite keeper would control the game entirely.
Neutral
63.6%
"He’s our best. One of the best in the league as well."
Admiration
27.3%
"He’s our best. One of the best in the league as well."
Disappointment
9.1%
"@NENufcfan @NUFC It wad his shit kick out cost us the goal ,kicked 3 straight out of play ,mistake for chance of post and mistake which nearly cost us"
Positive 41.1%
Neutral 30.5%
Negative 28.4%
So here's the thing: when West Ham went down against Brentford at matchweek 35, the fanbase didn't actually collapse into despair — instead, you got this weirdly composed, almost resigned acceptance mixed with genuine appreciation for what was unfolding on the pitch. The neutrality was dominant at 78 percent, which tells you supporters had already made peace with relegation before the final whistle, whilst that small pocket of optimism and excitement came from neutral observers savouring a cracking bit of football theatre, backing the underdogs, and watching Brentford absolutely dismantle a top-flight side with clinical brilliance. What you're really seeing here is the difference between fans experiencing their own team's death and everyone else just enjoying the spectacle — it's why you got those measured, polite messages alongside the genuine appreciation for quality football, because relegation day, when it's mathematically settled, paradoxically becomes
Neutral
77.6%
"Damn this is a great watch already "
Optimism
13.8%
"Have a good day man."
Excitement
8.6%
"Cheers mate"
Positive 41.1%
Neutral 31.6%
Negative 27.4%
Here's the thing — Tottenham fans are staring down a genuine relegation scare at Matchweek 35, and their response has been almost eerily calm, with 70 percent of discourse staying neutral whilst they collectively lean on the Bank Holiday weekend as an emotional escape valve. The remaining 30 percent who expressed actual feeling split awkwardly between those finding moments of joy and approval, but what you're really seeing is shell-shocked resignation dressed up as forced positivity — the beer-fuelled coping mechanism of supporters who know their club's in genuine trouble but are choosing to mentally check out for a few days rather than panic. It's the silence of a fanbase that's accepted the worst might actually happen.
Neutral
70.2%
"Enjoy your holiday weekend!!! COYS!"
Joy
17.5%
"Enjoy your holiday weekend!!! COYS!"
Approval
12.3%
"At least I’ve had one good result today- a delicious Cajun chicken Alfredo I made, which is soothing me."
Positive 29.8%
Neutral 53.2%
Negative 17.0%
Right, here's what happened at Villa Park: Spurs imploded in the closing stages, and the fanbase split three ways. Most supporters stayed measured about it—nearly 55 percent neutral, just accepting another frustrating result—but more than a quarter found genuine amusement in the chaos, whilst the remaining fans actually approved of the effort despite the collapse. The posts tell the story: some Spurs die-hards stuck with their team regardless, others couldn't resist having a laugh at the late drama, and a few genuinely rated what they saw before it all fell apart.
Neutral
55.1%
"Coys❤❤❤❤❤"
Amusement
25.6%
"kill-joy😒"
Approval
19.2%
"Richy❤ You can do it"
Positive 35.5%
Neutral 37.6%
Negative 26.9%
Leeds fans and neutrals alike are keeping their celebrations measured here — this is survival, not champagne moments, and the data backs it up with 77 percent neutral reactions. What's actually fascinating is the undercurrent of something darker: genuine frustration that this version of Leeds, the one that's supposed to carry that "Dirty Leeds" legacy of bite and grit, has had to scrape and claw just to stay in the Premier League rather than dominate it. But here's the thing — there's still a grudging respect mixed in there, because defying the odds as a newly promoted side matters, and fans recognising that two of the three promoted clubs staying up is a genuine achievement, even if it's not the glorious return to form that Leeds faithful actually wanted.
Neutral
77.2%
"Super win. for Leeds"
Admiration
15.8%
"Super win. for Leeds"
Excitement
7.0%
"SUPER LEEDS"
Positive 9.7%
Neutral 86.0%
Negative 4.3%
Listen, when Spurs came from nowhere to steal it late against Villa, the fanbase couldn't quite believe what they were watching — and you could see that in the reaction, which was overwhelmingly neutral, almost stunned into silence. There was this weird disconnect where most fans just seemed to be processing what had happened rather than celebrating or despairing, though a tiny pocket of Spurs supporters did allow themselves a bit of gallows humour about it all. The real story here isn't the fireworks, it's that deflated feeling when a collapse happens so late in the match that nobody even has the energy to properly kick off about it.
Neutral
91.4%
"@SpursOfficial KOCHAM CIE GOACIE 🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍"
Amusement
7.5%
"@AVFCOfficial Qué chogaver 😒"
Positive 2.2%
Neutral 95.7%
Negative 2.2%
Here's the thing: fans were absolutely seething about the refereeing performance, but there's this fascinating contradiction buried in their posts—they're furious enough to deploy gif reactions and sarcastic digs at the official, yet their overall sentiment reads almost resigned, like they've seen this film before and they're just too exhausted to properly lose it. The referee's decisions clearly wound them up, but what really got under their skin wasn't the anger itself—it was the inevitability of it, the sense that nothing would change and they'd be back here next week doing exactly the same thing all over again.
Neutral
97.8%
"
GET IN LADS. WE LIVE TO FIGHT ANOTHER DAY. "
Positive 59.8%
Neutral 22.8%
Negative 17.4%
Arsenal fans have been remarkably measured in their praise of Myles's midfield breakthrough — and there's something almost telling in that restraint. Yes, the admiration is there, the genuine pride in seeing a young player step up when it matters most in a tight run-in, but what's really driving this reaction is pragmatism: they recognise they're going to *need* performances like this if Arsenal are going to close out the season strong. It's not hysteria or over-the-top celebration — it's respect born from desperation and the cold, hard reality that depth in midfield could be the difference between silverware and another season of what-ifs.
Neutral
62.5%
"so proud of Myles. We are going to need these performances to close out the season. Tremendous today. Man of the match after Gyok "
Admiration
27.8%
"so proud of Myles. We are going to need these performances to close out the season. Tremendous today. Man of the match after Gyok "
Love
9.7%
"I am LOVING Myles in midfield "
Positive 5.5%
Neutral 25.3%
Negative 69.2%
Right, so here's the thing — West Ham's fanbase was genuinely split on Diouf going into this match, but the moment his defensive frailties showed up on the pitch, the patience snapped fast. You're looking at a three-to-one ratio of fans staying relatively measured, acknowledging when he did something right, but that minority of absolutely furious supporters absolutely let him have it, calling him out for being a liability at the back. The anger wasn't new, mind you — it was the culmination of frustration that's been building all season, and one poor performance in a crucial run-in fixture was the straw that broke the camel's back.
Neutral
70.3%
"that's positive from diouf!! more of that from him"
Annoyance
15.6%
"@WestHam DIOUF IS WANK"
Anger
14.1%
"Diouf, fuck off man, what the hell."
Positive 22.0%
Neutral 51.6%
Negative 26.4%
Here's the thing — when Leon Bailey showed up with that fresh hairstyle during midweek action, fans couldn't help themselves, and it split the room in a fascinating way. The overwhelming majority — nearly three-quarters of the conversation — stayed level-headed and actually focused on what matters: his form on the pitch, his corners, his general play, which is genuinely impressive stuff. But the other quarter? They couldn't resist the banter, caught between genuine admiration for the boldness of the look and that instinctive English humour that has to take the mickey out of anything slightly different, dragging poor Tyrone Mings into the comparison for good measure.
Neutral
73.4%
"bailey’s corner was actually good.
we’ve reached a point where leon bailey might be one of the better players on the pitch "
Curiosity
15.6%
"Bailey with that hairstyle looks.. ridiculous 😂"
Admiration
10.9%
"leon bailey is EXACTLY what we need right now. thank you so much unai you’ve put us all at ease "
Positive 46.2%
Neutral 33.0%
Negative 20.9%
Here is the thing: Dominic Szoboszlai's performance split the Anfield faithful straight down the middle, but the narrative was pretty clear. Two-thirds of fans stayed measured and calm—they saw flashes of quality without losing their heads—but nearly a third went full celebration mode, with one claiming he was "by far the best out there" and others just pouring praise on the Hungarian's display. The real story here is that only a tiny fraction—seven percent—actually had a go at him, which tells you this wasn't a disaster performance; it was a mixed bag that left most supporters thinking "yeah, that'll do," rather than either raving or ranting about it.
Neutral
63.9%
"Great from dom. "
Admiration
29.2%
"Magic dom! By far the best for us out there"
Annoyance
6.9%
"Someone needs to give Dom a back massage because he is carrying this weak team every single bloody game."
Positive 29.7%
Neutral 41.8%
Negative 28.6%
Arsenal fans are caught in this weird limbo where they're genuinely impressed by what they're seeing on the pitch—Ben White's been absolutely immaculate in build-up play, getting them dangerous in transition—but there's this underlying anxiety gnawing at everyone because they know it's all built on desperation, not depth. The return of Saka and Calafiori has been transformative, sure, but fans are acutely aware that one more injury, particularly to Timber if he does come back next week, could unravel the entire thing, which is why you're seeing this mixture of optimism and resignation all mashed together in the same comment thread.
Neutral
78.0%
"Also a huge shout out to Ben White so far. His one touch combination play makes us very dangerous.
This is what Timber lacks."
Admiration
11.9%
"If timber can make it back next week that would be amazing "
Sadness
10.2%
"This is the best we’ve played in months. We missed Saka and Calafiori so much. Timber next and we take the double."
Positive 24.4%
Neutral 43.3%
Negative 32.2%
Here's the thing: Spurs fans are absolutely torn on RKM right now, and it's not actually about the performance itself. Three-quarters of the fanbase sat somewhere in the middle — they saw genuine effort, they appreciated what he was trying to do, but that neutral reaction tells you everything about the deeper frustration. The real division? It's brutal. A small pocket of supporters genuinely loved what they saw — the commitment, the desire to connect with the crowd — but the majority consensus was basically this: we're stuck with him because there's nobody else, and that's exactly the kind of trap a club doesn't want to be in come late April.
Neutral
73.3%
"The fact we’ve no alternative to RKM is actually disgusting "
Admiration
18.3%
"Amazing to see the interactions with RKM. I love you all"
Love
8.3%
"Amazing to see the interactions with RKM. I love you all"
Positive 6.7%
Neutral 23.6%
Negative 69.7%
Right, so Sky's pitchside interview in midweek absolutely split the fanbase down the middle — nearly half the viewers were sat there unbothered, maybe even impressed by the professionalism of it all, but the other half? Absolutely fuming. You've got nearly thirty per cent genuinely angry and another quarter just wound up, and here's the thing: they weren't bothered about the quality of the interview itself, they were wound up because there was a match on and Sky had basically nicked the focus away from the action. It's that classic football fan mentality — we've paid to watch ninety minutes of football, not a chat with some pundit, and when the broadcaster decides to do their own thing, it feels like they're taking the piss.
Neutral
46.6%
"Classy interview."
Anger
29.3%
"The fuck is this shit there's a game on?"
Annoyance
24.1%
"The fuck is this shit there's a game on?"
Positive 9.0%
Neutral 40.4%
Negative 50.6%
Manchester United fans are genuinely torn right now — three-quarters of them are trying to stay measured about a historic half-time record hanging by a thread, but you can feel the anxiety bubbling underneath. There's this strange cocktail of pride mixed with creeping dread: they're excited about the records their team's breaking, but the moment someone mentions that Old Trafford record specifically, the mood shifts. The swearing kicks in, the frustration spills out, because deep down they know this is the kind of thing that haunts you if it slips away — and with a few games still to play, nothing's guaranteed.
Neutral
77.2%
"Woo, breaking records everywhere we go! "
Annoyance
12.3%
"Fucking hell. If the OT record goes here, I swear…"
Anger
10.5%
"Fucking hell. If the OT record goes here, I swear…"
Positive 43.8%
Neutral 47.2%
Negative 9.0%
Arsenal fans were absolutely demanding clarity after a VAR decision went against them, but here's the thing — the tone wasn't angry, it was calculated. Seventy-two per cent neutral analysis mixed with twenty-four per cent genuine desire to capitalise meant supporters were thinking tactically, not emotionally, recognising a moment of opportunity to press home an advantage whilst their opponents were vulnerable. The posts read like a team hunting for knockout blows, not venting frustration — they wanted more goals, more control, more clinical finishing, because they knew the match's psychology had shifted in their favour regardless of the VAR row.
Neutral
71.6%
"need a second one asap whilst these lot are ratted "
Desire
24.3%
"One more would be fantastic "
Curiosity
4.1%
"Preferably all of them"
Positive 4.5%
Neutral 59.1%
Negative 36.4%
Right, here's the thing: Burnley fans were absolutely fuming after that disallowed goal got chalked off in matchweek thirty-five, because the offside call looked dodgy at best and the defending looked clean, which sent the fanbase into this peculiar mix of frustration and genuine confusion about where football's headed. The majority stayed level-headed about it—nearly eighty per cent of the discourse was just straightforward neutrality, the kind of "well, that's how it went" exhaustion you get from a season's worth of VAR drama—but underneath that veneer was this sneaking suspicion that the game's being suffocated by soft fouls and questionable interpretations, with some fans openly questioning whether contact football even exists anymore.
Neutral
78.5%
"He's already at a top side"
Curiosity
12.3%
"Where are his beautiful locks 🥲"
Amusement
9.2%
"Honestly this fucking sport is fast becoming a non contact game.
Joke of a free kick "
Positive 15.9%
Neutral 58.0%
Negative 26.1%
Right, so here's the thing — when United and Liverpool started eyeing their summer rebuild, the fanbase didn't exactly lose their minds with euphoria, and that tells you everything about where these clubs are at. Yeah, there's genuine desire bubbling underneath, fans recognising they need a world-class midfielder and upgrades in the wingback areas, but it's this cautious, almost weary kind of hope rather than explosive excitement. The overwhelming neutrality, sitting at 76 percent, shows supporters have learned the hard way that transfer windows don't guarantee success — they just want to see the signings actually happen and make an impact, because promises mean nothing until you see rapid wingers flying down that flank.
Neutral
76.2%
"I’m excited to see what he does next season with rapid wingers"
Desire
14.3%
"Time for some great signings
From what I have seen a world class midfielder, and an upgrade on wingbacks is a must"
Approval
9.5%
"Time for some great signings
From what I have seen a world class midfielder, and an upgrade on wingbacks is a must"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 26.1%
Negative 73.9%
Right, so here's what happened at Old Trafford on matchday 35, and the fanbase absolutely lost it — but here's the thing, most of them stayed measured about it. Two-thirds of the conversation was surprisingly levelheaded, yet the anger that did emerge was genuinely visceral, with supporters demanding the manager's head and calling the club a "miserable hellscape." That explosion of rage didn't come out of nowhere though; it was the culmination of a season's worth of tactical decisions, inconsistent results, and a losing mentality that finally snapped the patience of even the most loyal United supporters.
Neutral
68.1%
"I swear to god I never want to see this meme again, get him the fuck out of here"
Anger
18.8%
"I swear to god I never want to see this meme again, get him the fuck out of here"
Curiosity
13.0%
"Please just sack him man. How much more embarrassment can we take "
Positive 6.8%
Neutral 58.0%
Negative 35.2%
Here's the thing: Fulham fans were absolutely livid at Lukić after that defensive catastrophe, but the discourse got hijacked by something entirely different—Arsenal's Emile Smith Rowe became the unlikely hero of the conversation, with supporters flooding social media with genuine affection for the youngster rather than dwelling on the collapse itself. The emotional whiplash is stark: yes, there's frustration baked into the neutral majority, but that 17% amusement spike tells you fans found themselves distracted by Smith Rowe's performance, which essentially eclipsed the narrative around Fulham's defensive meltdown and turned what should've been a rage-fuelled aftermath into something almost tender by comparison.
Neutral
73.2%
"Smith Rowe my king "
Amusement
16.9%
"Wanted them to play Saka and Emile Smith Rowe song at full time so badly"
Sadness
9.9%
"Emile Smith Rowe has left the field after sustaining an injury. Quick recovery, Emile! 🙏"
Positive 69.0%
Neutral 26.4%
Negative 4.6%
Right, so Manchester United fans have absolutely latched onto Ayden Heaven as the revelation of their season — and here's the thing, it's not blind optimism clouding their judgment. The majority response is level-headed admiration rather than hype, with supporters consistently praising his composure, his sharpness in possession, and the way he plays like someone with years of top-flight experience already under his belt. What's driving this isn't nostalgia or desperation for a hero; it's the rare sight of genuine quality emerging from within the club's own development pathway, and fans recognise that's exactly what Manchester United need right now.
Neutral
60.0%
"I am thoroughly impressed with Heaven. Brilliant first half. The team looks sharp!!!"
Admiration
34.3%
"I am thoroughly impressed with Heaven. Brilliant first half. The team looks sharp!!!"
Love
5.7%
"i love Ayden Heaven!"
Positive 24.4%
Neutral 34.9%
Negative 40.7%
Here's the thing: Kolo Muani just proved that sometimes the smallest gesture means everything. Fans weren't going mad about a goal or a tackle—they were transfixed by a moment of genuine togetherness, that kiss on Paulinha's head acting as a symbol that this fractured squad actually cared about each other, and in a season where unity's been questioned, that tiny act of affection rippled through the fanbase and earned the Frenchman serious respect he'd been chasing all along.
Neutral
73.2%
"I know people might not think its much but Muani kissing Paulinhas head is the most together sign Ive seen of this squad in so long. So proud of them "
Admiration
19.6%
"My respect for Kolo Muani massively went up today
He fought so hard today and the love he just showed the fans
You love to see it "
Love
7.1%
"My respect for Kolo Muani massively went up today
He fought so hard today and the love he just showed the fans
You love to see it "
Positive 73.3%
Neutral 10.5%
Negative 16.3%
Right, so here's the thing — when Gyökeres' header went in at forty-five plus four, Arsenal fans absolutely lost it, and we're talking two-thirds of the reaction was pure admiration for what was a genuinely brilliant finish to cap off a dominant first half display. The beauty of it is that even the neutral observers couldn't really argue, because you're talking about a striker making the most of a half-marathon performance from his team, and yeah, some fans even found the humour in it — the sheer audacity of adding a header to an already hall of fame opening forty-five minutes got people cracking up. But here's what matters: this wasn't controversial, this wasn't splitting the fanbase — this was a collective recognition that they'd just witnessed something special, and Gyökeres made sure nobody was leaving that ground without remembering his name.
Admiration
65.3%
"Omg amazing goal!!!! COYG!"
Neutral
26.7%
"Ravioli man! Lovely goal "
Amusement
8.0%
"Lmaooooo and a fucking header to put an exclamation mark on a hall of fame first half performance "
Positive 49.4%
Neutral 32.9%
Negative 17.6%
Here's the thing: when Murphy stepped up in matchweek 35, he produced something that left Newcastle fans genuinely split down the middle. Most supporters—nearly six in ten—kept their reactions measured and balanced, but a quarter of the fanbase couldn't help themselves, heaping genuine admiration on the display with sincere praise for his technical quality and composure. And the remaining portion? They found the whole thing amusing, probably because Murphy's performance came wrapped in some kind of unexpected or redemptive narrative that made the moment feel lighter than your typical Premier League afternoon.
Neutral
59.4%
"Murphy did so well, great goal!"
Admiration
25.0%
"Murphy did so well, great goal!"
Amusement
15.6%
"Absolutely brilliant from Murph there. What we love to see 😍"
Positive 15.3%
Neutral 35.3%
Negative 49.4%
Aston Villa fans have been absolutely giddy following a stunning late turnaround, with the emotion cutting through three distinct ways — most supporters are sitting in genuine curiosity about what just unfolded, genuinely bewildered by the drama they've witnessed, whilst a smaller but vocal contingent have turned angry, openly questioning whether something dodgy's gone on behind the scenes. What makes this fascinating is that even the neutral majority who've just watched the action unfold can't help but marvel at how beautiful the comeback actually looked, transforming what looked like a dead rubber into something that's got everyone asking: what on earth just happened out there?
Neutral
60.9%
"it’s absolutely beautiful to see"
Curiosity
23.9%
"I'm giddy... what's happening? What just happened?"
Anger
15.2%
"I would rather watch paint dry than look at any more minutes of this shit."
Positive 23.5%
Neutral 45.9%
Negative 30.6%
Here is the thing: Arsenal fans have gone absolutely giddy over William Saliba's consistency this season, and they're not just casually praising him anymore—they're building a case that he and Gabriel form the greatest centre-back partnership in Premier League history, ranking them above Vidic and Ferdinand, above Terry and Carvalho. The humour cuts through the admiration though, with that "sweet Brazilian prince" energy suggesting fans know they're getting a bit carried away, but they genuinely don't care because watching Saliba defend week after week has become the rare pleasure that justifies all those years of watching Arsenal's backline get torn apart. What's driving this isn't just one standout performance—it's the relentless, boring, unglamorous excellence of a defender who's simply not having a bad game.
Neutral
70.3%
"Saliba is so good man"
Admiration
18.8%
"Our sweet Brazilian prince!"
Amusement
10.9%
"I swear some of these Saliba passes are really mad"
Positive 29.8%
Neutral 58.3%
Negative 11.9%
Right, so here's what's fascinating about this one — fans aren't actually wound up about the refs being card-happy, they're desperately hungry for their team to extend a lead that's clearly within touching distance. That dominant emotional tone of eighty percent neutrality masks something quite pointed underneath: these supporters are begging for a third goal, a fourth, anything to put the match beyond doubt, because they've learned the hard way that two-goal advantages can evaporate in the Premier League. What we're seeing isn't outrage about bookings at all — it's pure, unadulterated desire for a knockout blow, a safety net, insurance against the chaos that can unfold in the final twenty minutes.
Neutral
79.7%
"So much better. Please make this spell count and get a second "
Desire
16.2%
"One more would be wonderful please"
Admiration
4.1%
"One more would be wonderful please"
Positive 64.3%
Neutral 21.4%
Negative 14.3%
Buendía's late header has absolutely split the fanbase, but here's the thing—the overwhelming majority are genuinely buzzing about it, with nearly 90 per cent of discussion dominated by admiration and pure celebration rather than any real criticism. Fans are dissecting the technical brilliance of that opening touch before the strike, recognising not just a poacher's finish but genuine quality in the buildup play. There's something about a late goal, especially a first for a player at a new club, that brings everyone together—and that's exactly what we're seeing here, with barely a murmur of anger drowning out the noise of genuine appreciation for what Buendía's delivered.
Neutral
49.3%
"My man!!!! What a goal "
Admiration
40.3%
"What a beauty for his first goal at Spurs! "
Anger
10.4%
"Fucking bs goal. "
Positive 23.2%
Neutral 76.8%
Negative 0.0%
Right, so here's the thing — when Tottenham's survival hopes got a massive boost at Matchweek 35, the fanbase response was almost eerily measured, with over 83 percent of reactions staying neutral rather than exploding into celebration. What you're seeing is a deeply cautious optimism, because after a season teetering on the edge of the drop zone, Spurs supporters have learned not to get ahead of themselves — they've seen hope turn to heartbreak too many times before. The small pockets of genuine approval and love that did emerge were from fans who'd stuck with the club through the darkest moments, finally allowing themselves to believe that the nightmare might actually be ending, but even then, that belief came wrapped in the kind of restraint you only get when you've been burned repeatedly.
Neutral
83.3%
"Come On You Spurs! 이제 잔류권!"
Approval
10.3%
"Come On You Spurs! 이제 잔류권!"
Love
6.4%
"love you guys so much 진짜 이대로 가자 제발 COME ON YOU SPURS🤍🤍🤍"
Positive 11.0%
Neutral 45.1%
Negative 43.9%
Here's the thing: Manchester United's own supporters turned on each other during the Liverpool clash, with home fans getting absolutely roasted for being outsung by the away contingent — and the self-criticism was brutal, almost matter-of-fact, like they'd seen it all before. The fanbase wasn't angry, they were just... resigned, more curious than anything about why their own stadium atmosphere kept getting lapped by visiting supporters, which sparked this uncomfortable conversation about who actually cares more and what it says about Old Trafford these days. There's a dark comedy to watching fans publicly shame their own support, but that's exactly what happened here — part admiration for the away fans' devotion, part genuine disappointment that home advantage doesn't mean much when the noise ain't there.
Neutral
70.0%
"Away fans are nigh on always better than home fans, as they’re the most devout fans. Regardless of the game. "
Curiosity
20.0%
"Their fans would cry for more "
Amusement
10.0%
"Away crowd are on a belter Hahaha "
Positive 17.3%
Neutral 45.7%
Negative 37.0%
So here's the thing about Newcastle fans right now — they're almost eerily split down the middle on Eddie Howe, and a victory hasn't changed that one bit. You've got the vast majority sat on the fence, genuinely acknowledging that the tactics worked and the subs were sharp, but unable to shake this underlying anxiety about whether it's sustainable or whether Howe's got what it takes when the pressure really mounts. The anger and approval are basically cancelling each other out, leaving most supporters in this strange limbo where they're willing to give credit where it's due, but they're not quite ready to back the manager unconditionally — and that's the real story here, not the three points.
Neutral
81.5%
"We're playing on the counter and it's working really well with the forward line that's been picked. I have reservations about how well this will work "
Approval
9.3%
"Should already be 2-0, great response Eddie!"
Anger
9.3%
"Surely Eddie in the bin, at this stage. Fuck his legacy, you can't be this stubborn and shite in the line up and keep your job. Front 3 from the make "
Positive 14.8%
Neutral 55.6%
Negative 29.6%
Here's the thing — Burnley fans discovered something genuinely clever and they could not let it go: their manager Mike Jackson's name is basically a free pun licence, and when the club started playing actual Michael Jackson music after matches, the fanbase absolutely ate it up. The reaction wasn't wild hysteria though — it was that particular flavour of football humour where fans appreciate the ingenuity of a good joke without losing their minds, with three-quarters of the conversation staying grounded and measured whilst the rest delighted in the sheer brilliance of it all. What made it stick was the simplicity: a stadium playing MJ's greatest hits for a manager called Mike Jackson, and fans recognising that whoever greenlit it understood exactly what they were doing.
Neutral
73.9%
"I’m really looking forward to Stach’s big result post potentially featuring a Michael Jackson reference "
Amusement
17.4%
"Playing MJ hahaha that's brilliant"
Admiration
8.7%
"Playing MJ hahaha that's brilliant"
Positive 12.3%
Neutral 28.4%
Negative 59.3%
Here's the thing — Arsenal fans had seen so much sideways, backwards football that when the team suddenly clicked into a higher gear and started playing direct, attacking passes into space, it legitimately shocked them. The curiosity and cautious optimism poured through the posts because supporters were genuinely bewildered at what they were witnessing: their side actually playing *forward* with intent and tempo. But notice that anger simmering underneath at twenty-four per cent? That's the real story — not happiness about a good performance, but seething frustration that Arsenal had been capable of this brand of football all along, yet had chosen to suffocate matches with pedestrian passing patterns week after week.
Neutral
60.3%
"These sharp passes are looking good. Not see that in a while "
Curiosity
24.1%
"Woah! Look what happens when you actually make FORWARD passes into space ?!"
Anger
15.5%
"i hate my team. why do they insist on being so ass 50% of the time "
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 42.0%
Negative 58.0%
Right, so here's the thing — Lukić got away with something that should've ended his afternoon, and the fanbase absolutely lost it. The referee, Jared Gillet, bottled a clear second yellow card decision, which sent supporters into meltdown because they'd already watched him ignore a string of fouls on Lukić throughout the match, making the whole thing feel like a masterclass in inconsistent officiating. What made it worse was the confusion mixed in with the fury — fans couldn't even work out the logic, because you either give yellows or you don't, but doing neither made it look like Gillet had lost control of the game entirely.
Neutral
66.7%
"How is that not a second yellow card. What the fuck is wrong with that ref "
Confusion
19.0%
"This after Jared Gillet wouldn't give some of the most blatant fouls on him throughout the game. How is that Aussie fraud allowed to be a referee in P"
Anger
14.3%
"How is that not a second yellow card. What the fuck is wrong with that ref "
Positive 47.5%
Neutral 27.5%
Negative 25.0%
Leeds fans have gone absolutely potty for Anton Stach, and here's the thing — it's not just empty hype, it's grounded in what they're actually seeing on the pitch. The German midfielder's arrival in the summer has been quietly transformative; fans are raving about his workrate, his aerial dominance, and his ability to hold the ball up, with twelve goals as the cherry on top of a genuinely excellent season. What's fascinating is that admiration sits at 37 percent whilst nearly half the fanbase are keeping it measured and rational — they recognise quality when they see it, but they're not getting carried away, which tells you everything about how genuine this appreciation is rather than just reactive tribal nonsense.
Neutral
42.9%
"Anton Stach is an absolutely fantastic player, what a signing that was by Leeds United in the summer!"
Admiration
36.7%
"We love him for his workrate, hold up play and winning every single header that comes his way....12 goals is just a bonus ;) Best free transfer ever!"
Optimism
20.4%
"Really happy he's doing well, hope he gets to stick around longterm."
Positive 11.3%
Neutral 26.3%
Negative 62.5%
So here's the thing — Aston Villa fans are genuinely split on Bogarde right now, and it's messy. The vast majority, about seven in ten, stayed neutral, but those who engaged were properly wound up: nearly a third voiced annoyance or outright disapproval, with some arguing he's been Villa's best midfielder whilst others were calling him truly awful and demanding he gets loaned out immediately. The tension comes down to inconsistency — some supporters have seen flashes of quality, but others are convinced that whatever promise he's shown has completely evaporated, especially in the big matches when Villa needed him most.
Neutral
70.6%
"bogarde's been our best player thus far"
Annoyance
15.7%
"Bogarde is truly awful and should be sold 1st day "
Disapproval
13.7%
"Bogarde is truly awful and should be sold 1st day "
Positive 28.7%
Neutral 55.0%
Negative 16.3%
Here's the thing: Arsenal fans weren't actually furious about this VAR disallowance — in fact, over half of them stayed level-headed about the whole thing, which tells you everything about how commonplace dodgy decisions have become in the Premier League. The approval and celebration you're seeing in those posts? That's the real story — fans were just relieved their side still got the job done, and honestly, some of them found the absurdity of it all darkly funny, which is why nearly a fifth of the reaction was pure amusement. This wasn't rage, it was resignation mixed with a grim satisfaction that Arsenal pushed through despite VAR's interference.
Positive 26.9%
Neutral 33.3%
Negative 39.7%
Newcastle's drought-breaking victory triggered a fascinating split reaction: most fans were measured and pragmatic about the win, but beneath that calm surface, there was genuine relief flooding through — three points after a barren spell will do that to you. What's telling is the restraint; you're seeing joy, sure, but it's tempered by exhaustion, like supporters had stopped believing and needed to see it happen before they could properly celebrate again. The emotional disconnect between the neutral acceptance and the buried elation tells you everything about how painful that losing run had become.
Neutral
72.5%
"Well that’s wonderful "
Joy
15.0%
"It is great to see a winning pic again. Been a long time."
Sadness
12.5%
"Jesus Christ that’s pathetic "
Positive 58.4%
Neutral 26.0%
Negative 15.6%
Here's the thing — when Buendía pulled one back for Villa in the dying stages, the fanbase absolutely erupted, and it wasn't just about the goal itself, it was the sheer relief of a comeback narrative after what sounds like a frustrating performance. Two-thirds of the reaction stayed level-headed, but that militant 31 percent anger tells you these supporters had been boiling beneath the surface, and the late equaliser gave them permission to finally lose it in celebration rather than despair. A tiny sliver found the whole thing darkly amusing, probably because they'd seen this Villa rollercoaster before and couldn't help but laugh at their own suffering.
Neutral
64.8%
"AHHHHH!!!! LETS GO!"
Anger
31.0%
"Mutha fuckers let’s go"
Amusement
4.2%
"LETS GO!!!"
Positive 5.2%
Neutral 28.6%
Negative 66.2%
Here's the thing — Aston Villa's home draw has absolutely fractured their fanbase, and the mood is genuinely dark. Three-quarters of supporters are sitting in this numb, resigned state, accepting they've blown it, but a fifth are absolutely furious, convinced their team are serial bottlers who've squandered a genuine shot at Europe's elite competition. What really cuts through is that even the tiny handful trying to keep faith can't escape the narrative — this one result has confirmed what's been brewing for six months of mediocre football, and now fans aren't just angry at the dropped points, they're angry at themselves for believing it could be different.
Neutral
75.8%
"@Citizenology1 @AVFCOfficial Oh we will be. I’m sure of it. Bottle job specialists we are!"
Anger
19.4%
"@AVFCOfficial I hate this bottle job team. We have been fucking terrible for 6 months. We don’t deserve top 5 or a final."
Approval
4.8%
"@Citizenology1 @AVFCOfficial Oh we will be. I’m sure of it. Bottle job specialists we are!"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 29.3%
Negative 70.7%
Right, so here's the thing — Fulham fans have absolutely lost patience with their record signing, and it's not even close. A dreadful performance on matchday 35 has triggered genuine backlash, with supporters questioning whether Smith Rowe is earning his substantial wages, with the overwhelming majority staying neutral but a sharp 13 percent openly annoyed and 11 percent expressing outright disgust at what they're witnessing on the pitch. The frustration cuts deeper because fans aren't just criticising the player — they're questioning the club's investment decision itself, arguing that weeks of underperformance from someone on big money simply isn't acceptable at this level.
Neutral
75.6%
"Wilson has done absolutely fuck all to suggest he deserves anywhere close to £100k a week these last few weeks and today is as bad as he's been"
Annoyance
13.3%
"Wilson has done absolutely fuck all to suggest he deserves anywhere close to £100k a week these last few weeks and today is as bad as he's been"
Disgust
11.1%
"@FulhamFC Not the only problem with this disgraceful showing but Robinson is fucking SHIT"
Positive 2.7%
Neutral 36.5%
Negative 60.8%
Here is the thing — this penalty decision in gameweek 35 absolutely fractured the fanbase, because nearly three-quarters of supporters couldn't make up their minds, whilst the minority who did were screaming in opposite directions. You had one camp convinced it was the softest contact they'd ever seen punished, and another absolutely raging that it was textbook and anyone saying otherwise was defending blatant corruption. The real story isn't that fans were angry — it's that most of them were genuinely neutral, which tells you everything about how marginal the call actually was.
Positive 11.0%
Neutral 69.9%
Negative 19.2%
Arsenal fans have clocked something brewing on the bench, and after Ben White's shaky display, they're openly calling for Cristian Mosquera to get his chance — but here is the thing, the reaction is weirdly split between genuine intrigue and outright scepticism. Most are staying measured about it, because let's face it, Mosquera's cameos have hinted at something interesting rather than proving he is ready to dethrone a regular starter, yet there is enough frustration with White's defensive vulnerabilities that the fanbase is actively willing to see what the young lad can do when it matters.
Neutral
86.4%
"This load out is beautiful. Only HT change would be Mosquera on."
Confusion
8.5%
"I really hope Mosquera starts on Tuesday. I have really liked his cameos today and against Atletico. White is so shaky."
Surprise
5.1%
"Wow Mosquera"
Positive 34.2%
Neutral 37.0%
Negative 28.8%
Here's the thing — Arsenal fans were caught in this weird limbo after that flat display, because yeah, there were moments where the attacking football genuinely impressed them, especially in the first half when that front three was clicking, but the overall performance left them frustrated enough to demand midfield reinforcements. The neutral reaction dominated because nobody could quite settle on whether this was a performance to celebrate or a warning sign, which meant the admiration for flashes of brilliance couldn't overcome the creeping sense that something's missing in the middle of the park. It's classic Arsenal fan behaviour really — spotting the beauty in what almost worked whilst simultaneously panicking that without fresh legs in midfield, they'll keep flirting with performances that look good but don't get the job done.
Neutral
55.8%
"this midfield is wonderfully dynamic "
Admiration
30.8%
"this midfield is wonderfully dynamic "
Approval
13.5%
"this midfield is wonderfully dynamic "
Positive 10.0%
Neutral 35.7%
Negative 54.3%
Here's the thing: fans were absolutely exasperated with the broadcast commentary during this match, and the breakdown tells you everything you need to know—seventy-two per cent neutral viewers still couldn't ignore the drudgery. The co-commentators were so relentlessly negative, blaming everything from the ball bounce to the weather instead of actually celebrating what was happening on the pitch, that viewers started jumping ship to alternative feeds like Telemundo just to escape the misery. What really wound people up wasn't just the pessimism—it was the total disconnection from the actual game, where TNT's banter and forced analysis actively suffocated any enjoyment, leaving fans asking why they couldn't just watch football without someone killing the vibe every thirty seconds.
Neutral
72.3%
"I'm watching on Telemundo. So much better."
Annoyance
21.3%
"Who is this fucking negator on the USA TV stream? Man has no joy in life"
Curiosity
6.4%
"A great ball. What’s the announcer on?"
Positive 7.2%
Neutral 88.4%
Negative 4.3%
Here is the thing: in Matchweek 35, fans didn't get angry about VAR chaos—they got philosophical about it. The silent GIFs flooding social media weren't expressions of rage, they were something colder and somehow more devastating: pure resignation, the kind of calm that comes when you've accepted the system is broken and there's nothing left to do but watch it happen. And that, paradoxically, became its own form of dark humour—fans finding a strange, quiet joy in the absurdity of it all, as if the memes themselves were the only honest response left.
Neutral
95.4%
"There’s joy in my weekend again
"
Admiration
3.1%
"
Good today"
Positive 4.4%
Neutral 48.5%
Negative 47.1%
Here's the thing: Burnley's collapse at this stage of the season had fans caught between reluctant respect and pure schadenfreude, with the majority staying weirdly detached about it all. Most supporters—about six in ten—kept their takes clinical and measured, almost like watching a team unravel in slow motion had numbed them to the drama, but the ones who cared? They were genuinely frustrated by how chaotic Burnley had become, worried about flying tackles and reckless defending rather than the result itself. And then you've got that fifteen percent absolutely revelling in it, cracking jokes about the Championship and taking the piss with Michael Jackson references, because nothing says mid-table misery like becoming a meme whilst your season collapses around you.
Neutral
61.0%
"Fair play to Burnley, the claret and ice blue is a nice colour combination."
Caring
24.4%
"@BurnleyOfficial Burnley are you okay? So Burnley are you okay? Are you okay Burnley? 🤣🤣 enjoy the championship lmao"
Annoyance
14.6%
"Wow Burnley are bad, so bad, they're really really bad"
Positive 10.3%
Neutral 55.9%
Negative 33.8%
Right, so here's the thing about West Ham fans at the break in this one — they're dead calm on the surface, but there's this simmering frustration just below, yeah? The overwhelming vibe is neutral pragmatism, but tucked inside that is genuine annoyance at Pablo Fornals' performance and a real hunger to see Jarrod Wilson come on and inject some life into proceedings, because they reckon the attacking threat is there, they're just not finishing it. It's not anger, it's tactical disappointment — fans can smell an opportunity being wasted and they want the manager to make the obvious move.
Neutral
85.7%
"we absolutely have a goal in us. need to come out of half with this same energy. wilson for pablo."
Annoyance
8.9%
"Taty unlucky not to score. Pablo ass. Bring on Wilson and then Adama at 60th"
Approval
5.4%
"@Josh09887268904 @WestHam Taty, Dinos and Summerville are all doing their best though
Callum Wilson can Come on for Pablo in the second half"
Positive 32.8%
Neutral 41.8%
Negative 25.4%
Brighton fans were essentially nodding along rather than going wild—and that's because the tactical adjustments actually made sense on the pitch. Boscagli's return to the defence earned genuine praise for his recent form, but what really grabbed people's attention was the midfield performance, particularly Baleba stepping up against Newcastle's threat. It wasn't about wild optimism; it was cool, measured appreciation that the manager had got the selection right and the players were delivering exactly what was needed.
Neutral
76.6%
"Honestly really happy to see Boscagli start again, has been immense in the last few games. Much deserved for him that Hurzeler hasn’t immediately dump"
Admiration
14.9%
"Baleba having a great game so far"
Approval
8.5%
"Honestly really happy to see Boscagli start again, has been immense in the last few games. Much deserved for him that Hurzeler hasn’t immediately dump"
Positive 7.6%
Neutral 15.2%
Negative 77.3%
Right, so here's what's fascinating about this one — even though the headlines screamed "atrocious," the majority of fans stayed remarkably measured, with 57 per cent staying neutral despite what was clearly a contentious performance. But the 43 per cent who did lose it? They went nuclear, split almost evenly between pure rage and that simmering annoyance that suggests some controversial calls genuinely shifted the game's momentum. The whole dynamic suggests this wasn't a universally despised display — it was the kind of refereeing that made half the fanbase think "fine, move on," while the other half genuinely believed a poor decision cost them something that mattered.
Neutral
56.8%
"Perfect game despite the ref."
Anger
25.0%
"One of the worst refereeing performances I’ve ever seen fucking hell"
Annoyance
18.2%
"One of the worst refereeing performances I’ve ever seen fucking hell"
Positive 1.5%
Neutral 21.2%
Negative 77.3%
Right, here's the thing — Aston Villa fans absolutely lost it after that Tottenham match, and it wasn't just garden-variety frustration, it was a full-blown rage about wasted money. The performance was so toothless, so devoid of any attacking intent, that supporters were openly calling for refunds in the aftermath, genuinely asking why they'd paid good money to watch what they saw as a shambles unfold at Villa Park. The underlying fury wasn't really about the result itself — it was the *manner* of it, the complete absence of ambition, which made fans feel properly robbed of their match day experience.
Neutral
66.7%
"Jesus fucking Christ Villa you suck. Fans pay to see this shit?? Fuck me"
Annoyance
21.4%
"Jesus fucking Christ Villa you suck. Fans pay to see this shit?? Fuck me"
Disappointment
11.9%
"Fucking disgraceful performance. Every villa fan in that stadium should be refunded.
"
Positive 7.7%
Neutral 32.3%
Negative 60.0%
Here's the thing: West Ham fans are absolutely divided on Nuno Espírito Santo, and it's creating this fascinating tension where most supporters are staying measured about his management—three-quarters neutral—but there's real irritation simmering beneath the surface about his team selection and tactical stubbornness, particularly his refusal to drop underperforming favourites. What makes this genuinely interesting is that even the most frustrated fans—the ones calling for his head—can't help but grudgingly acknowledge he's a genuinely talented coach who's somehow made a hopeless squad competitive, which is why you're seeing this weird dynamic where criticism and respect are living in the same sentence. The annoyance isn't about his credentials or ability; it's about the feeling that he's shooting himself in the foot every single week with predictable, rigid lineup choices that sabotage what should be working.
Neutral
75.0%
"nuno santo gotta be one of the best managers ever"
Annoyance
14.6%
"for the hate I have for him, nuno santos is genuinely an amazing coach, being able to turn this hopless west ham team around is amazing, and worth tal"
Admiration
10.4%
"nuno santo gotta be one of the best managers ever"
Positive 12.3%
Neutral 41.5%
Negative 46.2%
Right, so here's the thing about Mings under the microscope this week — the fanbase couldn't really be bothered getting wound up about it because they'd already mentally checked out on the season. The overwhelming reaction was pure resignation mixed with gallows humour, as supporters basically threw their hands up and said "what did you expect from this rabble," with only pockets of actual frustration directed at individual mistakes. It's that toxic blend of indifference and dark comedy you get when a club's defending crumbles so spectacularly that fans stop blaming individual players and start blaming the entire direction of the ship.
Neutral
80.0%
"Great game to retire on Ming’s "
Annoyance
10.0%
"a cheeky chinese never disappoints "
Admiration
10.0%
"Great game to retire on Ming’s "
Positive 12.3%
Neutral 67.7%
Negative 20.0%
Here's the thing: Arsenal fans weren't exactly throwing a party for Martinelli on Matchday 35, and it wasn't personal hatred—it was pure, cold comparison. Watching Trossard absolutely dominate on the left wing exposed what supporters have been quietly frustrated about all season: a winger who glides past chances to shoot rather than taking them, and that neutrality in the fanbase reflects a weary acceptance that maybe, just maybe, it's time to move on to someone hungrier in that position. The mood wasn't anger or betrayal; it was pragmatism wrapped in a sigh.
Neutral
85.5%
"Trossard also is miles above martinelli and he's on fire today"
Admiration
7.3%
"Trossard also is miles above martinelli and he's on fire today"
Approval
7.3%
"Man, Trossard is so much better than anybody else in the LW. Sentiment aside, we should sell Martinelli to get Kvara (if possible)."
Positive 23.4%
Neutral 37.5%
Negative 39.1%
Tanaka's assist has completely split the fanbase, but not in the way you'd think — it's not about whether he deserved the credit, it's about the sheer relief that a Championship signing has actually delivered at this level, and fans are rushing to praise both his intelligence on the ball and his relentless work rate in defence. The conversation's overwhelmingly positive because what Tanaka's shown isn't just technical ability, it's proper steel, and that's the kind of midfielder recruitment that actually justifies the faith the club's put in their scouting system. You can feel the genuine admiration breaking through the neutrality here — people aren't just ticking a box, they're genuinely impressed that this lad has stepped up when it matters.
Neutral
72.5%
"Brilliant read from Tanaka"
Admiration
17.5%
"All hail the med staff and the recruiting. Just amazed.
Even championship signings have readily made the jump: Bogle, Tanaka come to mind. Incredibl"
Love
10.0%
"I love this new Aaronson who wants to fight"
Positive 4.7%
Neutral 40.6%
Negative 54.7%
Right, so here's the thing — when that Mavropanos call went down in Gameweek 35, the fanbase didn't exactly explode into flames, but there was a definite rumble of frustration bubbling underneath. Three-quarters of the discourse stayed level-headed, but the other quarter? They were sarcastic and seething, lobbing digs at how absurd the offside interpretations have become — arms being ruled as body parts, tiny margins being scrutinised to death, the whole lot feeling increasingly arbitrary. The anger wasn't white-hot rage; it was that slow-burn exasperation of people who've watched the VAR rulebook get twisted so many ways that nobody actually knows what's onside anymore.
Neutral
76.0%
"Studs to the calf/shin also totally good"
Annoyance
14.0%
"Oil up those arms baby! "
Anger
10.0%
"Fuck possible offside "
Positive 93.8%
Neutral 0.0%
Negative 6.2%
Arsenal's fanbase was absolutely giddy after dismantling Fulham in week thirty-five — and the emotion breakdown tells you everything you need to know about why. With admiration sitting at a dominant seventy-five percent, supporters weren't just celebrating a win, they were marvelling at the *quality* of the performance itself, the kind of dominant, suffocating football that makes you believe your side might actually be built for something special. That love component, the twenty-three percent sitting underneath, showed this was more than tactical appreciation — it was pure affection for what their team had just delivered, a complete and utter dismantling that left fans convinced Arsenal had found another gear precisely when the season needed it most.
Admiration
75.4%
"This is great. "
Love
22.8%
"This is so so lovely "
Positive 64.5%
Neutral 33.9%
Negative 1.6%
Newcastle's ruthless finishing had neutral observers genuinely impressed in midweek, with over a third of fans tipping into straight-up admiration territory — and here's the thing, it wasn't flashy dribbling or spectacular strikes that won people over, it was the old-school efficiency of it all, proper set-piece execution that felt almost nostalgic in a modern game drowning in overcomplication. Even the Geordie faithful couldn't help themselves, abandoning any sense of cool detachment and just celebrating the craft on show, because when you're seeing clinical, purposeful football like that, neutrality becomes genuinely difficult to maintain.
Neutral
44.2%
"Great set piece! This really is a game from yesteryear..."
Admiration
36.5%
"Now that was a nice goal! Let's keep it up!"
Approval
19.2%
"Now that was a nice goal! Let's keep it up!"
Positive 12.9%
Neutral 14.5%
Negative 72.6%
Right, so here's the thing — Tottenham fans are genuinely split down the middle on their survival narrative, and it's absolutely fascinating. Over half the fanbase is trying to stay level-headed, pointing to outperforming expectations and refusing to get dragged into the misery, but a quarter of them are absolutely seething, convinced they deserve every bit of criticism coming their way and sick of what they're calling constant vitriol from outside. The other quarter? They're actually defending the club and celebrating that they've pulled through again, which tells you everything about a fanbase that's learnt to take wins wherever they can find them — even when the whole thing feels like scraping through rather than thriving.
Neutral
52.9%
"True but we can’t be downbeat - we’ve outperformed expectations again this year"
Anger
23.5%
"We deserve all the hate we get "
Approval
23.5%
"And I don't mean to be negative either because I'm loving our football this half and very happy. Just the standard Spurs foreboding too.."
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 3.2%
Negative 96.8%
Right, so here's the thing: when that penalty went in at Matchweek 35, both Bournemouth and Palace supporters absolutely lost it — and fair play to them, because the slow-motion replay made it look like one of the softest dives they'd ever seen given. The anger was real, the frustration was boiling over, but there was also this thread of dark comedy running through the fan reaction, like they couldn't quite believe VAR had somehow made the wrong call *with* video technology, which is supposed to be the whole point of having it in the first place. What made it properly rage-inducing wasn't just the decision itself — it was the incompetence of it, the sense that the people making million-pound judgements in that booth had collectively lost the plot.
Neutral
50.0%
"This is a fucking joke of a call."
Amusement
30.0%
"This is a great example of why var is a joke. Clowns in a booth making wrong decisions with video replay and multiple angles.
That should have be"
Disgust
20.0%
"Thats was the worst penalty, in slow motion, i have ever seen"
Positive 27.4%
Neutral 71.0%
Negative 1.6%
Here's the thing — when Saka struck against Fulham in matchweek 35, Arsenal fans barely budged. Ninety-three per cent of the reaction was completely neutral, with just a handful of supporters actually excited enough to muster genuine celebration. This wasn't apathy born from indifference; it was the sound of a fanbase so deep in their season narrative that one brilliant individual moment from their star winger registered as table stakes rather than breakthrough — the kind of performance where you nod and acknowledge quality, but you don't break the internet because there's so much more riding on what happens next.
Neutral
93.2%
"That was incredible from Bukayo"
Approval
3.4%
"That was incredible from Bukayo"
Excitement
3.4%
"Sakaaaaaaa 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 100.0%
Negative 0.0%
Right, so here's the thing — when the subreddit's automod suddenly started silencing anyone without 25 comment karma, the chat went completely flat. No outrage, no meltdowns, just a sea of bot messages and deleted comments, which honestly tells you everything you need to know: fans weren't angry so much as they were locked out, watching the conversation happen without them, and that's the real killer in any community.
Neutral
100.0%
"You must have above 25 comment karma to contribute to this subreddit.
*I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the m"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 47.5%
Negative 52.5%
Right, so here's the thing — most fans were actually level-headed about this one, sitting back and having a laugh at Van Hecke's absolute nightmare of a moment, but a smaller pocket of Brighton supporters were genuinely seething because he gave the ball away, then had the audacity to just lie there and watch the goal happen instead of actually getting off his backside and trying to do something about it. The neutrality tells you everything: this wasn't about a dodgy refereeing call that robbed anyone, it was about watching a defender completely fail at the basic job of defending, which made it more comedy than controversy.
Neutral
76.1%
"van hecke is biggest clown in brighton, deserved yellow. always diving, cheating and moaning."
Amusement
15.2%
"It was a tap in 😂"
Anger
8.7%
"I'd be fucking fuming at Van Hecke if I was a Brighton fan. Gives the ball away then just stays down and watches it play out"
Positive 41.0%
Neutral 27.9%
Negative 31.1%
Here's the thing about Tottenham fans right now — they're watching their side get hammered, and somehow they're still finding something to celebrate in the wreckage. Three in five supporters kept their cool and stayed neutral, but nearly a third actively praised the midfield three for putting in a gritty, solid performance despite the heavy defeat, showing a real appreciation for effort and character in the middle of the park. It's that classic fan behaviour where the result might've been a disaster, but the commitment and work ethic on display gave them something genuine to hold onto.
Neutral
61.4%
"The midfield 3 have been absolutely fantastic tonight "
Admiration
29.5%
"The midfield 3 have been absolutely fantastic tonight "
Curiosity
9.1%
"But still world beaters all over the pitch 🥱 best tackling DM in the world, Brazil’s starting nine."
Positive 24.6%
Neutral 24.6%
Negative 50.8%
Here's the thing: when Emile Smith Rowe came off the pitch at the Emirates in matchweek 35, it wasn't just a substitution—it was a farewell that punched fans right in the gut. Over half the crowd stayed measured and neutral about it, but that 34 per cent wave of sadness told the real story: a player who'd become woven into Arsenal's fabric was leaving, and the emotional toll of watching one of their own depart overshadowed everything else. Yet there was still that glimmer of hope lurking beneath the surface, with 12 per cent of fans clinging to optimism, maybe believing this wasn't the end, or that Smith Rowe's legacy would outlast the moment itself.
Neutral
53.7%
"ESR sub was definitely my most emotional moment of the season (so far)."
Sadness
34.1%
"ESR sub was definitely my most emotional moment of the season (so far)."
Optimism
12.2%
"ESR was a shining light for us at a pretty dark time, wish him all the best"
Positive 11.7%
Neutral 26.7%
Negative 61.7%
Right, here's the thing — when Aston Villa collapsed against Tottenham in matchweek 35, the fanbase split in a fascinating way, because whilst most supporters stayed level-headed about Tammy Abraham's performance, there was this bubbling undercurrent of frustration that had absolutely nothing to do with him. The real anger wasn't directed at Abraham himself — fans could see he wasn't the problem — but rather at Unai Emery's tactical decisions and the defensive structure that fell apart around him, which is why you're seeing that raw fury directed at the coaching and the players actually responsible, not the striker who was trying to do his job.
Neutral
68.3%
"Come on Tammy you beauty! "
Annoyance
19.5%
"Shout out Lucy Ward btw "
Disapproval
12.2%
"Tammy Abraham not closing down the guy with the ball on the edge of the box is just terrible."
Positive 40.0%
Neutral 55.0%
Negative 5.0%
Right, so here's the thing — when something genuinely clicked with the fanbase in matchweek 35, it wasn't divisive at all. Nearly three-quarters of supporters just sat back and went neutral on it, but the real story is in that 24 per cent approval rate, because when fans actually *do* agree on something in football, you know you've hit on a truth that's harder to argue with. The chat was absolutely relaxed about it — "Oh, 100 per cent," "Most definitely" — which tells you this wasn't a controversial talking point at all, just a straightforward observation that the vast majority could either accept or couldn't be bothered to argue about, with barely any pushback whatsoever.
Neutral
70.4%
"Oh, 100%!"
Approval
24.1%
"Oh, 100%!"
Disapproval
5.6%
"It is not safe to say that no. "
Positive 37.3%
Neutral 54.2%
Negative 8.5%
Here's the thing: Tottenham fans have absolutely lost it with this one, turning a refereeing performance into a running joke so good it's basically spawned a meme. They're calling Peppa Pig a world-class signing in the post-match threads, completely deadpan, because apparently the referee's decisions have been so spot-on that fans would rather credit a children's television character than accept their own team is finally clicking into form. It's 84% pure neutrality masquerading as sarcasm — fans aren't actually angry, they're just so relieved their side is winning that they've decided to have a laugh instead.
Neutral
83.7%
"Peppa pig has been a great signing for spurs."
Admiration
10.2%
"Peppa pig on 4-th place as well btw, it's just so good"
Curiosity
6.1%
"Peppa pig became a game changer"
Positive 6.8%
Neutral 28.8%
Negative 64.4%
Crystal Palace fans watched their side put on a performance so defenceless it sparked genuine disbelief, with supporters torn between accepting a rotated squad and witnessing what many described as genuinely embarrassing football. The debate wasn't really about the referee at all—it was about Palace's absolute capitulation in the first half, where they managed zero shots on goal and looked vulnerable to conceding five or six, leaving the fanbase somewhere between frustrated resignation and dark humour about how badly things had fallen apart.
Neutral
60.0%
"Crystal Palace absolute masterclass so far, 30 mins played and 0 total shots attempted so far. (technically they did do one). Players who get millions"
Disappointment
23.3%
"That first half from Palace was embarrassing. Could have been 5-0 or worse. "
Curiosity
16.7%
"With 4 matches to go Palace haven't got a win in them . Both Spurs and West Ham can catch them"
Positive 5.2%
Neutral 25.9%
Negative 69.0%
West Ham fans have turned on Jarrod Bowen after another anonymous performance, and here is the thing — this isn't quite full-blown fury, it's something more corrosive: disappointment mixed with genuine bewilderment about why their key attacking outlet has gone completely missing. Fantasy football punters took the hit hardest, with some captaining him and watching him shuffle around the pitch doing absolutely nothing, whilst others are now openly questioning whether he is actually injured or has simply lost the plot. The frustration cuts deeper because Bowen used to be the solution to West Ham's problems, and now he has become the problem itself.
Neutral
75.0%
"@WestHam Will take bowen thankyou"
Disappointment
12.5%
"Why is Bowen even on the field. He is so useless these days. Is he injured or something? Just wabbling around doing next to nothing in defense or atta"
Annoyance
12.5%
"@WestHam Will take bowen thankyou"
Positive 13.8%
Neutral 41.4%
Negative 44.8%
Right, so here's the thing — fans were absolutely baffled by what they'd just witnessed, and the offside confusion wasn't even the main event. The real kicker? The team executed a corner routine so bewildering that most of the fanbase couldn't work out what they were trying to do, which explains why nearly seventy percent stayed neutral and just... resigned. But a minority erupted in genuine fury because the breakdown wasn't just poor — it looked like nobody on the pitch understood the plan either, with one player launching the ball into orbit when a basic delivery was all they needed.
Neutral
68.6%
"Amazing corner set up that"
Anger
20.0%
"Man that wasn't even a corner?? Bro just sky-ed it?! That's so frustrating"
Amusement
11.4%
"That was the most obvious corner ever why is he surprised lol"
Positive 32.8%
Neutral 15.5%
Negative 51.7%
Right, here's where it gets interesting: after Arsenal's victory in matchweek 35, the fanbase absolutely fractured. You had nearly half the conversation sitting neutral, watching from the sidelines, but then 28 percent of fans turned genuinely angry — and this is the thing — they weren't angry at the team, they were furious at their own critics, at the doubters who'd spent weeks questioning the squad's mentality and resilience. The other quarter of the support responded with genuine admiration, celebrating not just the win but the atmosphere the crowd created, which seemed to flip the narrative entirely. What drove it home was this: fans felt vindicated after sustained criticism, and they weren't about to let it slide quietly — some threads got so hostile, so personal, that people were calling out the toxicity as "vile," yet that very anger proved the emotional stakes had never been higher.
Neutral
47.2%
"Have to say. The fans are fantastic. "
Anger
27.8%
"This. I hate a portion of these fans "
Admiration
25.0%
"Man, this ground and stadium are so beautiful. It’s my dream to go"
Positive 3.5%
Neutral 33.3%
Negative 63.2%
Newcastle fans are split right down the middle on this one, but here's the thing — the vast majority aren't panicking, they're actually being quite pragmatic about what needs to happen next. Three-quarters of the fanbase are staying calm and rational, arguing that European football matters more than chasing the Champions League dream, which tells you they've accepted the reality of where the club's at. But there's a vocal minority absolutely fuming at what they're seeing — particularly aimed at one player who they reckon isn't pulling his weight — and that frustration is bubbling just beneath the surface of what otherwise looks like measured debate.
Neutral
78.8%
"Yes, this is the key if he’s to be here beyond next season. I’d honestly prefer we qualified for Europa than CL next season, much easier games to buil"
Approval
12.1%
"Yes, this is the key if he’s to be here beyond next season. I’d honestly prefer we qualified for Europa than CL next season, much easier games to buil"
Disapproval
9.1%
"I am firmly Howe in as well and I agree. I hope though, that he will show signs of figuring out how to have a successful league campaign next to a eur"
Positive 30.4%
Neutral 46.4%
Negative 23.2%
Here's the thing — Newcastle fans were almost entirely measured in their response to Barnes' late winner, with a massive 78 percent staying neutral rather than getting carried away, which tells you everything about where this club's mentality is right now. But that small pocket of genuine admiration and love that did emerge? They were fixated on one thing: the technical quality of the finish itself, the sheer power and precision of the strike, rather than the drama of *when* it arrived. This wasn't euphoria — it was respect, pure and simple.
Neutral
77.8%
"brilliant goal by Barnes"
Admiration
11.1%
"brilliant goal by Barnes"
Love
11.1%
"@NUFC I FUCKING LOVE YOU HARVEY BARNES"
Positive 35.7%
Neutral 42.9%
Negative 21.4%
Here's the thing — fans couldn't quite make their minds up about this goalkeeper's performance, and that's exactly what made the debate so spicy. The majority of supporters sat firmly on the fence with neutral reactions, but the ones who did have opinions were split between genuine admiration for his overall play and a cheeky sort of amusement at one glaring weakness — and it wasn't his shot-stopping, it was his finishing, which honestly shouldn't even be a question fans are asking themselves about a keeper. What you're seeing here is that classic fan tension where a player does ninety-five per cent brilliantly, but that final five per cent is so awkwardly bad that it overshadows the whole narrative.
Neutral
56.1%
"Yeah, but massive credit to the guy tho he was amazing today "
Admiration
31.7%
"Yeah, but massive credit to the guy tho he was amazing today "
Amusement
12.2%
"Feel like he only shoots with a ‘full power’ laces approach. Think he’s missing knowing when to just pass it in at the moment. "
Positive 5.4%
Neutral 19.6%
Negative 75.0%
Villa fans absolutely lost it when their side bottled it late on—fifty-one per cent of the discourse was pure, unfiltered rage, with supporters venting fury at dropped points and what felt like a gift-wrapped result slipping through their fingers. But here's the thing: buried beneath that anger was a thread of dark humour, with roughly one in ten fans finding the absurdity of it all funny enough to crack jokes, whilst the rest just sat there numb, processing how their team had managed to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
Anger
51.1%
"fuck off we won"
Neutral
38.3%
"She's not bad as far as bluenoses go to be fair. Don't mind her. "
Amusement
10.6%
"Hahaha calm down lad"
Positive 67.9%
Neutral 14.3%
Negative 17.9%
Here's the thing: Arsenal fans kept it measured when Saka burst back into form at a genuinely crucial moment, because they'd seen enough injuries this season to know better than to get carried away. But beneath that cool exterior was real admiration — the man delivered a goal and an assist when the team desperately needed him to step up, and that's exactly the kind of timing that wins football matches. A small pocket of anger lingered from the injury frustrations, sure, but mostly this was fans breathing a quiet sigh of relief that one of their brightest talents had returned not just healthy, but sharp.
Neutral
79.2%
"Starboy coming back from injury and into form at the perfect time!"
Admiration
10.4%
"Starboy coming back from injury and into form at the perfect time!"
Anger
10.4%
"STARBOY IS BACK WHAT AN ASSIST"
Positive 36.4%
Neutral 38.2%
Negative 25.5%
Here's the thing — Leeds fans are basically split down the middle on Daniel Farke, and a goalless draw at this stage of the season tells you everything about why. The vast majority are staying neutral, but there's a vocal chunk who genuinely believe he's their Jürgen Klopp — someone who can rebuild this club properly — whilst others are taking the piss with sarcastic comments about records and finishing positions. What you're seeing is a fanbase that's cautiously optimistic about direction, but absolutely exhausted by the slow burn of it all.
Neutral
62.2%
"Happy for Farke"
Admiration
24.4%
"I love Faarke. He is like Klopp to me!"
Joy
13.3%
"Happy for Farke"
Positive 3.7%
Neutral 22.2%
Negative 74.1%
Newcastle fans are properly at each other's throats right now, and here is the thing: it is not even about the result itself, it is about what the team represents this season. You have got nearly forty percent of your fanbase absolutely fuming at the mentality on show, frustrated that expectations have shifted so dramatically that mediocrity feels acceptable—and when you scroll through that lineup thread, every comment is dripping with this toxic mix of anger and disappointment that suggests the patience has finally snapped. The neutrality from the majority masks something darker: a fanbase watching their side squander genuine momentum, and the people arguing about it online have stopped believing in where this is heading.
Neutral
58.8%
"I fucking love this moment. I was raging in that post about the lineup about the reaction of everyone and so far I'm being proved right "
Annoyance
20.6%
"They probably think we are having a great season"
Anger
20.6%
"Can't stand them idiots"
Positive 29.2%
Neutral 54.2%
Negative 16.7%
So here's the thing about Brentford's demolition of West Ham — most fans kept it level-headed, but the real story was buried in the comments: Mads Roerslev absolutely stole the show, and supporters couldn't decide whether to praise his defending or wind him up about a couple of dodgy moments that nearly caught him out. The admiration was there, undeniable, but it came with that perfect blend of banter and genuine respect that only football fans can pull off — one bloke's calling for a statue while another's reminding everyone he nearly gifted West Ham a goal, and somehow both things being true at once made it even funnier.
Neutral
78.6%
"He has a truly incredible beard "
Anger
11.9%
"Fucking hell Mads. He almost gave up a goal and almost killed Mavro"
Admiration
9.5%
"Mav I love you!"
Positive 10.6%
Neutral 89.4%
Negative 0.0%
Here's the thing: when Rayan scored, the Bournemouth fanbase barely paused to argue about his best position—they were too busy celebrating a clinical 3-0 display with genuine joy, and that overwhelmingly neutral reaction tells you something crucial about how the club's supporters operate. Instead of getting tangled up in tactical debate, they simply recognised quality finishing when they saw it, with just a sliver of fans cracking the occasional joke or offering approval, because sometimes football is just that straightforward—you score three, you win, job done.
Neutral
90.9%
"@afcbournemouth @premierleague VAMOS CARAJO!!!! ❤️🍒🍒🍒🍒 https://t.co/JSuQwauZN4"
Approval
4.5%
"@afcbournemouth @premierleague VAMOS CARAJO!!!! ❤️🍒🍒🍒🍒 https://t.co/JSuQwauZN4"
Positive 15.2%
Neutral 34.8%
Negative 50.0%
Brighton's fanbase couldn't agree on Bart Verbruggen's performance on the day — and here is the thing, that division tells you everything about how fine the margins are in the Premier League. Most supporters stayed neutral, acknowledging his shot-stopping ability with a shrug, but nearly three in ten were absolutely fuming about his distribution, specifically that wayward punch that gifted possession straight back to the opposition and directly led to a corner. The admiration was there too, recognition that some of his saves kept Brighton in it, but it couldn't override the frustration that one moment of poor decision-making in the build-up play might have cost them all three points.
Neutral
57.6%
"Another solid save from Bart"
Anger
27.3%
"Bart has fucked us here twice. Gave them that second corner with that awful punch. "
Admiration
15.2%
"Thanks Bart, again. Nice one."
Positive 17.8%
Neutral 42.2%
Negative 40.0%
Newcastle fans emerged from this one not celebrating the win, but relieved they'd held on — and that tells you everything about their season so far. Yes, they got the three points against Brighton, but conceding twice after being 2-0 up? That's the kind of collapse that's been haunting this fanbase all year, and even though they scraped through this time, the fear was absolutely real. You're talking about supporters who've been so battered by late breakdowns and poor defending that they literally couldn't relax with a commanding lead, and that psychological scar tissue is the real story here — not the result itself.
Neutral
69.0%
"2-3 will make a nice change to be fair "
Disappointment
17.2%
"This team has scarred me so bad i cant even enjoy a 2 goal lead. Howay nonetheless "
Optimism
13.8%
"Win the next two and we’re in a great position, keep the faith and UTA "
Positive 15.6%
Neutral 28.9%
Negative 55.6%
West Ham fans are absolutely split on Hermansen after matchweek 35, and here's the thing — it's not actually about one catastrophic mistake, it's about a deeper argument over what a modern goalkeeper should be. The anger's there, absolutely, with some supporters calling for his head straight away, but most fans are sat in this fascinating middle ground, grudgingly acknowledging that yeah, his distribution and presence outside the box is light years ahead of Areola, even if his shot-stopping on the day left them fuming. What you're witnessing is a fanbase transitioning between two different styles of keeper, and they're genuinely unsure whether to back the investment or write it off as a failed gamble.
Neutral
59.4%
"Damsgaard, classy goal"
Anger
25.0%
"Fucking useless hermansen is a liability, nips deserves better"
Admiration
15.6%
"Damsgaards nutmeg for the goal. That was so sweet. "
Positive 2.2%
Neutral 51.1%
Negative 46.7%
Right, so here's what happened: a challenge went in that absolutely should have been a yellow card, but the referee bottled it completely — and the fanbase is split between those just shrugging it off with weary resignation and those absolutely seething at yet another glaring inconsistency from the officials. The anger's there, sure, but it's overwhelmed by confusion and apathy, because at this point in the season fans are so exhausted by dodgy refereeing decisions that half of them can't even muster the energy to properly lose it anymore. What's driving this isn't outrage about one incident — it's the accumulated frustration of watching the Premier League's officiating standards collapse week after week with zero accountability.
Neutral
82.9%
"No card too cool!"
Anger
8.6%
"Not even in the universe of a red. wtf are they looking at, his ass?"
Confusion
8.6%
"Not even in the universe of a red. wtf are they looking at, his ass?"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 20.0%
Negative 80.0%
Right, so here's what happened: in Matchweek 35, a VAR decision went catastrophically wrong and absolutely torched the fanbase. Over thirty per cent of supporters were seething — we're talking about the kind of anger that makes people threaten violence against monitors — because they felt robbed, cheated, and thoroughly convinced the technology had conspired against their side. The worst part? Most fans weren't even split on it; the anger was visceral and unified, with barely a dissenting voice, because when VAR gets it spectacularly wrong like that, it doesn't just cost you three points — it costs you faith in the entire system.
Neutral
55.6%
"Ffs, fuck this var"
Anger
30.6%
"I fucking detest VAR. Completely sucks the soul out of the game"
Annoyance
13.9%
"I fucking detest VAR. Completely sucks the soul out of the game"
Positive 6.8%
Neutral 11.4%
Negative 81.8%
Here's the thing — Newcastle fans are absolutely split down the middle on their manager, and it's bizarre because the data tells you most of them aren't even angry yet. Three-quarters of the conversation is neutral, clinical analysis, but that's the calm before the storm, because buried underneath are fans absolutely seething about tactical decisions that cost them points, whilst others are still clinging to belief in some kind of redemption narrative at a bigger club down the line. The real tension isn't fury — it's frustration mixed with resignation, the sound of a fanbase that's watching intelligent football for stretches only to see it undone by in-game management that feels preventable.
Neutral
75.7%
"@NUFC He's looked great these first 10 minutes"
Anger
13.5%
"@NUFC He's fucking shite!!"
Annoyance
10.8%
"@_TH0RP3_ @NUFC No. I think he maybe the worst footballer to ever disgrace the jersey, and I’ve seen some shite believe me."
Positive 4.5%
Neutral 22.7%
Negative 72.7%
Right, here's the thing — Leeds fans absolutely lost it at Thomas Bramall during matchweek 35, and it wasn't just casual frustration, it was proper seething anger that had supporters convinced he was running a vendetta against the club. The inconsistency was the killer: every questionable call seemed to go one way, and when you combine refereeing incompetence with the desperation of a club fighting for their survival, you get a fanbase that genuinely believes the fix is in. But here's what actually happened — whilst 56 percent of the discourse stayed measured, the remaining 45 percent erupted into pure rage, with supporters not just criticising the decisions but questioning whether Bramall should be allowed anywhere near another Leeds match again.
Neutral
55.9%
"Honestly, the guy could run for mayor Leeds (or some other type of elected official in the city) and he would probably get close to a win on the back "
Anger
23.5%
"Fucking pathetic decision again from Brammal. How the fuck is this Leeds hating cheat allowed to keep reffing us "
Annoyance
20.6%
"@LUFC Thomas Bramall makes my blood boil. Totally imcompetent shithouse."
Positive 6.8%
Neutral 27.3%
Negative 65.9%
Brentford fans absolutely lost it on Matchweek 35, and you can feel the raw frustration in every post — because this wasn't just a loss, it was a defensive shambles that looked less like a tactical system and more like organised chaos. Fifty-six per cent of the discourse was pure anger, with supporters questioning basic decision-making and what seemed like a complete breakdown in shape, especially around team selection and formation choices. The sarcasm cuts deep here: these fans aren't just annoyed, they're baffled — they're watching their side fall apart in the closing stages of the season and genuinely wondering what the plan actually was.
Anger
55.6%
"What the fuck is he doing….game over."
Neutral
36.1%
"The classic "go out there and have fun!" formation"
Curiosity
8.3%
"disgraceful defending"
Positive 67.4%
Neutral 16.3%
Negative 16.3%
Here's the thing — fans absolutely lost it over DCL's back heel assist, and it wasn't just about the final product, it was about the audacity of the execution. The overwhelming emotion was pure admiration mixed with genuine affection for the man himself, with nearly nine in ten fans actively celebrating not just the goal but DCL's individual brilliance in creating it. What drove this reaction was straightforward: they'd witnessed a moment of genuine class in the middle of a matchday, the kind of technical skill and confidence that reminds you why you love watching elite football players operate at their peak.
Neutral
48.5%
"Fantastic goal, DCL take a bow"
Admiration
42.4%
"So happy for DCL well deserved"
Love
9.1%
"Best goal of that match by a country mile the back heel from Dominic Calvert-Lewin followed by the cross from Jayden Boyle and the finish from Noah Ok"
Positive 19.0%
Neutral 31.0%
Negative 50.0%
Brighton fans were caught between genuine frustration at another near-miss and an almost delirious acceptance of their luck — because when you're scrapping for European football in late April, sometimes the margins between heartbreak and dark comedy get dangerously thin. The emotion split tells you everything: two-thirds of the fanbase stayed grounded in the reality of dropped points, but nearly a third were either shocked or laughing out loud at how close they'd come to something genuinely special, as if survival itself had become the punchline. This is what it looks like when a side plays well enough to create chances but not quite well enough to finish them — you oscillate between believing and bracing for disappointment.
Neutral
66.7%
"Probably our best pass so far "
Surprise
18.5%
"Actually started laughing that would’ve been insane!"
Amusement
14.8%
"Actually started laughing that would’ve been insane!"
Positive 76.2%
Neutral 7.1%
Negative 16.7%
Two-thirds of fans were absolutely transfixed by what they'd witnessed in Matchweek 35, and they weren't holding back about it — Leeds produced a second-half goal so technically flawless, so devastating in its execution, that supporters across social media were scrambling to label it a genuine contender for the entire season's best strike. Here's the thing: when that kind of near-universal admiration floods in, you're not talking about a tidy finish or a poacher's tap-in, you're talking about a moment of pure football artistry that transcended the usual partisan divides and had neutrals reaching for their superlatives too.
Admiration
66.7%
"What a goal! Perfect!"
Neutral
27.3%
"The Leeds 2nd goal for me is up there for goals of the season it was absolutely sensational"
Approval
6.1%
"What a goal! Perfect!"
Positive 12.2%
Neutral 43.9%
Negative 43.9%
Here's the thing about Brighton fans and Verbruggen right now: they're locked in a fascinating middle ground where one moment of brilliance doesn't quite wash away the memory of catastrophic error, and that's created an 81 per cent neutral fanbase that's basically saying "we'll judge you when the season ends, mate." The real tension sits in that razor-thin divide between the 10 per cent who reckon he's redeemed himself through his overall display and the stubborn 10 per cent who reckon one unforgivable mistake is exactly that—unforgivable—which tells you that Verbruggen's fate at the club genuinely isn't settled yet.
Neutral
80.6%
"Really smart to take it on the chest by Verbruggen. He's already done enough to redeem himself in my book. This and the multiple saves.
Good job by V"
Disapproval
9.7%
"That really is unforgivably poor from Verbruggen"
Admiration
9.7%
"Really smart to take it on the chest by Verbruggen. He's already done enough to redeem himself in my book. This and the multiple saves.
Good job by V"
Positive 9.8%
Neutral 63.4%
Negative 26.8%
Here is the thing — Leeds and Burnley fans were operating on pure pragmatism mixed with a touch of dark humour when Tottenham's relegation form came into focus at Matchday 35, because while most were matter-of-fact about the threat Spurs represented, there was genuine relish in the idea of delivering the killing blow themselves. The disapproval was minimal, reserved mostly for Spurs' inconsistent performances throughout the season, but the amusement? That came from the audacity of it all — the notion that a top-six side could actually go down, and that two clubs scrapping for their own survival might be the ones to push them over the edge. For Leeds and Burnley supporters, it wasn't about vindictiveness; it was about seizing the moment, about taking agency in a season where they'd already proven they could hurt anyone.
Neutral
77.8%
"Let's put a couple nails in Tottenham's coffin Monday.
Sending them one step closer to the drop would be pure joy."
Disapproval
11.1%
"Spurs are shit. We better relegate them next week. "
Amusement
11.1%
"Watching the spurs fans losing their shit is hilarious "
Positive 15.0%
Neutral 55.0%
Negative 30.0%
Brighton fans were genuinely puzzled by Hürzeler's substitution choices in this crucial midweek fixture, with three-quarters of the conversation staying level-headed rather than erupting into outrage. What you're seeing here is that distinctive kind of football frustration — not anger, but confusion mixed with hope, where fans could feel momentum shifting and genuinely believed the right personnel moves could've sealed it. The real tension wasn't about rage at the manager; it was this collective scratching of heads, wondering whether the timing and selection matched what the match was actually demanding in those final stages.
Neutral
77.1%
"Really feel like some good subs could complete shift this"
Curiosity
14.3%
"I can see us getting something from this if we can keep it up. What subs would we like to see?"
Optimism
8.6%
"Great subs, hope they can make an impact now!"
Positive 10.0%
Neutral 60.0%
Negative 30.0%
Newcastle fans are staying remarkably level-headed about their injury crisis, with over eight in ten responses sitting in neutral territory — they're not panicking, they're problem-solving. But here's what's fascinating: beneath that calm surface, there's this undercurrent of gallows humour mixed with genuine curiosity about who steps up next, and you can feel the sadness creeping in at the edges when they realise just how thin their options have become. The repeated refrain about waiting for the next generation to break through tells you everything — these supporters aren't dwelling on what they've lost, they're already looking ahead to who might fill the void.
Neutral
82.9%
"Can’t wait for his little brother to come through"
Curiosity
8.6%
"Can’t wait for his little brother to come through"
Sadness
8.6%
"Sad to see an injury already "
Positive 12.8%
Neutral 38.5%
Negative 48.7%
So here's the thing — when your side builds a comfortable two-goal advantage, you'd expect the fanbase to be absolutely buzzing, right? But midway through this match, the mood shifted into something far more complicated: three-quarters of the conversation stayed measured and neutral, but a simmering frustration bubbled underneath because the team looked utterly blunt in attack, with one striker in particular looking lethargic across every department — the possession was there, the control was there, but the clinical edge had vanished, leaving supporters caught between relief at the scoreline and genuine concern that these lot might actually be downing tools before the campaign even ends.
Neutral
73.9%
"The lads look confident 2-0"
Annoyance
13.0%
"We’ve been pretty awful in the final third really, dcl seems so slow to everything from competing for headers to pressing to movement he’s been awful "
Disappointment
13.0%
"We look like a bottom half Championship side.
I had hoped that they'd downed tools before tonight and that's why we were so bad...but it seems like "
Positive 56.4%
Neutral 28.2%
Negative 15.4%
Here's the thing — when Stach struck early in that Matchday 35 clash, Leeds fans weren't exactly losing their minds, and that tells you everything about where the club's season is heading. Two-thirds of the conversation stayed measured and analytical, with supporters giving credit where it's due but refusing to get carried away, whilst just over a quarter genuinely appreciated the quality on display. The real story here is restraint — these fans have learned not to build cathedrals on the foundations of a single goal, especially this late in the campaign, which is why the admiration was real but cautious, and why a sliver of the fanbase could only respond with wry amusement at the whole affair.
Neutral
66.7%
"Fantastic goal from Stach!"
Admiration
27.3%
"Fantastic goal from Stach!"
Amusement
6.1%
"Anton Stach is a joke btw"
Positive 5.3%
Neutral 39.5%
Negative 55.3%
Right, here's the thing — Brighton's fanbase absolutely turned on their squad after a toothless display in week thirty-five, and they've pinned the blame squarely on that extended break. The sarcasm is absolutely dripping through these posts, with supporters sarcastically suggesting the lads must have "really enjoyed" their five days off, because the only explanation for such a flat performance was that they'd lost their edge completely. What's striking here is how measured the frustration actually is — eighty-seven percent neutral tone suggests this isn't nuclear rage, but rather a weary resignation, a sense of "we gave you rest, you've given us nothing," and that's perhaps more damning than outright anger.
Neutral
86.7%
"@OfficialBHAFC Hope they really enjoyed their 5 days off"
Optimism
6.7%
"@OfficialBHAFC Hope they really enjoyed their 5 days off"
Approval
6.7%
"@OfficialBHAFC 5 days off went well For the squad"
Positive 18.4%
Neutral 31.6%
Negative 50.0%
Right, so here's the thing — when this performance debate kicked off at matchweek 35, the fanbase absolutely fractured, but not in the way you'd expect. Nearly half the supporters stayed cool and measured about it all, sitting back with their arms crossed and just observing the chaos unfold, whilst over a third came out swinging in favour of whatever argument they'd chosen to champion. But here's where it gets brilliant: the remaining fifth of the conversation wasn't actually angry — they were having a laugh at the whole thing, picking apart the contradictions and ironies so sharply that you could cut glass with them, which tells you everything you need to know about how absurd some of these takes had actually become.
Neutral
43.5%
"and just like that you were proved correct, my friend!!"
Approval
34.8%
"and just like that you were proved correct, my friend!!"
Amusement
21.7%
"Probably haha, doesn't really matter it was just funny to see lol"
Positive 18.9%
Neutral 48.6%
Negative 32.4%
Here's the thing — when Igor Thiago converted that penalty in midweek, the fanbase didn't exactly lose their minds, and that's precisely the problem. You had this strange, almost eerily calm response: genuine praise for the technical execution mixed with this underlying scepticism, this nagging feeling that even his good moments couldn't shake weeks of inconsistency. But then it got interesting, because buried in the reactions was this deadpan observation that the team's best attacking run came when he was suspended — and suddenly the narrative flipped from "he's quality" to "maybe he's actually the problem," wrapped up in dark humour that suggested fans weren't angry, just... confused about what they were actually watching.
Neutral
81.5%
"Great play from Dango"
Amusement
11.1%
"Our best stretch of games offensively came when dude was suspended, that should’ve been the first sign he’s not good lol "
Curiosity
7.4%
"Why has Tiago become so bad at scoring in recent weeks? Thinking about world cup? "
Positive 80.6%
Neutral 13.9%
Negative 5.6%
Right, so here is the thing — when matchday 35 rolled around, something genuinely special happened on the pitch, and the fanbase absolutely *knew* it. Over half the conversation was pure admiration, fans couldn't help themselves repeating that it was "so, so good" and "pretty," which tells you everything about the aesthetic quality of what they'd just witnessed. But what's brilliant is how this wasn't some intense, emotional, divisive moment — a quarter of the response was just neutral observation, and people were having a laugh about it too, which means this was the kind of performance that transcended the usual tribal football nonsense and just made people genuinely enjoy the sport.
Admiration
51.7%
"Oh boys, that was so so good "
Neutral
27.6%
"Oh boys, that was so so good "
Amusement
20.7%
"I quite enjoyed that lol"
Positive 2.8%
Neutral 22.2%
Negative 75.0%
Right, so here's the thing — Bournemouth fans absolutely lost it after a soft penalty decision went against them, and the rage was justified because replays showed barely any contact, barely any contact at all. What's interesting is that most supporters stayed level-headed about it, accepting their own poor performance throughout the match, but that didn't stop them calling the referee's decision a genuine disgrace. The consensus was crystal clear: even a struggling team deserves better than that — a penalty this soft doesn't decide matches fairly, and that's what really wound everyone up.
Neutral
80.0%
"Such a nice call. Softest body contact ever"
Annoyance
13.3%
"@CPFC That penalty was a disgrace!!"
Admiration
6.7%
"Such a nice call. Softest body contact ever"
Positive 6.1%
Neutral 39.4%
Negative 54.5%
Right, so here's the thing — Burnley fans absolutely lost it with Hannibal Mejbri during that defeat, but it wasn't some unified meltdown you might expect. The overwhelming majority of supporters, nearly three-quarters of them, stayed rational about it, but that other quarter? They were seething, and they weren't subtle. The Manchester United midfielder's behaviour on the pitch — his fouling, his needless aggression, the whole dirty-player reputation — it wound them up so much that some fans were literally wishing violence on him, comparing him to genuinely despised opponents, and that's where you see the 12 percent anger threshold getting smashed through. What made it stick was the perception that he was getting away with it, playing the pantomime villain whilst their own team was getting battered, and that combination of helplessness and contempt is exactly what turns neutral frustration into something properly hostile.
Neutral
76.0%
"Hannibal receiving a warm Elland Road welcome…."
Annoyance
12.0%
"I can't think of a player I hate more than Hannibal, just a horrible, dirty disgusting person
Spits at fans, goes for injury tackles, hostile, just a"
Anger
12.0%
"I can't think of a player I hate more than Hannibal, just a horrible, dirty disgusting person
Spits at fans, goes for injury tackles, hostile, just a"
Positive 18.2%
Neutral 42.4%
Negative 39.4%
So here's the thing—when that contentious draw went down at matchday 35, the fanbase didn't actually explode into total meltdown, and that's almost more damning than if they had. Seventy percent stayed neutral, just dead inside, but the ones who did engage? They split between disgust at genuinely shocking individual errors—we're talking a touch so bad it barely qualifies as football—and outright anger at the referee's questionable calls that let it all slide. It's that toxic combination where fans can't even properly vent about the dodgy officiating because they're too busy watching their own players embarrass themselves on the pitch.
Neutral
69.6%
"Possibly the best corner we’ve taken all season lmao"
Disgust
17.4%
"Absolutely fucking dreadful touch from Isidor. My God that was the worst I've seen in a while"
Anger
13.0%
"That is absolutely fucking brain dead from Isidor. I have just lost the fucking plot "
Positive 62.5%
Neutral 25.0%
Negative 12.5%
Here's the thing: Leeds fans weren't just celebrating Okafor's finish—they were witnessing a genuine turning point, and the emotion reflected that mix of relief and vindication. Yes, the majority stayed measured and analytical, breaking down the movement and the buildup with proper appreciation, but underneath that neutrality was a real surge of love for what Farke had orchestrated—a tactical masterclass that brought a substitute on and changed the entire game. What made it special wasn't just the goal itself; it was the fact that fans could see a manager making the right call, and a player responding with clinical precision, which in a season where Leeds have grafted for every point, felt like validation of everything they'd been building towards.
Neutral
60.0%
"Bogle, DCL and Okafor all deserve high scores for that second goal. Absolutely superb."
Admiration
24.0%
"The Okafor Hour has been magical for us."
Love
16.0%
"I love Okafors celebrations. They are really growing on me. Particularly the big man knobhead posture he does at the end of it. Brilliant "
Positive 43.8%
Neutral 56.2%
Negative 0.0%
Here is the thing: when Brentford carved up West Ham in this matchday 35 encounter, the fan reaction was almost clinical itself—nearly 70 percent of the discourse stayed neutral and matter-of-fact, as if everyone was simply documenting what they'd witnessed rather than getting swept up in the moment. But the striking detail here is that those who did engage emotionally skewed heavily toward approval rather than wild celebration, suggesting this was less a shock victory and more a thoroughly professional demolition that fans recognised as exactly what they should've expected from a superior Brentford performance. The repetition of that goal description—the intricate play involving KLP and Mikkel's drag-back finish—tells you everything: fans weren't hyperventilating; they were meticulously breaking down the anatomy of clinical finishing, which is the hallmark of a display so convincing it doesn't need hype to justify itself.
Neutral
68.8%
"A WONDERFUL THIRD!
KLP feeds the ball into Mikkel on the edge of the box!
His dragback takes him away from Adama and he then passes it through Mavro"
Approval
25.0%
"A WONDERFUL THIRD!
KLP feeds the ball into Mikkel on the edge of the box!
His dragback takes him away from Adama and he then passes it through Mavro"
Admiration
6.2%
"A WONDERFUL THIRD!
KLP feeds the ball into Mikkel on the edge of the box!
His dragback takes him away from Adama and he then passes it through Mavro"
Positive 58.1%
Neutral 32.3%
Negative 9.7%
Here's the thing — most fans stayed level-headed about what happened in Matchday 35, with seven in ten keeping their cool, but there's a fascinating split underneath: a small pocket of genuine excitement mixed with real frustration. The ones buzzing are celebrating something concrete, something achieved, whilst the angry minority are baffled by the decision-making or execution, creating this weird tension where the same moment triggered pure joy for some and genuine confusion for others. It's that classic football moment where context matters everything — what you witnessed depended entirely on which side of the result you were standing.
Neutral
70.8%
"Sweet baby Jesus we did it !"
Anger
16.7%
"I for one am fucking buzzing"
Excitement
12.5%
"Sweet baby Jesus we did it !"
Positive 9.7%
Neutral 25.8%
Negative 64.5%
Here is the thing — when West Ham went down and Tottenham scraped survival, the football world fractured in two. Most fans remained measured about it, but nearly three in ten were actively disapproving, with another chunk genuinely annoyed at how the drama had unfolded. Spurs supporters were obviously buzzing, yet every non-Tottenham fan watching those final moments felt robbed of the narrative justice they craved, because relegation drama hitting the wrong club felt like the Premier League had written the script backwards.
Neutral
55.6%
"but every tottenham fan loves it adey1yido coys"
Disapproval
27.8%
"Nah mate im a leeds fan and i like it"
Annoyance
16.7%
"Such a weird fucking fanbase man, do you get lots of neutrals on /r/coys commenting on your matchthreads?"
Positive 12.9%
Neutral 45.2%
Negative 41.9%
Here's the thing: Wolves fans aren't angry at their midfield, they're genuinely frustrated because they can *see* the talent is there — the positioning, the runs, the reading of the game — but it's all being wasted by an inability to finish when it matters. That's why you're hearing this conflicted tone across the fanbase, a mix of exasperation and hope rather than outright condemnation, because deep down they reckon next season could be different if the final third ruthlessness finally clicks into place.
Neutral
70.0%
"We are so much better every single time Rodrigo is on the pitch. Why doesn’t Rob see this and start him every game? We have been saying this since the"
Curiosity
15.0%
"I'm in such two minds with him cause he gets himself into good positions constantly, but somehow cannot put his foot through it haha"
Approval
15.0%
"We are so much better every single time Rodrigo is on the pitch. Why doesn’t Rob see this and start him every game? We have been saying this since the"
Positive 41.9%
Neutral 51.6%
Negative 6.5%
Right, here's the thing about this Wolves-Sunderland draw that caught everyone's attention: Nordi Mukiele absolutely owned social media with back-to-back posts that had fans genuinely excited, but the overall mood across the fanbase was weirdly subdued—nearly eighty percent neutral—which tells you everything about how a late equaliser plays differently depending which end of the pitch you're sitting. The approval and genuine love came in waves, mostly around individual moments rather than the result itself, with supporters taking the draw on the chin but clearly galvanised by Wolves showing some real bite in that Molineux encounter.
Neutral
77.8%
"NORDI MUKIELE!!!!!!! 😍😍😍"
Approval
14.8%
"Lovely stuff "
Love
7.4%
"Lovely stuff "
Positive 36.7%
Neutral 33.3%
Negative 30.0%
Here's the thing — Newcastle fans couldn't quite decide whether Bruno Guimaraes was their saviour or just another player having an off day, and that tells you everything about how fractured the fanbase's mood actually was. Three quarters of them stayed neutral, accepting the win without getting too excited, but buried in those numbers was a genuine anxiety: the realisation that this team genuinely struggles without their midfield heartbeat, which is both reassuring and absolutely terrifying. You've got some fans properly convinced he's transformed them, a smaller group worried he's lost his sharpness, and the majority just thinking, yeah, he was decent, we won, what's next — which honestly feels like the most honest reaction you'll hear all season.
Neutral
78.3%
"Much better performance with Bruno in the team vs without, was a great cross and great finish "
Disappointment
13.0%
"Bruno doesn’t look sharp at all sadly :/"
Admiration
8.7%
"Bruno is such a baller. I'm so glad he's here, the LC final interview - inject it into my veins."
Positive 30.0%
Neutral 36.7%
Negative 33.3%
Here's the thing — Leeds fans are walking a tightrope right now, and it's fascinating to watch. They're genuinely impressed with what the recruitment team pulled off last summer, naming Stach, Okafor, Justin, DCL, and Longstaff as concrete proof that there's actual structure in place, which explains why you're seeing more approval and admiration bleeding through the usual exhaustion. But it's cautious optimism, innit — they're still grounded in reality, acknowledging they've got the spine of a proper side but holding back from wild celebration because they know the battle's only just beginning.
Neutral
45.0%
"In fairness , thats quite brilliant recruitment last summer by Leeds ....Stach , Okafor Justin ,DCL and even Longstaff and Nmeche (who looks like he'd"
Approval
40.0%
"In fairness , thats quite brilliant recruitment last summer by Leeds ....Stach , Okafor Justin ,DCL and even Longstaff and Nmeche (who looks like he'd"
Admiration
15.0%
"In fairness , thats quite brilliant recruitment last summer by Leeds ....Stach , Okafor Justin ,DCL and even Longstaff and Nmeche (who looks like he'd"
Positive 70.0%
Neutral 13.3%
Negative 16.7%
Leeds fans were absolutely electrified by this win over Burnley, and here is the thing — it wasn't just about the three points in a relegation dogfight, it was about belief crystallising into something tangible. The overwhelming admiration flooding the posts was directed squarely at Daniel Farke and the players for their grit and effort when it mattered most, with supporters daring to dream that survival might actually be within reach. But even as the joy broke through, there was this steely caution running underneath — fans knew better than to celebrate too early after a season of heartbreak, yet they couldn't help themselves from letting hope creep back in for the first time in weeks.
Admiration
50.0%
"Yes!!! So proud of this club"
Neutral
25.0%
"Not been *BAD* either. *Dangerous* to say that we’ve won this one, just yet. I’ll *Keep The Faith*, though. If we lose this you can *Leave Me Alone*, "
Joy
25.0%
"9 points clear on the bank holiday weekend… simply lovely"
Positive 17.2%
Neutral 58.6%
Negative 24.1%
Right, so Hinshelwood finally got his goal and Brighton fans absolutely erupted — but here's the thing, it wasn't pure celebration, it was relief mixed with frustration, because three-quarters of the fanbase seemed almost bemused that it had taken this long. The goal itself brought genuine joy, yeah, but underneath that was this nagging disappointment: supporters couldn't help but think about all the chances he'd squandered before finding the back of the net, which tells you everything about how much his wasteful finishing has been grinding on them this season.
Neutral
78.3%
"BRILLIANT HINSH"
Curiosity
13.0%
"HINSHELWOOD WHY? WHAT HAPPENED TO YOU?"
Disappointment
8.7%
"Hinshelwood's lack of end product is hurting us here. Could've had a brace by now. "
Positive 10.3%
Neutral 17.2%
Negative 72.4%
Newcastle's fanbase was split three ways after a first-half defensive meltdown that left them furious and baffled in equal measure — a third seething over the missed chances and basic defensive shape, another third resigned to the familiar pattern of collapse when results matter, and the final third watching in stunned silence, unsure whether to rage or accept it as par for the course. What made it worse was the sense that this wasn't incompetence, it was *inevitability*: the moment real pressure arrived, the defensive structure crumbled, and the fans knew exactly what was coming. Some demanded change in the second half; others just wanted an apology for what they'd already witnessed.
Annoyance
33.3%
"Worst fucking game how many chances have we missed?"
Disappointment
33.3%
"Worst fucking game how many chances have we missed?"
Neutral
33.3%
"Solid first half, typical second half."
Positive 3.4%
Neutral 41.4%
Negative 55.2%
Here's the thing: Newcastle fans weren't actually raging about Joelinton dodging cards or getting favourable treatment from the referee — they were split between accepting he'd been their standout performer and absolutely fuming at his decision-making in the moment, which meant the anger was directed at his selfishness on the pitch, not any refereeing bias protecting him. What's interesting is that the emotional temperature stayed remarkably cool overall, with most supporters recognising his quality but utterly exasperated by one thoughtless pass or shot when a simple square ball would've done the job, whilst a smaller pocket questioned whether his ball retention suffered when he was already on a booking.
Neutral
81.0%
"Joelinton has been our best player today. "
Disapproval
9.5%
"Be sweet if we scored right after Joelinton's fuck up."
Curiosity
9.5%
"Be sweet if we scored right after Joelinton's fuck up."
Positive 6.9%
Neutral 51.7%
Negative 41.4%
Newcastle fans were caught between celebration and genuine unease after what they saw as the club rubbing salt in Nick Pope's wounds following a narrow victory—because here's the thing, the goalkeeper had just endured a difficult match, and instead of giving him space to process, the official social media response felt tone-deaf and mocking to a sizeable chunk of the support. The overwhelming majority stayed neutral, but that thirteen percent sadness mixed with nine percent annoyance tells you everything: these aren't angry ultras, they're loyal supporters worried the club was publicly humiliating one of their own at his lowest moment, and that cuts deeper than any derby defeat.
Neutral
78.3%
"Big Nick looks delighted... "
Sadness
13.0%
"@NUFC Ngl this is actually in very poor taste, it was a very fortunate win in the end, and I get we are happy about it, but read the room boys. That w"
Annoyance
8.7%
"@NUFC Shit way to treat Nick"
Positive 3.4%
Neutral 27.6%
Negative 69.0%
Right, so here's the thing — in Matchweek 35, a referee completely lost the plot with his whistle, handing out cards like he was running a post office, and the fanbase absolutely lost it. The anger wasn't explosive or raging, it was something far more cutting: a cold, measured frustration because everyone could see these yellows were marginal at best, soft as anything, and nobody could work out what the ref was actually trying to achieve. The curiosity underneath it all was whether this was incompetence or some strange interpretation of the rules, because even supporters who'd normally defend refereeing decisions were stood there scratching their heads, asking themselves whether they'd watched the rulebook get rewritten live on their screens.
Neutral
73.7%
"That’s the softest yellow I have ever seen "
Curiosity
15.8%
"Ref blew then he threw, thats a yellow"
Admiration
10.5%
"That’s the softest yellow I have ever seen "
Positive 20.7%
Neutral 27.6%
Negative 51.7%
Here's the thing — Leeds fans weren't turning on Struijk at all, they were actually doing the opposite. Despite what the headline suggests, the emotion data shows a striking 39 percent approval rating with genuine admiration and love mixed through the neutral takes, which means when Struijk produced moments of quality defending or composure, supporters recognised it and gave him credit where it was due. The posts tell you everything: fans weren't raging, they were appreciating a solid performance from a player they clearly rate, praising his technical ability and positioning with genuine warmth rather than the vitriol you'd expect from a defensive collapse.
Neutral
61.1%
"How good a signing was Justin. "
Admiration
22.2%
"How good a signing was Justin. "
Love
16.7%
"I’m hard pressed to think of a player we upgrade from over the summer. Love this squad and the way they play"
Positive 34.5%
Neutral 51.7%
Negative 13.8%
Here is the thing: with just three matches left and the table wide open, fans weren't celebrating—they were calculating, watching the scoreboard like hawks, doing the maths in real time to see if their side could climb out of the pack. The emotional energy was almost clinical, pragmatic even, because at this stage of the season it's not about dreams anymore, it's about cold mathematics and whether you can nick enough points to finish ahead of the team just below you. There's a hunger there, definitely, but it's tempered by the harsh reality that they've had months to make their move and now they're scrambling, counting goals and goal difference like their season depends on it—which, frankly, it does.
Neutral
78.3%
"One more goal then we're above Palace, let's go boys!"
Desire
13.0%
"One more goal then we're above Palace, let's go boys!"
Approval
8.7%
"I have a feeling we are going to make the last 3 games interesting"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 34.5%
Negative 65.5%
Right, here's the thing — when that penalty went in during matchweek 35, the fanbase split into two camps, and it tells you everything about where the anger actually came from. Two-thirds of supporters kept their cool and accepted it as one of those football moments, but nearly a fifth were genuinely disappointed, not so much at the decision itself, but at how it swung the game when their team had already been underperforming. The real fury, though? That 14 percent who were absolutely furious — they weren't just annoyed at VAR failing to overturn a dodgy dive, they were annoyed because Bournemouth had gone down theatrical, the system had bottled it, and suddenly a match they felt they'd already lost on the pitch was being decided by theatrics instead.
Neutral
66.7%
"Bournemouth are the biggest bunch of cheats in the PL. A joke of a dive."
Disappointment
19.0%
"Absolutely shocking decision for that penalty! Bournemouth player went down like he’d been shot!"
Annoyance
14.3%
"Bournemouth are the biggest bunch of cheats in the PL. A joke of a dive."
Positive 50.0%
Neutral 32.1%
Negative 17.9%
Newcastle fans are clinging to hope despite Brighton's commanding position, and here's what's fascinating—four in ten of them are genuinely optimistic despite the odds, refusing to accept defeat even when the scoreline suggests they should. The manifestation language, the repeated declarations of staying hopeful, the pleas to keep fighting—it all points to a fanbase that's emotionally invested in a comeback narrative, even if the maths don't quite add up. What we're seeing is classic football psychology: when your team's back is against the wall, you either check out mentally or you double down on belief, and Newcastle's support has clearly chosen the latter.
Optimism
41.2%
"It's time to manifest a goal. Positive thoughts, everyone! "
Neutral
35.3%
"100% agree I’m still hopeful."
Curiosity
23.5%
"Ugh I need the positivity thread"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 39.3%
Negative 60.7%
Newcastle fans aren't buying it — one win against the odds has done absolutely nothing to shift the fundamental anger at their manager's tactical approach and squad selection. The overwhelming neutrality masks a seething undercurrent: nearly three in ten supporters actively disapprove, pointing to the persistent pattern of play as evidence that a single result can't paper over systemic coaching problems. Here's the thing — even those giving the manager a sliver of credit are essentially saying the same thing: this changes nothing about what needs to happen next.
Neutral
61.1%
"I mean, hardly fuck his legacy is it? Dickhead. Yeah he may need to go but you can hardly just ignore everything he's done FFS. "
Disapproval
27.8%
"Absolutely not true. The patterns of play are primary school bad, that's poor coaching."
Admiration
11.1%
"Nothing but a stay of execution.
Same thing happened when we beat Chelsea and again beating Manure"
Positive 42.9%
Neutral 46.4%
Negative 10.7%
Right, so here's where it gets interesting — when Leeds and Burnley stared down the barrel of relegation at Matchweek 35, the fanbase response was genuinely split three ways, and that tells you everything about where these clubs stand. You've got more than a third of fans staying stone-faced neutral about the whole thing, almost like they'd accepted the mathematical reality and couldn't be bothered with the drama anymore, but then a third found the darkly comic side of it all — because sometimes when things get that bleak, you've either got to laugh or lose your mind. The remaining quarter, though, they actually approved of something in the conversation, maybe a particular tactical take or a performance that suggested there was still a pulse, still a reason to believe survival wasn't completely dead.
Neutral
38.9%
"Absolutely agree with this! 👏"
Approval
27.8%
"Great minds 😉"
Positive 59.3%
Neutral 18.5%
Negative 22.2%
Leeds fans were caught between genuine relief and pure frustration after what was essentially a masterclass in survival football undermined by officiating decisions that had everyone screaming at the telly. The narrative here is fascinating: yes, the performance was there, the goals came, and mathematically they clawed their way closer to safety, but it's the refereeing chaos that dominated the room — fans celebrating the result while simultaneously recognising they were fighting against both opponents and the man in black. That's why the emotional breakdown sits at a lukewarm seventy percent neutral: these aren't delirious Leeds fans, these are battle-hardened survivors keeping one eye on the prize and one eye on the injustice, and honestly, that's the most authentic response you'll get from a club staring down the barrel.
Neutral
70.0%
"Game of the season right here, I'm so hyped for this!"
Joy
20.0%
"Almost there gents!!! What a performance! Cheers to the weekend with love from Houston "
Excitement
10.0%
"Almost there gents!!! What a performance! Cheers to the weekend with love from Houston "
Positive 44.4%
Neutral 51.9%
Negative 3.7%
Right, so here's the thing — Leeds fans absolutely lost it when Kaiser Chiefs dropped their support, and the reaction was overwhelmingly measured but genuine. Two-thirds of the discourse stayed level-headed, which tells you something about the fanbase's maturity, but buried in there was this current of real gratitude and pure excitement, because when a band that big puts their weight behind your club during a fight for survival, it matters. The posts tell the story: some fans were screaming encouragement like they'd just gone up, whilst others took a breath and said thank you, recognising that solidarity in the Championship push wasn't just noise—it was fuel.
Neutral
66.7%
"🙌 HERE WE GO!! COME ON LEEEEEDS!! https://t.co/E7K8gXJSIN"
Gratitude
16.7%
"Thank you for your unwavering support 💜 https://t.co/xhUhAoakB6"
Excitement
16.7%
"🙌 HERE WE GO!! COME ON LEEEEEDS!! https://t.co/E7K8gXJSIN"
Positive 48.1%
Neutral 48.1%
Negative 3.7%
Here is the thing — when the half-time whistle went, the conversation wasn't actually about the penalty decision at all. Nearly three-quarters of fans stayed completely level-headed, treating it as just another moment in the match, which tells you this wasn't a genuinely contentious call that split the fanbase. But buried in that neutrality was a small pocket of pure affection, with supporters flooding the timeline to celebrate a standout player — Evanilos — whose performance had clearly elevated the entire atmosphere despite whatever controversy was supposedly brewing. What you're actually seeing here is fans choosing to focus on the positive, the individual brilliance, rather than getting dragged into the ref debate.
Neutral
73.9%
"EVANILSONNNN 😍"
Love
17.4%
"Thank you for the incredible support ❤️💙
Onto Thursday 🔜 https://t.co/t9gfRKrJYg"
Amusement
8.7%
"EVANILSONNNN 😍"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 3.8%
Negative 96.2%
West Ham fans absolutely lost it over Craig Pawson's penalty decision in midweek, and here's the thing — two-thirds of the conversation stayed rational, but that other third? Pure rage. The confusion came from the fact that nobody could quite believe what they were seeing; the anger, though, that was directed squarely at Pawson himself, with fans questioning whether the decision was just incompetence or something darker, and VAR's involvement only made it worse because it meant multiple officials had supposedly signed off on what felt like an obvious mistake.
Neutral
66.7%
"Pawson is such a fucking clown, man."
Confusion
16.7%
"Don’t know who I hate more: Craig Pawson, VAR, or the goalposts."
Anger
16.7%
"This ref is a cheating fucking nonce. Fuck you Pawson you scum."
Positive 50.0%
Neutral 30.8%
Negative 19.2%
Here's the thing—Bournemouth fans are caught between genuine admiration for Andoni Iraola's tactical work and a creeping anxiety that he might walk away, and that tension is splitting the fanbase right down the middle. Nearly a third of supporters are singing his praises, recognising the quality football he's brought to the Vitality Stadium, but here's where it gets complicated—another chunk are so frustrated with recent performances that they're already mentally preparing for his departure, almost resigned to losing him before he's even committed his future. It's the paradox of managing a smaller club in the Premier League: build something special and your manager becomes a target, and the fans know it.
Neutral
37.5%
"big fan of iraola's audition so far"
Optimism
31.2%
"Honestly, watching us play has become a bore and is mostly frustrating. Looking forward to a new manager, with hopefully an even small amount of willi"
Admiration
31.2%
"big fan of iraola's audition so far"
Positive 3.8%
Neutral 42.3%
Negative 53.8%
Right, so here's the thing — Bournemouth fans were absolutely livid over a penalty decision that most neutral observers reckon was dodgy at best, with the anger directed squarely at the match officials and the Professional Game Match Officials Limited. What's mental is that eighty percent of the discourse stayed relatively measured, but that ten percent of genuinely disgusted fans were vocal enough to paint a picture of a fanbase at their wit's end with refereeing standards this season. The broader narrative wasn't just about this one call though — it was Bournemouth supporters weaponising this moment as the latest piece of evidence in what they see as a systemic problem with inconsistent penalty decisions across the Premier League.
Neutral
80.0%
"@CPFC WHAT A PEN @FA_PGMOL"
Anger
10.0%
"@CPFC WHAT A PEN @FA_PGMOL"
Disgust
10.0%
"@CPFC That’s the worst pen decision I’ve ever seen"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 26.9%
Negative 73.1%
Crystal Palace fans have had enough, and they're naming names. After a genuinely poor display in this crucial fixture at Matchweek 35, the overwhelming response isn't shock or surprise—it's cold, calculated anger, with supporters singling out Devenny, Johnson, Lerma, and Riad as the primary culprits who need removing from the starting XI immediately. The neutrality in the broader fanbase suggests most Palace supporters see this less as panic and more as a long-overdue reckoning: these players have underperformed when it matters most, and patience has finally run out with four games left to play.
Neutral
70.0%
"@CPFC Fucking crap. Johnson lerma devenny shouldn't play again"
Anger
15.0%
"@CPFC Fucking crap. Johnson lerma devenny shouldn't play again"
Surprise
15.0%
"@CPFC What an absolutely shocking decision that is."
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 34.6%
Negative 65.4%
Here's the thing — Bournemouth fans were absolutely seething over a penalty that shouldn't have been given, and the conversation online tells you everything about why modern football discourse is broken. Two-thirds of the reaction was pure frustration, deadpan and matter-of-fact, with fans picking apart the decision frame by frame because they genuinely couldn't believe what the referee had awarded. What made it worse was that barely anyone was laughing it off — instead, they were stone-cold sarcastic, pointing out the absurdity with lines like "dropping the ball in the box is a pen now," which is the kind of cold fury that means fans have completely lost faith in consistency.
Neutral
68.2%
"IF ITS NOT A PEN, it’s a a CLEAR AND OBVIOUS ERROR. "
Amusement
18.2%
"Dropping the ball in the box is a pen now. Interesting"
Curiosity
13.6%
"Jesus Christ that’s a pen??"
Positive 7.7%
Neutral 38.5%
Negative 53.8%
Wolves fans have moved well beyond frustration with Tolu Arokodare—they're now in a state of grim resignation, almost darkly comic about his finishing woes. The overwhelming majority are resigned rather than angry, which is actually worse: they're not expecting miracles anymore, they're just hoping someone, anyone, will take him off their hands in the summer window. His hold-up play might create chances for others, but when he gets the ball in the box himself, fans are treating it less like a goal-scoring opportunity and more like a comedy sketch—one where the punchline never lands.
Neutral
90.5%
"@Wolves Genuinely the strongest part of tolus game is getting his hair pulled"
Surprise
4.8%
"Be an absolute miracle if we can sell Tolu in the summer "
Optimism
4.8%
"Be an absolute miracle if we can sell Tolu in the summer "
Positive 8.0%
Neutral 56.0%
Negative 36.0%
So here's the thing — in matchweek thirty-five, the referee added eight minutes of injury time and absolutely nobody could work it out. The fanbase was largely baffled, not furious, but there was this undercurrent of suspicion; some supporters reckoned the league was manufacturing drama on purpose, pulling time out of thin air just to keep matches artificially alive. And that's where the anger kicked in — not explosive rage, but this simmering frustration that the decision lacked any transparency or logical explanation whatsoever.
Neutral
81.8%
"The extra time in the league this year has been insane."
Anger
13.6%
"Where the fuck have they pulled 8 minutes from?
Surely it's for the potential drama and headlines
Criminal"
Curiosity
4.5%
"Proper 9"
Positive 12.0%
Neutral 28.0%
Negative 60.0%
So here's the thing — a penalty decision in matchweek 35 has split the fanbase right down the middle, and it's genuinely messy. The majority of supporters are sitting in that neutral zone, trying to work out what actually happened, but there's a vocal chunk absolutely furious about it, saying the ref's made a catastrophic error whilst a smaller group are celebrating the decision. What makes this fascinating is the genuine bewilderment: fans aren't just angry, they're genuinely confused about how the referee could see it that way, which suggests this wasn't a clear-cut call — it was one of those decisions that'll haunt the debate for weeks.
Neutral
61.1%
"PENALTY to the Chez 🙌"
Curiosity
22.2%
"@CPFC Horrible penalty. How can this be a penalty ??"
Approval
16.7%
"PENALTY to the Chez 🙌"
Positive 4.0%
Neutral 16.0%
Negative 80.0%
Here is the thing — when that penalty was given in Matchday 35, the fanbase essentially split down the middle between those absolutely convinced it was a dive and those who reckoned there was genuine contact, even if it was minimal. The overwhelming majority stayed level-headed about it, but the 17 percent who were genuinely disappointed weren't just annoyed at the decision itself — they were furious at what they saw as a striker manufacturing contact, and that frustration was compounded by Henderson's shocking distribution and positioning that led to the moment in the first place. What's mad is the 11 percent who found it amusing, because honestly, the whole sequence — soft defending, softer diving, and a goalkeeper who'd already had a nightmare — became one of those chaotic episodes that somehow transcends the actual result and just becomes folklore.
Neutral
72.2%
"He is 100% embellishing the contact to go down. It's 100% cheating. What the actual fuck."
Disappointment
16.7%
"My goodness henderson disaster class"
Amusement
11.1%
"Had to smile how he held his shin as though Roy Keane had tackled him 🤦"
Positive 30.4%
Neutral 65.2%
Negative 4.3%
Right, so here's the thing — by gameweek 35, fans weren't out here frothing at the mouth or picking sides; they were genuinely stepping back and appreciating the raw chaos of what they'd just witnessed, with four in five people taking that detached, analytical approach rather than getting caught up in the drama. You've got this tiny pocket of admiration bubbling underneath — maybe fourteen percent of the conversation — where people were recognising the sheer intensity and unpredictability on display, the kind of football that reminds you why you watch in the first place despite all the madness. The overwhelming sentiment was reverence for the beautiful game itself, not vindication for any particular team, which tells you that by late April, fans had moved past tribalism into something purer — they were just witnessing football in its most chaotic, unfiltered form and respecting it for exactly that.
Neutral
81.0%
"THE BEAUTIFUL GAME"
Admiration
14.3%
"THE BEAUTIFUL GAME"
Curiosity
4.8%
"A good old tug of war"
Positive 4.3%
Neutral 17.4%
Negative 78.3%
Right, so here's the thing — VAR absolutely bottled it, and fans were genuinely baffled rather than furious, which somehow made it worse. Two-thirds of the reaction was just cold disbelief, that dead-inside acceptance that technology has somehow made the problem worse instead of fixing it, but then you've got a proper angry contingent asking the question nobody can answer: what is VAR actually for if it can't get the basic calls right? It's the difference between rage and resignation, and that resignation is what's truly eating away at people's faith in the system.
Neutral
64.7%
"VAR: “good process lads”"
Annoyance
17.6%
"@CPFC That’s fucking tragic. What is VAR for."
Curiosity
17.6%
"What's the point of VAR?
Every week they get something horrifically wrong."
Positive 13.6%
Neutral 36.4%
Negative 50.0%
Right, so here's what's mental about week thirty-five — fans are split right down the middle on whether referees are actually losing the plot or whether supporters are just winding each other up for entertainment, and the whole thing's devolved into this brilliant chaos where people are simultaneously exasperated at the standards, amused by how wound up everyone's getting, and grudgingly approving of the fact that someone's finally called out the inconsistency. What you're seeing is that moment where frustration tips over into dark humour, where fans are less angry at specific decisions and more just taking the piss out of each other for taking it all so seriously — and honestly, that's when football Twitter becomes pure gold.
Neutral
54.5%
"Some Football fans are simply are dumb."
Amusement
27.3%
"am i reading this correct welcome to dark side mate"
Approval
18.2%
"That’s the kind of petty comparison I love. Great info. "
Positive 13.6%
Neutral 45.5%
Negative 40.9%
Here's the thing: Leeds fans were overwhelmingly pragmatic about the substitutions in this match, largely backing the removal of BA and Longstaff, but there was a genuine frustration bubbling underneath about Piroe not getting on the pitch when they felt it mattered most. What you're seeing in that neutral 76% is tactical acceptance mixed with a quiet disappointment—they could see the logic, but they weren't convinced the manager had gone far enough to chase the game when it counted.
Neutral
76.5%
"BA and longstaff subs were good. We just need piroe on for the fourth. "
Admiration
11.8%
"9th comment ❤
I absolutely LOVE the Martin Scorsese film and Robert De Niro, as always was phenomenal. The original is a damn good film, too."
Sadness
11.8%
"So unlucky for Pires"
Positive 38.1%
Neutral 57.1%
Negative 4.8%
Here's the thing: when that yellow card chaos unfolded in Matchweek 35, the fanbase stayed ice cold about it. Eighty-four per cent neutral reaction tells you everything — fans weren't outraged, weren't celebrating wildly, they were just... accepting what they saw on the pitch. That small pocket of approval, maybe ten per cent, those were the supporters who saw justice in the moment, but the overwhelming majority? They witnessed the madness and simply moved on, which is almost more damning than any roar of protest.
Approval
10.5%
"Heck yes"
Curiosity
5.3%
"Are you having a stroke?"
Positive 14.3%
Neutral 23.8%
Negative 61.9%
Leeds fans weren't panicking at half-time against Burnley — they were frustrated, almost pragmatic, recognising they'd done the hard work but knowing the second half was where it would actually be won. The overwhelming neutrality in their posts reveals something interesting: they'd seen this film before, and they knew a one-goal lead meant absolutely nothing without ruthlessness and intensity to back it up. What they wanted wasn't reassurance or celebration — it was aggression, more energy, another goal to put the game to bed before Burnley could mount one of their classic second-half pushes.
Neutral
77.8%
"@LUFC Playing well better team but 2nd needed."
Desire
11.1%
"@LUFC Good half everyone been good just need to up it in the final third"
Admiration
11.1%
"@LUFC Good half everyone been good just need to up it in the final third"
Positive 14.3%
Neutral 81.0%
Negative 4.8%
Here is the thing — when Santiago Bueno dragged Wolves level, the fanbase barely registered it as a proper moment, and that tells you everything you need to know about where they were in this match. The neutrality was overwhelming, a sea of apathy masking something deeper: this wasn't celebration, it was relief, a desperate gasp from supporters watching their side scrape back into a game they'd been completely outplayed in. Buried beneath the surface was a sliver of genuine respect for Bueno's intervention, but honestly, most fans seemed too exhausted by Wolves' ordinary performance to properly celebrate what should have been a crucial leveller.
Neutral
90.5%
"SANTI YOU LEGEND "
Confusion
4.8%
"wovles were shite :)"
Admiration
4.8%
"SANTI YOU LEGEND "
Positive 5.6%
Neutral 44.4%
Negative 50.0%
Right, so here is the thing — Bournemouth's penalty decision at Matchday 35 has absolutely split the fanbase, but what's fascinating is that most people aren't even angry about it. Two-thirds of the conversation is sitting in this bemused, almost detached space where fans are treating it less like a genuine controversy and more like theatre, cracking jokes about bought referees and men going soft in modern football. But then you've got that pocket of genuine optimism, the fifteen percent who reckon this is just how the game goes, mixed in with another fifteen percent who are taking the piss mercilessly — one lad went full meta complaining about commentators getting Marcus Tavernier's name wrong, which tells you how much people have just checked out of taking any of this seriously.
Neutral
69.2%
"@afcbournemouth YALL BOUGHT THE REFEREE HAHAHHAHAHA CANT WIN SO YALL NEED 12TH MAN NEVER A FUCKING PENALTY HENDO DIDNT EVEN TOUCH THAT FUCKING ARGENTI"
Optimism
15.4%
"Try supporting Bradford in league 1! I had better refs officiating my games when I was 12! 🤦♂🙄"
Amusement
15.4%
"@afcbournemouth YALL BOUGHT THE REFEREE HAHAHHAHAHA CANT WIN SO YALL NEED 12TH MAN NEVER A FUCKING PENALTY HENDO DIDNT EVEN TOUCH THAT FUCKING ARGENTI"
Positive 25.0%
Neutral 75.0%
Negative 0.0%
Here is the thing: Bournemouth's 3-0 demolition left most fans completely unmoved—86 per cent neutral—because the scoreline felt oddly hollow, shadowed by genuine doubt over whether the opening goal actually crossed the line. But the real comedy gold? Rival supporters, particularly Leeds fans, were absolutely loving it because Bournemouth's win shuffled the table without them having to lift a finger, which is the kind of fixture chaos that only works in your favour when you're sat on the sofa. The confusing part wasn't the result itself—it was the bizarre own goal from their own midfielder Jefferson Lerma and the fact that someone had to genuinely celebrate a goal from a corner, suggesting Bournemouth had gone the entire season without actually scoring from set play before this moment.
Neutral
85.7%
"Great goal from Rayan and Junior Kroupi +
Own Goal from Jefferson Lerma Former
AFC Bournemouth Mildfilder.
AFC Bournemouth winners against
Crystal "
Amusement
7.1%
"Woke up with Leeds in 15th, will be going to bed in 14th without even playing... Cheers Bournemouth... 😂😂😂"
Confusion
7.1%
"Woke up with Leeds in 15th, will be going to bed in 14th without even playing... Cheers Bournemouth... 😂😂😂"
Positive 0.0%
Neutral 18.8%
Negative 81.2%
Right, here's the thing: Wolves fans were absolutely livid after being held to a draw by ten men, and the anger wasn't evenly spread—most supporters sat somewhere between neutral frustration and genuine annoyance, but the ones who did speak up were absolutely seething at their manager's tactical decisions, particularly the substitution choices that left them looking clueless against a depleted opposition. The core complaint wasn't just about dropping points; it was about the sheer lack of a coherent plan, the refusal to gamble with attacking changes like bringing on Bellegarde, and the embarrassing reality that Wolves couldn't break down a team playing with a man down—which for fans meant one brutal conclusion: if you can't beat ten men, you've got no chance of building anything worth watching.
Neutral
64.3%
"@Wolves Should be sacked tonight absolutely shocking. Not bringing on Bellegarde is utterly mental"
Annoyance
21.4%
"@Wolves FUCK OFF This is our level. Playing against 10 men. Shows how bad this team and manager are no ideas, barely anything created. Just a total em"
Disappointment
14.3%
"@Wolves Pathetic substitutions, no sense of any plan, sitting back against 10. Just sack him now"
Positive 35.7%
Neutral 57.1%
Negative 7.1%
So here's the thing about Bournemouth fans right now — they're absolutely buzzing about Rayan's performance, but it's not blind optimism, it's calculated excitement mixed with genuine concern about what comes next. Two thirds of the conversation is measured praise, fans recognising genuine quality in this kid and pencilling him in as a serious prospect, but then you've got that lingering doubt creeping in from a fifth of the fanbase: they're worried this is just another academy gem Bournemouth will eventually flog off to a bigger club, which tells you everything about what it's like supporting an ambitious but perpetually restless Premier League operation. The real story isn't just that Rayan had a great game — it's that Bournemouth fans are simultaneously celebrating and bracing themselves for heartbreak.
Neutral
66.7%
"Rayan is an insane youngster, defenitly up there for young player of the year"
Curiosity
16.7%
"Rayan is going places"
Disapproval
16.7%
"Nah, can't give that "
Positive 42.9%
Neutral 57.1%
Negative 0.0%
So here's the thing — when Junior Kroupi smashed the teenage scoring record for a Premier League debut season in matchweek 35, the fanbase basically went cold on it. Nearly 80 percent of the conversation was pure, clinical acknowledgement of the record itself, like fans were ticking a box rather than celebrating, which tells you everything about what they really thought. The 21 percent who actually got excited about it? They were the ones pushing the narrative that he deserved Player of the Season recognition, but even then, they felt like they were shouting into a void — because the overwhelming majority of supporters seemed more bothered about managing expectations than riding the wave of what should've been a genuinely thrilling moment for English football.
Neutral
78.6%
"No teenager has ever scored more goals in their debut @premierleague season than Junior Kroupi 🔥 https://t.co/8up0Nmch6U"
Admiration
21.4%
"@afcbournemouth @premierleague That’s the young best player of the season here
PR team get to work
He really deserves an award for setting such recor"
Aston Villa supporters are divided over Emiliano Buendía's performance and his crucial late goal against Tottenham, with some praising his solidity as a starter whilst others argue he's inconsistent and costly when he underperforms. The discussion touches on whether his talent justifies keeping him long-term or whether Villa should cash in on a potential £70m transfer to reinvest in the squad.
He's Lost The Dressing Room
These fans believe the performance was genuinely abysmal and the manager—or player—has fundamentally failed, deserving immediate removal regardless of the late goal.
neutral
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"He needs to be sacked after this poor abject performance.
"
"He is a joke of a footballer. But this was always going to be the outcome with him. The summer transfer business has been noting less then shocking. "
This Is Our Guy Now
True believers who've bought into the project completely, crediting this performer with transforming Villa's season and refusing to entertain criticism.
admiration
approval
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"He’s given us hope, I absolutely love what’s he’s done at spurs so far "
"He's been our most consistent performer and I love him for it."
Absolutely Finished With Him
Exasperated supporters at breaking point, convinced the player is useless and actively damaging the team, demanding immediate action before more damage is done.
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"Omg tell please cross or do something why is he soo useless "
"We need to bin this fuck asap."
Talent's There But Something's Wrong
Analytical sceptics who acknowledge quality exists somewhere in the player but can't shake the feeling he's underperforming relative to his pedigree and price tag.
"been crap all season"
"Should still be at Chelsea!"
Tottenham fans and neutrals are sharply divided over whether Spurs' late comeback from 0-2 down represents a genuine turning point in their relegation fight or merely a lucky reprieve against a struggling Villa side. The discussion splits between those believing the win signals genuine improvement under De Zerbi and those insisting the display proved they're still fundamentally "utter garbage" destined to go down.
We're Back, Baby
These fans believe Spurs have turned a corner and deserve celebration for scrapping their way to a vital result that could spark a genuine survival push.
admiration
player
Emiliano Martínez
"I'm so happy for Spurs ❤❤❤❤❤❤"
"COME ON YOU SPURS!!!!!!!!! Great victory"
Still Absolute Shite
This camp sees the result as a hollow escape that masks a fundamentally broken side, questioning how anyone could be outplayed by a team they consider the league's worst.
anger
player
Emiliano Martínez
"This is genuinely embarrassing, worst we'd played all season, and we've already had some stinkers. Gonna end 4-0 Spurs at this rate, pathetic."
"I really fucking hate Spurs and I forget just how much until we play them. "
Lucky Bastards
These observers acknowledge Spurs got away with it — not playing well but somehow finding a way, a tactical escape rather than a convincing performance.
"Spurs are lucky 😂😂😂😂😂"
"Love Spurs"
The Disgrace Dissectors
This group is processing the sheer embarrassment of the occasion itself, focusing less on Spurs' quality and more on how the opposition surrendered to an inferior outfit.
neutral
player
Emiliano Martínez
"Spurs are comfortably the worst team in the league so to get played off the park is nothing short of a disgrace "
"this is just embarrassing how are you getting completely dominated by this spurs side at home"
Tottenham supporters are celebrating their team's dominant performance against Aston Villa, with many praising the intensity and quality on show, though frustration lingers over a dramatic late goal that cost them a clean sheet and perfect three points. The mood is cautiously optimistic but tinged with disappointment that a commanding display didn't yield maximum reward, with fans emphasising the season remains far from decided.
Early Brilliance, Here We Go
These fans are riding the wave of Spurs' dominant first-half performance, convinced the lads have cracked it and need only sustain the intensity to seal the three points.
admiration
concede
James Maddison
"Fantastic first 45 min. Cmmon boys!"
"Great half.. lets keep this up boys!! COYS!!!"
Tactical Collapse Was Inevitable
This group recognises the fundamental flaw: Tottenham cannot defend a lead because their attacking setup leaves them structurally vulnerable, and the second half will expose exactly that weakness.
neutral
concede
James Maddison
"This team is horrendous at parking the bus.
Play how we did in the first "
"2-0 up? What the fuck do I do?"
We've Already Bottled It
These supporters are furious that despite the first-half dominance, Spurs have reverted to their self-sabotaging habits, and they're bracing for the inevitable meltdown that's about to unfold.
concede
James Maddison
"Embarrassing first half, we better come out for this second half at 100 miles per fucking hour"
"This is somehow worse than the first half"
Tottenham fans are anxiously debating whether Rodrigo Bentancur and Richarlison picked up genuine injuries during the match, with most convinced they're just minor knocks, cramp, or exhaustion rather than anything serious. The overwhelming consensus is cautiously optimistic, though the desperation in the tone reveals how fragile Spurs' injury situation feels given their current league position.
The Referee Robbed Us Brigade
Fans fixated on the officials' failure to punish Doherty's reckless challenge, believing a red card was bottled and Bentancur's injury was entirely preventable negligence.
neutral
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"The Doherty challenge was truly appalling, was a high scissor tackle and he wasn’t sent off for it. "
"Thomas frank absolutely wasted benta and fucked his reputation unfairly. All those side passes were definitely not his choice"
The Midfield Meltdown Merchants
Critics hammering individual errors—Bissouma's giveaways, poor passing choices—as the root cause of Tottenham's vulnerability and the chaos that led to the injury scare.
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"fucking hell rodri looks like he’s in so much pain "
"Fucking bissouma and giving the ball away in our third. "
The Bentancur Believers
Admiring fans celebrating what Bentancur brings to Spurs' play, convinced his presence and quality make him absolutely essential to their turnaround regardless of the injury scare.
admiration
optimism
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
João Palhinha
"Love it benta! "
"Bentancur is such an incredible player to watch. I love the way he plays football. He's been instrumental in the turnaround so far."
The Injury Uncertainty Faction
Fans caught between panic and pragmatism, oscillating between catastrophising about Bentancur's fitness and clinging to hope he'll walk it off without serious damage.
"Tot is on life support."
"hes fine, 100%
"
The Season's Dead Narrative
Doomsayers writing off Tottenham's campaign entirely, convinced another key injury signals the beginning of the end for their already fragile title hopes.
"Tot is on life support."
"hes fine, 100%
"
Despite Tottenham losing 0-2 to 1-2, fans are singling out the midfield performance as genuinely impressive and "sensational," with particular praise for Kevin Danso's defensive work and the collective shift from the three-man engine room. The consensus cuts through the result itself—this is about recognising individual unit excellence amid a disappointing scoreline.
The Midfield Deserved Better
This crew genuinely believe the three central players were the standout performers and deserve credit regardless of the scoreline, because grit and control matter more than the final result.
admiration
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
João Palhinha
"The midfield 3 have been absolutely fantastic tonight "
"This midfield just has grit. Love it "
Sarcasm and Resignation
These fans are caught between acknowledging individual quality and watching it all collapse in execution, so they're using irony to process the gap between potential and reality.
"But still world beaters all over the pitch 🥱 best tackling DM in the world, Brazil’s starting nine."
"This might be the most ridiculous front 3 we’ve ever played lol"
The Winger Problem is Real
This lot have identified a concrete, fixable issue — that the attacking width is genuinely letting the side down — and they're calling it out because the midfield can't control a match if there's nowhere to transition.
Richarlison
Randal Kolo Muani
Mathys Tel
"Our wingers genuinely have the worst end product in the league"
"Our wingers are so bad"
Tactical System is Fundamentally Broken
These voices are going harder, claiming the entire midfield approach is flawed at its core and that no amount of individual brilliance can save a structurally dumb setup.
neutral
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"Jesus that spurs midfield is atrocious."
"Truly dumbest front three in the league"
Trapped Between Hope and Honesty
This camp mirrors the sarcasm group — caught between wanting to believe in quality midfielders and having to watch a front three that simply cannot finish the job they're being handed.
"But still world beaters all over the pitch 🥱 best tackling DM in the world, Brazil’s starting nine."
"This might be the most ridiculous front 3 we’ve ever played lol"
Villa supporters are experiencing a sudden surge of emotion after Emiliano Buendía's dramatic 90+6 minute header pulled the score back to 1-2 against Tottenham, with fans describing an almost surreal feeling of optimism they haven't experienced in months despite the defeat. The discussion centres on this unexpected glimmer of belief — a psychological turning point rather than a critique of refereeing decisions.
Robbed By The Referee
This camp believes the goal should never have stood and feels genuinely betrayed by an officiating decision that's cost them points they desperately needed.
"Feel so sick. No idea why I do this .... "
"What the fuck is this feeling lol"
Finally, Something Went Right
These fans are embracing the rare moment of VAR or refereeing fortune in their favour, treating it as emotional redemption after a season of getting the short end of the stick.
optimism
"Yeeeeaaaaaaahhhh.
I genuinely feel like a weight has been lifted off my chest. Even if it is only for one day "
"This is what love and happiness feels like 🥰"
Hope Is The Cruelest Killer
The sceptics aren't debating the technicality — they're warning that false hope from one dodgy decision will only make the inevitable disappointment hurt even more when it comes.
neutral
"Have you learned nothing this season? It’s the hope that kills you."
"It’s a regular occurrence and it honestly makes my stomach turn."
Spurs fans are expressing cautious optimism after consecutive victories, with several posts celebrating the wins despite the club's precarious league position near the bottom. The discussion reveals a fanbase oscillating between hope for a survival push and resignation about the season's trajectory, with some calling for focus on the remaining fixtures.
The Dread Is Real
These fans can't shake the feeling that one good result means nothing if Thursday's collapse confirms their worst fears—they're trapped in a cycle of hope followed by inevitable disappointment.
disappointment
Tyrone Mings
Emiliano Martínez
Matty Cash
"I feel like nothing good ever comes from throwing a game, and if we lose thursday it makes today 10x worse. Why pretend, either throw it or dont, dont half arse it like that becaus"
"I’m so fucking worried for thursday. Genuinely makes me feel a little sick "
Finally, Something To Celebrate
Optimists are riding the momentum of today's win and choosing to believe it's the turning point, refusing to catastrophise about what comes next because for once, something actually went right.
optimism
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Excited for Thursday!"
"The women won today too, today is a good day to be COYS."
Bracing For The Inevitable Collapse
These supporters are stuck in a grim middle ground, analytically predicting disaster based on pattern recognition—they've seen enough stupid mistakes to know how this story usually ends.
neutral
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Nagging feeling this game is going to make me wanna bash my head in. Stupid mistakes all game is my prediction. "
"We’re genuinely going to fuck this up. "
Manchester United and Liverpool served up a thrilling 3-2 encounter with five goals and multiple talking points, with fans marvelling at the quality of finishing — particularly Kobbie Mainoo's late winner — and debating how the match might have unfolded differently under varying circumstances. The dominant talking point across the discussion is sheer appreciation for the attacking football and individual moments of brilliance on display.
Defending Standards Absolutely Shattered
These fans are furious because they've witnessed a catastrophic defensive lapse that's instantly becoming legendary for all the wrong reasons—and they're not letting it slide quietly.
anger
"That might be the worst goal I've ever seen us concede. Taibi has nothing on that "
"This shit guy always scores against us. Got away there"
Brilliance Worth Every Bit
These supporters are riding the high of spectacular attacking football, choosing to celebrate the moment of genius rather than dwell on what went wrong beforehand.
admiration
"Great goal, come on!"
"Great play. More of this please."
The Cold, Hard Facts
These fans are calling it exactly as they see it—a poor goal to concede, full stop—without the emotional baggage of either fury or celebration.
neutral
"Literally, the worst way to concede"
"Now that's a very poor goal to concede.b"
Following Arsenal's dominant win, supporters are revelling in vindication against fellow fans who had criticised the team's form earlier in the season, with posts celebrating that doubters and "haters" are now forced to eat their words. The discussion reflects a broader tension between loyal backing and constructive criticism within the fanbase, with some urging unity whilst others argue that naysayers deserve to be called out for their lack of faith.
The Moral Outrage Brigade
They're absolutely furious that certain fans crossed a line during the chaos, viewing the behaviour as toxic and unrepresentative of what Arsenal should stand for.
anger
"This. I hate a portion of these fans "
"That was one of the most vile hate threads i seen on this sub"
The Pure Joy Merchants
They're soaking in the beautiful moment—the stadium, the atmosphere, the fans—because sometimes a victory is just about celebrating something genuinely special.
admiration
"Man, this ground and stadium are so beautiful. It’s my dream to go"
"Have to say. The fans are fantastic. "
The Vindication Vultures
They're here to watch the doubters and haters squirm, treating the win as poetic justice against everyone who wrote Arsenal off this season.
"I’m just here to see what the haters are saying as usual"
"Love the sound of rivals slithering back under their rocks on a Saturday evening 😊."
The Deserved Comeuppance Crew
They reckon the critics and doom-mongers who've slagged off the team all year have earned a bit of humble pie, and they're not apologising for letting them know it.
neutral
"Bro has such an unsuccessful hate watch today that he is yapping nonsense"
"Nah people who have been shitting on our team and players all season deserve mud in their eye. They deserve to be called out and put in their place at every opportunity.
Not true"
Fans are questioning why the referee allowed play to continue well beyond the initially signalled 90+5 minutes, ultimately permitting Aston Villa's late equaliser at 90+6. The vast majority believe the whistle should have been blown much earlier, with speculation ranging from incompetence to match-fixing accusations.
Ref's Ruined The Match
These fans believe the referee made a blatantly wrong call that fundamentally changed the game's outcome, and they're absolutely seething about it.
annoyance
"Fucking cunt referee. Why are we still playing"
"This ref cam is so shit lmao just showing it randomly for no reason"
Finally, The Refs Got It Right
This group sees the refcam technology and the decision itself as evidence that officials are improving, and they're genuinely impressed by the standard of refereeing on display.
admiration
"Wow refcam is a really great new feature! "
"well done to the refs too, nice job today (am i really saying this in big 2026)"
The Technology's The Real Problem Here
These supporters aren't entirely sold on either side of the call itself — they're more concerned that the refcam feature is intrusive, distracting, and detracting from their viewing experience.
neutral
"Now the shit ref calls are coming "
"The ref cam, can just fck off.. It's so annoying.
"
Aston Villa fans are furious after their side failed to break down bottom-half Tottenham, with supporters questioning why a top-four team performed so poorly and some even suggesting the club deliberately underperformed to avoid inflaming the title race or damaging their Champions League prospects ahead of a likely drubbing by Manchester City.
Emery's Lost The Plot
Villa fans furious that their side delivered nothing—no shots on target, no fight, no excuses—and they're demanding answers about whether their manager has completely abandoned the system that got them into contention.
anger
villa
ole
"@AVFCOfficial piece of shit cunt football club, not even a shot on target. how much has spurs paid emery? fucking useless shits i hope you get knocked out the europa league and get"
"@AVFCOfficial Fucking disgraceful performance. Don't deserve Championship football never mind Champions League. Every player should be embarrassed by this."
Dissecting The Disaster
Fans taking a step back to catalogue exactly what went wrong, from the chaotic opening minutes to the overall shape of play, treating the stalemate like a post-mortem that needs breaking down piece by piece.
neutral
villa
ole
"@AVFCOfficial Fucking awful first 10 mins again!!!!!!"
"@AVFCOfficial Fucking disgraceful performance. Don't deserve Championship football never mind Champions League. Every player should be embarrassed by this."
Spurs Did The Business
The minority voice in the Villa fanbase acknowledging that Tottenham simply outplayed them and deserves credit for a well-executed display, even if it stings to admit it.
admiration
villa
ole
"@SpursOfficial Fantastic football from spurs! Wow!"
"@SpursOfficial What a fantastic game, keep going lads!"
Something Doesn't Add Up
Cynical observers convinced Villa are deliberately underperforming before facing Manchester City, either to lower expectations or dodge blame for an inevitable hammering down the line.
"The Villa are trying harder to stay out of top 4 race before they face City so that no one blame them for losing 6-0 against City, which is actually their mission to make sure Arse"
"I'm about to become an aston villa hater if spurs gonna stay in epl"
This Changes Everything
Supporters processing how this result fundamentally shifts the narrative around Villa's top-four ambitions and their manager's credibility heading into the run-in.
"The Villa are trying harder to stay out of top 4 race before they face City so that no one blame them for losing 6-0 against City, which is actually their mission to make sure Arse"
"I'm about to become an aston villa hater if spurs gonna stay in epl"
Supporters across both sides engaged in heated debate over multiple yellow cards and VAR decisions during a tense, fractious encounter, with Leeds fans particularly frustrated over disciplinary inconsistency and missed tactical substitutions late in the match. The discussion reflects the high stakes of the relegation battle, with fans dissecting refereeing standards and managerial decisions in what appears to have been a physical, contentious fixture.
Pure Euphoria, No Questions Asked
Leeds fans absolutely losing it in the best way possible, celebrating a stunning goal without a shred of doubt or hesitation.
admiration
defender
"@LUFC LETS GO . Happy Friday"
"@LUFC One of our goals of the season that, beautiful"
Shock and Awe Reactions
Fans processing the moment in real-time with raw, unfiltered emotion—caught between disbelief at what they've just witnessed and struggling to find the words.
neutral
defender
"@LUFC Absolute bastard of a goal that"
"@LUFC Ooh fuck off. Cmon get a fucking grip"
The Ref Sabotage Squad
Burnley supporters convinced the official has absolutely bottled it, blaming the referee entirely for a decision that's cost them the match.
anger
defender
"@LUFC The worst referee I have EVER seen!!! MOT!"
"@LUFC Fucking shambolic display. 1-0 or not, that was pathetic"
The Dirty Play Debate
Fans arguing it wasn't just about the referee's call—it's about Leeds' conduct, character, or how the season unfolded, refusing to let the moment stand on its own.
"@tllightning12yeah it is, dirty Leeds"
"@itsSloMo 11 points they finished with they were shocking that season"
Newcastle supporters are debating whether midfielder Bruno Guimaraes was sharp enough in the victory over Brighton, with some praising his leadership and mentality-shifting presence while others felt he lacked intensity and sharpness in possession. The discussion reflects broader anxiety about the team's dependency on him as their creative lynchpin.
Bruno's The Missing Piece
These fans believe Newcastle's dramatic improvement is down to one man — Bruno Guimaraes is the difference between mediocrity and magic, and his presence alone transforms the entire team's trajectory.
admiration
great
"Bruno is such a baller. I'm so glad he's here, the LC final interview - inject it into my veins."
"So nice to see Bruno back in the flow"
Finally, Someone Gets It
These fans are vindicated by results — they've been saying Bruno was essential all along, and now the doubters can see exactly what they were moaning about when he was absent.
neutral
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"@NUFC So all the bloody moaning for weeks...add Bruno & what happens? We improve dramatically! Why are people so blind to this fact!"
"Bruno’s magic and presence has been a huge miss"
Still Not Convinced Yet
These fans refuse to get swept up in one good performance, pointing out that Bruno looks off the pace and questioning whether one player can really paper over deeper problems.
disappointment
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"Bruno doesn’t look sharp at all sadly :/"
"It's almost like we suck when we don't have Bruno... played well against Arsenal and now this..."
The Physicality Matters
These fans are focused on how Bruno's return changes Newcastle's ability to impose themselves physically in midfield — his presence means different tactics, different energy, and different outcomes in tight moments.
"Bruno’s magic and presence has been a huge miss"
"Joelinton and Bruno would have rolled around."
Refereeing Shaped The Narrative
These fans are debating how match officials' decisions either helped or hindered Newcastle's performance, suggesting that Bruno's impact is being inflated or deflated depending on what calls went their way.
"Bruno’s magic and presence has been a huge miss"
"Joelinton and Bruno would have rolled around."
Tottenham supporters are mocking Aston Villa fans for abandoning the match early after conceding twice in the opening 25 minutes, with the discussion revealing sharp divisions between those defending the away support as passionate and those condemning the early departures as shameful. The debate reflects broader frustration about Villa's underperformance despite their league position, alongside sarcastic commentary about the nature of fan engagement during a difficult away fixture.
"We've Hit Rock Bottom"
Fans convinced the performance was genuinely unacceptable and demanding better from specific players, with real fear that patience is running out before things get properly ugly.
ole
villa
"Hope the fans still boo even if we did get a goal at the end. That was disgraceful display, cash bailey and buendia gave a shit and that was it "
"Those boos were scary. Fuck up on Thursday and it could genuinely get mutinous"
"This Is Just Awful"
Supporters processing the emotional wreckage of the result without agenda, simply stating the uncomfortable reality that the team and fixture didn't deliver what fans deserved.
neutral
ole
villa
"Disgraceful really for a 7pm Sunday match the fans there deserve better. Like I would advice them to go home."
"I will never forgive your Mother"
"They're Punching Above Their Weight Anyway"
A reality-check faction arguing Villa have overachieved this season, so expecting perfection is unreasonable, even if this particular display was genuinely poor.
"Villa are massively overachieving and their fans are booing them? Wow"
"I will never forgive your Mother"
"Our Away Support Is Elite"
Opposition fans or neutrals celebrating the travelling support's dominance of the atmosphere, treating the result as secondary to the badge worn by those who showed up.
admiration
ole
villa
"Absolutely love it, our fans absolutely conquered Villa Park"
"Sounds like a home game for us, amazing traveling fans so far"
Arsenal supporters are astonished by their team's transformation on the pitch, with many calling it their best display in months or the entire season—a dramatic shift from weeks of sluggish, lifeless football that has left fans questioning whether the Gunners are finally clicking at a crucial moment.
"Finally, We're Back"
Arsenal fans celebrating a long-overdue return to their best form, convinced this performance proves the team has found the magic that's been missing for months.
admiration
"OMG best we’ve played in MONTHS!!! "
"This is the best I’ve seen us play in months. We play like this 6 more times and this will be the greatest season of our lifetimes. "
"One Good Game, But..."
Pragmatic supporters acknowledging the quality on display whilst remaining sceptical — they've seen brilliant individual moments before that didn't translate into sustained success.
"This is the best he's played all season"
"Outfit taken as a whole is a disaster but we move "
"Where's This Been All Season?"
Bewildered fans caught between amazement at what they're witnessing and genuine confusion about why Arsenal waited until matchday 35 to play with this intensity and cohesion.
neutral
"Well they’ve played and been shocking so"
"Am I watching the wrong team ? Where the fuck has this been !!!! "
"Too Little, Too Late"
Critical voices questioning whether one standout performance can erase months of inconsistency, demanding answers for why the team buried this version of themselves until the season was already decided.
"Where the fuck has this team been? God damn "
"respectfully, where the fuck has this team been hiding?"
Arsenal delivered a crushing 3-0 victory over Fulham that exposed the visitors' defensive fragility and sparked immediate recriminations among their fanbase about the manager's future. The discussion centres on whether Fulham have stalled under their current regime and need wholesale changes to mount a genuine challenge.
The Absolutely Livid Brigade
These fans are seething because they've just watched their side produce one of the season's worst performances, with half the squad looking like they couldn't be bothered to show up.
annoyance
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@FulhamFC that was fucking woeful. awful lineup. awful performance. half the players can’t even be fucked. i gave up on europe months ago but fuck me they like to tease us before a"
"One of our worst performances this season, fuck me. "
The Brutal Honesty Crew
They're dissecting the collapse with clinical, matter-of-fact language — no excuses, just stating the obvious fact that Fulham were fundamentally broken in every department.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@FulhamFC Fucking hell u couldn't even score 1 goal fuck u"
"@FulhamFC You guys are so bad damn.. you can’t even string four passes together"
The "We Saw This Coming" Cynics
These are the fans who watched Fulham capitulate and treated it as confirmation of what they already knew — that the team had mentally checked out with nothing left to play for.
"Not surprised Fulham folded like a deck chair.... they're on the beach already."
"Alright mate 😂 but west ham domt have your former goalie letting them in...."
The Opposition Grateful Visitors
Arsenal fans who've popped into the Fulham discourse to express genuine appreciation for the three points, even offering goodwill wishes for a European finish next season.
gratitude
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@FulhamFC Thank you Fulham for the 3 points today. We are absolutely rooting for you to be in European spot for next season"
"@FulhamFC Was a great game !"
The Finger-Pointing Analysts
Mixing resignation with specific grievance, these fans are identifying particular culprits — like individual defensive errors — whilst maintaining that collapse was inevitable anyway.
"Not surprised Fulham folded like a deck chair.... they're on the beach already."
"Alright mate 😂 but west ham domt have your former goalie letting them in...."
Arsenal supporters are joking that April is a cursed month after a devastating loss, with many half-seriously calling for the calendar to skip it entirely. The tongue-in-cheek complaints mask frustration at a poor result that threatens their title push heading into the final weeks of the season.
April Is Arsenal's Enemy
These fans are absolutely fuming that the calendar itself has become the villain, convinced that April fixtures are cursed and actively sabotaging their title push.
anger
annoyance
new
Gabriel Jesus
"Fuck you April 🖕🖕🖕"
"Fuck April. We should ban April games. "
The Curse Is Real (Maybe)
Observers are processing the pattern with dark humour, half-joking that April genuinely feels like a jinxed month whilst simultaneously finding comedy in the superstition itself.
neutral
new
Gabriel Jesus
"April is by far the worst month of the first half of the year"
"These cursed images give me life"
We're Brilliant When It Matters
The optimists refuse to blame the month and instead credit the team's actual performance, arguing that stunning football and positive results prove April is irrelevant.
new
Gabriel Jesus
"We are playing some fantastic stuff today. Triangles and interchange, runs and through balls. It must be May!"
"Already love this month "
This Is Genuinely Unhinged
These fans are taking the April curse to absurd extremes, making formal complaints about eliminating the month entirely as a darkly comic coping mechanism for their frustration.
"The April fools curse might be real, I can't lie."
"I’m submitting a formal complaint that we should go to an 11 month calendar and eliminate the month of April altogether. That was so needed."
Fans are divided on whether Randal Kolo Muani's early yellow card (27 minutes) was a harsh decision, but the overwhelming sentiment centres on his touching interaction with supporters later in the match — a gesture that won over many who had previously questioned his commitment to Tottenham. Despite mixed views on his overall performance, his emotional connection with the crowd has earned him considerable goodwill among the fanbase.
The Frustration Chorus
Fans venting raw anger at Muani's on-pitch performance, dismissing him as simply not good enough for the level.
celebrating
"Kolo Muani is so bad in this match. "
"Muani you fucking suck mate"
The Weary Acceptance
Supporters too exhausted by Muani's inconsistency to even muster outrage anymore, just resigned disappointment.
neutral
celebrating
"Muani is so bad man"
"So sick of Muani"
The Fairness Brigade
Fans applying cold logic to the incident, debating whether the yellow card was justified and contextualising individual moments within the match narrative.
"0:51 Kolo Muani getting flashbacks"
"Tbf, from what they showed muani’s was harsh. Tel was just stupid though"
The Redemption Believers
The converts who saw Muani's passion and connection with supporters as proof of character that transcends his technical struggles.
admiration
love
celebrating
"My respect for Kolo Muani massively went up today
He fought so hard today and the love he just showed the fans
You love to see it "
"Muani showing passion and high fiving the fans as he came off made me love him more instantly too. Purely based off that I say keep them both haha."
The Memory Miners
Supporters processing the live action and its implications, drawing parallels to past moments or extracting meaning from how the incident unfolded.
"0:51 Kolo Muani getting flashbacks"
"Tbf, from what they showed muani’s was harsh. Tel was just stupid though"
West Ham supporters are processing a devastating 3-0 defeat to Brentford that mathematically confirms their relegation from the Premier League, with fans expressing resignation and despair at the club's fate. Brentford's comfortable win, sealed by Damsgaard's late goal after an earlier penalty, leaves West Ham rooted in 17th place with no realistic path back to safety.
The Bubble Still Believes
These fans are riding the wave of hope, convinced West Ham's survival fight isn't over and determined to back the team through the noise.
optimism
excitement
final
game
"Damn this is a great watch already "
"Go Go Bubble squad. The world is with you"
Grim Acceptance Sets In
These supporters have clocked what's happening on the pitch and are bracing for impact with dark humour, already preparing themselves for the worst.
neutral
final
game
"Yeah this isn’t gonna be our day…"
"Lmao we're not in the mood for this shit"
The Rage Bubble Bursts
Absolutely gutted and furious, these fans are venting their despair at what they're watching, caught between hating the performance and knowing they'll be back for more.
final
game
"I hate football. The world sucks. (see you guys on Sunday)"
"Referring an absolute joke today"
The Win-At-All-Costs Crew
These fans are locked in on the result and what it means for staying up, reading the room with either defiant celebrations or strategic realism depending on which way it swings.
"Cheers mate"
"WE ARE STAYING UP"
The Tactical Deep-Divers
These supporters are breaking down the systems and shape on the pitch, more interested in the how and why than the raw emotion, searching for understanding in the chaos.
"Cheers mate"
"WE ARE STAYING UP"
Arsenal supporters are processing Emile Smith Rowe's substitution during the match with a mixture of nostalgia and sadness, reflecting on his academy journey and early impact on the club whilst recognising he hasn't quite reached the level needed for sustained success. The crowd's applause as he left the field has sparked poignant discussion about his contribution during a difficult period under Arteta and wishes for his future health and career elsewhere.
Heartbreak and Fury
These fans are devastated by another injury blow to ESR, viewing it as cruel misfortune that's compounded Arsenal's season in the most painful way possible.
sadness
"Nooo hope ESR is good, fucking hell so cruel "
"ESR injured again 😭💔 Actually breaks my heart bro"
Celebrating a Legend's Legacy
This camp chooses to honour what ESR gave the club rather than dwell on the injury, recognising his academy roots and the emotional connection fans built with him.
optimism
"I knew our fans would chant for ESR irrespective of the scoreline. Absolutely class and loved it. He was a big part of our turnaround "
"We loved his emergence through the academy, some of still have our ESR jerseys and wear it"
The Sympathetic Observers
These supporters acknowledge the tragedy of the moment without spiralling into despair, offering measured empathy for a player caught in a cycle of setbacks.
neutral
"Poor ESR. He comes home and is hurt again "
"ahhh man breaks my heart to see esr hurt"
The Complicated Middle Ground
This group wrestles with conflicting feelings — missing ESR as a person while doubting whether he fits Arsenal's current ambitions, making his injury exit bittersweet rather than purely tragic.
"I know he’s not at the level we need but man do I miss ESR "
"The sad thing about this match was,
looking at ESR sub off while Max Dowman sub in at the same time.
Tears.
"
Newcastle supporters are sharply split on whether their 3-1 win was deserved or a fortunate escape, with some crediting defensive mistakes and missed chances by Brighton players, whilst others insist Newcastle were poor but benefited from opposition profligacy and keeper errors. The discussion hinges on whether this represents a genuine three points or an undeserved result that papered over ongoing defensive vulnerabilities.
Lucky But Livid
These fans refuse to celebrate because they've clocked that Newcastle were genuinely poor for large stretches — they're furious the team can scrape wins through fortune rather than proper football.
disappointment
annoyance
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"Fkn hell. A better team would have put us away now, I do not like our ball management at the moment."
"It sucks to not even be able to fully enjoy a win being how terrible we were for the second half, and knowing we just got lucky. "
Fortune Favours The Cynical
They're acknowledging the luck whilst somehow still backing the project, recognising that undeserved victories happen in football but choosing to keep faith rather than spiral.
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"We have gotten so lucky so far, can't even complain when we chuck this "
"Pure luck that we are leading. Jesus Christ."
The Honest Analysts
These supporters cut through the emotion to diagnose the actual problems — defensive lapses, chance creation imbalance, individual errors — without getting lost in either celebration or despair.
"It looked like we made more or as many chances for them. It happens a lot, we don't focus in defence."
"I agree, we were better than them, we only lost due to players mistakes. I still believe in this team because if we were at least a bit better in finishing our chances we would've "
The Pragmatic Narrators
They're simply documenting what happened on the pitch with detached observation, noting the tactical adjustments and personnel changes that shaped the outcome without heavy judgment.
neutral
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"Great first half, got a bit shaky in the second so we bring on the subs to tighten up at the back, one of the sub scores to see it through at the end
Easy 3 points lads I don't kn"
"We have been so so fucking lucky "
Fans are deeply divided on whether managerial quality is the primary factor determining their team's performance, with some crediting coaching excellence for turning results around whilst others criticise poor appointments and tactical incompetence. The discussion reveals broader debate about what type of manager — passionate, experienced in volatile leagues, or from specific football cultures — best suits a squad perceived as unpredictable and in need of strong leadership.
We Got Robbed For Months
These fans are furious that the previous manager was allowed to rot the club from within, and they're channelling pure rage at wasted time and negligence from above.
annoyance
managers
players
"Fucking stupid idiot of a manager and we left him there for months to truly let the rot grow. "
"Our worst Manager for years. Awful hire."
Finally, A Proper Football Team
These believers reckon the new manager has instantly restored order and competence, and they're buzzing because they can suddenly see a pathway out of the chaos.
admiration
players
"What a difference a competent manager makes!
We could still get out of this, COYS! "
"Finally we look like a properly coached football team. I have been waiting years for this"
This Weird Competence Thing
These fans are in a state of disorientation — they're witnessing good coaching for the first time in ages and they're genuinely confused by how foreign it feels.
neutral
managers
players
"This is absolutely fucked. We actually look well coached. What a strange feeling "
"he's just quite incompetent, if you look at what he did for the gooners too lol. it's baffling why/how some of the appointments in the backroom were made."
Managers Matter, Obviously
These pragmatists are sitting in the middle, acknowledging that the difference between a quality operator and a poor one is real, but they're not making it emotional.
"There are quality managers and not so good managers"
"He is a great coach indeed!🧡"
Newcastle United supporters are celebrating a badly needed 3-1 win over Brighton after a difficult run, with fans expressing relief and rediscovering the feeling of victory as the season enters its final stretch. The mood is cautiously optimistic mixed with some lingering anxiety about the team's recent form, though the result provides a welcome boost heading into the run-in.
The Agony Of Injustice
These fans believe Newcastle's victory came at the cost of a catastrophic officiating error or controversial incident that fundamentally undermined the result's legitimacy.
sadness
"Oh this is bad. Like bad bad."
"Jesus Christ that’s pathetic "
Chaos And Disbelief
This group is still processing the sheer absurdity of what unfolded — they know Newcastle won, but they can't quite believe how it actually happened.
neutral
"I had to open my BIG DUMB MOUTH"
"We should have lost that game lmao"
Drought Finally Broken
These supporters are simply relieved and delighted that Newcastle have ended their winning drought, choosing to celebrate the three points regardless of how messy the path was.
joy
"Well that’s wonderful "
"It is great to see a winning pic again. Been a long time."
Fans are divided over Kobbie Mainoo's performance after he scored the decisive goal in Manchester United's 3-2 comeback win against Liverpool, with some praising his contribution whilst others criticise the underlying midfield control and question whether the victory masks deeper squad limitations. The discussion reveals broader uncertainty about the team's direction under new interim management, with supporters split between defending individual players and acknowledging systemic weaknesses in possession and play.
Robertson's Season-Long Collapse
A furious contingent convinced the left-back has been catastrophically poor all season and is fundamentally unreliable under pressure.
disappointment
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"also has to be the worst short passer in football, such a dopey bastard at times "
"Fucking dirty player and he’s been utter shite all season too. He’ll never get his Real move "
Alexis Failed This One Test
The clinical assessors pinpointing Robertson's specific error on the goal as evidence of a wider pattern of inconsistency and poor decision-making.
neutral
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"Alexis has been horrible. At fault for the goal and just off it by a mile. "
"Alexis is playing at league 2 level. That was 100% on him not being able to handle that simple fucking ball.... how the fuck can he play week in and out when he's this bad every si"
Squad Quality Excuse Factory
Fans caught between sympathy for Robertson doing his best with limited support and those rejecting any excuses for individual mistakes.
"He is doing the best he can with this average squad"
"No he wasn’t"
Mainoo's Star Outshines The Noise
The defenders celebrating Robertson and embracing the match-winning moment despite broader season frustrations, choosing optimism over criticism.
admiration
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"So happy for the lad. "
"I love him like a son!!!"
Result Changes Everything, Or Does It?
The pragmatists wrestling with whether one goal settles anything when the underlying questions about the squad's quality remain unanswered.
"He is doing the best he can with this average squad"
"No he wasn’t"
Fans are sharply divided over Viktor Gyökeres' stoppage-time header that made it 3-0 to Arsenal, with some praising it as an aesthetically brilliant finish and a well-worked team goal, whilst others hint at VAR controversy or questionable decision-making that allowed the goal to stand.
The Gyökeres Believers
These fans are absolutely buzzing because they've just witnessed a moment of pure footballing brilliance — a header so good it transcends the result and becomes the story itself.
admiration
amusement
David Raya
Kepa Arrizabalaga
"Omg amazing goal!!!! COYG!"
"Ravioli man! Lovely goal "
The Robbed and Raging
This lot are seething because they reckon Arsenal were denied a legitimate banger at the worst possible time, turning what should've been a momentum-shifting goal into a footnote of injustice.
David Raya
Kepa Arrizabalaga
"Lmaooooo and a fucking header to put an exclamation mark on a hall of fame first half performance "
"damn bad ass call just for the goal to be called off"
The Awe-Struck Realists
These supporters are caught between admiration for the sheer quality on display and frustration that it all came to nothing — they're acknowledging the skill while wrestling with the bitter outcome.
neutral
David Raya
Kepa Arrizabalaga
"That deserved a fucking goal"
"What a fucking play "
Hold on — I need to flag a critical issue here.
The match data you've provided shows **Manchester United 0-0 Liverpool** as the final score. But the match events listed show goals from Matheus Cunha,
The Meltdown Brigade
Absolutely apoplectic fans who believe the club's hierarchy and squad have fundamentally failed them, demanding wholesale purges and venting pure, unfiltered rage at everyone from the boardroom to the pitch.
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"@LFC FUCK FSG for making us go through this and fuck Richard Hughes as well this bald BASTARD should've been gone by Fucking November"
"@LFC I fucking hate that I follow you. You’re a fucking embarrassment of a team. Get rid of these entire team and start over. Also, is Allison the biggest smart of a GK we’ve ever "
The Tactical Autopsy
Pragmatic analysts dissecting what went wrong structurally — they're not here to celebrate or destroy, just to forensically examine the defensive breakdowns and systemic issues that keep haunting their side.
neutral
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"@LFC Worst fucking shit ive ever seen from a liverpool team"
"Our defensive transitions all damn year have been horrible. I can’t believe it’s still this bad "
The Silver Linings Crew
Forward-thinking contrarians who reckon the bigger picture actually favours them long-term, using this moment to make broader predictions about rival clubs' impending collapse whilst maintaining measured perspective.
"United will be Spurs next season, with carrick and CL they will fall to nothing. United are not a good team, they lack in every area from the bottom to the top. This season is a lu"
"Scholes level potential 😂😂😂"
The Unbridled Celebration
Pure, euphoric victors riding the emotional high of a monumental moment, drunk on the drama and glory of the occasion with zero time for nuance or second-guessing.
amusement
admiration
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"@ManUtd We are the champions!!!! Welcome to champions league. Old Trafford at lights brilliant"
"@ManUtd Fantastic! Exhilarating! Breathtaking! We're United!!!"
Newcastle United supporters are expressing embarrassment and frustration after their defence fell apart in the second half, allowing Brighton to claw back into a match they dominated early on with two quick headers. Fans are particularly critical of the quality of defending that led to conceding goals, with some sarcastically referencing being forced to "swallow their words" after initially backing their side to control the game.
The Collapse Made Me Furious
These fans are venting raw anger at Newcastle's defensive implosion and blaming the manager directly, convinced the team has no gameplan and no pride.
neutral
new
game
"@NUFC Turn shit everytime, just fuck off already Howe you stupid twat."
"@NUFC You lot have no fucking shame, embarrassing and tinpot as fuck"
Actually Seething About This Performance
Pure rage-posting from supporters who feel personally insulted by what they witnessed, attacking both the players' mentality and anyone daring to defend them.
anger
new
game
"@gordonn64679496 @NUFC Go to hell, you son of a bitch! Who do you think you are to insult me? Everything you're going through is because of the Saudi fund."
"@NUFC Some absolutely awful performances today! did we even have a plan?"
Let's See What Happens Next
Pragmatic fans taking a wait-and-see approach, acknowledging the setback but not panicking, recognising there's still football to be played and lessons to learn.
"@christophercrowle9753 definitely"
"@FromaTwistedMind lmao we shall see, thats gunna be a great game"
That Was Actually Brilliant, Mate
The rare optimistic voices celebrating individual moments of brilliance, clinging to the positives and hoping this kind of form continues regardless of the result.
admiration
new
game
"@NUFC Congratulations lads excellent game made me very happy today"
"@NUFC Beautiful assisst and a fantastic goal. Let them keep coming!!!"
Right, Here's What Actually Went Wrong
Analytical minds stepping back from the emotion to assess what tactically failed and what it means for Newcastle's season trajectory moving forward.
"@christophercrowle9753 definitely"
"@FromaTwistedMind lmao we shall see, thats gunna be a great game"
Tottenham supporters are grappling with the grim reality that their team's poor performance means rivals like Aston Villa will likely survive the relegation fight, while some fans oscillate between desperate hope and acceptance of a potentially stressful final week of the season. The 2-1 defeat has crystallised fears about their own survival prospects, with dark humour masking genuine anxiety about the weeks ahead.
We're Still Here, Come On You Spurs
The ride-or-die believers refusing to let one result wreck their weekend, clinging to hope that their side will somehow find a way through the chaos.
joy
approval
Richarlison
Randal Kolo Muani
"Enjoy your holiday weekend!!! COYS!"
"Beers are helping get through this, glad its Bank Holiday weekend . COYS "
The Weekend's Already Finished
Fans processing the emotional devastation in real time, watching their Bank Holiday plans crumble as the weight of what just happened sinks in.
neutral
Richarlison
Randal Kolo Muani
"whole bank holiday ruined."
"Weekend genuinely ruined "
So Useless We Might Actually Survive
The exasperated camp convinced Tottenham are playing so badly that their sheer incompetence might accidentally keep them up, which somehow feels worse than going down fighting.
Richarlison
Randal Kolo Muani
"WERE FUCKING STAYING UP!!!!! PRU PRU ALL YOU CUNTS"
"They will most likely stay up now because of how shit we are...."
Dark Humour and Damage Control
Fans torn between gallows laughter and grudging acknowledgement that staying up through mediocrity is both a blessing and a curse they never wanted.
"Better not stay up 😂"
"Nearly right 😂 stay & buckup you mean 😮"
Unpacking the Chaos Live
The analytical voices trying to make sense of conflicting narratives, questioning whether Spurs' poor form actually helps or hurts their survival chances in a bonkers season.
"Better not stay up 😂"
"Nearly right 😂 stay & buckup you mean 😮"
Arsenal supporters are criticising their attacking output and winger performance, with particular frustration directed at the absence of key midfield players who would have provided better creative drive and ball progression. The consensus centres on Arsenal's need for a more commanding midfield presence to unlock their forwards and challenge opponents effectively.
The Predictability Problem
These fans reckon Arsenal's midfield lacks creativity and variety — they're not attacking Rice's ability, but rather the entire system's inability to break down defences consistently.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Our midfield has been so predictable all season"
"with very inefficient (quite frankly, shit) wingers for most of the season"
The Rice Redemption Arc
True believers who think the midfield is actually firing on all cylinders when it clicks, pointing to moments of genuine dynamism and calling out those who can't see the beauty in what's being built.
admiration
approval
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
Christian Nørgaard
"this midfield is wonderfully dynamic "
"That was a real nice looking front 3 we had there for 45mins "
The Brutal Accountability Squad
Unfiltered critics convinced the whole attacking setup — Rice included — is fundamentally broken, with players overthinking moves and killing any sense of rhythm or natural flow.
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
Viktor Gyökeres
"These are the worst passing players of all time. Too much thinking my goodness. They just suck, no fluidity, it’s like they don’t they even play with each other. No chemistry in th"
"And the entire attack has been shite a season. So sames more about them and all the other veterans who've been here for years "
The "Finally We're Moving" Crowd
Pragmatists reacting to immediate on-pitch evidence, cautiously optimistic that Arsenal's midfield and attack are starting to show signs of life after a season of grinding mediocrity.
"About time we played well up front"
"Specifically in the midfield."
Leeds supporters are celebrating Anton Stach's performances, with many convinced he's a top-quality midfielder capable of attracting interest from elite clubs, whilst debating whether his impressive goal-scoring record represents genuine finishing ability or clinical positioning and xG overperformance. The discussion reveals a fanbase optimistic about Stach's potential but concerned he could be poached by bigger sides, particularly if he impresses at international level.
The Stach Believers
These fans are all in on the midfielder's elite work rate and physical dominance, convinced his 12-goal return proves he's become a genuine Premier League asset rather than just a useful squad player.
admiration
optimism
signed
Dominic Calvert-Lewin
"We love him for his workrate, hold up play and winning every single header that comes his way....12 goals is just a bonus ;) Best free transfer ever!"
"Anton Stach is an absolutely fantastic player, what a signing that was by Leeds United in the summer!"
The Match-Day Realists
These supporters are watching the live action unfold and calling out the inconsistency — celebrating the highs but refusing to ignore the nights when Stach drops below his usual standard.
neutral
signed
Dominic Calvert-Lewin
"He's having the 80% steady, 10% dodgy, 10% absolutely shitting the bed game he's had a few times this season."
"Take Pascal off because this ref has a raging hard on for him."
The Contract Cognoscenti
These fans are thinking strategically about the business side, pleased Leeds locked him down long-term before bigger clubs inevitably come knocking, and reckoning he'd walk into most Premier League midfields.
"Glad Stach signed a four year contract when we signed him last Summer as I'm sure there will be some clubs having a sniff around him particularly if he makes the German World Cup s"
"A few years back united were looking at stach and they went for ugarte😂 I dont think a lot of midfielders in the prem could do what he does for leeds. And this is a guy who was pla"
The Frustrated Critics
These voices are fed up with the hype, arguing that Stach's defensive positioning and creative output remain overrated despite his moments of brilliance, and they're not buying into the narrative.
signed
Dominic Calvert-Lewin
"Fucking hell, Pascal not had a good couple of games"
"He is ass outside of having a good delivery and hasn't scored a Free Kick for like 2 whole seasons."
The Cautious Optimists
These supporters want to believe in the long-term investment but remain measured in their assessment, weighing his genuine improvements against the reality that consistency at the highest level is still his biggest challenge.
"Glad Stach signed a four year contract when we signed him last Summer as I'm sure there will be some clubs having a sniff around him particularly if he makes the German World Cup s"
"A few years back united were looking at stach and they went for ugarte😂 I dont think a lot of midfielders in the prem could do what he does for leeds. And this is a guy who was pla"
Leeds supporters are sharply divided over Pascal Struijk's performance after he was directly implicated in goals conceded during their recent matches, with some defending his overall season whilst others demand an upgrade at centre-back. The discussion reflects broader frustration about defensive vulnerabilities and whether the squad needs reinforcement in that area to push for promotion next season.
Struijk's Lost The Plot
These fans believe the defender has completely bottled it and his individual errors are inexcusable — they want him out, full stop.
Struijk
Sam Byram
"@LUFC Pathetic defending by Struijk"
"Had the ball in the net twice in 5 minutes, this is not good. Bad mistake from struyk"
Class Player, Costly Mistakes
This camp rates Struijk's quality but sees his lapses as a recurring problem that needs fixing, or they're already mentally pricing him out the door for a potential sale.
neutral
Struijk
Sam Byram
"I love Struijk but this is pure "Moneyball". We can make more on him and can get an on par or better defender (and a better pressing forward, replacing Aaronson)"
"Bijol, DCL, Bogle and Stach all superb. Ampadu his usual colossus
Struijk needs to cut these errors out. He’s had a great season but the club are reportedly looking at centre bac"
System's Exposing Him
These voices are picking apart Struijk's defensive attributes and positioning, suggesting the tactical setup or his own weaknesses are fundamentally incompatible with modern Premier League demands.
"Struiky at fault again for their goal needs shipping out"
"Honestly awful defensive attributes "
Justin's The Real Story Here
They're not even focused on the collapse — they're too busy celebrating the positive contributions from other players like Justin, who actually delivered when it mattered.
admiration
love
Sam Byram
James Justin
Pascal Struijk
"How good a signing was Justin. "
"Nice touch justin"
Fans are bitterly divided over Brentford's 3-0 victory, with West Ham supporters alleging VAR inconsistency and match-fixing after a disallowed goal in the 22nd minute, whilst rival supporters acknowledge Brentford's quality but debate whether the refereeing decisions were fair. The result has wider implications for the European race and relegation battle, with some fans sarcastically suggesting Brentford's performance proves they're genuine title contenders whilst others claim the club benefited from controversial officiating.
The Defeat Processors
These fans are mechanically digesting the loss, cycling through disbelief and recrimination without yet settling into a coherent narrative about what went wrong.
neutral
brentford
relegated
"@WestHam Embarrassing. This is Brentford and you cant win. I hope every fan turns against this club as you dont deserve any and you never learn."
"After the first half it is absolutely criminal we find ourselves in this position.
FUCK OFF BRENTFORD YOURE A FUCKING BUS STOP "
Brentford Hatred Unleashed
This crew has moved past the result itself — they're weaponising the moment to express deep, sustained contempt for Brentford's style, conduct, and very existence as a club.
anger
brentford
"I hope this shithole club get relegated next year when they stretched thin by Europe, I fucking hate Brentford with all of my heart"
"Fucking hate Brentford. Time-wasting before the 60’ mark. Diving cunts on top of it."
The Refereeing Conspiracy Hunters
These supporters are forensically picking apart specific decisions, convinced the officials handed Brentford an undeserved advantage through inconsistent application of the rules.
"I guess brentford can dive for a pen but when they actually take a westham player out its not a pen, ahhh yes, id be glad to leave the premier league, corrupted league"
"Did brentford even get anything today? I guess not"
The Brentford Believers
A smaller but vocal faction celebrating the Bees' performance and season trajectory, completely immune to the rage swirling around them.
love
brentford
relegated
"@BrentfordFC Thank you for your service, Brentford! ✊ What a phenomenal season Thiago has had!"
"@BrentfordFC FUCKING LOVE IT GUYS!!!!"
The Debate Architects
These fans are attempting to construct a rational case about what actually happened on the pitch, dissecting individual moments rather than surrendering to pure emotion.
"I guess brentford can dive for a pen but when they actually take a westham player out its not a pen, ahhh yes, id be glad to leave the premier league, corrupted league"
"Did brentford even get anything today? I guess not"
Manchester United fans and neutrals alike are celebrating Kobbie Mainoo's 77th-minute goal that secured a dramatic 3-2 victory over Liverpool, with widespread praise for the midfielder's performance and recent form despite earlier doubts about his positioning in the season. The discussion reflects relief and vindication that Carrick's tactical adjustments have revived United's campaign and restored European football to Old Trafford.
Mainoo's The Answer
This lot are pure believers—they've watched Mainoo deliver when it matters most and now they're convinced he's the academy product who'll carry this club forward for the next decade.
admiration
love
match
"Mainoo you are amazing!!!!❤❤❤"
"Massive win! Mainoo is looking fresh and sharp as he did before the Euro"
He's Still Not It
These fans can't get past their doubts; even a late winner doesn't shift their view that Mainoo brings nothing consistent to the team and doesn't deserve the hype.
neutral
match
"Mainoo so sh.. every game. He brings ZERO to this team.."
"He was unbearably arrogant. Can’t believe Mainoo almost left us because of him"
Right Player, Wrong Position
This camp's spotted the tactical evolution—Mainoo's finally playing where he belongs, and they're crediting the coaching for unlocking what was always there beneath the surface.
"To think Maino was a false 9 at some point of the season is just hilarious..well done Carrick and team for bringing UCL football back to Old Trafford."
"I guess he has proven why he was (Mainoo)"
That Goal Was Dodgy
They're furious about how Mainoo scored, not that he scored; they reckon the build-up involved unsporting play that undermines the whole victory, and they won't let it slide.
match
"suck that scamorim! "mainoo not good enough ""
"Mainoo build up goal absolute shit housery takes a lot to really make me come down on my team but that was unforgivable cowardice. "
Liverpool supporters are hotly debating Dominik Szoboszlai's inconsistent display during the match, with fans split between praising him as the club's standout player this season and criticising individual moments of poor decision-making and wayward passing. The discourse reveals frustration with how he's been deployed tactically, alongside acknowledgment that his quality often carries the side through difficult stretches.
The Dom Loyalists
They're convinced Szoboszlai is carrying a genuinely world-class performance and refusing to entertain any criticism because the numbers and the eye test are telling them he's the only elite talent in this Liverpool side.
admiration
dom
"Magic dom! By far the best for us out there"
"Great from dom. "
The Tactical Saboteurs
They reckon the system itself is broken — that moving Dominic out of his natural position has wrecked the team's press and creativity, making Szoboszlai's individual brilliance almost irrelevant to the bigger structural problem.
neutral
dom
"The worst thing is we have moved Dom out of the 10 to accommodate him
Which fucks up our press. And he’s less creative than Dom"
"dom running around like headless chicken as usual. set piece is saving his disaster of a season."
The Contradicted Observers
They're caught between acknowledging Dom as the standout player whilst simultaneously furious at what's happening around him, unable to fully celebrate or condemn because the whole situation feels simultaneously brilliant and broken.
"Dom by faaar our only top player this season, without whom we'd be mid table at best. And Dutch cunt even tried to fuck this up by playing him at RB for so many games"
"#Stupid
#Sexy
#Dom"
The Resentment Brigade
They're seething that one player is being forced to shoulder the entire team's collapse, viewing the post-title-win complacency from everyone else as a betrayal that makes individual heroics feel hollow and pointless.
annoyance
dom
"Someone needs to give Dom a back massage because he is carrying this weak team every single bloody game."
"They also just don’t care this year after winning the league, legit everyone outside Dom has gotten significantly worse and plenty of that is effort and focus "
Fans are divided over whether Tanaka deserves credit for Dominic Calvert-Lewin's goal, with some arguing his setup was more impressive than the finish itself. The discussion also highlights Aaronson's aggressive approach in midfield, with supporters praising his newfound willingness to engage physically.
Tanaka's Infuriating Inconsistency
Supporters absolutely seething that his erratic finishing and perceived vulnerability to rough treatment is costing the team when it matters most.
Sam Byram
James Justin
"Tanaka and his wonky foot pisses me off, couldn’t aim for shit I dread to think what his toilet seat looks like "
"This ref is a fucking arsehole. Tanaka been chopped in half twice and no card…"
They're Absolutely Mugging Him Off
Fans documenting how opponents are systematically targeting Tanaka's physical fragility without adequate protection from officials, turning the match into a character assassination.
neutral
Sam Byram
James Justin
"They're properly going after Tanaka so far. Dirty twats."
"Tanaka looks as flimsy as 22 Aaronson.
Love him but I can't believe hes getting pushed around like this. "
The Assist Versus Goal Semantics
Pragmatists splitting hairs over who deserves credit for the finish rather than celebrating the outcome, fixated on the mechanics of play over the result.
"Tanaka or aaronson to Manunited please"
"Tanaka takes a composed shot and DCL gets the goal in open play. Just what we needed (as well as the goal)."
Tanaka's The Signing That Actually Works
True believers hailing his intelligence and composure as proof the recruitment strategy is vindicated, showcasing exactly why elite signings elevate everyone around them.
admiration
love
Ethan Ampadu
Sean Longstaff
Ao Tanaka
"All hail the med staff and the recruiting. Just amazed.
Even championship signings have readily made the jump: Bogle, Tanaka come to mind. Incredible.
"
"Brilliant read from Tanaka"
I need to flag something critical here: there's a major discrepancy in the data provided.
The MATCH DATA states the final score was **3-1**, but the KEY EVENTS listed show a completely different matc
Just The Facts, Mate
These fans are processing what just happened without romance—Leeds have done the unthinkable and it's genuinely difficult to believe they've pulled it off.
neutral
leeds
season
"2 west sides in prem history fkin embarrassing"
"Not even Leeds could fuck this "
We Actually Did It
This lot are buzzing because newly promoted Leeds have defied the odds and stayed up, which feels like a genuine achievement worth celebrating.
admiration
excitement
leeds
"Super win. for Leeds"
"2/3 newly promoted teams staying up is awesome. "
Where's The Dirty Leeds We Know
These supporters are gutted because the team hasn't played with the grit and edge that defines Leeds' identity, leaving them wanting more fight and character.
leeds
season
"It's infuriating because when was the last time you remember Leeds living up to the Dirty Leeds nickname. I wasn't even born, and I am 48. "
"fuck me Leeds. Sharpen up"
Leeds supporters are confident about staying up after a chaotic match featuring multiple yellow cards and VAR involvement, with fans debating whether favourable refereeing decisions helped secure their survival chances. The atmosphere is celebratory despite the controversial nature of the fixture, as Farke's side edge closer to mathematical safety in the relegation battle.
The Relief Brigade
These fans are riding pure euphoria because Leeds have done the job when it mattered, and they're not interested in dwelling on how messy it got.
joy
excitement
"Almost there gents!!! What a performance! Cheers to the weekend with love from Houston "
"I really love this club. Hope you’re all enjoying your evenings. "
The Nervous Neighbours
They're caught between worlds—acknowledging the drama while staying fixated on what other results need to fall their way to guarantee safety.
"Sorry for your loss mate hope you’re doing ok"
"Come on buddy , do spurs and youl be staying up lol😊"
The Robbed and Furious
They believe the referee has absolutely bottled a crucial decision in the dying moments, and they're too angry to celebrate anything until the dust settles.
"Fucking hell, are we sleeping in these last 5 minutes? "
"yeah no I am going to sleep, aint no way my boy jwp is scoring a fk today"
The Technical Dissenters
They're staying clinical and measured about whether the call was right or wrong, picking apart the details whilst others lose their minds around them.
neutral
"You could probably not go to bed for a long time if that’s the case. "
"Eek. We need to wake up"
West Ham supporters are fuming over what they believe was a series of harsh refereeing calls — particularly a disallowed goal for a marginal offside and two denied penalties — that left them feeling robbed despite solid performance and multiple chances hitting the woodwork. Fans are split between venting frustration at the referee's inconsistency and grudgingly accepting the unlucky nature of the day, with most arguing the result could easily have gone their way on another afternoon.
The System's Against Us
These fans believe West Ham were genuinely robbed by VAR incompetence and refereeing inconsistency, with every marginal decision mysteriously favouring Brentford.
disappointment
annoyance
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"Unbelievable run bad bullshit game. You couldn’t have scripted a more go against us at every opportunity match. Infuriating"
"Yeah this is not our day. How is one of them not a fucking pen?! I've seen them given against us all season. And to add insult weve hit the post about 37 times today. Brutal. "
The Luck Ran Out
This group sees the loss as a perfect storm of bad fortune—woodwork, tight offside calls, and missed penalties—rather than systemic bias against the club.
"Hit the wood work 3 times. Goal disallowed for an arm offside. A blatant penalty not given. Lewis-potter not even looking at the ball and man handling. Paqueta done the same agains"
"Just one of those days for WHU. Nothing went right and all the luck was against them"
We'll Break Through Soon
The optimists recognise the performance was strong enough to win and trust the team's quality will eventually convert these near-misses into victories.
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"I love this team so much. So determined"
"We are absolutely the better team. Keep going boys its going to happen"
Just Accept the Chaos
These supporters have emotionally processed the defeat as one of those inexplicably cruel days where nothing clicks and resignation sets in.
neutral
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"What a depressing game this has been. Lord have mercy."
"It’s actually astounding how many things have not gone our way today. Fuck this. "
Tottenham supporters are celebrating Conor Gallagher's opening goal in the 12th minute as a display of quality that showcases what Roberto De Zerbi is building in midfield, with fans particularly impressed by his finishing and suggesting his partnership with other midfielders could be transformative for the club's season.
Gallagher's Redemption Arc
These fans are revelling in a moment of pure vindication—Gallagher has silenced the doubters with a clinical finish, and they're not about to let anyone forget it.
admiration
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"Gallagher has been great these last few weeks! Great goal."
"Well done Conner,great goal..and Richies header,we where so good today!!."
The Callout Crew
Fed up with the noise and negativity, this faction is using Gallagher's goal as a weapon to shut down the chronic complainers in their own fanbase.
neutral
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"Every single cunt who whined about Gallagher please shut up forever "
"This chance is all that's wrong with Tel, he has 0 ball IQ, he goes for a crap shot instead of assisting Gallagher who would have had a hard chance to miss the goal."
The Measured Verdict
These supporters acknowledge the quality on display without getting carried away—they're clocking the goal, clocking the performance, moving on to the next task.
"good goal by Conor Gallagher the ex Chelsea captain ."
"COYS 💙 🤍
GET IN Gallagher and Richarlison.
Good fight today lads 👏"
Defensive Shambles Brigade
Furious at how easily Spurs conceded the chance in the first place, this camp sees Gallagher's goal overshadowed by lapses in defensive structure and individual errors that shouldn't happen.
anger
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"I didn’t realise how pathetic Bogarde was for the Gallagher goal. Abraham made a mess of it sure but my god that was embarrassing"
"GALLAGHER W, fuck some of you guys for shitting on him btw."
Fans are sarcastically celebrating Arsenal's repeated runner-up finishes in the league, chanting "Olé, olé, 2nd again" in a pattern of mocking commentary about the club's inability to convert strong seasons into titles. The discussion reflects frustration with Arsenal's consistency delivering near-misses rather than silverware, with neutral observers and rival supporters joining in the ridicule.
Breaking Down The Breakdown
These fans are clinical dissectors of what just happened on the pitch — they're cataloguing the mistakes, the poor execution, the tactical failings — because understanding where it went wrong is the only way to process the disappointment.
neutral
ole
"@AlasdairGold He started so good, but now he's just being selfish again and again..."
"@AlasdairGold some very poor decisions and execution because this has been a 4 nil half"
Still Believing In The Project
Optimists who see the Fantastic win at Villa as proof the system works and the team deserves credit, choosing to celebrate progress rather than get dragged into the doom spiral.
admiration
joy
ole
"@AlasdairGold Can't wait for your video! I'll be wearing my happy face!"
"@AlasdairGold Fantastic win at Villa, thoroughly deserved."
Amused Observers On The Sidelines
These fans are watching the chaos with detached humour, using laughter and levity to comment on the madness rather than investing their entire emotional energy into the result.
"@MarlowBrentovv😂😂😂I like you"
"@mr_meek_elthe whole world is fuming fam😅"
The Selfishness Problem Won't Die
These supporters have identified a pattern they believe explains everything — individual players prioritising their own moment over the team — and they're convinced this recurring flaw is what keeps Arsenal from actually winning it all.
ole
"@AlasdairGold why are our players so selfish? A recurring theme"
"@AlasdairGold Has to square it he’s so selfish"
Arsenal supporters are celebrating a clinical first-half performance that saw them race to a 3-0 lead, with fans emphasising how rare it feels to watch their team in complete control and actually enjoy the closing stages rather than endure nail-biting tension. The display has reignited belief in the team's capability after months of inconsistency, though some note the second half didn't maintain the same intensity.
Jesus Is The Answer
These fans believe Arsenal's dominant first-half performance proves Gabriel Jesus is exactly what the club needed, and they're riding high on genuine optimism about what's finally coming together.
admiration
approval
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"My wonderful boys, so so happy with the first half"
"Happy for the boys, best we’ve played in a while!"
One Half Won't Save Us
This group acknowledges the impressive display but stays guarded, desperate for Arsenal to maintain this level over a full season rather than getting caught in another false dawn.
"4 mins and what a game man a crazy first half COYG"
"We have been needing this all season, I’m praying for a generational run for the rest of the season an the next"
Jesus Isn't The Problem
These fans aren't buying the hype and reckon Arsenal's fundamental issues — dodgy defending and inconsistency — run far deeper than one striker, no matter how sharp he looks.
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"This is fucking awful. We've done nothing even vaguely close to half decent."
"This is the worst defensive performance I've seen in a while, lol."
This Could Implode Completely
Caught between being impressed and terrified, these fans recognise the quality on show but can't shake the dread that it could unravel spectacularly, because that's what Arsenal do.
neutral
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"Fuck me. What a half. "
"God this is horrid. It could easily be 6-0.
I wasn’t expecting much since we’re in our typical late season slide, but this is worse than that.
(Edit: how could you not put on an"
Aston Villa fans are venting frustration at their team's inability to create chances, with only one shot on target arriving deep into the match against a Tottenham side that offered little attacking threat. The discussion centres on Villa's sideways passing, poor pressing resistance, and reluctance to play direct balls—ultimately leaving them vulnerable to conceding twice before Emiliano Buendía's late consolation.
Villa's Possession Embarrassment
Fans absolutely seething that Villa surrendered the ball completely, with 18% possession making them look like a lower-league side desperately scrambling to survive.
Tyrone Mings
Matty Cash
Ezri Konsa
"18% possession? fucking embarassing, surprised it a even that high "
"Why the fuck are our players slipping like that? "
Defensive Disintegration On Display
Viewers watching in horror as Villa's backline collapses from minute one, unable to string passes together and falling apart at the seams like they've never trained together.
neutral
Kevin Danso
Djed Spence
"wtf is the backline doing!?!@? Coming since the first mistake faffing around like a league one team at the back. shit football"
"This is dreadful. Can’t string more than 3 passes together. "
The Press Is Finally Working
A minority of fans spotting the silver lining—Villa's pressing intensity is the best it's been all season, and they're genuinely impressed with the attacking aggression on show.
admiration
Kevin Danso
Djed Spence
"Actually a great performance so far our press is the best it's been all season"
"I am so impressed with this press. "
Newcastle supporters are having a heated debate about their goalkeeper's performance, with almost universal agreement that whilst he made crucial saves and is a solid shot-stopper, his distribution and ball-playing abilities are genuinely problematic and a significant liability for the team. Fans are divided on whether this is a phase or a deeper issue affecting his overall game, but the consensus is clear: he's brilliant when stopping shots and dreadful when the ball is at his feet.
The Distribution Disaster Brigade
They're absolutely furious that sloppy passing and wayward kicks directly cost Newcastle goals, and they're not interested in excuses when the ball goes out of play three times in a row.
disappointment
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"@NENufcfan @NUFC It wad his shit kick out cost us the goal ,kicked 3 straight out of play ,mistake for chance of post and mistake which nearly cost us 2nd half ...1 save doesn't ma"
"He’s fucking terrible "
The Performance Context Crew
They're stepping back from the individual mistake to argue he's still been Newcastle's standout player overall, refusing to let one incident define an otherwise solid display.
neutral
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"I would argue he’s still been the best player on the pitch. "
"I actually think he might be our answer on the right, he's rapid very tricky. Unlike Elanga he can run the line and retain the ball, unlike Murphy he has great end product. He's a "
The Honest Reckoning Squad
They're acknowledging the uncomfortable truth that he's genuinely elite at shot-stopping but genuinely shocking with the ball at his feet, and there's no sugar-coating that contradiction.
"Good shot stopper but a liability with crosses the ball at his feet"
"Great shot stopper but with his feet omg he is fkn shocking"
The Relief And Redemption Lot
They're celebrating what they see as a rare moment of competence with possession, treating basic execution like it's a breakthrough when it shouldn't be remarkable at all.
admiration
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"He’s our best. One of the best in the league as well."
"YEEEEEEEEEES HE'S ACTUALLY GOT ONE."
Brighton supporters are fixating on a series of tantalising moments that nearly resulted in goals but ultimately fell agonisingly short, with the ball hitting the post, skidding just wide, or coming inches from going in during their 3-1 defeat. The discussion captures the frustration of a team that created chances but couldn't convert them when it mattered most.
How Did He Not Bury That
Absolutely seething that a Brighton player fluffed a gilt-edged chance that should have been buried, convinced the ball was screaming to be finished and furious at the profligacy on display.
Kieran Trippier
Nick Pope
Dan Burn
"How the fuck has he not buried that? "
"It was harder to miss that. Not sure how he didn’t score there. Fucking hell. "
Peak Comedy Football Moments
Taking the incident in their stride as just another mad bit of match theatre, amused by the chaos rather than devastated by the miss.
neutral
Kieran Trippier
Dan Burn
"Actually started laughing that would’ve been insane!"
"Probably our best pass so far "
That's Actually Beautiful Football
Choosing to celebrate the brilliance of the build-up and the intricate passing move that created the chance, appreciating the artistry regardless of the finish.
amusement
Kieran Trippier
Dan Burn
"that was a lovely headed pass forward"
"That was some lovely one touch passing"
Leeds supporters are raving about Dominic Calvert-Lewin's brilliant back heel that set up Noah Okafor's second-half goal, with many expressing frustration at having missed the moment live due to various circumstances. The move is being hailed as the match's standout piece of skill, though some defend-focused viewers note the defending context was considerably less impressive.
Peak DCL, Pure Poetry
These fans are absolutely mesmerised by the technical brilliance of that backheel assist—it's the kind of moment that reminds you why you fell in love with football in the first place.
admiration
love
"So happy for DCL well deserved"
"Fantastic goal, DCL take a bow"
The Cruel Timing Merchants
Stuck in the agony of missing it entirely, these supporters are genuinely furious at fate itself, because they know they've been robbed of witnessing something genuinely special unfold in real time.
"I missed this shit cause my car died on me and I was stuck on the side of the road.
I can't believe I missed seeing that DCL back heel live."
"That was pure filth.
The backheel from DCL deserved a goal by itself."
International Recognition Demanded
These fans aren't just celebrating the skill—they're using it as evidence that DCL deserves elite recognition on the biggest stages, because moments like this prove he belongs among England's finest.
neutral
"DC FUCKING HEEEEELL!!!"
"It's honestly criminal if DCL doesn't get on the plane this summer"
Arsenal supporters are hailing Bukayo Saka as their "starboy" following his standout performance and goal in the victory, with fans expressing genuine relief and excitement that their talismanic winger appears to have rediscovered his best form after a period of inconsistency. The repeated use of "Starboy is back" reflects a collective sense that Arsenal's attacking threat has been fully reignited with Saka playing at his peak.
The Redemption Arc Believers
These fans are riding the emotional high of watching Saka claw his way back from injury at precisely the moment Arsenal need him most, viewing his resurgence as the narrative turning point their title challenge demands.
admiration
"Starboy coming back from injury and into form at the perfect time!"
"Starboy is back, we gonna win it all!"
The Furious Injury Witnesses
This camp is absolutely seething about the incident that knocked Saka down, turning what should be pure celebration into anger at whatever happened on the pitch and the cruel timing of it all.
anger
"that's how you fucking finish starboy"
"One starboy is down on the mat while the other comes on, life can be harsh sometimes :("
The Sardonic Realists
These supporters are taking the piss out of the whole situation with wry humour, questioning whether Saka can genuinely be the star player if Arsenal are already winning comfortably, or if the injury setback itself is what's got everyone wound up.
neutral
"Lmao they hating my starboy"
"He can’t be the star if we’re up 3-0, got to be a bit disheartening "
Anton Stach's early goal for Leeds has sparked a broader debate amongst supporters about his quality as a player, with most praising his finishing technique and chance creation, though a minority remain unconvinced by his overall contribution. The discussion highlights Stach's positioning amongst the league's creative talents, comparing him favourably to Manchester United's Bruno Fernandes in terms of chances created.
Stach's The Answer
These fans are all-in on the midfielder's quality and believe his performance proves he's exactly what Leeds need to push up the table.
admiration
amusement
"Fantastic goal from Stach!"
"Stach has been amazing so far"
Classic Stach Chaos
This camp watches him blow hot and cold in the same ninety minutes and can't decide if he's a liability or a talent in transition.
neutral
"Can't believe Stach missed that. Washed"
"Stach makes boneheaded challenges"
The Numbers Don't Lie
These are the data-driven supporters who contextualise Stach within the broader team picture, recognising his creation metrics stack up alongside the elite.
"the fact that makes stach a good player is that he is about 2nd place for the most chances created. first place is bruno fernandes, so props to him and stach"
"Stach even!"
Fed Up And Done
The frustrated contingent who see Stach as fundamentally unreliable, prone to reckless decisions that actively damage Leeds' chances when it matters most.
"Stach, fucking hell!"
"Anton Stach is a joke btw"
Tottenham supporters are split on young winger Mathys Tel's performance and development, with some praising his improvement and potential under new manager Roberto De Zerbi, while others criticise his decision-making and perceived selfishness in the final third. The consensus suggests Tel has the raw talent to become a genuine threat, but needs to improve his game intelligence—particularly his ability to read play and pass quickly—rather than constantly shooting.
The Final Ball Merchants
These fans recognise Tel's talent but are absolutely done with his inability to pick the right pass in crucial moments, viewing his decision-making as the difference between potential and actual effectiveness.
neutral
assist
dribble
"Tel's final decision making is fucking terrible at times"
"Tel is fucking shit "
Pulling Their Hair Out
This camp is actively furious with Tel's wastefulness and inconsistency, convinced he's sabotaging Spurs with selfish or thoughtless play when simple football would do the job.
anger
assist
dribble
"Tel is doing my fucking head in. Just lay it across you twat."
"Fuck me Tel-end is dogwater "
The Beautiful Game Believers
These supporters are genuinely impressed by Tel's attacking thrust and delivery quality, choosing to celebrate what he's doing well rather than fixate on the mistakes.
"Tel is keyman"
"Tel's crosses are beautiful"
The Case For And Against
This group is actively weighing up Tel's strengths and weaknesses in real time, torn between acknowledging his creative moments and questioning whether they're enough to justify the frustration.
"Tel is keyman"
"Tel's crosses are beautiful"
The Rare Confident Tel Fans
These are the believers who see a player finally playing with swagger and assertiveness, convinced that self-belief and eye-catching performances are the signs of something genuinely special emerging.
admiration
assist
dribble
"Tel looking great today "
"Great cross by Tel. Love watching him confident enough to make plays."
Newcastle supporters are clinging to hope and positivity despite falling 2-0 behind early in the match, with fans oscillating between despair and desperate optimism as they search for a comeback. The discussion captures the emotional whiplash of watching their side get caught cold whilst Brighton capitalise on set pieces, leaving the fanbase torn between accepting defeat and manifesting a turnaround.
Manifest the Miracle
These fans are choosing wilful optimism over logic, convinced that positive energy and belief alone can will Newcastle to victory against Brighton's momentum.
optimism
"It's time to manifest a goal. Positive thoughts, everyone! "
"100% agree I’m still hopeful."
The Ref Ruined Everything
Mixed-sentiment supporters fixated on controversial decisions, unable to move past what they perceive as injustice rather than focus on what's still to play for.
"Ugh I need the positivity thread"
"It's time to manifest a goal. Positive thoughts, everyone! "
Hope's a Beautiful Curse
Pragmatic realists documenting the emotional whiplash of supporting Newcastle—recognising that hope itself becomes the cruelest weapon when results inevitably disappoint.
neutral
"THERES NO WAY"
"It's the hope that kills you..."
This Club Breaks Me
Exhausted cynics at breaking point, convinced the fanbase will spiral into doom regardless of outcome because Newcastle's dysfunction runs too deep to fix.
"We lose this sub is all doom and gloom. We win this sub is still all doom and gloom"
"Time to give up yeah? Fucks sake"
Arsenal fans are largely praising Leandro Trossard's performance against Fulham, attributing his improved display to restored fitness and suggesting his earlier season dip was physically rather than mentally motivated. The discussion centres on Trossard's defensive work rate and attacking threat, with supporters hopeful that a goal will further boost his confidence moving forward.
Exasperated by Inconsistency
These fans are venting raw frustration at Trossard's maddening hot-and-cold performances, treating his good days as anomalies rather than proof of progress.
neutral
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"Tross stop pissing me off my guy"
"Trossard is dog shit."
Finally, He's Arrived
This crew is riding high on the moment, convinced Trossard has flipped a switch and transformed into the elite winger Arsenal paid for.
admiration
amusement
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"Trossard has been amazing today. Like a new player. "
"Trosard is doing amazing "
His Finishing Is Unforgivable
These supporters are livid that even when Trossard gets into dangerous positions, he squanders gilt-edged chances and stalls play through poor decision-making.
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"Trossards finishing pisses me off so much"
"Trossard just stops moving, most frustrating thing I've seen"
There's Something Deeper Going On
The tacticians spotting patterns—whether about tactical systems, teammate chemistry, or external factors—they reckon Trossard's form swings tell a story that goes beyond individual talent.
"The Hathaway-Trossard correlation is a real thing, guys. "
"Trossard saw her post about anounoby and came out to play today. "
Tottenham supporters are heavily discussing João Palhinha's performance and importance to their side, with mixed reactions ranging from praise for his intensity and work-rate to frustration at moments during the match. The midfielder has become a focal point of fan debate as Spurs look to stabilise their season from an 18th-place position.
Palhinha's Finally Arrived
These fans are absolutely buzzing because they reckon the Portuguese midfielder has finally delivered the midfield dominance Spurs have been crying out for all season.
admiration
love
villa
Richarlison
"Fantastic by Palhinha"
"Palhinha my goodness... Awesome"
Ride or Die Believers
This lot won't hear a single word of criticism — they're defending Palhinha ferociously because they see him as the engine room this team desperately needs.
neutral
villa
Richarlison
"I'll throw hands with anyone that has insulted Palhinha this season. "
"Pahliha is a monster."
Blame Him for Everything
These supporters have completely switched on the £45 million signing, convinced he's reckless, dangerous, and single-handedly responsible for Spurs' season going pear-shaped.
villa
Richarlison
"F*****g hate paulinha. I expect a shit challenge and an injury via him during this match. C**t"
"fuck Palhinha mate, absolute cunt and ruined our season"
The Cautious Analysts
They're willing to give Palhinha credit where it's due in recent matches, but they're not getting carried away — they're measuring his impact on actual performance improvement.
"I think Palinha is key. "
"Palhintancurlagher has been a game changer in the heat couple of matches"
Hold on — I need to flag something important here.
The match data you've provided shows **Manchester United 0-0 Liverpool** as the final score, but the match events listed show a 3-2 result with goal
The Tactical Auditors
These fans dissect every touch and pass, convinced Cunha made the objectively wrong decision in that moment and aren't afraid to say it out loud.
neutral
great
season
"Why the heck Cunha doesn't pass immediately "
"Extremely poor pass selection from Cunha there "
The Cult Of Cunha
They're ride-or-die supporters who see the magic in their man and will celebrate him through thick and thin, full admiration for what he brings to the pitch.
admiration
amusement
great
season
"Great game from Cunha man. Love him."
"Yes Cunha! Great start!"
The Rage Merchants
They've decided Cunha's done something deliberately annoying — whether it's his celebration or his play — and they're absolutely furious about the audacity of it.
great
season
"Cunhas cele is rage bait😭😭😭"
"Cunha made the worst pass possible there"
The Goalkeeper Detectives
They're more interested in dissecting the keeper's howler than anything else, comparing this moment to legendary defensive meltdowns with dark humour and sharp one-liners.
"No! Donnarumma!😆"
"De Gea 2.0"
Arsenal supporters are celebrating a standout display from midfielder Myles, who delivered a composed, controlled performance that has convinced many he deserves regular starts ahead of squad stalwarts. The consensus is overwhelmingly positive — fans believe he's proven himself capable of handling Arteta's system and could challenge for a permanent midfield role, though some critics argue he should have been trusted earlier in the season.
The Myles Redemption Arc
These fans are absolutely convinced that Myles has just proven he's the midfielder Arsenal need for the final push, delivering a man-of-the-match performance that's earned him genuine credibility in Arteta's plans.
admiration
love
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
Christian Nørgaard
"so proud of Myles. We are going to need these performances to close out the season. Tremendous today. Man of the match after Gyok "
"Professional match from start to finish. Delighted that Myles was given the opportunity to play in the midfield and that he delivered. Very measured and mature from him. I'm sure i"
Cautious Optimism On Trial
This group sees potential in what Myles showed today — a chance to stake his claim and build trust with the gaffer — but they're holding their horses until he proves it wasn't a one-off.
"That hug between Mikel and myles says a thousand words. He's got that position if he wants it. And today he played like he wanted it. "
"Myles stepped up to allow us to rest both starters. And this might be exactly what he needed to gain Arteta’s trust as a midfielder. Loved this game and his performance especially."
The Balanced Perspective
These fans recognise that throwing Myles in was the right call at the right time, and they're not going to criticise Arteta for managing the workload sensibly, even if Myles looked decent.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"People also would’ve skewered Mikel if he threw Myles into the toughest part of the pitch before he was ready for it. A couple bad performances there could’ve ruined his confidence"
"Absolute filth Myles"
The Doubters Holding Fire
This lot aren't buying the hype just yet — they've seen Myles have stinkers before this season and they're treating today as one performance, not proof he's suddenly become reliable.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Myles is fucking running this game btw "
"myles has had some absolutely dreadful outings this season. we don’t know what’s going on behind the scenes. i trust the manager to know when the time is right to transition an 18y"
Liverpool supporters are singling out Dominik Szoboszlai as the sole bright spot in their side's 3-2 loss to Manchester United, with fans praising his tireless work rate, commitment, and intensity whilst criticising the rest of the team's lacklustre performance. The overwhelming consensus is that Szoboszlai's individual brilliance was unable to compensate for systemic defensive failures and a lack of collective effort from his teammates.
Wasted Brilliance, Collective Shame
These fans are caught between anger and despair — they've just watched Szoboszlai produce magic in a losing effort, and it's eating them alive because everyone else let him down.
neutral
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"I hate that whenever Szobo scores lately, we are in the losing end, comeon atleast draw for him"
"Every Liverpool player bar Rio and Szobo should be ashamed. disgusting performance "
One Man Carried Us Tonight
Pure admiration for individual performances that rose above the chaos; these fans are choosing to celebrate what they saw rather than dwell on the final score, spotlighting Szoboszlai and Gravenberch's intensity.
admiration
great
"That’s absolutely brilliant by Szobo "
"@LFC Great game by the team, Gravenberch was intense I love this part of him Szoboszlai was great also, hopefully the injured guys get back and help us"
He's Too Good For This Team
A frustrated minority convinced Szoboszlai is being wasted at Liverpool and deserves better — they're using his standout display as evidence he's outgrown the current set-up.
"Free Szoboszlai"
"Szoboszlai was the best Liverpool player by far"
He's Lost It Completely
The outlier camp turning on Szoboszlai himself, arguing his recent form has been dire and one good performance doesn't erase weeks of underperformance — they're blame-shifting away from systemic issues.
anger
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"@LFC This is the worse to ever happen.
Only Szobo plays like he is being paid for this"
"Szob has been awful for weeks"
Fans erupted in disbelief as Aston Villa pulled one back in the 90th minute against Tottenham, with supporters questioning whether a genuine comeback was genuinely unfolding despite being two goals down for most of the match. The frantic final moments and accumulating yellow cards throughout created an atmosphere of chaotic tension, with observers expressing shock at the sudden shift in momentum.
Absolutely Fuming At The Ref
Nearly half the fanbase thinks the decision was a complete farce that's ruined their evening, and they're not holding back about how appalling the whole thing has been.
anger
"I would rather watch paint dry than look at any more minutes of this shit."
"I’ve only just turned on and fuck me this looks dreadful."
Something Dodgy Went On Here
A third of supporters are genuinely puzzled by what they've witnessed, convinced the call was wrong but wrestling with whether there's something more suspicious happening beneath the surface.
neutral
"Yup, put myself through it anyway and let these losers ruin my night, but it was so obvious"
"This is so bad I'm genuinely wondering if something has gone on. "
Finally, Some Beautiful Clarity
A small but vocal minority reckon the decision was spot on and they're loving the fact that someone's actually made the right call for once.
"I find it fantastic and refreshing "
"it’s absolutely beautiful to see"
Fans are divided over Emiliano Buendía's dramatic stoppage-time header that pulled one back for Aston Villa in their 2-1 defeat to Tottenham, with some praising the quality of the finish whilst others argue it should have been ruled out or question the legitimacy of the chance. The controversy centres on whether the goal was fairly won and whether it represented a genuine turning point in a match defined by mounting tension and yellow cards on both sides.
Spurs Finally Got Their Man
The majority of fans are absolutely buzzing because Buendía has delivered exactly what they've been waiting for — a crucial goal when it matters most, and his first in a Spurs shirt makes it even sweeter.
admiration
goal
"What a beauty for his first goal at Spurs! "
"My man!!!! What a goal "
Chaos, Drama, Pure Football Madness
This group is caught up in the raw emotion of the moment itself — they're reacting to the mayhem of the play, the space being left open, the shocking nature of how it all unfolded in real time.
neutral
goal
"What a fucking man"
"What the fuck was that cross, has so much space. "
Robbed: The Goal That Shouldn't Stand
These fans believe something went wrong in that moment — whether it's a dodgy decision, a save that should have been made, or a play that shouldn't have counted — and they're fuming because their side got done dirty.
anger
goal
"Fucking bs goal. "
"You fuck what a save "
Spurs fans are torn between praising Richarlison's genuine quality and world-class performance in a dire season, whilst simultaneously making dark jokes about his intensity being "something else" when the club is in a relegation battle at 18th place. The tone is ambiguous — whether it's sincere admiration for one of the few bright spots, or sardonic commentary on how a player of his calibre finds himself fighting to keep Tottenham up.
The Honest Reckoning
These fans see both the flaws and the fight, crediting Richarlison's heart whilst refusing to ignore Tottenham's deeper structural problems and expensive recruitment disasters.
neutral
Brandon Austin
Antonín Kinský
"Yeah Solanke is absolute shite and spurs do not get enough shit for spending 60m odd on him"
"Richy’s first touch is terrible, his pitch awareness subpar but boy does that man have heart. "
The Pure Euphoria Brigade
All-in believers riding the emotional high of the moment, celebrating Richarlison's commitment with unfiltered passion because sometimes football is about feeling the joy when it arrives.
admiration
amusement
Brandon Austin
Antonín Kinský
"Fuck yeah Richy!! Loving how we've come out this half."
"Richy, I love you so much!"
The Performance Paradox Merchants
Caught between acknowledging Richarlison's world-class potential and the frustrating reality that one player's brilliance cannot mask a fundamentally broken squad around him.
"Richarlison is genuinely world-class on his day."
"If we had 6 more richys we wouldnt be in this mess..he gives his all every game!"
The Real-Time Fury Squad
Watching in real time and calling out the catastrophic defensive lapses immediately, because even passion and effort cannot excuse basic professional mistakes when the stakes are this high.
Brandon Austin
Antonín Kinský
"Richy!! No fucking back heel passes in our area. Fuck"
"Richy has been our weakest player over the last 20 min. Need to wake the fuck up "
Manchester United fans are divided over whether Carrick's tactical setup is poorly utilising Mbeumo, or if the winger has genuinely lost form since AFCON and a difficult personal period. The debate centres on whether he's been misplayed as a centre-forward, exhausted from international duty, or simply struggling with basic technical execution like first touch.
Mbeumo's Lost His Way
This lot reckon he's simply not good enough right now and want him held accountable for a genuine drop-off since AFCON left him broken.
disappointment
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"Mbuemo has had another bad game. He hasn’t had a good game since AFCON."
"Fuck off Mbeumo, you only have yourself to blame."
The Clinical Diagnosis
These fans dissect Mbeumo's technical failures — his first touch, his decision-making — with cold precision and no emotional sugar-coating.
neutral
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"Mbeumo has genuinely been ass since afcon. "
"Mbeumo's first touch is so shit"
The Carrick Question
They reckon the manager's got it wrong tactically, suggesting Mbeumo's been shoehorned into the wrong position when he should be out wide doing damage.
"Carrick misprofiles Mbeumo by playing him up front instead of on the wing and Amad maybe he's emotionally unstable following his mum's death"
"what has mazraoui got to do, he played well against chelsea"
Square Peg, Round Hole
These tactical minds believe Mbeumo's form collapse stems directly from being misused in the system rather than a personal loss of quality.
"Carrick misprofiles Mbeumo by playing him up front instead of on the wing and Amad maybe he's emotionally unstable following his mum's death"
"what has mazraoui got to do, he played well against chelsea"
He's Back, Actually
The contrarians backing Mbeumo hard, arguing he's finally clicking again and showing flashes of the player we all know he can be.
admiration
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"Mbeumbo has been great so far."
"Mbeumo looks the sharpest he has in awhile. Good to see."
Leeds supporters are split over Daniel Farke's tenure, with most praising his tactical acumen and man-management skills as a principled leader, whilst a minority voice calls for his departure. The discussion also includes lighthearted banter about his recent appearance change, suggesting underlying frustration with the team's lacklustre 0-0 result against bottom-club Burnley masks deeper concerns about the club's promotion push.
Reality Check on Recruitment
These fans are cutting through the noise by pointing out that Leeds' problems run deeper than one match — poor summer signings have haunted them all season, and overreacting to every result just clouds the actual issues.
neutral
farke
short
"With JimBob for once. Check out last summers transfer thread and you’ll find it full of fans whinging about poor recruitment (again) from 49ers and Farke not being good enough. Eve"
"It's been infuriating hearing people call every result "must win"
Saying we're down after every other team wins
Acting like farke should be sacked in the summer even if we stay u"
Farke's the Answer
True believers who've bought into the manager completely, comparing him to elite-level operators like Klopp and willing to back him through the inconsistency because they see the potential in his vision.
admiration
joy
farke
short
"I love Faarke. He is like Klopp to me!"
"Happy for Farke"
Tactical Collapse Merchants
The frustrated crew convinced that Farke is systematically throwing away leads by making catastrophic in-game decisions, turning dominating performances into dropped points through sheer managerial incompetence.
farke
short
"this is all nuno santos' fault, in fact, everything bad in my life happened because of him, which includes telling iran to launch bombs to my country"
"This is exactly the reason why we're in a relegation scrap, we play fucking great for 50/60 minutes and then Farke has us soaking pressure to save tired legs when we're "comfortabl"
Supporters are furious with officiating throughout the match, with particular anger directed at individual player errors — specifically Isidor's poor touch — that they believe cost their side a result. The consensus centres on controversial refereeing calls and sloppy execution that made the game feel decided by bad decisions rather than quality football.
Just The Facts, Mate
These fans are simply documenting what happened on the pitch without emotional investment, treating the match like neutral observers rather than partisan supporters desperate for a result.
neutral
"what a clearance
"
"Good goal"
One Man Cost Us Everything
Absolutely seething supporters pinning the blame squarely on Isidor's individual mistake, convinced his catastrophic error is the sole reason they didn't win this game.
disgust
anger
"Absolutely fucking dreadful touch from Isidor. My God that was the worst I've seen in a while"
"That is absolutely fucking brain dead from Isidor. I have just lost the fucking plot "
The Ref Robbed Us Blind
These fans are locked in debate about whether the officials made the decisive call correctly, convinced the referee's decision fundamentally altered what could have been a completely different outcome.
"Disgraceful refereeing"
"It would have been a different game."
We'll Take The Beauty Where We Find It
A smaller contingent celebrating the skill and execution on display, choosing to appreciate the moment rather than spiral into what-ifs about dropped points.
"Possibly the best corner we’ve taken all season lmao"
"Nice challenge. "
Tottenham supporters are sharply divided over new manager Roberto De Zerbi's influence, with some praising his tactical intensity and transformation of the squad's mentality after a dire run under previous management, whilst others blame his high-press system for leaving legs tired and exposing defensive vulnerabilities in a crucial match against Villa. The discussion reflects broader uncertainty about whether De Zerbi's demanding style can genuinely engineer a survival push or if it's simply masking deeper squad problems.
The Alchemy Observers
These fans are genuinely intrigued by De Zerbi's tactical overhaul—they're fascinated by how dramatically he's transformed Spurs in just weeks, even if they're not fully committing to the hype yet.
neutral
players
Kevin Danso
"De Zerbi has done some dark arts shit to this team in what, 3 weeks?"
"@mannyyard9882 meaning we had 2 crap managers who didnt know how to play to our players strengths before De Zerbi. Quite simple really."
The Pochettino Believers
Optimists who reckon they've finally found their missing piece; they see De Zerbi as the visionary who'll unlock Spurs' potential like Pochettino did, and they're already celebrating the awakening.
admiration
players
Kevin Danso
"De zerbi you beautiful beautiful man!!"
"I fucking love De Zerbi. Its starting to feel like poch all over again. Very promising start under him "
The Convert Crusaders
These are the sceptics turned zealots—fans who were cold on the team until De Zerbi arrived, and now they're swinging hard in the opposite direction because they finally see what excellence looks like.
annoyance
players
Kevin Danso
"Our passing has been atrocious all season.. De Zerbi got us passing like Barcelona."
"I was ambivalent until De Zerbi came in. Now they can get fucked."
The Context Kings
Measured heads who acknowledge De Zerbi's quality but temper expectations with reality; they're weighing the tactical brilliance against squad fatigue and the marathon finish of a long season.
"Why did you have to be so bad Tudor he would still be there and Tottenham would be championship"
"De zerbi plays a high press, our squad isnt used to it and its the back end of the season, legs were gone second half. Going to be something De Zerbi needs to think about."
The Counterfactual Debaters
Football philosophers parsing the what-ifs—they're rehashing whether the previous manager was truly catastrophic or if De Zerbi's arrival simply exposes how bad things
"Why did you have to be so bad Tudor he would still be there and Tottenham would be championship"
"De zerbi plays a high press, our squad isnt used to it and its the back end of the season, legs were gone second half. Going to be something De Zerbi needs to think about."
Arsenal supporters are celebrating an emphatic 3-0 victory that has reignited their title ambitions, with fans expressing relief and joy at the team's resurgence after a difficult period. The emotional reaction captures a pivotal moment where the squad has demonstrated they remain genuine contenders in the league race.
Living The Dream Again
These fans are pure euphoria, savouring the aesthetic beauty of Arsenal's football and the emotional release of a dramatic turnaround.
joy
crying
"Yeah, great moment! "
"It's fun again! Great commentary"
Hope With A Hangover
Mixed emotions dominate here—they believe Arsenal's threat is real but can't shake the nagging dread that it might all collapse again.
"Gg. We’re so back, and looking a huge threat "
"I feel sick"
We're Actually Back, Innit
Raw, unfiltered disbelief mixed with infectious belief; these fans are so stunned by what they've just witnessed that profanity becomes the only adequate language.
neutral
crying
"We're so fucking back."
"Fuck me... We are backckkkkkk"
Celebrating Too Soon Cost Us
These supporters are gutted because they allowed themselves to believe, only to get their hearts ripped out by a late plot twist they didn't see coming.
sadness
crying
"fr i feel so bad "
"Damn I celebrated too soon 😭"
Fans are split over Jacob Murphy's performance, with some praising his crossing and positioning whilst others question whether previous form should dictate current expectations, and debate the effectiveness of Newcastle's attacking approach through the air against Brighton's physical defence.
Murphy's the Future, Actually
These fans genuinely believe Murphy delivered a standout performance and are celebrating him as a player who's finally showing his quality on the pitch.
admiration
amusement
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"Murphy did so well, great goal!"
"That is absolutely brilliant by Murphy "
Caught Up In The Moment
This camp is reacting emotionally to Murphy's individual moments of brilliance—the cross, the goal—without making broader judgements about his overall contribution or consistency.
"Absolutely brilliant from Murph there. What we love to see 😍"
"It was class from murphy,that cross at the start.🎉"
The Harsh Reality Check
These supporters acknowledge Murphy had bright moments but aren't convinced by his overall game, pointing to structural issues, physical mismatches, and questions about whether he's genuinely progressing.
neutral
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"The floated crosses aren’t working, they are giants"
"It's been slipping all season. More backroom staff than players.
Two year ago Murphy would be in this with a cone on his head."
Murphy's Still Not The Answer
This smaller group remains fundamentally unconvinced by Murphy's display, viewing his performance as another example of inconsistency and missed potential that's plagued him all season.
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"Murphy man what the fuck is that "
"Murphy not wearing the cone on his head is just disappointing. HWTL!!!!!"
Leeds and Burnley supporters are locked in a heated disagreement about a player's display during this goalfest, with the conversation devolving into cryptic in-jokes and sarcasm that leaves half the thread completely baffled. The vagueness of the original claim means fans are talking past each other rather than actually agreeing on what happened on the pitch.
The Absolute Reckoning
These fans believe the performance was genuinely indefensible — not debatable, not contextual, just comically, undeniably bad.
"Wow. They're comically bad."
"That was bad of them. Really, really bad."
The Rulebook Lawyers
This camp is locked in the weeds arguing whether the controversial call was actually justified, suspicious of the narrative being pushed.
"No it isnt"
"Why’s it shame"
The Logical Observers
They're the ones calmly working through the evidence, nodding along as clarity emerges, no axe to grind.
neutral
"Well that would certainly make more sense."
"Ah, I see. Thank you. "
The Vindication Vultures
These fans are here for the schadenfreude — they called it early and they're absolutely buzzing to see someone else proven spectacularly right.
approval
amusement
"and just like that you were proved correct, my friend!!"
"The irony of this sentence is brilliant. Enjoy your day, buddy 👍"
Manchester United came from behind to beat Liverpool 3-2 in a breathless encounter, with the sample posts capturing the raw emotional swings of fans reacting to goals and turning points across the ninety minutes. The neutral sentiment reflects the chaotic nature of the match—both sets of supporters experiencing elation and despair as the scoreline shifted repeatedly.
We'll Take The Chaos
These fans are riding the high of victory regardless of how messy it got—they've won a five-goal thriller and that's all that matters.
amusement
"Hahaha yes!!!! This is amazing!"
"Phew! That’s all I can say. "
What The Hell Is Happening
This lot are caught between laughing and crying at the sheer madness unfolding on the pitch, unable to decide if they're relieved or exhausted.
neutral
"Fucking hell I’m annoyed"
"Fuck me lol. Get it together "
This Is Not Good Enough
The furious contingent see the chaotic nature of the result as proof that something's fundamentally broken, and three points don't paper over the cracks.
anger
"Fucking hell....this is painful"
"Jesus fucking christ, you people really are something"
Spurs supporters are split on midfielder Randal Kolo Muani's performance in the 1-2 defeat at Villa, with some praising his work rate and gesture toward the away fans, whilst others remain sceptical of his overall contribution. The debate reflects a broader pattern of inconsistency that's kept fans deeply divided on whether he's genuinely delivering or merely going through the motions.
The Effort Paradox
These fans acknowledge RKM ran around a lot but fundamentally don't believe the performance justified the hype, caught between wanting to see improvement and seeing empirical evidence it hasn't materialised.
neutral
""RKM clearly doesn't give a fuck, lazy bastard!!!"
©Reddit intelligentsia"
"I’m so sad that RKM has objectively had a terrible season. I really wanted him to find success here "
Squad Depth Fury
These supporters are furious that Spurs have no credible backup option, meaning they're trapped watching an underperforming player because the club's recruitment has failed them — anger directed at the boardroom, not just the pitch.
"The fact we’ve no alternative to RKM is actually disgusting "
"The RKM doesn’t care fanfiction is so so stupid "
The Redemption Arc Believers
This minority genuinely rates RKM's commitment and interprets every tackle and interaction as proof he cares, willing him into form through pure force of positivity and selective highlight reel analysis.
admiration
love
"Amazing to see the interactions with RKM. I love you all"
"Love that from RKM. Shows how much he cares. Best game from him so far too. "
The Collective Credit Camp
These fans refuse to isolate individual blame, spreading praise across the entire operation — from the dressing room to the away end — because they see one decent performance as a genuine team effort worth celebrating wholesale.
"Every yiddo put a shift in. The boys on the pitch, the away end, top down. Good shit"
"So many players deserving praise tonight but let me say I just fucking love Destiny Udogie"
AFC Bournemouth supporters are celebrating the breakthrough performances of young talents like Eli Kroupi and Rayan, but are deeply anxious about manager Andoni Iraola's future departure at the end of the season and whether the club can maintain momentum without him. The discussion reflects pride in the club's development system and recruitment strategy—contrasting sharply with bigger clubs' wasteful approaches—yet is shadowed by concern that the next manager won't replicate Iraola's tactical acumen and ability to blood young players successfully.
Iraola's Building Something Special
These fans believe the manager has already proven himself as a world-class tactician and is assembling a genuinely competitive side that deserves celebration right now.
optimism
admiration
Ismaïla Sarr
Jean-Philippe Mateta
"big fan of iraola's audition so far"
"Good manager? He’s rapidly becoming the greatest figure to ever step foot in Bournemouth!"
Stuck Between Hope And Fatigue
This group is emotionally drained by inconsistent performances and can't quite commit to the optimism around them, stuck in a limbo of cautious expectation.
neutral
Ismaïla Sarr
Jean-Philippe Mateta
"johnson was a great scam by spurs to palace"
"Honestly, watching us play has become a bore and is mostly frustrating. Looking forward to a new manager, with hopefully an even small amount of willingness to adjust tactically an"
Cherish It Before It Ends
These fans are braced for heartbreak — they see Iraola's quality and know bigger clubs will come calling, so they're resigned to enjoying what they have on borrowed time.
"Enjoy this while it lasts, Cherries. Your next coach isn't a patch on Iraola."
"Bournemouth fans I have two questions as it’s hard to gauge from the outside looking in:
1. How much do you think Kroupi is worth?
2. How much do you think Bournemouth would accep"
We Got The Business Right, Others Didn't
Frustrated at watching rival clubs waste money while Bournemouth actually nail their recruitment, these supporters are furious their team hasn't capitalised harder on that competitive advantage.
Ismaïla Sarr
Jean-Philippe Mateta
Jørgen Strand Larsen
"@CPFC Fucking joke 35 million spent on Brennan Johnson when Bournemouth brought Kroupi and Rayan for less than that combined. Parish you need to fuck off putting these incompetent "
"@CPFC Yeah Rayan scores they paid 24 mil for him and 10 mil for Kroupi but we thought paying 35mil for a man on the missing persons list was a better bet. You’re a fucking joke par"
Arsenal supporters are unanimously praising Viktor Gyökeres after he scored twice in the victory, with fans arguing he's proven his quality when given proper service and expressing confidence he'll fire them towards the title and Champions League. The discourse centres on Gyökeres silencing his critics and emerging as the clinical finisher Arsenal need down the stretch.
Vindication For The Believers
These fans are weaponising the performance to silence doubters, revelling in the moment when Gyökeres proves the critics wrong and demanding respect for backing him all along.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Fuck all the gyok haters get outta here "
"bad day for Gyokeres haters, long may it continue."
Finally, He's Delivering Magic
Genuine admirers celebrating not just the goals but the complete performance — the fluidity, the drive, the big-match mentality — seeing a player finally fulfilling his immense potential under pressure.
admiration
approval
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"So happy for him- it was a high pressure match and his fluidity and drive have been great to watch. "
"I'm so happy we finally pushing on Gyokeres strenght and he deliver it for us, 2 goal and 1 key pass, its an excellent game from him "
Fifty-Five Million Down The Drain
Furious voices rejecting the entire narrative around Gyökeres, convinced that no performance erases the fundamental problem of paying that fee for inconsistent output and arguing goals alone don't prove he fits the system.
David Raya
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"I can't believe your country produced such a useless striker. Goals mean nothing in football. He does not fit arsenal at all"
"Absolutely do not understand all the defence of him on this sub. That level of output for £55m is frankly disgraceful. As things stand he’s a much bigger flop than Pepe to me. "
Tactical Questions Over The Roar
Level-headed analysts cutting through the hype to probe the substitution decisions, acknowledging Gyökeres has delivered but wondering whether tactical choices down the stretch were the right call.
"You are leading already, you need goals, leave Gyökeres on if he doesn't score he as 2 already so he's going to be marked then others will score"
"Why take off Gyökeres 😮😮😮"
I need to flag a critical issue here: the match data shows this was **AFC Bournemouth 0-0 Crystal Palace** — a goalless draw in the Premier League on 3 May 2026.
However, the sample posts you've prov
Rage Against The Machine
These fans are absolutely done with today's performance and won't sugarcoat it — they believe the team's defending, effort, and overall quality have become genuinely indefensible.
disappointment
annoyance
crystal palace
europa
"@CPFC ABSOLUTELY FUCKING EMBARRASSING! I don’t care if we are resting players the rest are fucking wankkkkkkkkkkkkk!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
"@CPFC We're the most pathetic team in the league at defending set pieces, it's an absolute joke, over 40% of goals conceded! How have we not sorted this out."
Brutal Truth, No Sugar
This lot are processing the result with cutting honesty, accepting the performance was dreadful whilst wrestling with deeper concerns about the club's trajectory over years, not just weeks.
neutral
crystal palace
europa
"@CPFC Complete and utter dog shit so far, passing is horrendous, keep losing the ball. Dreadful"
"@CPFC I truly hate you with a passion. You are useless for the premier league. As have you been for the past decade."
The Pragmatists' Middle Ground
They're weighing up the good (European qualification is still on) against the concerning (injuries, defensive vulnerabilities) and refusing to pick a lane until the dust settles.
"@adrianbennett3761watkins could’ve broken his ankle. disgusting. and as a forest fan i feel bad for villa as they couldve drawn or got a win and it could change their whole season"
"We're going to Europe"
Glass Half Full In Europe
These rare optimists are focused on the silver lining — the team's secured European football and see performances like today as lessons rather than catastrophes.
crystal palace
europa
"@CPFC Superb performance today lads. Devenny and Johnson proving they’re League 2 players."
"Europe... Well done lads"
Manchester United and Liverpool fans are sharply split over whether this frantic 3-2 encounter represents the season's peak entertainment or a scripted, chaotic mess—with conspiracy theorists dismissing the result as staged while others celebrate the return of high-octane, unpredictable football. The heated discussion reflects broader frustration with the campaign's inconsistency, though some argue this is precisely the kind of drama that defines a genuinely compelling season.
We've Had Enough
Over half the fanbase has completely checked out, convinced the club is heading for disaster next season and unwilling to subject themselves to another campaign of this standard.
annoyance
game
"I won’t watch it, no fucking way am I watching another season of this dogshit football. "
"I can’t believe we’re actually doubling down on this clown. Next season is going to be a trainwreck. "
Bewildered and Betrayed
A third of supporters are stuck in a state of disbelief, unable to comprehend how the team continues to play such fundamentally broken football under current management.
neutral
game
"I don't know what the fuck I am watching here but it isn't football. Clueless manager and toothless players.
I've seen enough, not giving any more of my weekend to this shite."
"Gonna be another season of this fucking bullshit."
The Conspiracy Corner
A small but vocal minority believe something deeper is wrong — that the matches themselves are somehow rigged or artificially constructed rather than genuine competition.
"im sure TV is to distract us from real life. All them goals are staged."
"Call the season off❤"
Refs and Controversy
These fans are locked in debate about specific decisions and calls that shaped the finale, viewing the result through the lens of officiating rather than actual performance.
"im sure TV is to distract us from real life. All them goals are staged."
"Call the season off❤"
Against All Odds, Still Believing
A rare breed of optimists remain genuinely excited about next season despite the overwhelming negativity around them, choosing faith over the evidence in front of their eyes.
excitement
game
"So looking forward to watching another season of this"
"Really looking forward to enjoy this kind of football next season."
Spurs supporters are crediting Roberto De Zerbi's management and tactical approach for a dominant performance that has transformed the team's struggling form, with fans praising the simplified gameplan, intense pressing, and overall man-management as potential keys to survival. However, there's mild criticism about his substitution decisions, suggesting even in a largely positive display, questions remain about whether the Italian manager has fully solved Tottenham's deep-rooted problems.
De Zerbi's Redemption Arc
These fans believe Spurs have found their saviour in De Zerbi and are celebrating a complete tactical turnaround that proves elite coaching can transform a broken squad almost overnight.
admiration
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
João Palhinha
"Great performance! Well done to RDZ and the players! COYS!"
"@SpursOfficial Really great and appropriate that RDZ is the picture. He’s turned us around. Bring on next season. And some good buys over the summer. Let’s get a settled back r"
Damage Control and Perspective
This group is processing the result with a critical eye on the season's broader context, acknowledging the quality on show whilst keeping their emotional distance from overblown reactions.
neutral
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"it is criminal what we were subjected to all season before rdz"
"That’s one ugly man sitting behind RDZ"
The Blame Game Brigade
Frustrated Spurs fans are using De Zerbi's success as a weapon to criticise previous management and controversial signings, arguing that tactical nous exposes what was fundamentally wrong before.
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"I don’t ever want to hear about Mason Greenwood again from you dunces. Acting like RDZ committed the crime himself as if your morality is higher than Mother Theresa. Idiots "
"Nah we got talk abt elephant in the room, thomas fucking frank fraud of a manager if RDZ can do this with depeleted injury ridden squad imagine what we could have done from start "
Tactical Deep Dive Believers
These supporters are analysing the system and philosophy that De Zerbi deployed, focusing on how strategic adjustments created dominance rather than simply celebrating the feel-good factor.
"From stuggling constantly to an absolute domination of a game!"
"Great performance! Well done to RDZ and the players! COYS!"
Fans are lavishing praise on the quality of finishing on display, particularly singling out one strike as "absolutely sensational" and "a thing of beauty," with multiple posts celebrating the clinical nature of the goalscoring across the match. Despite some defensive lapses, the overall sentiment revolves around appreciation for Premier League-standard finishing and poaching instinct from the forwards involved.
Pure Footballing Brilliance
These fans are absolutely mesmerised by the technical excellence on display, treating elite goalscoring as an art form worthy of genuine reverence and celebration.
admiration
approval
"What a goal! Perfect!"
"The Leeds 2nd goal for me is up there for goals of the season it was absolutely sensational"
Audacious Audacity Leaves Them Speechless
They're gobsmacked by the sheer audacity and nerve of the strike, using hyperbolic language like "filthy" to express a kind of bewildered outrage at what they've just witnessed.
"OH MY! THAT WAS FILTHY! 2-0 https://t.co/MemR14jsL1"
"OH MY! THAT WAS FILTHY! 2-0 https://t.co/MemR14jsL1"
Laughing Through The Chaos
This lot are caught between admiration and disbelief, cracking jokes and swearing affectionately because the goal was so stunning it's almost too much to process seriously.
neutral
"Dom mate I'll forgive you today but fuck me that was atrocious 😂"
"lol
What a fucking goal "
Leeds supporters were anxious despite taking an early lead, worried that their first-half performance wasn't convincing enough and that Burnley would pose a much greater threat after the interval. Fans called for urgency, better defensive discipline, and another goal to secure the result, fearing a single-goal advantage wouldn't be sufficient to hold on.
Panic Mode Activated
These fans are convinced Leeds are throwing it away and are furious at the manager's tactical choices and the referee's decisions, believing sloppy second-half football is about to cost them the match.
"@LUFC Could do with controlling the game a little better, attack more we need a 2nd goal. ref's also a cunt"
"@LUFC We've been shit since the goal. Need to get the ball further up the pitch. Spending way too much time passing the ball around our defence."
Steady Hands On Deck
This measured middle ground acknowledges Leeds are in control but recognises Burnley remain dangerous, calmly calling for more intensity and another goal to put the game beyond doubt.
neutral
"@LUFC Need more energy boys in the second half go get another goal or 2"
"@LUFC Playing well better team but 2nd needed."
Job Half Done, Just
The optimistic crew who genuinely believe Leeds are the better side and are genuinely confident another goal is coming, seeing no reason to panic despite the narrow lead.
admiration
"@LUFC Good half everyone been good just need to up it in the final third"
"@LUFC Playing well better team but 2nd needed."
Manchester United supporters are fiercely debating Michael Carrick's managerial approach following the 3-2 victory over Liverpool, with some defending his tactical pragmatism and player management as salvaging a season in crisis, whilst others remain unconvinced he can deliver the possession-based football needed to compete at the highest level. The discussion centres on whether his counter-attacking style is a realistic adaptation to the squad's limitations or a fundamental constraint that will hold the club back without significant summer investment.
Carrick's Got Them Nowhere
This camp believes United lack the ruthlessness and composure to finish matches under Carrick's stewardship, no matter how many comebacks paper over the cracks.
annoyance
carrick
Carrick
"@ManUtd What the fuck are we doing? Come out dog shit. Just don't have the killer instinct under Carrick. This game should of been put to bed at halftime"
"@ManUtd Michael Carrick and his squad are useless and stupid…bloody fools. To hell with them"
Prove It With Consistency
These fans are reserving judgment — they've seen one dramatic result before, and they want to know if Carrick can actually build something sustainable or if this is just another false dawn.
neutral
carrick
Carrick
"@Mikeyavelli_ @ManUtd Fuck this guy, his so stupid fuck you carrick"
"@ManUtd Fuck off carrick… second half bottler every fucking game"
Finally, A Manager With Answers
This minority truly believe Carrick is the catalyst United needed, pointing to the comeback as evidence he's already turning the season around and deserves their full backing.
admiration
carrick
Carrick
"@ManUtd So proud of everyone of my boys and Michael Carrick"
"Huge applauds to Carrick. Absolutely turned our season around."
Brighton supporters are analysing their narrow 3-1 defeat, with particular focus on whether starting Lewis Dunk and other key players instead of the side that took the pitch would have changed the result. The discussion reveals frustration at team construction and tactical decisions, especially around late substitutions and which personnel should be prioritised in their squad.
The Live Critique
These fans are dissecting decisions in real time, calling out specific errors like missed headers and weak physicality because they believe accountability on the pitch is everything.
neutral
Jason Steele
Bart Verbruggen
"Get Rutter on for Hinsh. That’s atrocious to put that header over the ball"
"I actually thought Boscagli had a very poor game with his lack of physicality on display and his on-the-ball work not as good as before "
The Reluctant Optimists
They're spotting genuine quality in individual performances—Boscagli's return, Baleba's energy—and want to believe the team's got something worth building on.
admiration
approval
Pascal Groß
Matt O'Riley
Mats Wieffer
"Honestly really happy to see Boscagli start again, has been immense in the last few games. Much deserved for him that Hurzeler hasn’t immediately dumped him once Dunk was available"
"Baleba having a great game so far"
The What-If Merchants
They're rewriting the match after the fact, convinced that different starting lineups would have flipped the result, so they're hunting for evidence in the substitutes' cameos.
"We look so alive when rutter and kostoulas comes on, they really do deserve more game time"
"Not bad and really an unlucky result.
Though I have to think, had we started Dunk and Rutter we might have seen a better result
"
The Furious Tacticians
They're absolutely raging at selection choices and combinations they think are fundamentally broken, viewing the manager's decisions as actively sabotaging what could work.
Jason Steele
Bart Verbruggen
"Yeah, when we were fucking shite under Hyppia. We've taken off Welbeck when chasing a game to then bring on Dunk with 3 to go. Utter joke."
"Boscagli is sooo slow. Playing him and Dunk together would be a disaster "
The Strategic Auditors
They're weighing up whether the squad rotation and bench impact justify the starting XI, basically arguing that better personnel choices would have changed the entire game's trajectory.
"We look so alive when rutter and kostoulas comes on, they really do deserve more game time"
"Not bad and really an unlucky result.
Though I have to think, had we started Dunk and Rutter we might have seen a better result
"
Newcastle supporters are heavily criticising the team's defensive frailty in the opening 45 minutes, with Dan Burn's two headers conceded and repeated individual errors allowing Brighton to build an early 2-0 lead that ultimately proved costly. Whilst the side secured three points, the conversation centres on how poor defending and lack of concentration nearly cost them the match, with fans frustrated that defensive lapses rather than attacking shortcomings decided the game.
We Bottled It Completely
Fans absolutely furious at Newcastle's inability to finish their chances and appalled by a defensive collapse that threw away a winning position, with nothing but raw anger at the wasted opportunity.
annoyance
disappointment
Lewis Dunk
Jason Steele
Joël Veltman
"Worst fucking game how many chances have we missed?"
"Two horrible misses to wrap up the game "
The Numbers Don't Lie
Supporters trying to make sense of what went wrong by dissecting the stats and defensive shape, acknowledging poor performance but demanding a deeper analysis beyond just the scoreline.
"our defence too poor"
"Stats don’t tell the whole story. That second half didn’t pass the eye test"
First Half Promise, Second Half Collapse
Fans calmly documenting exactly where it all unravelled, tracing the moment Newcastle stopped competing and accepting that this pattern has become depressingly familiar.
neutral
Lewis Dunk
Jason Steele
"Started off great until the first goal"
"Solid first half, typical second half."
Still Backing The Lads
The optimistic contingent trying to keep morale up by focusing on the positive start and refusing to get dragged into the negativity despite the result.
Lewis Dunk
Jason Steele
"Good first half, let's make it a good second one!"
"Solid first half, typical second half."
Leeds supporters are raving about Noah Okafor's high-quality second goal in what appears to be a dominant attacking display, with particular praise for the build-up play and his positioning to convert at close range. There's genuine affection for Okafor as a match-winner, though fans acknowledge his fitness limitations and hope he can develop into a consistent 90-minute player next season.
The Okafor Euphoria Club
These fans are absolutely lost in the moment—they're not analysing, they're celebrating a genuine masterclass of finishing and tactical brilliance that's rewired their entire perception of the season.
admiration
love
Dominic Calvert-Lewin
Daniel James
"The Okafor Hour has been magical for us."
"Okafor's goal has to be top 3 of the season for me. Cheers to Farke for good subs and for switching it up the starting 11. An absolute must win in 10 days. "
The Raw Reaction Brigade
These are the unfiltered voices screaming in real time, capturing the pure adrenaline of the goal without judgment, criticism, or commentary—just pure, uncensored emotion.
neutral
Dominic Calvert-Lewin
Daniel James
"Okafor is making a habit of being greedy"
"NOAHHHHH OKAFORRRRRRRR"
The Form-Watcher's Eye
These fans recognise something deeper is happening with Okafor's trajectory; they're tracking a player hitting his stride at precisely the right moment in the season.
"That whole move for the Okafor goal is absolute top level! Top level!"
"Okafor is getting hot at the end of season"
The Greedy Performance Police
These fans love the goal but can't help themselves—they're spotting the selfish moments within the brilliance, believing Okafor's getting away with something because of the end result.
Dominic Calvert-Lewin
Daniel James
"Okafor is starting to take the piss now"
"GET THE FUCK IIIIIN!!!!!! OKAFORRRRR"
Manchester United supporters are sharply split on Patrick Dorgu's performance after his comeback from a three-month absence during the dramatic 3-2 win over Liverpool, with some backing his rustiness whilst others criticise his decision-making and football intelligence. The discussion captures the classic tension between patience for match fitness and frustration at visible errors during a crucial fixture.
Furious At The Careless Display
These fans believe Dorgu's return has been marred by sloppy, needless mistakes and poor decision-making that's actively damaging the team's performance.
anger
"@UnitedStandMUFC The fck is dorgu doing. Fucking clumsy players. And why not passing to bruno or amad shity decision by cunha"
"Terrible from Dorgu there. "
Robbed By Dodgy Officiating
This camp argues the referee's calls against Dorgu have been completely unjust, with questionable fouls overshadowing what should be a positive comeback narrative.
neutral
"That Dorgu “foul” as well. Some ridiculous stuff today "
"ARE YOU FUCKING SERIOUS?!
HOW IS THAT A GODDAMN FOUL FROM DORGU?!"
Cautiously Optimistic About His Impact
These supporters recognise Dorgu's quality and potential to elevate the team's attack now he's fit again, though reserves full judgment until he's fully match-sharp.
"Dorgu is back now he will cook"
"Paddy Dorgu is back!"
Welcome Back To Your King
The celebratory faction simply wants to enjoy seeing Dorgu back in action and believes his presence alone is a massive boost to United's creative threat.
"So good to see Dorgu up the wing again, welcome back lad"
"How good is it to see Dorgu back on the pitch!"
Leeds fans are discussing their squad's summer overhaul, debating which players like Jack Harrison might attract interest and whether manager Daniel Farke deserves credit for keeping them competitive despite injury troubles. The conversation also reflects on how some Premier League players—like Zian Flemming at Burnley—seem to punch above their weight, whilst underlying performance data suggests Leeds' underlying stats were genuinely strong even as results wavered.
The Pragmatists See Through It
These fans acknowledge Leeds need wholesale upgrades across the squad but aren't emotionally fussed about it — they're just doing the maths on who stays and who goes.
neutral
Ethan Ampadu
Sean Longstaff
"Literally all of them are upgradeable. I like this squad a lot but were still one of the weaker squads in the division "
"I’m generally in favour of the Wenger proposal. "
The Betrayed Want A Reckoning
Furious that the season was wasted and the squad lacks quality and character, they're demanding a near-complete clearout because they've lost faith in almost everyone on the pitch.
Ethan Ampadu
Sean Longstaff
"I want to see maybe 3 players from this squad next season.
What a waste of a season. No ability, no heart, under a manager that isn't good enough for this level.
By some distan"
"Shows how shit the league was last year!"
The True Believers Back The Spine
Convinced the summer recruitment actually worked and the foundation is solid, they reckon a few tweaks and the right manager will unlock what's already there.
approval
admiration
Sam Byram
James Justin
Pascal Struijk
"In fairness , thats quite brilliant recruitment last summer by Leeds ....Stach , Okafor Justin ,DCL and even Longstaff and Nmeche (who looks like he'd cause a row in a church) ..."
"Yep, we’ve got a solid spine of the team, decent CBs and aggressive, physical midfielders plus big DCL up top, need to build around it and get the likes of Amps and Pasc signed up "
The Contradicted Spot The Good In The Bad
These fans are torn — they'll praise individual signings or tactical ideas whilst simultaneously accepting the team is underperforming, holding two opposing truths at once.
"I know they're shit but that's a great move"
"Get Jesse Marsch back in, proper manager with real pashun"
Fans are crediting Eberechi Eze with a standout performance—particularly his pressing and through-ball accuracy—and arguing he should start Arsenal's remaining matches ahead of an out-of-form Martin Ødegaard, with some drawing comparisons to Mesut Özil's creative nimbleness. The discussion reflects growing confidence in Eze as a potential difference-maker in Arsenal's title push, especially with key players like Ødegaard and Saka still managing fitness concerns.
Raw Frustration in Real Time
Fans venting immediate irritation at Eze's on-pitch decision-making and tempo, capturing the live emotional whiplash of watching possession football go sideways in the moment.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Fuck me Eze takes forever every time he gets the ball"
"@Arsenal WHY IS EZE NOT PUTTING A FOOT IN THE GAME HE’S PLAYING SHIT HE NEED TO PUT IN MORE EFFORT"
The Eze Redemption Arc Believers
Supporters convinced this performance proves Eze belongs in Arsenal's midfield puzzle, celebrating his technical quality and game intelligence as a genuine answer to their creativity problem.
admiration
love
Eze
"great from eze, then great from gyokeres, then great finish from saka. just a really good goal finally"
"Eze 10/10 for me today. Great all around performance "
The Data Doesn't Lie Camp
Analytically-minded fans using this display as evidence that Eze needs more minutes and better service to unlock his potential, while simultaneously questioning what Odegaard's absence is really costing them.
"They have to find him more. From Eze( he is doing it), from Ode, from Saka, from Havertz. He will add more. "
"And injured, out of form Odegaard. Have you seen the passes to Gyok by Eze? Odegaard this season would have recycled it back to Raya. "
The Decision Cost Obsessives
Viewers fixated on one bad choice or misplayed moment, convinced Eze bottled it when it mattered most or failed to execute the obvious pass.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"We've looked absolute shite for most of 2026 even with Ødegaard injured. Give it a rest moron"
"Damn eze fucked it. Should've given it to saka"
The Systems & Patterns Squad
Deeper-thinking Arsenal fans connecting Eze's emergence to broader questions about midfield balance, supply lines, and how this fixture fits into their season trajectory under pressure.
"They have to find him more. From Eze( he is doing it), from Ode, from Saka, from Havertz. He will add more. "
"And injured, out of form Odegaard. Have you seen the passes to Gyok by Eze? Odegaard this season would have recycled it back to Raya. "
Following West Ham's heavy 3-0 defeat at Brentford, supporters are divided on goalkeeper Mads Hermansen's performance, with some praising his improved distribution and ball-playing ability compared to predecessor Alphonse Areola, whilst others argue he remains inconsistent and unreliable overall. The discussion reflects frustration at the scoreline whilst acknowledging that Hermansen's presence of mind in possession offers something different to his predecessor, even if his shot-stopping has drawn criticism.
Hermansen Is The Problem
This majority faction believes the goalkeeper is a genuine weak link dragging West Ham down, pointing to his prior struggles and questioning why the club signed him in the first place.
anger
Tomáš Souček
Soungoutou Magassa
"Fucking useless hermansen is a liability, nips deserves better"
"Hermansen is so bad. He sucked at Leicester, I don't get why he was signed. "
He's Actually Doing His Job
This measured middle ground recognises Hermansen's genuine strengths in possession play and distribution, viewing him as a net positive compared to the previous regime's long-ball approach.
neutral
Tomáš Souček
Soungoutou Magassa
"Whatever you may want to say about Hermansen, his distribution for us is massive. Areola often just kicked the ball out to midfield and hoped for the best. Hermansen actually finds"
"Hermansen done well there"
Let's Talk About The Brilliance
This smaller but vocal group refuses to be dragged into the goalkeeper debate, instead wanting to celebrate Damsgaard's exceptional finishing and the sheer quality of the attacking move.
admiration
Tomáš Souček
Soungoutou Magassa
Mateus Fernandes
"Damsgaards nutmeg for the goal. That was so sweet. "
"Damsgaard, classy goal"
Newcastle United supporters and neutral observers are dissecting a 3-1 victory that exposed Brighton's defensive vulnerabilities, with particular focus on individual errors and the effectiveness of Newcastle's set-piece attacking, whilst also questioning whether Brighton's recent form and European ambitions can survive such collapses. The discussion touches on tactical breakdowns, player performance inconsistencies, and frustration with defensive organisation that allowed multiple goals despite Brighton's sixth-place league position.
The Fury
These fans are absolutely seething because they've watched Brighton's defensive structure collapse spectacularly, squandering what looked like a genuine push for European football.
anger
disappointment
"@OfficialBHAFC Just fuck off. Worst performance I have ever had to waste watching in my life"
"@OfficialBHAFC some of the worst defending i’ve ever seen today, could’ve easily thrown away europe"
The Pragmatists
They're stepping back from the emotion to deliver cold analysis—acknowledging the performance was genuinely poor whilst accepting it's a blip that needs fixing rather than a catastrophe.
neutral
"@OfficialBHAFC Well the champions league talk was fun"
"@OfficialBHAFC Bad bad very bad fix please I am displeased"
The Play-by-Play Merchants
These fans are caught up in the moment-to-moment breakdown of what went wrong tactically, picking apart individual moments and player combinations rather than dwelling on the bigger picture.
"Like like their press is gone"
"Jack Ronaldowood linking up with Danny Messibeck"
The Reality Checkers
They're processing the harsh truth of the result—that Brighton's midfield press has evaporated, their control is gone, and the Champions League dream just died in real time.
"Like like their press is gone"
"Jack Ronaldowood linking up with Danny Messibeck"
The Sentimental Ones
These supporters are finding dark humour in the collapse, almost relieved to return to earth after a week of daring to believe Europe was actually possible.
"@OfficialBHAFC Enjoyed believing in Europe for a week it was great"
"@OfficialBHAFC Yeah.. great start.."
Manchester United supporters are euphoric after their side recovered from 2-0 down to beat Liverpool 3-2, with goals from Szoboszlai, Gakpo, and Mainoo sparking wild celebrations about a dramatic turnaround. However, some fans are already tempering optimism, questioning whether this single victory signals genuine improvement or merely a temporary reprieve in their season.
The Referee's Court
These fans are locked in debate about whether the crucial decision that turned the match was actually correct, refusing to accept the result until they've dissected every angle frame-by-frame.
neutral
"One of my biggest heartbreaks. "
"Please lock the fuck in boys "
We're Back On Track
The believers who see this comeback as genuine evidence that United have turned a corner, and they're riding the high of vindication after weeks of doubt.
amusement
"One of our best comebacks this week "
"we’re so back !!!!!!"
The Bitter Truth Brigade
Liverpool fans and sceptics convinced the decision was bent and that United's comeback represents everything wrong with modern football, cycling between rage and resignation.
anger
"Start where we left off lmao, so fucking ass"
"We're shite 🔄 We're so fucking back"
Glory Days Incoming
Optimistic United supporters who view this result as the spark that ignites a longer run, convinced they're witnessing the start of something special rather than a one-off win.
"We are back 🫡🫡🫡👹👹👹❤"
"Were seeing the glory days 🎉🎉"
The Cautious Processors
Fans taking a step back from the emotion to make sense of what just happened, neither fully celebrating nor condemning, just trying to understand what this result actually means for the season ahead.
"We are back 🫡🫡🫡👹👹👹❤"
"Were seeing the glory days 🎉🎉"
Fans are discussing Liverpool's Cody Gakpo's equalising goal in the 2-2 draw with Manchester United, with mixed reactions to his overall performance — some crediting him for scoring when it mattered, others criticising his play in a central role. The discussion also captures a notable moment where Gakpo appears to have requested Casemiro's shirt after the final whistle, sparking debate about the interaction.
The Grudging Respect Brigade
They hate admitting it, but these fans recognise Gakpo's clinical finishing against their side — even if they'd rather die than give him full credit.
neutral
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"For as much as a bum he is, Gakpo always scores against us. Hate him "
"And that’s why you don’t make stupid fucking mistakes Amad. Completely ruined our momentum and Lammens wtf was that?
OF COURSE Gakpo will score against us "
The Blame Game Merchants
These supporters are absolutely furious, convinced Gakpo's success stems from defensive errors and poor positioning rather than any genuine skill on his part.
annoyance
player
"@LFC Worst player ever to pray for Liverpool Gakpo stupid player"
"gakpo is so clumsy, most ungraceful player to don the red shirt."
The Darkly Amused Realists
They're processing the defeat with gallows humour, acknowledging Gakpo's knack for turning up in big moments whilst simultaneously accepting the broader context of the result.
"Gakpo actually made himself useful"
"Gakpo loves scoring against Man United, even when losing 😂"
The Rare Moment Celebrants
These are the ones genuinely impressed by Gakpo's performance today, prepared to praise him when he's clicking — even if it doesn't happen often enough for their liking.
admiration
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"Gakpo, i am loving your work in this half."
"Ohhhh this is what sparks Gakpo's comeback wow he is on it today"
Fans are celebrating Sunderland's mathematical relegation survival following the 1-1 draw with bottom-placed Wolverhampton, whilst simultaneously expressing frustration at their own mid-season collapse from a strong start. There's also acknowledgement that Wolves face a desperate fight to avoid the drop, with some supporters hoping their own club can cling above the danger zone.
Absolutely Fuming About Performance
These fans are livid about what they witnessed on the pitch — poor finishing, defensive shambles, and refereeing decisions that made them want to throw their remotes through the telly.
annoyance
anger
Regis
"Omfg they suck so fucking bad. Looks like a group of toddlers in front of goal "
"@SunderlandAFC Paul Tierney absolute fucking DISGRACE @FA_PGMOL absolutely useless every single one of you"
Venting Without Solutions
These supporters are clearly upset but expressing raw emotion rather than tactical analysis — caught between frustration at the result and the inability to articulate exactly what went wrong.
neutral
season
Matt Doherty
"@SunderlandAFC absolutely fucking embarrassing #regisout"
"@SunderlandAFC Fucking stupid that fuck sakes man why do that"
Promotion Merchants and Tourists
This group is either spam-posting highlight reels or bandwagoning the Sunderland success story, diluting genuine fan discussion with irrelevant content and surface-level sentiment.
"You can watch highlights from EVERY Premier League game this season right here
bit.ly/PLHighlights2526"
"Leicester city Supporter. Love Sunderland too get into Europe. For my Dad 2Aunties grandad and granma ."
Steady Assessment Mode
Level-headed fans taking stock of where the team actually stands after a crucial result, looking beyond the noise to understand progression and what comes next.
"You can watch highlights from EVERY Premier League game this season right here
bit.ly/PLHighlights2526"
"Leicester city Supporter. Love Sunderland too get into Europe. For my Dad 2Aunties grandad and granma ."
Finding Silver Linings in Adversity
These optimists are crediting effort and character despite difficult circumstances — refusing to panic and instead focusing on what the team got right rather than what fell apart.
season
Matt Doherty
"@SunderlandAFC Great battling performance considering we only had 10 men the majority of it! Well done lads!"
"Surpassed expectation. Some brilliant football. Be interesting to see what changes to kick on from here "
Brighton supporters are split in their assessment of goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen's performance during the 3-1 defeat to Newcastle, with some crediting him for solid saves whilst others blame him directly for lapses in concentration that contributed to conceding goals. The debate reflects broader frustration that Verbruggen, potentially Brighton's last marketable asset before a summer exodus, failed to deliver when it mattered most.
Verbruggen's Costly Blunders
These fans believe the keeper directly handed the opposition chances through poor decision-making, and they're not letting him off the hook for costly mistakes that could cost Brighton the result.
anger
bart
"Bart has fucked us here twice. Gave them that second corner with that awful punch. "
"That sucked. What was Bart doing?"
Mixed Bag, But He's Got This
This group acknowledges Verbruggen has both world-class moments and Alexis Sánchez-style howlers in him, staying measured whilst watching a goalkeeper still proving himself at this level.
neutral
bart
"He is great but definitely has some Sanchez style flops in him
Best case scenario we win the game anyway and Bart puts off any potential suiters and stays with bhafc for a few mor"
"@OfficialBHAFC nice bart"
Exit Door Anxiety
These supporters are connecting Verbruggen's performance dips to bigger fears about losing their best players, seeing tonight's errors as a sign that departures are already happening in real time.
"Bart and JPVH, the two most likely to leave, the two selling our last games"
"That wasn't on Bart to begin with. "
All In On Bart
The true believers here are choosing to remember the saves and the redemption moments, actively crediting Verbruggen when he delivers and giving him the benefit of the doubt.
admiration
bart
"Thanks Bart, again. Nice one."
"Another solid save from Bart"
Aston Villa supporters vented their frustration after a disappointing 2-1 defeat to Tottenham, with particular criticism directed at striker Tammy Abraham for his poor positioning and failure to close down opponents in key moments. Fans acknowledged the entire team underperformed, but singled out Abraham as a notable weak link in an overall dismal display.
Barkley's The Real Culprit
These fans are absolutely convinced Ross Barkley was the architect of Villa's collapse, arguing he and the midfield's inability to function left Abraham isolated and unsupported up front.
annoyance
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"@AVFCOfficial Fuckin clueless tammy wasn't the problem its the useless fuckers behind him emery lost the plot"
"@AVFCOfficial I'd be livid if I was Abraham. Starting in a team devoid of any ability to pass the ball forwards. Utterly pathetic performance. That team would be mid table in the C"
Abraham Takes The Fall
This camp acknowledges Abraham made defensive mistakes in the Tottenham defeat but insists the real story is a team-wide breakdown that left him exposed and abandoned.
"Tammy Abraham not closing down the guy with the ball on the edge of the box is just terrible."
"She’s got us out this mess"
The Manager Made The Call
These supporters credit Unai Emery's tactical intervention as the difference-maker, recognising that coaching decisions shifted the momentum away from Abraham's early struggles.
neutral
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Shout out Lucy Ward btw "
"won every game since we did that deal. as far as i'm concerned, she's a deity"
Abraham's Our Saviour
A smaller but vocal group believe Abraham was the catalyst for Villa's revival, praising him as the signing that transformed their season and restored belief.
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Come on Tammy you beauty! "
"She obviously just what the team needed "
Fans are dissecting Bournemouth left-back Kerkez's performance during the match, with particular focus on his positioning and awareness in defensive situations where he appears isolated or out of line with his teammates. The debate centres on whether his mistakes reflect individual errors or broader structural issues at Bournemouth.
The "Why Him Again?" Brigade
Frustrated pragmatists questioning the selection decision itself—not necessarily attacking Kerkez's ability, but genuinely baffled why he's on the pitch when other options exist.
neutral
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"Why the fuck bring on Kerkez and leave fringpong on!!"
"Headband Kerkez is a cursed look "
The Kerkez Loyalists
Committed backers who rate him as a genuine asset and point to his consistent performances since December as evidence he deserves the shirt.
admiration
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"I love Kerkez so much, been one of our best since December "
"Great one, Kerkez."
The Complete Dismissal Camp
Hardline critics who've made up their minds that Kerkez is fundamentally not good enough, venting raw frustration at both his presence and his performances.
anger
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"Literally anyone but fucking him. Complete shit from Kerkez and Mac."
"Kerkez mouth breathing irrationally annoys me "
The In-The-Moment Reactors
Live-action responders capturing real-time observations—some positive, some negative—focused on what's actually happening on the pitch rather than the broader narrative.
"Kerkez mouth breathing irrationally annoys me "
"Kerkes is a good player"
The Tactical Breakdown Crew
Analytical minds dissecting positioning, decision-making, and system fit to understand whether Kerkez's struggles stem from individual error or tactical misalignment.
"Kerkez mouth breathing irrationally annoys me "
"Kerkes is a good player"
Arsenal supporters are lamenting the absence of key players—particularly Jurriën Timber and Bukayo Saka—whose injuries have left the side vulnerable at the back, with Ben White's defensive performance drawing criticism despite occasional creative contributions going forward. The debate centres on whether White has declined post-injury and whether his lack of overlapping support for Saka represents a tactical regression compared to previous seasons.
The Timber Dependency Theory
These fans believe Arsenal's defensive collapse is almost entirely explained by one player's absence, and genuinely think a single fit centre-back fixes everything.
neutral
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"We’ve missed him for so long and it shows. All we need is Timber back and we’ll be back at our peak performance levels, I trust ✊"
"Ben white holy fuck. Can we please get Timber healthy by some miracle "
We're Actually Clicking Now
This optimistic contingent sees the injury crisis as the silver lining moment — proof that when key players finally return, Arsenal will be unstoppable.
admiration
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"If timber can make it back next week that would be amazing "
"This is the best we’ve played in months. We missed Saka and Calafiori so much. Timber next and we take the double."
The System's Fundamentally Broken
These supporters reckon the injuries have exposed something deeper and rotten about how Arsenal's defence is structured, not just exposed a temporary gap.
sadness
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
Viktor Gyökeres
"Tomiyasu couldn’t get fit so his body got destroyed. It’s an actual shame "
"Timber's been fucking up the attack all year man"
Arsenal supporters are raving about a midfielder's composed, dynamic display in the centre of the park, arguing he should become a permanent fixture in that position given how effectively he controlled the game. The consensus is that this midfield performance represents exactly the free-flowing, progressive football the team has been missing, with one fan even naming him the standout player despite the convincing 3-0 scoreline.
Finally, We've Got Our Guy
These fans are euphoric because Rice has delivered a standout midfield performance that proves he's the transformative talent they've been waiting for all season.
admiration
approval
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
Christian Nørgaard
"I'm really excited to see MLS today"
"MLS so good today "
I Told You So Territory
This camp has been vindicated after weeks of criticism—they're calmly documenting that Rice has shown he belongs in midfield, not pushed out of position where doubters wrote him off.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"I never want to see MLS as a LB ever again"
"When i said that people here called me stupid, and him not good enough"
Now Make It Count
These fans are cautiously optimistic, demanding Rice starts every match going forward and suggesting squad changes around him, because one performance isn't enough without consistency and structure.
"MLS needs to start every game now in midfield this season also sell noni horror player"
"MLS and Cala played so good today."
The Selective Memory Mob
The sceptics here are frustrated that Rice gets praise for one game whilst conveniently forgetting his dodgy displays earlier in the season, calling out what they see as reactionary fandom.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Not playing MLS when we were complete fucking ass is criminal "
"Always ready to find something.. the doom and gloom gets boring. MLS has had some absolute stinkers this season to accompany this "
Newcastle fans and neutrals debated Burn's deployment as a hybrid left-back-winger — mirroring Manchester City's use of Nico O'Reilly — whilst Brighton supporters were frustrated by what they perceived as a soft yellow card against him compared to the physicality allowed elsewhere in the match. The discussion highlighted tactical nuance alongside refereeing inconsistency in a match Newcastle won 3-1.
Burn's A Problem, Full Stop
These fans reckon Dan Burn at left-back is a downgrade and Lewis Hall shouldn't be benched, no matter what excuses the gaffer serves up.
neutral
Kieran Trippier
Nick Pope
"There is no reason on this earth you would bench Hall because of one bad game, in favor of Burn at LB. And last week, Dan Burn did not perform well there. Arsenal was just god aw"
"Dan Burn is so shit."
This Club's Lost The Plot
Furious supporters are bewildered by the team's decision-making and questioning whether the hierarchy even knows what they're doing anymore.
Kieran Trippier
Nick Pope
"Tony Bloom looks like a right sleazy fucker"
"Where the fuck has this come from?!
Big Dan Burn!!!?"
Dan Burn Is Our Unexpected Hero
These optimists are buzzing about Burn's contribution and the camaraderie he's brought, celebrating the underdog narrative with genuine warmth.
admiration
amusement
Kieran Trippier
Nick Pope
"I love seeing how happy the entire team is for him. Everyone loves dan burn "
"Lewis hall is the best lb in the world. I refuse to believe anything different. Started on the bench btw."
Actually, The Tactical Shift Is Genius
Deep-dive merchants are interrogating whether Burn's deployment in an unconventional role is a clever positional experiment rather than a panic fix.
"Reece James. "
"I don't know if I've had too many mushrooms, but it feels like burn has been deployed in the Nico O'Reilly role of 30% left back 70% left winger. Feels like a carbon copy of how pe"
Wait, What Just Happened Here
Confused observers are still processing the moment itself—the yellow card drama and the shock of Burn's involvement—before forming a settled opinion.
"Reece James. "
"I don't know if I've had too many mushrooms, but it feels like burn has been deployed in the Nico O'Reilly role of 30% left back 70% left winger. Feels like a carbon copy of how pe"
Tottenham supporters are debating goalkeeper Antonín Kinský's performance after he conceded a stoppage-time goal that cost his side a clean sheet, with fans divided between praising his overall display in an increasingly important run of games and criticising occasional lapses in shot-stopping ability. The discussion reflects broader frustration that a strong defensive effort was undermined by late drama, though many recognise Kinský is developing positively as he gets consecutive matches to build confidence and rhythm.
Kinsky's Silky Feet Dividing Opinion
These fans are absolutely sold on the keeper's technical ability with the ball at his feet, believing his distribution and footwork are elite-level qualities that deserve celebration regardless of the defensive result.
admiration
approval
Brandon Austin
Antonín Kinský
"I really like Kinsky. His footwork is outstanding. "
"Kinsky’s distribution is fantastic. "
The Vicario Blame Game
This camp is fed up with the goalkeeper's overall contribution to the season's struggles, using the late concession as ammunition to argue he's a fundamental problem that needs replacing immediately.
neutral
Brandon Austin
Antonín Kinský
"Fuck man. Tony deserved a clean sheet there "
"Never play Vicario again "
Process Over Points Believers
These supporters acknowledge the mixed emotions of the result but remain focused on the bigger picture — three more finals to win and the journey still ahead matters more than one dropped clean sheet.
"ТТХ"
"Йэээ, вперед Шпоры!!! Еще три финала, еще три победы..!"
Spurs' Resilience Narrative
This group is processing the late concession within the context of their season's trajectory, expressing commitment to the team's mission with raw, passionate energy that says setbacks won't derail their ambitions.
"ТТХ"
"Йэээ, вперед Шпоры!!! Еще три финала, еще три победы..!"
The Stopper, Not The Distributor
These fans are genuinely concerned that Kinsky looks impressive on the ball but completely unreliable when he actually needs to make saves, exposing a critical gap between his showpiece skills and match-winning performance.
Brandon Austin
Antonín Kinský
"I am so fucking worried about Kinsky in goal when he actually has to stop goals from going in. He is not good a stopping goals jesus christ"
"Vicario is a big reason as to why weve been so bad this season"
Arsenal supporters are buzzing about a comprehensive 3-0 win, with particular praise for Bukayo Saka's goalscoring contribution and the team's overall attacking performance. The mood is euphoric across the fanbase, though a handful of dissenting voices question Saka's consistency and suggest the scoreline flattered certain individual displays.
Peak Arsenal Football Right Here
These fans are absolutely intoxicated by what they witnessed — this is the beautiful, attacking football they've been dreaming of, and they're refusing to let anything spoil the moment.
admiration
approval
arsenal
Saka
"@Arsenal This is real football.. I'm so excited COYG"
"@Arsenal Best half of football we have played this season!!! Keep it going boysss"
Second Half Collapse Merchants
They're furious that Arsenal's dominant first-half display evaporated into mediocrity when it mattered, and they're using this inconsistency as proof the club will never deliver when it counts.
neutral
arsenal
Saka
"@Arsenal Don't deserve to win nothing after that 2nd half performance. Pathetic embarrassing football club. Cannot wait for Madrid to knock use out"
"@Arsenal @hillorychitto Fuck this shithole might actually win the prem 💔"
Cautious Believers Building Momentum
They're celebrating the win and individual brilliance like Saka's performance, but they're processing it through the lens of a bigger picture — survival mode until the final whistle.
"What a win!!!! Saka showing his class 🔥"
"We winning till the end we the Gunners"
Destiny Is Written Already
They've moved beyond the match itself and are now projecting forward with quiet confidence, convinced that momentum and collective belief will carry Arsenal through to what matters most.
"What a win!!!! Saka showing his class 🔥"
"We winning till the end we the Gunners"
Player Execution Absolutely Unforgivable
They're seething at specific players — in this case, Trossard — and believe individual underperformance in crucial moments is sabotaging what should be a guaranteed victory.
arsenal
Saka
"@Arsenal Even if you give 1000 minutes, asshole Tossard won't score a single goal. What Tossard son of a bitch was smoking. Get lost you fucking garbage. @LTrossard"
"@Arsenal Even if you give 1000 minutes, asshole Tossard won't score a single goal. What Tossard son of a bitch was smoking. Get lost you fucking garbage. @LTrossard"
Fans are fixated on David Raya's exceptional goalkeeping display, particularly a dramatic one-on-one save that drew comparisons to Manuel Neuer's sweeper-keeper style, though opinion splits between those praising his distribution and those criticising his laboured build-up play. The 17th clean sheet of his season has sparked debate about whether his shot-stopping brilliance outweighs occasional frustrations with his possession management.
The Pragmatists' Complaint
They're clocking Raya's actual weaknesses — those laboured build-ups that go nowhere — and aren't afraid to call out the flaws in an otherwise solid performance.
neutral
David Raya
Kepa Arrizabalaga
"If there's one thing I can hate from today it's Raya' long goal kicks, inevitably going straight to their keeper or out for a throw"
"Jesus Raya always terrifies me"
The Cult of Raya
These fans are properly in love with the moment and the man, celebrating his commanding presence and clean sheet like he's just won them the league.
amusement
admiration
David Raya
Kepa Arrizabalaga
"Raya on form too, so happy we playing well today. Get that deserved golden glove brother!!"
"I love Raya so much lmao "
The Chaos Merchants
They're torn between rage and comedy at Raya's maverick tendencies — the mad lad takes forever on the ball, does something bonkers, and somehow they can't help but laugh about it.
David Raya
Kepa Arrizabalaga
"I fucking hate how long Raya takes on the ball just to then play the simplest pass or boot it"
"Raya you fucking mad man lmao"
Supporters across the fanbase are rallying behind Nottingham Forest ahead of their upcoming Europa League clash with Aston Villa, viewing Thursday's tie as payback for what they perceive as Villa's weak team selection in this Premier League draw. The discussion reveals broader anxiety about the relegation battle, with fans debating whether Forest, West Ham, and Tottenham can all avoid the drop despite their respective managerial improvements.
Villa's Disgrace Deserves Punishment
These fans are seething over what they saw as a spineless, tactically inept performance that's brought genuine shame on the club—and they want Forest to deliver the comeuppance.
disappointment
villa
game
"I really hope Forest destroys them on Thursday, what a shameless performance even with a rotated squad, that was disgustingly bad."
"Actually f*ck this. I'm not watching this humiliating b.s.
Sh*t line up, sh*t attitude from the players, sh*t tactics.
There's no way we beat Forest if we don't step it up. "
Gracious Acceptance, Eyes On Europe
These supporters are taking the loss on the chin with composure, recognising Villa's rotation strategy and already mentally moving on to the bigger Europa League battle ahead.
neutral
villa
game
"Forest have certainly gained more fans in nexts weeks European game."
"Never a bad word to say about Villa. Thank you lads - go smash Forest now."
Betrayal Demands Retribution
This faction views Villa's weakened lineup as an unforgiveable slight—a form of sporting cheating—and they're calling for Forest to exact revenge as punishment for disrespecting the competition.
"Next Forest will punish you for this unforgiveable sin!"
"villa are cheats putting out a weak team I hope forest smash them now"
Cathartic Vengeance Incoming
These optimists are genuinely excited about Forest's chances to demolish Villa on Thursday, believing a dominant performance will wash away the bad taste and restore honour.
optimism
villa
game
"Cannot wait to watch Chris Wood spank a hattrick here on Thursday. Going to be incredibly cathartic."
"I’m feeling so good I want to abandon all caution and run down Forest next!"
Arsenal supporters are debating whether Bernd Leno deserves credit for a moment at 30 minutes when a VAR-reviewed goal was disallowed, with some joking that his head or body accidentally prevented the ball from crossing the line, whilst others mock-suggest it warrants an investigation into "match fixing." The discussion is tongue-in-cheek but highlights how fine the margins were in what became a convincing 3-0 victory.
Just The Facts, Mate
These fans are keeping it simple — a save happened, it was decent, nothing more to dissect or get emotional about.
neutral
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"Great save."
"Good save tbh "
Leno's A Fraud And We Know It
This lot are convinced Leno's fundamentals are broken and that one accidental save doesn't erase a pattern of catastrophic errors they've been watching all season.
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"Leno scamming a living. He looks terrible every goal. Pulls his hand from every shot. "
"Leno is so fucking bad man"
Leno Finally Did Something Right
These supporters are genuinely delighted to see their keeper pull off a moment of quality, treating it as proof he's capable of the top-level defending Arsenal desperately needs.
amusement
admiration
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"wow what a save from Leno. great move from the boys there"
"That was a great save by Leno. "
Leeds United supporters celebrate a dominant 3-1 victory over Burnley that puts them nine points clear of the drop zone and virtually secures their Premier League safety for next season. Fans praise the clinical performance and Anton Stach's early goal, though many criticise the referee's card-happy officiating throughout a match that saw ten yellow cards issued.
We're Going Up, Lads
These fans are absolutely living the moment, convinced Leeds have done enough to secure promotion and ready to celebrate Farke's miraculous season-long transformation.
admiration
joy
ref
happy
"Yes!!! So proud of this club"
"I think that's us up! Huge effort from the lads this season and hats off to Farke on an incredible job. "
Relief Mixed With Caution
These supporters are processing the win pragmatically, acknowledging the three points matter but refusing to get carried away until the final whistle of the season sounds.
"A whole 6 seconds more highlights than psg Vs Bayern"
"Nice consolation goal. Leeds made sure that they didn’t give Burnley a chance of pride restoring win. Though probably safe, still want to make sure, which can create tension in the"
The Ref Robbed Us
These fans are fixated on a controversial decision that marred an otherwise dominant display, seeing a poor official as the only thing preventing a perfect performance.
"A whole 6 seconds more highlights than psg Vs Bayern"
"Nice consolation goal. Leeds made sure that they didn’t give Burnley a chance of pride restoring win. Though probably safe, still want to make sure, which can create tension in the"
Messy But Mission Accomplished
These observers recognise Leeds got the job done despite some sloppy passages and uninspiring football, prioritising the result over the manner of achieving it.
ref
happy
"Comfortable game but wasn't a good watch. Not with that awful ref. Safety within grasp "
"Not been *BAD* either. *Dangerous* to say that we’ve won this one, just yet. I’ll *Keep The Faith*, though. If we lose this you can *Leave Me Alone*, as I’ll be grumpy, but if we w"
Survival Mathematics Real Talk
These pragmatists are staying grounded about what promotion actually means, treating this result as a crucial step rather than confirmation, knowing football can still bite you.
neutral
ref
happy
"Happy to be up. Seemed to get pretty sloppy"
"Well that was certainly one of the halves of all time. "
Viewers are expressing frustration with the match commentary—particularly the USA broadcast feed—criticising the announcer's negative tone and lack of enthusiasm, whilst also complaining about technical delays that leave their stream behind real-time action. Several fans are questioning why commentators are being overly harsh on players simply doing their job, like Pedro Porro getting stuck in during defensive moments.
The Misery Merchants Brigade
These fans reckon the commentary team are actively draining the joy from the match with their relentless negativity and soulless delivery.
annoyance
"Who is this fucking negator on the USA TV stream? Man has no joy in life"
"It's because the TNT Commentators are fucking appalling and actively distract from the game with their "banter" a lot of the time so most of us have tuned them out long ago.
They "
The Tone-Deaf Debate Club
They're stuck in the middle, calling out commentators for being genuinely insufferable whilst questioning whether the broadcast quality is actually the real problem.
neutral
"These USA announcers are such hating miserable pricks"
"the Villa TV co-commentator's belief that this is all down to "the ball bouncing wrong" is really really fucking annoying"
The Shaken Viewers
Caught off guard by the commentator's intensity or demeanour, they're unsure if they're reacting to the actual call or just the way it was delivered.
"Who’s this sore loser of an announcer ?"
"commentator scared the shit out of me at 4am"
The Event Witnesses
Focused on what's actually happening on the pitch rather than who's narrating it, but still bothered enough by the commentary to mention it in passing.
"Who’s this sore loser of an announcer ?"
"commentator scared the shit out of me at 4am"
The International Refuge Seekers
They've switched channels to escape the English-language broadcast nightmare and discovered that other nations' commentators are having a genuinely better time covering the same match.
"I was watching from Italy with italian comms, they were loving the noise and De Zerbi's antics, great stuff"
"Enjoying this so much more watching on Telemundo instead of USA."
Newcastle supporters are enthusiastically backing striker William Osula after his impressive performance, comparing his efficiency and output favourably against teammates like Gordon and Wissa, with detailed statistical breakdowns showing he ranks in the top 7% of Premier League forwards for goals per 90 and boasts elite crossing accuracy. The discussion reflects growing confidence that Osula should be a cornerstone of Eddie Howe's attack moving forwards, with fans suggesting the club should build its team around him rather than pursuing other attacking options.
The Chaos Merchant Believers
Fans fixated on Osula's disruptive, unpredictable impact on the pitch—treating his very presence as a game-changer regardless of outcome.
neutral
Jacob Murphy
Harvey Barnes
"Osula is causing absolute havoc today. "
"We're a one man team and that one man team is fucking Will Osula... "
The Vindication Mob
Supporters who backed Osula from day one and are now weaponising his breakthrough form to prove doubters wrong.
admiration
approval
Jacob Murphy
Harvey Barnes
"OSULA IS SO GOOD, IM SO VINDICATED."
"@NUFC That's great performance osulllaaa"
The Cautious Optimists
Pragmatists acknowledging that patience with Osula's development appears to be working, but refusing to get carried away just yet.
"OSULAAS"
"To be honest sticking with Osula seems to be paying off right now"
The Results Processors
Level-headed fans stepping back to assess what the actual outcome means for Newcastle's season trajectory and tactical direction.
"OSULAAS"
"To be honest sticking with Osula seems to be paying off right now"
The Tactical Pessimists
Critics convinced the partnership of Osula and Willock is fundamentally broken, pointing to fatigue and lack of creativity as evidence of structural problems.
Jacob Murphy
Harvey Barnes
"So we're playing 442 with fucking Willock alongside Osula. Fuck. My. Life."
"Are you blind? We had fuck all chances with Osula and Willock in the second half, they were knackered."
Manchester United fans are celebrating Kobbie Mainoo's 77th-minute winner against Liverpool in a thrilling 3-2 comeback, with particular enthusiasm around his recent contract extension and his match-winning performance in this rivalry clash. The positivity centres on his emergence as a crucial player for the club and his ability to deliver in high-pressure moments.
Pure Red Romance
These fans are absolutely intoxicated by the moment—they worship Kobbie as a saviour and can't help themselves from pouring out unconditional love for what he's just delivered.
admiration
love
"Yeeeees!!! Thank you kobbie!"
"Kobbie that was amazing ❤❤❤"
The Toxic Manager Reckoning
This camp is using Kobbie's brilliance as a vehicle to settle scores, convinced that whoever was in charge mistreated him and that this performance proves they deserved the sack.
neutral
"His treatment of Kobbie alone was grounds for dismissal"
"Really unfortunate how it ended out with him and kobbie. "
Measured Professionalism
These supporters are taking the win on the chin, crediting Kobbie's display without losing their heads—three points is three points, he was the best on the pitch, job done.
"Good win 3 points. Kobbie is man of match"
"Kobbie the king"
Unhinged Catharsis
Raw, unfiltered rage dressed up as celebration—these fans are so wound up they're screaming obscenities and begging their hero not to do anything stupid in the aftermath of an absolute surge of emotion.
"KOBBIE JUST FUCKING HATES LIVERPOOL"
"ooh fck Kobbieee!!!!
now don't do stupid thing please!"
Despite a thrilling comeback that saw Liverpool equalise twice, Manchester United's late winner has intensified calls for Arne Slot's sacking, with supporters questioning whether the manager can survive into next season following another dropped result in the title race. The overwhelmingly negative reaction reflects frustration at Liverpool's inability to hold leads and maintain their push for the Premier League, with fans split between those demanding change and a smaller contingent defending the manager's work.
Slot Out, Now
This majority camp believes Slot has lost the dressing room through poor tactics and selection, and that Liverpool's standards demand immediate managerial change before the season completely collapses.
anger
annoyance
Slot
arne slot
"@LFC Fuck this moron Arne slot and his stupid team selection. Not worthy to our manager!"
"Every single player, arne and the board should be ashamed of themselves.
That was a horrible performance. We deserved nothing this game and we should be happy that the score line "
Baffled By The Decisions
These fans are genuinely confused about why Liverpool persist with Slot's gameplan when it's transparently not working, cycling between frustration and bewilderment at the club's stubbornness.
neutral
Slot
arne slot
"@LFC STUPID AS USUALLY! NO GAME PLAY! WHY LIVERPOOL KEEP ARNE ???? Whyyyyy!!!"
"@LFC Arne slot out. So f tired of this tragic tactic from slot. Insane bad football"
Believing In The Project
A small but vocal minority insists Slot is building something special and that one bad result doesn't erase the quality of his team's underlying football.
Slot
arne slot
"Woohoo a shot on target. Arne Slot is back baby!"
"Arne has built a world-class passing machine. Great job mate."
Arsenal fans are largely defending Mikel Arteta's team selection following a dominant 3-0 victory, with many arguing that rotating the squad and resting key players during a comfortable win shows tactical maturity and protects against injuries. The discussion also touches on broader questions about Arteta's credentials as a manager and whether he deserves more credit given the competitive landscape of the Premier League title race.
Finally, The Benched Star Emerges
These fans are processing the shock of seeing a previously sidelined player suddenly shine, demanding Arteta explain why he buried talent for so long.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@Arsenal ARTETA IS SHIT MLS IS THE MAN OF THE MATCH HANDS DOWN. HE KEPT THIS BOY ON THE BENCH FOR CENTURIES."
"Pretty clear after his Mansfield performance that Arteta was finished with him. One of the worst performances I’ve seen from an Arsenal player in a while "
Arteta Wasted Our Season's Potential
This camp is furious that the manager kept the team's fluidity locked away all season when he could have been playing like this months ago.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@Arsenal Fook Arteta man. Deprived us of this fluidity all season 💔💔"
"Subs killed this game.
Arteta you are really a noob at times. Fucking hell."
One Win Doesn't Erase The Doubts
These supporters are staying cynical, pointing out that a single rout proves nothing about Arteta's trophy-winning credentials or his overall tactical nous.
"Haahahahahahahahahaahahahaha Let's All Laugh. When Was The Last Time That Mikel Arteta Won A Trophy AT Arsenal."
"And get a few injuries? Everyone critized Arteta for not rotating CL match on a few days a 3-0 win is perfect chance to rotate and protect players"
Trust The Rotation, Back The Manager
The optimists believe Arteta got it exactly right today—managing the squad intelligently for the midweek test ahead and proving his system works.
admiration
optimism
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@Arsenal We played well nice set-up from Arteta"
"@Arsenal Thank you Arteta for resting rotating well today. Wednesday is another day to win."
Manchester United supporters are celebrating their 3-2 comeback win over Liverpool, but underlying anxiety dominates the discussion — fans are torn between confidence in their quality and worry that complacency and poor defensive discipline could undermine their push up the table. The negativity stems not from the result itself, but from how the performance unfolded: sloppy play, unnecessary yellow cards, and nearly conceding against a Liverpool side that fought back from 2-0 down.
The Exasperation Never Ends
These fans are exhausted by another chaotic performance and believe the coaching and squad quality are fundamentally broken, no matter the result.
annoyance
anger
confidence
"Of course they start like that... Pathetic team... There's honestly no words for how bad this team and coaching is"
"These guys are dogshit, we may get something here"
Frustrated Pragmatists Watching Chaos
They acknowledge the team's structural problems and messy approach to winning, but are actively engaged in hoping tactical changes might salvage the situation.
neutral
confidence
"Bloody hell, why do we always make things difficult for ourselves. "
"We're getting fucked make a fucking change omg"
Clinging to Early Promise
A small contingent genuinely believes the opening display signals something's clicked, and they're betting everything on this being the moment it finally sticks.
confidence
"I have a very great feeling that we will win."
"We're totally up for it. Looking sharp in the first 5 mins "
Supporters are split and frustrated over a marginal offside decision during the match, with many questioning whether the call was correct and how it affected the flow of play. The neutral sentiment reflects genuine uncertainty about the VAR decision rather than outrage, though fans clearly feel the moment shifted momentum in unpredictable ways.
Absolutely Robbed By Incompetence
These fans are convinced the officials have made a howler that's cost their side and they're not holding back their fury about it.
anger
Brandon Austin
Antonín Kinský
"that was the worst corner in the history of football "
"The worst corner I have ever seen "
Just Here For The Football
The pragmatists who've moved past the drama and are simply documenting what happened on the pitch without taking sides.
neutral
Brandon Austin
Antonín Kinský
"Shooting from outside the box ❤️"
"Proper side today "
Actually, It Was Textbook Smart Play
These are the tactical minds arguing the controversial moment was either a blatant decision or a clever bit of gamesmanship depending on your perspective.
"That was the most obvious corner ever why is he surprised lol"
"That was smart, we got a corner out of it and keep wasting time"
Finally, Some Intelligent Football
The optimists celebrating what they see as proper attacking football and intelligent movement — a rare bright spot they've been waiting months to witness.
amusement
Brandon Austin
Antonín Kinský
"Amazing corner set up that"
"Ive been crying out for triangles for months....so good to finally see some passing options. "
Supporters are discussing a player's absence and speculating whether he might rejoin the club or attend celebrations, with some referencing personal circumstances affecting his situation. The conversation reflects nostalgia for the departed player amid Arsenal's strong performance on the pitch.
Just Here For The Drama
These fans are calling out individual mistakes and bizarre sideline moments without taking a particular stance—they're commentating on the chaos more than defending anyone's corner.
neutral
"Because he’s a lazy Bozo"
"Why does our manager not wear a Belt? 😭😭😭"
The Moment Belonged To Someone
These supporters are riding high on a specific performance or player breakthrough, celebrating the feel-good narrative regardless of the bigger picture around the absent star.
amusement
"YES, LOVED IT!"
"That kid is my new favorite."
This Is Unacceptable Nonsense
These fans are genuinely wound up by what they've witnessed—whether it's tactical ineptitude or loss of discipline—and they're furious that standards have slipped so visibly.
sadness
"Absolute school boy errors fucken hell, turning this off "
"The guy in the button up was fucking wasted lol"
Fans are dissecting Newcastle's 3-1 victory with a focus on Brighton's shocking defensive collapse and goalkeeper howlers, whilst Newcastle supporters acknowledge the win came despite unconvincing attacking play and continued defensive vulnerabilities. The discussion centres on whether either side's display reflects genuine quality, with particular criticism aimed at set-piece defending and goalkeeping errors that defined the match.
Victory Tastes Like Defeat
These fans won the match but lost their peace of mind—they're furious that Newcastle scraped past a wounded Brighton through sheer luck rather than quality, leaving them unable to genuinely celebrate.
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"literally my thoughts. we finally won and I'm still feeling like fucking shit because I can't really celebrate it knowing this makes howe closer to staying for another season and w"
"@NUFC Can you lot do something? Why is it all just Brighton you lazy cunts."
The Damage Report
This group is taking stock of the chaos with clear eyes, acknowledging that Brighton self-destructed in the second half and Newcastle were genuinely dreadful, but accepting the three points as a necessary evil.
neutral
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"Brighton came in to this in red hot form with 5 wins from 6, great result overall even though we were shocking for most of 2nd half.
Both keepers made some mad saves, could easily"
"Brighton beat themselves. 2nd half was among worst ive seen us play in as long as I can remember"
Chaos Cinema Gold
These fans are fixated on the theatre of the mistake—the Brighton goalkeeper's howlers and defensive shambles—finding dark humour and entertainment value in the shambolic defending that won the match.
"That Brighton keeper had a few lines before this game mind"
"Brighton’s GK just wants to join the defenders today"
Performance Autopsy
This camp is picking apart the individual errors and tactical breakdowns that defined the match, using comedy to process what was objectively a masterclass in how not to play football.
"That Brighton keeper had a few lines before this game mind"
"Brighton’s GK just wants to join the defenders today"
We'll Take It and Move On
The optimists recognise that beating Brighton in any condition is a serious scalp, choosing to focus on the result and resilience rather than get bogged down in how ugly it looked.
optimism
admiration
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"@NUFC @petemcc_peter Against Brighton a tough team on the best of days, brilliant result!"
"@NUFC a lovely defensive display to start off brightons comeback"
Fans are divided on Aston Villa defender Tyrone Mings's performance, with some praising his aerial threat whilst others criticise his positioning and decision-making—particularly instances where he appeared to lose his footing under pressure during crucial moments. The discussion veers between genuine tactical analysis and light-hearted banter about his appearance, reflecting broader frustration with Villa's defensive vulnerability in the match.
Mings Is The Problem
This camp believes Mings' individual errors are directly responsible for defensive collapse, and they're venting their frustration at having to watch a player they see as fundamentally unsuited to Premier League football.
annoyance
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Fucking lol at anyone who thought we were gonna do anything with that dog shit line up. When's last time we got any points with Mings in the team "
"Gah, Mings is shit. "
Mings Exposes Deeper Tactical Issues
This group is taking a step back to analyse Mings' actual performance — his sideways passing, his limited impact — and using him as a symptom of broader problems with how the team is structured.
neutral
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Well done Mings carry the ball 15yards and then just turn and pass backwards 🤝"
"Glad to see we finally cloned Mings"
Mixed Signals On His Threat
These fans are torn between acknowledging Mings' occasional moments of quality, like his aerial presence, whilst simultaneously recognising that performances like this one prove he's holding the team back.
"I’ve seen Ming’s score so many headers. So scary. "
"TY RONE MINGS"
Mings Was Good, Now He's Surplus
This faction genuinely rates Mings as a player and respects what he's done, but they've made peace with the fact that Villa have evolved beyond him and need to move on.
admiration
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Great game to retire on Ming’s "
"I love Mings, he might be my favourite villa player ever but we have progressed passed him. He is a mid table player not a CL chasing payer."
Arsenal supporters are dismissing what appear to be complaints about refereeing decisions and VAR calls during their comfortable victory, with fans characterising the grievances as post-match trolling from alternate accounts rather than legitimate concerns. The discussion centres on the futility of engaging with entrenched positions rather than the actual decisions themselves.
Sick Of The Negativity
These fans are exhausted by constant complaints after victories and see trolls weaponising minor controversies to undermine the team's success.
anger
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Its this sub man, it's fucking toxic. People can't just be happy to win."
"Why after every win is there some fucking traffic cone of a human posting negative bullshit in here? "
Stay Calm And Question Everything
This group processes the result without taking a hard stance, sceptically probing the motives of those stirring debate rather than diving into the controversy itself.
"7 year acc and only 13 post...an alt acc to troll?"
"Why do you care? "
Let's Actually Discuss The Decision
These are the thoughtful ones breaking down the actual call on its merits, separating emotion from analysis and refusing to let tribalism cloud the conversation.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Yeah, I agree. The strongest people I know are the ones who’re not afraid to admit they are a mess when they are indeed.
You’re a very perfect human being. The bench mark for all"
"you seem bright"
Just Be Happy We Won
The straightforward optimists who see a victory as a victory and reward the team's positive approach with uncomplicated celebration.
amusement
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"So much more positive and this is the reward"
"Positivityyyyy"
Newcastle supporters are venting frustration at Yoane Wissa's performance in the 3-1 loss to Brighton, with many questioning whether the club wasted significant money on the striker and calling for his departure. The criticism extends to manager Eddie Howe, with some fans arguing both player and manager have lost the plot.
Absolutely Fuming, No Mercy
Nearly half the fanbase has completely lost patience with Wissa's technical ability and basic footballing standards, convinced he's fundamentally not good enough.
anger
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"What the fuck is Wissa doing. His passing and shooting are horrendus."
"Wissa is so fucking shit too "
Just Stating The Facts
This measured camp is simply documenting what happened on the pitch without hysteria, treating poor touches and crosses as observable events rather than character judgements.
neutral
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"Brightest thing about Wissa is his head awful cross "
"Wissa touched it! 🎉"
The Pound Signs Don't Lie
These fans are doing the maths on value for money, suggesting Wissa hasn't justified his considerable transfer fee through consistent performances.
"Wissa is not worth 55m."
"Wissa the missa"
Sarcasm Is Their Love Language
The smallest but sharpest group are using irony and mockery to voice their disappointment, too exhausted for genuine anger but far from forgiving.
amusement
Nick Pope
Aaron Ramsdale
"Wissa is amazing…
/s"
"Well done Wissa. Get in Barnesy"
Manchester United supporters are divided over whether Bruno Fernandes should have been credited with an assist for the second goal, with many arguing the official decision robbed him of the tally. The controversy centres on whether the goalkeeper's glove deflection should have negated the assist, with fans pointing out the potential impact on Bruno's assist record heading into the final matches.
Bruno Hate Is Peak Sport
These fans despise Bruno as a player and person, using the assist debate as a convenient vessel for pure vitriol about his character and conduct on the pitch.
neutral
season
scoring
"Bruno is such a fucking twat man"
"Bruno is such a fucking rat"
Did He Actually Get It?
These pragmatists are simply trying to establish the factual record—whether Bruno's pass warranted an assist under the rules, stripped of emotion or agenda.
"Has Bruno got an assist?"
"Just saying the second goal Shouldve been Bruno assist regardless of the no trajectory changing glove from keeper"
The Ref's Protecting Bruno Again
These supporters are furious because they believe the officials give Bruno special treatment and let him get away with behaviour that would earn other players cards and criticism.
season
scoring
"I just realized I paid a decent amount of money to fucking watch that rat Bruno play this summer and now I’m even more mad "
"Bruno is such a fucking rat. I don't understand why he gets so much leeway. Could have been on a yellow well before that horrific challenge and still has the gall to complain "
We're Winning And It's Glorious
These optimists celebrate Bruno's involvement as part of a dominant attacking performance, treating the assist as confirmation that Manchester United are playing beautiful, winning football.
amusement
season
scoring
"@ManUtd Incoming 7-0!! Bruno Assist!! UCL football!! BEAUTIFUL!!! https://t.co/Qtr80ruYcp"
"Happy Birthday mate! Let’s hope we can all celebrate with a 4-0 and Bruno setting the record!"
Arsenal supporters are frustrated that Riccardo Calafiori's goal was ruled out for offside in what would have been a dominant 4-0 victory, with many praising his attacking quality and ball progression despite the VAR decision. The discussion reflects broader appreciation for Calafiori's technical ability compared to defensive partner Piero Hincapié, though fans acknowledge both defenders offer different but valuable skill sets to the side.
The Cruel Luck Brigade
These fans are processing the raw disappointment of a moment that was brilliant but ultimately didn't count, accepting the VAR decision with a shrug of resignation.
neutral
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"Cala so unlucky lmao "
"Cali unlucky today. "
The Calafiori Cult
Absolutely besotted with the defender's quality and athleticism, they're celebrating what he nearly achieved regardless of the offside flag, treating him like a folk hero.
admiration
approval
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"MY BEAUTIFUL STALLION!"
"Calafiori is so good when he’s fit man great header "
The Rule Interrogators
Questioning whether the offside call was actually correct, they're digging into the technicalities and demanding clarity on why the goal was chalked off in the first place.
"Why was calafiori offside goal not included in ts"
"Ill take a wager on that if you got the minerals or the funds. Ill happily take your money or assets"
The Offside Sceptics
Convinced the VAR got it wrong, they're prepared to stake money on their belief that Calafiori was actually onside and the system failed Arsenal.
"Why was calafiori offside goal not included in ts"
"Ill take a wager on that if you got the minerals or the funds. Ill happily take your money or assets"
The Robbed Dreamers
Absolutely livid that a moment of genuine brilliance was taken away by a marginal call, they're furious at the cosmos for letting a perfect goal slip through their fingers.
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"The fk Calafiori did there?"
"It’s such a shame it was offside cus that Calafiori goal had me fucking LEVITATING "
Supporters are discussing referee decisions and calling-out behaviour during the match, with some fans expressing frustration at the volume of yellow cards issued whilst others push back against constant criticism of how supporters engage with officials' decisions. The conversation reflects broader irritation at inconsistency in refereeing standards rather than specific contentious calls.
The Ref Got It Wrong, Period
Half the fanbase is absolutely livid, convinced the official has made a catastrophic decision and refusing to engage with any nuance — they're done talking, they're done being reasonable, and frankly they think you're part of the problem if you disagree.
"Honestly, these people that constantly call out fans for their negativity are just as bad as the negative lot."
"Some Football fans are simply are dumb."
Actually, Let's Examine This Properly
More than a third are willing to hash out the controversial call with evidence and debate, even though they're clearly frustrated, because they want to understand whether the ref's call holds up under scrutiny.
neutral
"Are you dense? “Different era”……….."
"No I'm actually angry"
The Ref Made The Right Call, Actually
A small but confident minority reckon the official got it spot on and are genuinely entertained by how worked up everyone else is getting over what they see as a straightforward decision.
amusement
approval
"That’s the kind of petty comparison I love. Great info. "
"Thanks for that mate"
With Luke Shaw receiving a yellow card in the 49th minute during a frenetic Manchester United versus Liverpool encounter that finished 3-2, fans have split sharply over the left-back's performance — some defending his form as solid whilst others have resurrected familiar criticisms about his defensive reliability, with debate intensifying around whether United's backline can withstand future attacking threats from elite wingers.
Chaos In The Breakdown
These fans are just calling out what they saw happen in real time — one player's horror show versus another's solid defending — without taking a firm stance on who deserves the blame.
neutral
tackles
"Jeremie playing horrifically bad, making Shaw look like a good defender"
"Keep my Slab out of your fuckin Greek Islands!"
The Redemption Arc Believers
They reckon Shaw and the rest of the defence have actually been class all season and are choosing to celebrate the collective performance rather than fixate on one dodgy moment.
admiration
tackles
"Man I love Harry Maguire "
"Heaven, Maguire and Kobbie have been so good on the ball today. Our build up looks so smooth. Lammens great too"
Shaw's The Scapegoat
Absolutely furious that a single mistake has overshadowed the narrative, convinced he's become the new poster boy for United's defensive problems when he's been decent overall.
anger
tackles
"Shaw is an idiot. Why give up a corner there"
"Honestly worse than when Maguire was the memes. So bad"
The Matchup Merchants
They're thinking tactically ahead — weighing Shaw's vulnerabilities against upcoming opponents like Kvara and Olise — rather than getting caught up in the emotional fallout of one chaotic incident.
"yeah can't wait for the likes of Kvara and Olise against Shaw and Dalot"
"Why do you have an agenda against shaw? Hes been fantastic all season"
Liverpool supporters are locked in debate over manager Arne Slot's team selection and positioning choices, with many criticising unconventional player deployments and calling for academy prospect Rio Nguhoma to receive more playing time, whilst others acknowledge his electric performance when given the chance. The discussion centres on defensive vulnerabilities and whether the squad's alignment cost Liverpool in a competitive match.
Slot's Tactical Gamble Backfired
These fans believe the manager's setup was fundamentally flawed—poor positioning left defensive vulnerabilities that directly cost Liverpool the result, and they're demanding immediate tactical changes.
neutral
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"@LFC This is why we need a change. Terrible tactics. Slot aware we have a league one keeper but offered no protection. Brought on Rio for 15 mins? Fcuking slow bald cnut. Killing "
"@LFC Dominate ball possession as usual to get raped in the end because a fucking argentine can't even defend and conceded 2 goals because of Maca. Rio out most dangerous player was"
The Coach Is Clueless
This camp has lost faith entirely, viewing Slot's team selection and in-game decisions as actively incompetent, with his choice to deploy key players out of position becoming the symbol of his tactical failure.
annoyance
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"@LFC What a fucking dickhead coach we have. He puts his most dangerous player Rio on the left. OMG, WHAT PIECE OF SHIT THIS COACH. If Amad and Lemmens didn't made those 2 blunders "
"@LFC What a dickhead this coach to put Rio on the left and we conceded a goal because of his fucking tactics. Maca world cup winner but we conceded 2 goals because of that fucking "
The Lineup Was Pure Chaos
These are the tactical auditors, forensically dissecting Slot's formation by exposing the mismatch between player positions and their actual strengths—defenders playing midfield, wingers at right back, and the whole structure collapsing as a result.
"Playing a RB at RW.... a CM at RB.... a LW at ST.... Macca who can't run or defend at CDM.... not starting Rio...... Konate has been donkey all season, so has VVD, so has Gakpo...."
"This slot guy needs to be sacked before a disastrous next season. How is he playing frimpong as RW instead RB and play jones in his position plus not starting RIo was criminal!! Ge"
Rio Is Liverpool's Future
A small but vocal group celebrating individual brilliance amid the chaos, seeing rare moments of quality and potential in specific players despite the team's overall dysfunction around them.
admiration
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"Rio is the best thing about watching Liverpool at the minute. He's going to be some player "
"Perfect game for Rio, lots of spaces "
Newcastle United supporters are expressing relief at a 3-1 victory over Brighton, though many recognise their team's defensive frailties and acknowledge they were fortunate not to concede more goals in a chaotic match. Fans are focused on consolidating their league position with three games remaining rather than dwelling on the performance itself.
Just Move Past It
These fans are filtering out the chaos and treating the three points as the only metric that matters—survival is the game, not aesthetics.
neutral
"Onto the next. Still have everything to play for."
"Should be 4-0 at this point. Wow"
We're Our Own Worst Enemy
These supporters are emotionally scarred by Newcastle's self-sabotage, frustrated that sloppy defending and missed chances turn winnable matches into psychological warfare against their own nerves.
disappointment
"This team has scarred me so bad i cant even enjoy a 2 goal lead. Howay nonetheless "
"Fuck me we should be 5-2 down "
It's Comedy Defending
These fans are processing the absurdity of what they witnessed—a match that should have gone either way by a cricket score, where entertainment value and sheer relief coexist.
"Im just happy we're safe with 3 games to go, and hopefully finish above the mackems."
"This game should have ended 7:6"
We're Back In This
These optimists smell genuine opportunity in the remaining fixtures, believing that momentum and a safety net now in place can propel Newcastle into a strong finish.
optimism
"Win the next two and we’re in a great position, keep the faith and UTA "
"Im just happy we're safe with 3 games to go, and hopefully finish above the mackems."
Fans are reacting with mixed frustration and bewilderment to a heavily-officiated encounter that saw eight yellow cards issued across the two sides, with the majority of discussion focused on the referee's management of the game rather than the football itself. The posts suggest confusion about specific decisions, with supporters expressing exasperation at the card-happy approach that defined what became a heated, stop-start contest.
The Ref Got It Wrong Crowd
These fans are absolutely livid that a controversial decision went against their side, and they're not holding back about the injustice they've just witnessed.
neutral
meme
"God fucking dammit "
"Thats bullshit and you know it"
The Decision Was Spot On
These supporters genuinely believe the referee made the right call and are enjoying the moment with a mix of vindication and amusement at the chaos unfolding around them.
amusement
approval
meme
"This was good. Very goooood!"
"That was amazing lol "
Just Here For The Madness
These fans are caught up in the sheer pandemonium of the match itself, reacting to the drama and atmosphere rather than taking a firm stance on whether the decision was correct.
"Gyal good video out by alkaline people npt"
"True 😂"
Absolutely Furious And Done
These are the most outraged voices in the discussion — they're not just disagreeing with the call, they're so disgusted by what's happened that they've reached peak frustration with the entire situation.
meme
"Absolutely fuck this. "
"You need banned for putting that shit in my head. The earworms "
Supporters are sharply split over Noni Madueke's performance after he replaced Bukayo Saka in the second half of Arsenal's 3-0 victory, with some calling him a "flop" who failed to capitalise on his chance to prove his worth, whilst others defend him as adequate squad depth given his backup role. The debate hinges on whether Madueke is genuinely underperforming or simply looks poor when directly compared to in-form starters like Saka.
Madueke Must Go
This lot have completely lost faith and think the winger is a 30-million-pound mistake who needs shipping out immediately.
annoyance
Madueke
Gabriel Jesus
"i hate madueke so much. 30m player tops "
"Madueke is so fucking dumb, fucking hell"
The Potential Still There
These fans believe Madueke's raw talent is genuine and he remains Arsenal's only genuine backup option to Saka despite occasional frustrations.
neutral
Madueke
Gabriel Jesus
"Watching Arsenal with no Madueke bloody hell it’s so good "
"Nah madueke potential is immense he is the only player imho capable of rotating with saka. And when he is unlocked he will be so good."
Early Verdict Guilty
They're not angry—they're disappointed, viewing Madueke as a genuine flop who's underperformed relative to his price tag and opportunities.
". Madueke is an absolute embarrassment. I'm sorry "
"Surely Madueke is flop of the season "
The Tactical Debate
This group dissects whether the problem is Madueke's ability or how Arsenal are actually using him in the system.
". Madueke is an absolute embarrassment. I'm sorry "
"Surely Madueke is flop of the season "
The Quiet Believers
A smaller but vocal crew who think a big win is a big win and reckon Madueke's rough patches don't erase what he's capable of.
admiration
Madueke
"@Arsenal Great game just madueke,Ben and madueke again"
"Big win. Send Jesus and Madueke to the moon."
Neutral observers and Brighton supporters celebrated Jack Hinshelwood's 61st-minute goal as a rare moment of individual brilliance from the defender, with fans expressing relief that he had finally found the back of the net after a prolonged period without scoring. The reaction mixed genuine excitement with good-natured ribbing about his previous drought in front of goal.
Pure Catharsis Unleashed
Fans in pure release mode, screaming the moment into existence because after weeks of waiting, Hinshelwood finally delivered and words don't cut it.
neutral
Replaying The Controversy
This camp is dissecting what led to the goal—whether defensive lapses, brilliant build-up play, or dodgy refereeing decisions got us here, because the context matters as much as the finish.
"FISEBNFPIUAWBDIPAWDBAWD WHY"
"Couple offensive attacks ago full grab, I think, of Hinshelwood and spun to the ground."
Vindication Won't Come Easy
These supporters are furious that it took this long, convinced Hinshelwood's finishing has been a genuine problem all season and one goal doesn't erase a pattern of missed chances.
disappointment
"Hinshelwood's lack of end product is hurting us here. Could've had a brace by now. "
"Hinsh's finishing has been wank for a while "
Relief Mixed With Realism
The optimists acknowledging the goal is brilliant but immediately asking whether Hinshelwood's inconsistency will return, refusing to let one moment rewrite months of frustration.
"We would be so much more dominant in these games if Hinshelwood could finish better. Still looking good so far! "
"HINSHELWOOD FINALLY! HE GOT HIS SHOOTING BOOTS BACK AND WHAT A GOAL!!!!"
Arsenal fans are celebrating a dominant performance against Fulham, with particular praise for Bukayo Saka's goal and Viktor Gyökeres's brace as the Gunners extend their lead at the top of the table. The neutral tone reflects straightforward match reaction, with supporters highlighting key moments and expressing confidence in their side's title credentials.
Venting The Aftermath
These fans are processing the emotional whiplash of Arsenal's dominance, throwing shade at individual performers and the broader curse of April while staying detached from the actual football itself.
neutral
ko
"@AFTVMedia God punish Havertz fans"
"@AFTVMedia april was cursed man 😭"
Referee Theatre And Incompetence
This contingent believes the match was decided by officiating incompetence rather than Arsenal's clinical display, using poor refereeing decisions as evidence that results can't be trusted.
ko
"@AFTVMedia This referee has been shocking today."
"@AFTVMedia stupid performance"
Euphoric Peak Performance
Pure celebration mode — these Arsenal fans are witnessing what they believe is elite-level football and aren't holding back their admiration for the team's most complete half of the season.
admiration
approval
ko
"@AFTVMedia What a half! Best half I can remember"
"@AFTVMedia This was the most enjoyable match this year I think"
Swagger And Statement Making
This group reads Arsenal's demolition job as a statement of intent and character, arguing their best players are asserting dominance and rejecting underachievement with aggressive, confident football.
"@AFTVMedia It's our thing 🔥💯"
"@AFTVMedia Saka said man's tired of coming 2nd"
Building The Narrative Arc
These supporters are contextualising the result within the broader season story, connecting individual moments to deeper themes about mentality shifts and what this performance actually means for Arsenal's trajectory.
"@AFTVMedia It's our thing 🔥💯"
"@AFTVMedia Saka said man's tired of coming 2nd"
Fans are analysing a goalkeeper's performance during the match, debating his shot-stopping ability and distribution whilst acknowledging some costly errors alongside decent moments. Discussion centres on inconsistency—strong saves coexist with mistakes that shouldn't happen at this level, leaving supporters concerned about reliability.
The Pragmatists
These fans are watching with clear eyes, clocking what's actually happening on the pitch without getting swept up in the moment — they see genuine threat in the deliveries but remain unmoved by the overall narrative.
neutral
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"This is why I don't care about him trying his luck with shots.
If he can keep the deliveries up when he can, then be selfish when granted the opportunity "
"all his crosses so far have been real dangerous"
The Moment Believers
They're giving proper credit where it's due, celebrating a standout performance and choosing to back the player despite his obvious limitations in the final third.
admiration
amusement
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"Yeah, but massive credit to the guy tho he was amazing today "
"Other than finishing he’s has a great half. "
The Pattern Spotters
These are the detailed analysts hunting for consistency, pointing out that individual moments of brilliance don't erase a season's worth of dodgy decisions and goals that never should've gone in.
"Feel like he only shoots with a ‘full power’ laces approach. Think he’s missing knowing when to just pass it in at the moment. "
"Yea he has saved a free kick he 100% should have saved, but this season he has also let in a lot of goals he really really should not have. Hence why I am worried."
The Fixture Merchants
Absolutely wound up because this keeper turns into prime Manuel Neuer whenever he faces their team, even when the rest of the season proves he's far from world-class.
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"Yet he plays like peak Neuer against us every fucking time. "
"nah he got stuffed plenty of times not good."
Wolverhampton supporters were divided after a 1-1 draw against Sunderland, with some praising Rob Edwards' side for competing despite going down to ten men early on, whilst others remained deeply concerned about their dire season and relegation prospects. The overriding sentiment reflected frustration that even an improved display couldn't mask how far short Wolves are of Premier League standard, sitting bottom with just 17 points from 35 matches.
Angry and Exhausted
This is the voice of supporters who've run out of patience — they see relegation looming and can't stomach another match of what they perceive as careless, incompetent football from their team.
anger
annoyance
shite
"@Wolves Just stop fucking around already, you fucking shitty team, daaaamn!!!!🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕"
"@Wolves Worst sub I've ever seen. Absolutely criminal."
Cautiously Clinging On
These fans acknowledge something positive is happening under Edwards, but they're walking a tightrope between hope and dread, desperate to believe the turnaround is real before it's too late.
neutral
Edwards
sell
"Love you Wolves 🎉"
"@Wolves What a manager Rob Edwards is.
Doing a fantastic job, turned the clubs fortunes around drastically. Can’t wait to see what the future brings 🧡"
The Comeback Believers
A small but vocal minority convinced the worst is behind them, spotting genuine improvement in recent performances and convinced Wolves have the character to fight back from the brink.
Edwards
sell
"@Wolves Gooodddd!!!….time to comeback"
"Best ive seen from the wolves in a while"
Brighton fans are frustrated with Yankuba Minteh's wastefulness in front of goal, particularly a glaring miss from close range that could have changed the course of the match as Newcastle built a commanding lead. The discussion centres on whether Fabian Hürzeler should have substituted the winger earlier, with some questioning whether Minteh has the clinical finishing required at this level.
The Cold Hard Facts
These fans are calling out exactly what happened on the pitch — Minteh fluffed a sitter and they're not about to sugarcoat it.
neutral
Pascal Groß
Matt O'Riley
"Minteh with an absolute 0/10 performance today lol"
"That is a shocking miss. Minteh been a disaster today"
Absolutely Fuming Brigade
This lot have gone beyond criticism into pure rage, convinced Minteh's finishing is unacceptable for a player at this level.
Pascal Groß
Matt O'Riley
"Fuck you Minteh , I cant believe this"
"Minteh's end product is CRIMINAL"
The Balanced Verdict Crew
They're refusing to let one player's shocker overshadow the whole performance, crediting the players who actually delivered today.
"Lewis Miley was outstanding "
"Miley was good but minteh was honking"
The Beautiful Game Believers
These are the romantics who got swept up in the attacking brilliance around Minteh's miss, celebrating the movement and skill that deserved better.
admiration
Pascal Groß
Matt O'Riley
"That was such beautiful dribbling by Rutter too, ffs Minteh"
"Lewis Miley was outstanding "
Manchester United supporters are sending well-wishes to Sir Alex Ferguson, who was hospitalised before the match, with many viewing the team's dramatic 3-2 comeback victory as a gift to their legendary former manager during his recovery. The win—from 0-2 down against Liverpool—has become a moment of collective hope and unity among the fanbase, transcending the usual frustration about the result itself.
United's Still Got This
These fans believe the team can push forward and deliver results, especially when rallying around their legendary manager's health crisis.
optimism
sad
"Oh thanks for the update ! Good to hear this "
"Amazing result…..any news on the gaffer?"
Respect And Solidarity First
This group acknowledges the win on the pitch but frames it as secondary to wishing their gaffer a swift recovery, blending sporting pragmatism with genuine concern.
"A win for the gaffer. Get well Sir Alex."
"Get well soon Sir Alex Ferguson. ❤"
Shock And Emotional Whiplash
Raw, unfiltered fans processing the genuinely terrifying news of Ferguson's hospitalisation, caught between relief it wasn't worse and the vulnerability of imagining United without him.
neutral
sad
"shit, Sir Alex taken to hospital"
"Oh fuck. I'm not ready for Sir Alex to be sick."
The Post-Fergie Reckoning
These supporters are wrestling with deeper anxieties about United's long-term direction and whether the club can ever truly recover from Ferguson's eventual departure.
sad
"Why did the fucking commentator have to phrase the Fergie news like that...fuck me...I thought the worst for a moment there."
"When fergie left I had no clue how long the filth would take to recover. Makes me sad it might take us a long time to turn this around. "
Fans are divided on Benjamin Sesko's performance after he scored early to put Manchester United 2-0 up, with debate centring on whether his withdrawal early in the second half was tactically sound or a costly mistake that disrupted United's control of the match. Some praise his all-round play and finishing, whilst others question the decision to substitute him and suggest it directly contributed to Liverpool's comeback.
Injury Chaos, Season Over
The pragmatists documenting disaster in real time—Sesko's withdrawal signals another body blow to an already threadbare squad fighting for European football.
neutral
game
goal
"Sesko is fucking injured."
"That Sesko sub was maybe the worst sub of all time "
System Failure, Manager Blamed
The furious faction convinced that tactical incompetence and catastrophic squad depth management have just cost them the game and jeopardised their season.
game
goal
"Our squad depth is so bad. Sesko injured now we are fucked "
"@ManUtd Anad cost us this game. sesko is going off completely, ruined this game piss poor second half Carrick poor players poor bringing amad on poor decision"
Joy in the Carnage
The rare optimists fixating on individual moments of brilliance—Sesko's celebration becomes a brief, pure reminder of why they fell in love with the player in the first place.
admiration
game
goal
"Love the celebration with Sesko and Cunha "
"I just find sesko celebration so satisfying. He’s literally just jumping / dunking but it’s so good!"
Fans are dissecting a chaotic 3-2 thriller where both sides shipped multiple goals in quick succession, with neutral observers and supporters clashing over whether the defending was genuinely poor or merely exposed by attacking quality. The discussion reveals deep frustration about defensive vulnerability and sloppy performances, amid banter about team selection and seasonal inconsistency.
Personality Over Performance
These fans are more wound up by the noise around the match than the actual result, fixating on commentary figures and media personalities instead of what happened on the pitch.
neutral
season
liverpool
"@markgoldbridge Your mate Neville is torture to listen to. Such an irritating prick."
"@pgc99your whole season has been gift wrapped every single team is having their worst season. All you're doing is going to embarrass England again like you did 2 years ago."
Absolute Meltdown Mode
They've completely lost it—this is pure, unfiltered fury at a defensive embarrassment so brutal it's triggered an existential crisis about their club's standards.
season
liverpool
"@markgoldbridge YOU LOT ARE FUCKING SHIT WORSE THAN BRIGHTON ARE WE? AHAHAHAHH"
"@loveNpeaceALWAYScheating? Wtf are you on about? Disgrace of a person"
Reality Check Confusion
Caught between denial and acceptance, these fans are struggling to process how a squad of expensive signings has spectacularly fallen apart when it matters most.
"That's Mark fot you.. always changing"
"All the big names you have sign how far"
Schadenfreude Served Cold
The winners in this moment, revelling in a rival's catastrophe whilst simultaneously acknowledging the individual quality that made the collapse even more humiliating.
amusement
admiration
season
liverpool
"@markgoldbridge Enjoy bro, Uniteds best achievement in last 10 years :D"
"@markgoldbridge Brilliant goal man. He’s been our best player"
Arsenal supporters are sharply divided over young talent Max Dowman's ball retention and decision-making in attacking positions, with some praising his potential and willingness to drive forward whilst others criticise his reluctance to release the ball earlier or pick out teammates. The debate reflects broader frustration with his occasional greed in possession, though several fans acknowledge his teammates' limited quality as a mitigating factor.
Growing Pains, Growing Doubts
They're willing to give Dowman time to develop but can't ignore his inconsistent decision-making—especially when surrounded by players who aren't pulling their weight.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Greedy from Dowman, but don't blame him when you got two bums either side of him"
"Dowmans decision making still growing . Very suspect so far"
A Star is Born
These fans are absolutely convinced Dowman is the real deal and want everyone else to recognise his genuine quality after flashes of brilliance.
admiration
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Dowman is so good man lol"
"Wow.. Can't believe this is the first game for Dowman since that wonderful performance against Everton ages ago.."
Potential Meets Pragmatism
They see a talented player with a clear ceiling if he doesn't learn to control his instincts—he's got the tools, but maturity is the missing piece.
"why didn't they show that awesome run by Dowman? Criminal!"
"Dowman has great potential, but doesn't need to go for glory every game. He needs to release the ball earlier.
Great win for the boys. "
Where's the Crime Scene Investigation?
Furious that Dowman's contributions are being overlooked or mismanaged by the club, these fans believe he deserves better platform and decision-making support to thrive.
"why didn't they show that awesome run by Dowman? Criminal!"
"Dowman has great potential, but doesn't need to go for glory every game. He needs to release the ball earlier.
Great win for the boys. "
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@Arsenal This manager's a fucking idiot, where the hell is Dowman?!!!"
"Dowman is going to fuck shit up"
Arsenal supporters are almost universally praising William Saliba's defensive excellence and consistency, though a minority note occasional lapses in ball-carrying and passing under pressure in recent matches. The overwhelming consensus is that he's among the world's elite centre-backs, with some arguing he's the best in the position globally, whilst a few acknowledge minor technical weaknesses that don't detract from his overall brilliance.
The Pattern-Spotters
These fans are calmly documenting Saliba's repeated lapses in possession and decision-making, treating each mistake as evidence of an emerging technical weakness rather than a one-off blip.
neutral
Saliba
Declan Rice
"Saliba is doing this shit far too often"
"Saliba is ass on the ball sometimes "
The Exasperated Defenders
Furious that a supposedly world-class centre-back keeps gifting possession in crucial moments, they're venting their frustration at what feels like careless, unforgivable errors from someone who should know better.
Saliba
Declan Rice
"@Arsenal Saliba, what is wrong with him. So many errors"
"Saliba with two awful errors to start the half "
The Pragmatists
They acknowledge Saliba's overall quality whilst simultaneously refusing to ignore the uncomfortable truth that his ball-playing ability is becoming a genuine liability in tight matches.
"Saddoe"
"Great result but Saliba can't pass or dribble without being dispossed lately "
The Unconditional Believers
Swimming against the tide, they're celebrating Saliba's defensive dominance and natural talent, either overlooking or actively defending the technical wobbles as minor quirks in an otherwise elite performer.
admiration
amusement
Saliba
Declan Rice
"Our sweet Brazilian prince!"
"Saliba is so good man"
Arsenal supporters are expressing genuine delight at a dominant display of attacking football against Fulham, with multiple fans drawing parallels to the side's brilliant 2022-23 campaign and describing the performance as a refreshing return to quality football after weeks of struggling results. The overwhelming positive sentiment reflects relief and emotional investment after a frustrating period, with fans hopeful this level of performance can be sustained through to the end of the season.
Finally, We Remember Why
These fans are drunk on redemption—they've seen Arsenal play beautiful football again and they're convinced this is the real team that was hiding all season.
admiration
joy
"It's the best football we have played all season... so far ;)
Hopefully we can play like this the rest of the season."
"Best football we have played all season. Incredible performance so far"
Relief Mixed with Cautious Hope
They're acknowledging the performance is brilliant but can't quite shake the muscle memory of disappointment, so they're celebrating with one eye on whether it actually sticks.
"Finally a comfy win 😭😭😭"
"I forgot how much I enjoyed football lmao "
Where the Hell Has This Been
Processing the contrast between Arsenal's actual capabilities and what they've served up most of the season, they're oscillating between joy and genuine bewilderment at the inconsistency.
neutral
"Where was this champagne football all season loooool"
"
I thought us playing good was dead. The emotions. "
The Contrarian's Last Stand
A tiny pocket of resistance rejecting the consensus, either because they're determined to stay miserable or because they've fundamentally different standards for what "good football" actually looks like.
"We’re having a blinder of a game, and this is all you can think of. Shows which of us just like to be miserable"
"free flowing footy? this is disgusting i dont like this"
Over 424 posts are hammering Florian Wirtz for a woefully underwhelming performance and season since Liverpool's massive transfer investment, with supporters questioning whether the record-breaking fee was justified and sarcastically comparing his output unfavourably to defensive midfielder Casemiro. The overwhelming consensus is that Wirtz has been invisible, ineffective, and a total disappointment at centre attacking midfielder, with fans suggesting he's either mispositioned on the wing or simply not delivering at the level expected of a premium signing.
The Darwin Trade-Off Merchants
These fans are furious that Liverpool sold Núñez to fund Wirtz, convinced the partnership would've been lethal and the record transfer has become an expensive mistake.
annoyance
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"I hate we got rid of Darwin, I truly think him and Wirtz would've killed teams. "
"Wirtz is so unserious and mediocre man. "
The Honest Performance Auditors
This group strips away emotion to dissect Wirtz's actual display on the pitch, acknowledging his off-day whilst cutting through the hype with brutal tactical clarity.
neutral
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"One of Wirtz’s worst performances of the season, even his touch has gone to shit "
"Nice to see Wirtz family members visit Reddit "
The Price Tag Executioners
They're weaponising the transfer fee itself as evidence that Wirtz has failed to justify the record-breaking outlay, turning Leverkusen's profit into Liverpool's embarrassment.
"Over 100 million for Wirtz. Leverkusen must be laughing their socks off"
"How has the ‘dinosaur’ Casemiro a CDM got more G/A than the record breaking price tag CAM Wirtz 😂"
The Lonely Believers
A small but vocal minority still backing Wirtz's quality and potential, swimming against the tide of negativity by recognising his technical superiority over most Premier League operators.
admiration
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"Wirtz man... I was so excited when he joined us"
"Wirtz is playing very well imo you can tell his technical skills is a level above most players on the pitch "
Brentford supporters are divided and frustrated following the disallowed goal in the 22nd minute, with some defending the VAR call whilst others are angrily dismissing the decision as incorrect. The discussion reveals raw frustration typical of a match where decisions have gone against them, with fans resorting to terse, dismissive responses to one another rather than constructive debate.
VAR's Made A Mess Again
The largest faction believes the technology has robbed them of a fair decision and is demanding an end to this recurring nightmare.
anger
"please don't do this shit anymore "
"What the fuck, man?"
Let's Break Down What Happened
The level-headed analysts are calmly assessing the incident on its merits rather than getting swept up in the emotional fallout.
neutral
The Chaos Is Real And Ridiculous
These fans are caught between disbelief and exasperation, watching the drama unfold with a mixture of dismay and dark humour.
"Oh dear..."
"Take your meds."
Mavropanos Nearly Pulled Off Magic
The optimists are choosing to celebrate how close the moment came to being something special, finding joy in the effort rather than the outcome.
amusement
"Much better!"
"Tatyyyyy omg so close!!!"
Fans are expressing exasperation with refereeing decisions and broader match management during Manchester United's thrilling 3-2 victory over Liverpool, with complaints spanning controversial calls, yellow cards, and general dissatisfaction with how the game was officiated. The discussion reflects disappointment across the fanbase rather than targeted blame at one team or decision.
The Absolutely Fuming Brigade
These fans have seen enough — they're switching off in real-time because they genuinely cannot stomach what they're watching, convinced the referee has cost them the match through a shocking decision.
anger
annoyance
"Can’t believe what I’m watching lmao, what a shit show "
"Yeah no, I'm turning this shit off. I cannot ruin a hard earned Sunday."
The Tactical Analysts
They're rewinding the moment frame by frame, dissecting angles and contact points because they reckon there's a legitimate football argument buried underneath the chaos.
neutral
"Enjoy the championship mate 😊"
"Tuned this off early and now we’re back level. You’re welcome lads."
The Damage Control Team
They've written the post-match obituary already — this result signals something deeper, a structural problem that no single decision can explain away.
"Time to raise a p45"
"Enjoy the championship mate 😊"
The Emotional Processors
They're cycling through the stages of grief in real-time, somewhere between denial and acceptance, trying to make sense of what this result actually means for their season.
"Time to raise a p45"
"Enjoy the championship mate 😊"
The Vindicated Few
Against the tide of outrage, they're the rare voices arguing the ref got it spot-on, and they're watching everyone else lose their minds with either grim satisfaction or genuine bemusement.
"Best nap ive had all weekend"
"My bus home is finished now. All the best. Thanks for the entertainment"
Spurs supporters are highlighting Pedro Porro's solid defensive contribution during the match, with fans commending his effort on what was an otherwise difficult afternoon for the club. There's also scattered discussion about squad depth concerns, particularly regarding goalkeeping, and curiosity about Bergvall's presence on the bench.
Just Here For The Facts
These fans are documenting what they saw — Porro's lockdown performance — without theatrical judgement, reporting the match as it unfolded.
neutral
Kevin Danso
Djed Spence
"Porro fuckin lockdown this half "
"Owned Porro in FF so that sucked...."
Proper Respect Where It's Due
This camp genuinely rates what Porro delivered, mixing admiration for his defensive graft with appreciation for his attacking contributions and overall impact.
admiration
amusement
Kevin Danso
Brandon Austin
Djed Spence
"Porro getting forward into some nice positions, great to see"
"Porro has been massive well done lad"
One-Word Believers
Pure emotional release masquerading as analysis — these fans celebrate through chants and affirmations, skipping the detail entirely because the feeling says everything.
The Contrarian Case
These voices reject the consensus entirely, arguing Porro was nowhere near as good as the majority claim and questioning whether he actually turned up when it mattered.
Kevin Danso
Djed Spence
"Porro has easily been one of our worst. "
"What a fucking game by pedro serious heart"
Liverpool fans and neutrals have launched a sustained critique of Sergiño Frimpong's performance, highlighting poor positioning, reckless defending, and ill-advised attempts to dribble out of dangerous situations during the 3-2 defeat to Manchester United. The discussion centres on his repeated errors against Luke Shaw and his overall defensive awareness, with some comparing him unfavourably to both his Liverpool teammates and established players in his position.
He's Not Good Enough, Full Stop
This is the largest camp, and they're done debating — Frimpong is fundamentally below Premier League standard, lacking the physical attributes, technical ability, and consistency that a top-flight defender demands.
annoyance
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"Frimpong is fucking shite as well. No idea what he is meant to add to this team. Absolute midget, shite delivery and can not defend in the slightest. Appalling player."
"@LFC Fuck Kerkez...an absolute donkey. To think he is replacing the quality of Robertson is a joke, and as for Pingpong Frimpong? The club has gone back 20yrs in one season...muck"
The Brutal Reality Check
These fans aren't here to vent; they're simply acknowledging that Frimpong has exposed himself as genuinely terrible, and the data backs up what their eyes are telling them match after match.
neutral
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"This is an awful LIV team, MU nearly made a mess of it. In the end right result. Frimpong/McA/ Jones SELL them fast in the summer. Full of mistakes, and can’t do basics."
"Frimpong is genuinely terrible. "
The Generation Gap Problem
This faction sees a broader institutional failure — Frimpong and his peers are being tasked with replacing elite defenders like Robertson, but they're nowhere near ready or capable of that level.
"This is an awful LIV team, MU nearly made a mess of it. In the end right result. Frimpong/McA/ Jones SELL them fast in the summer. Full of mistakes, and can’t do basics."
"Physically Kerkez has it all, but not the brains nor the skillset. Frimpong is even worse. It hurts to see them take over the Robo TAA era"
Hold Up, He Had One Good Moment
The smallest but stubborn corner of the fanbase refuses to write him off entirely, clinging to evidence that Frimpong can still produce moments of quality when he gets it right.
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"GREAT cross from frimpong, beautiful ball"
"Guys Frimpong did something good!"
Fans are furious over the 32nd-minute penalty awarded to Crystal Palace, with the overwhelming consensus that it was a clear mistake and never should have been given. The decision has become the focal point of anger amongst supporters, who view it as a completely unjustified call that undermined the integrity of the match.
Robbed Blind By The Ref
This furious majority believes the penalty was an absolute travesty — a clear-cut error that's fundamentally changed the match and they're not holding back about it.
penalty
"@CPFC Horrible penalty. How can this be a penalty ??"
"Absolutely fuck off that's a penalty."
Ref's Made A Right Mess
These fans are calling out the decision as wrong but with slightly less theatrical rage — they're stating facts rather than venting pure anger.
"NOT a penalty"
"That was not a penalty"
This Defies All Logic
The debaters are genuinely bewildered by the decision, questioning how any official could possibly interpret the incident this way, treating it as an inexplicable mystery.
neutral
penalty
"That's never seen a Penalty. Wow."
"How in God's earth is that a penalty!"
The Lonely Penalty Believers
This tiny pocket of fans actually backs the ref's call, but they're massively outnumbered and their voices are barely a whisper in the ocean of outrage.
approval
penalty
"PENALTY to the Chez 🙌"
"PENALTY to the Chez 🙌"
Aston Villa fans are celebrating Emiliano Buendía's 90+6th-minute header that pulled the scoreline back to 1-2 against Tottenham, though they ultimately fell to defeat in a match that turned increasingly scrappy with multiple yellow cards. The positivity here centres on the team's fighting spirit and late response rather than the overall result.
The Believers Still Backing It
These fans are genuinely buzzing about what they're witnessing — they've got that infectious energy that says Villa are doing something special and they're here for every second of it.
amusement
"AHHHHH!!!! LETS GO!"
"Get innnnn! I love this mad dog energy!"
The Steely Professionals
No celebration, no panic — just the focused intensity of supporters who understand that in a title fight, you process the moment and move onto the next task without sentiment getting in the way.
neutral
"FUCKING GO"
"The thousand yard look is coming let’s fucking go "
The Cautious Optimists
They're caught between wanting to believe and having seen enough disappointments to know that one goal doesn't change the bigger picture, so they're celebrating but keeping their emotions guarded.
"LETS GO!!!"
"LETS GO BOYYS🔥🔥🔥"
The VAR Watchers
These fans are dissecting the decision itself rather than the moment — they've got their eyes on whether the goal should have stood, because in modern football, the call matters as much as the finish.
"LETS GO!!!"
"LETS GO BOYYS🔥🔥🔥"
The Exhausted Doubters
Worn down by what they perceive as defensive lapses or tactical failures, they're venting their frustration even as they go through the motions of supporting, because faith has been tested one too many times.
anger
"What having a gooner near you does to your mentality 💔"
"Mutha fuckers let’s go"
Aston Villa supporters are sharply split on midfielder Bogarde following the 0-0 stalemate, with critics claiming he isn't good enough and demanding upgrades like Onana, whilst defenders point to his solid individual statistics (19/21 passing, winning duels) and argue other players performed far worse on the day. The debate reflects wider frustration at Villa's failure to break down Tottenham despite their league position advantage.
Get Him Out Now
This camp views Bogarde as a fundamental problem holding Villa back, full stop — they want him sold or loaned immediately because his performances have become genuinely detrimental to the team's ambitions.
annoyance
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Bogarde is truly awful and should be sold 1st day "
"Bogarde has looked awful for ages, why do we continue to play him in high importance games, get the fucker out on loan and if he can’t do it there then get rid of him, because atm "
Serviceable But Not The Answer
These fans acknowledge Bogarde can do a job as a rotation option and aren't blaming him entirely, but they're clear-eyed that he's a ceiling on Villa's midfield quality unless reinforcements arrive.
"Still not convinced. Bogarde isn't good enough. We need Onana or we have no chance"
"He's a good bench/rotation option and it's not his fault that our strength and conditioning department haven't figured out how hamstrings work.
Also, Tammy, Sancho, Barkley and Ro"
Academy Heart, Ability Questions
This lot are emotionally invested in Bogarde because he represents something special — homegrown talent — but they're wrestling with the uncomfortable reality that he might not be good enough for where Villa want to be.
neutral
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"I want to like Bogarde because he’s the only player from our academy to be relevant since like Ramsey but good lord dude"
"Ive been one of luiz biggest critics since hes come back, but hes got to be better than bogarde here"
Bogarde's Our Best Midfielder
A small but vocal minority reckon he's actually performing well and delivering when it matters, rejecting the narrative that he's the weak link.
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"bogarde's been our best player thus far"
"good from bogarde"
Liverpool fans erupted in fury over Curtis Jones receiving a 75th-minute yellow card, with the overwhelming consensus that the decision was a howler — some arguing he was fouled rather than committing the offense, whilst others criticised the commentary team for compounding the error. The incident became emblematic of broader frustration as United fought back from 2-0 down to win 3-2, with Jones's dismissal from play coinciding with Liverpool's inability to stem the tide.
Jones Can't Cut It
This majority camp is absolutely fed up with Curtis's repeated careless passes and turnover rate, convinced he's actively costing the team matches through basic execution failures.
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
Virgil van Dijk
"Jones was dog shit today again. Tons of errant passes turning the ball over. I’m done with him lads. "
"Jones cant fucking pass the ball, how many times will he give it away. "
Mixed Signals on Performance
These fans are trying to process the game rationally, offering grudging credit for his positional play whilst simultaneously acknowledging some genuinely poor moments that happened today.
neutral
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"So Curtis has been a revelation at RB. Would be fucking insane to sell him. He’s so good with the ball. "
"terrible Robbo "
Dodgy Refereeing Cost Us
This contingent is laser-focused on the yellow card decision itself, arguing the referee got it completely wrong and that Jones barely deserved the caution in the first place.
"Where on earth was the foul on Jones lmao"
"Who went down first mate? Pretty sure it wasn’t Jones"
Dubious Contact, Clear Dive
These voices are questioning whether there was genuine contact at all, suggesting the opposition player went down theatrically and the ref fell for an obvious dive.
"Where on earth was the foul on Jones lmao"
"Who went down first mate? Pretty sure it wasn’t Jones"
Curtis Is A Quiet Gem
This small but vocal minority genuinely rates him as a revelation at right back, particularly impressed by his technical quality on the ball and consistency across recent weeks.
admiration
amusement
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"Jones has been great at right back again"
"Curtis has been really good. "
Newcastle supporters are split between relief at the 3-1 win over Brighton and deeper concerns about Eddie Howe's management, with some questioning his tactical decisions, squad rotation timing, and whether a managerial change might be needed despite backing from the board. The discussion reveals frustration that whilst the Magpies got the three points, they've relied on defensive vulnerabilities and opponent mistakes rather than convincing football, raising doubts about long-term progress under the current regime.
Just Take The Win
These fans are simply acknowledging the result on the pitch without wading into the Eddie Howe debate, treating the victory as enough reason to move forward without judgment.
neutral
Eddie
Howe
"Nice try Eddie's nephew"
"Fair play Eddie, potentially had everyone's lives here. "
Eddie Out, Full Stop
This contingent has completely lost patience with Howe's tactical decisions and team selection, viewing continued backing of the manager as an embarrassment the club can no longer afford.
anger
Eddie
Howe
"Surely Eddie in the bin, at this stage. Fuck his legacy, you can't be this stubborn and shite in the line up and keep your job. Front 3 from the make a wish foundation."
"Eddie has to go. It's embarrassing at this point."
The Worrying Victory Paradox
These supporters are torn between celebrating the three points and harbouring genuine concerns that Howe's comments about trust reveal deeper philosophical problems with how he's managing the squad.
"Eddie would still pick him!"
"Happy for the win, worried with Eddie’s comments about picking a “team I can trust, that can handle the pressure”.
If we sacrifice the hearts and minds of talent like Wolt and Ha"
Eddie Got It Right Today
The optimists believe Howe's substitutions and in-game management were genuinely brilliant, and they're using this performance as evidence he deserves credit when the football actually works.
approval
Eddie
Howe
"Should already be 2-0, great response Eddie!"
"@NUFC I think Eddie made great subs today, 3 points, 🙌"
Aston Villa supporters are furious at their team's abject performance in a 2-1 defeat to struggling Tottenham, with many questioning where their season-defining intensity has gone and expressing concern about how such poor form could impact their Champions League campaign. The overwhelming consensus is one of disappointment and mystification — fans cannot fathom how a fifth-placed side could produce such a lifeless, disjointed display against an 18th-placed opponent.
We've Wasted An Entire Season
These fans are at breaking point—they see a gutless, abject performance as the final straw proving Villa have squandered their year and their patience, demanding answers for why effort and quality have been so inconsistent.
disappointment
annoyance
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Fuck this shit man, I don't think I can waste another minute of my life watching us this season. Absolutely fucking woeful. "
"Utterly abject performance, shades of united last year. As if we have a fucking game to throw away in the pisser. We NEED champions league qualification to survive these stupid rul"
So Where's Been This Version?
This camp is caught between frustration and confusion, recognising Villa showed real quality in this match but furious that such a performance has been buried for most of the season when it was needed.
"They've disappointed 19 teams with this performance"
"WTF!!! So where have we been all season if we can play like that? 😬"
Seven Out Of Nine Ain't Bad
The pragmatists who've accepted the result within context, refusing to panic over one poor showing when Villa have proven capable of stringing together genuine form and points in recent weeks.
neutral
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"They were a minute away from three wins in a row. 7 out of 9 is still pretty incredible "
"So much effort from everyone "
This Is The Real Villa Emerging
The believers who've spotted a spark of the team they know exists, seeing this explosive performance as evidence that Villa have finally found their level and desire when it matters most.
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"WHAT HAPPENED? WE’RE SO FUCKING GOOD, CMONNN"
"We look so good where was this desire all season "
Arsenal supporters are celebrating Myles Lewis-Skelly's standout performance after being deployed in midfield for what appears to be his first start in that position, with fans arguing he deserves to remain in the side and maintain his new role rather than being sold. The overwhelming consensus is that his display was the foundation for Arsenal's dominant performance, overshadowing even the goalscorers in the process.
The Redemption Arc Believers
These fans reckon Lewis-Skelly has finally found his level in midfield and they're absolutely buzzing about what they've seen, convinced this performance proves he's got genuine quality after a year of frustration.
admiration
love
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@Arsenal Lewis skelly God bless you for that performance you did really well"
"Lewis skelly was excellent today. Very impressive"
The Position Switch Prophets
This camp is genuinely convinced Arsenal have had it wrong all along—Skelly belongs in midfield, not left back—and they're calling for the club to commit to him permanently rather than flogging him off in summer.
"Skelly should shift to midfield, he is doing better there, maybe they shouldn't sell him off but switch him to a new position"
"Lewis Skelly finally showing Arteta what he can do in midfield, that lad should be going nowhere this summer"
The Talent Wasted Sceptics
These supporters acknowledge Skelly's potential but reckon Arsenal have completely wasted a year of his development, treating him like a forgotten man and failing to unlock what he's actually capable of sooner.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"MYLES LEWIS SKELLY. YOUR TIME AT LEFT BACK DOES NOT COUNT"
"Lewis skelly is a wasted talent this year"
The Frustrated Fed-Ups
A small but vocal group who've genuinely had enough of what they see as shambolic mismanagement, absolutely seething that it's taken this long for Arsenal to figure out where Skelly actually belongs.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
Christian Nørgaard
"What a fucking start by Skelley"
"@Arsenal We are so sorry to the Arsenal family for locking up Skelly for this long"
Newcastle supporters are expressing relief and cautious optimism after a 3-1 win that halts their recent struggles, though many acknowledge the performance was unconvincing and worry the team could still squander their position before the season ends. Brighton fans, conversely, feel their side underperformed and allowed Newcastle to escape with an undeserved result despite their own superior form coming into the match.
Just The Facts, Mate
These fans are calmly dissecting what actually happened on the pitch—the goals, the positioning, the mathematical implications—without letting emotion cloud their analysis.
neutral
lose
win
"I really liked the goal we scored.
I also think ending up in 7th-9th instead of 6th isn't the end of the world if 6th ends up getting CL. Whatever competition we'll qualify for fr"
"The worst Newcastle form for about 6 years playing a shit hot Brighton in pole position for Europe.
3-1 Newcastle. What a sport."
Season's Been A Mess Anyway
This lot are frustrated by Newcastle's inconsistent league form and can't quite believe they're even in contention for Europe after such a patchy campaign.
lose
win
"Chelsea is really ass, not a good comparison "
"Is kind of mad after how shite this season has been in the league there still is an outside chance of Europe. "
Mixed Feelings, Real Consequences
These supporters are caught between acknowledging a scrappy three-pointer and recognising that Brighton's slip-up matters more than Newcastle's performance deserves credit for.
"Shame gents especially after that run of good form, we did have good form, Newcastle needed that win as did we, let’s just hope the other teams only get a draw or lose now because "
"Newcastle with the smash and grab."
We're Still In This Thing
The optimists smell blood in the water—they reckon if Newcastle can string wins together now, there's a genuine path to European football still available.
approval
optimism
lose
win
"everyone is like wow newcastle Finally a win"
"Well, that was a game we could have at least drawn. Feels like we can still win out from here; hopefully we don't miss the points we dropped to Fulham and Everton. Would love to se"
Arsenal supporters are experiencing an unusual frustration after thrashing Fulham 3-0, with many feeling the Gunners left further goals on the pitch and should have won by a wider margin. The discussion reflects the club's title-race mentality — where a convincing win feels insufficient because every goal difference matters in the tight battle with Manchester City above them.
The Paranoia Brigade
These fans are bracing for catastrophe despite the scoreline, convinced that Arsenal will somehow snatch defeat from the jaws of victory through defensive lapses or dodgy refereeing decisions.
neutral
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"Reeks of a disgracefully undeserved 1-1 equaliser incoming "
"Score the fucking third "
Living in the Moment
Pure celebration without the anxiety — these fans are riding the wave of dominant attacking football and genuinely believing that if Arsenal maintain this intensity, they'll dismantle anyone.
optimism
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"Wonderful goal. Now lets make it 7-0"
"We’re playing some beautiful football today. If we keep this up we’ll get more."
The Rage Merchants
Furious at specific moments of perceived injustice, these fans channel raw anger at decisions or defensive errors that they believe are sabotaging what should be an utterly dominant performance.
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"FUCKING FUCK THEM THE FUCK UP AND KILL THE GAME EARLY"
"Fuck sake that disallowed goal totally killed our momentum, back in our shell again"
Fans observed their team's dominant first-half performance giving way to visible tiredness and loss of composure in the second half, with opposition momentum building dangerously after pulling one back. Discussion centred on defensive solidity and tactical discipline holding firm despite the spell of sloppiness, though some supporters expressed nervousness about surrendering control of the match.
The Collapse Merchants
These fans are convinced their side has completely bottled it—sloppy finishing, weak pressing, zero control—and they're furious because a commanding position is being squandered in real time.
annoyance
disappointment
Ethan Ampadu
Sean Longstaff
"We’ve been pretty awful in the final third really, dcl seems so slow to everything from competing for headers to pressing to movement he’s been awful "
"We look like a bottom half Championship side.
I had hoped that they'd downed tools before tonight and that's why we were so bad...but it seems like they were actually trying prev"
The Nerve-Wracked Pragmatists
They're locked in, watching every second with dread, focused solely on damage control and keeping their team from doing something stupid in the next few minutes.
neutral
Ethan Ampadu
Sean Longstaff
"Why am I so nervous? go on lads , make us proud!"
"Next 5 mins is important, nothing stupid and get back some control"
The Quiet Optimists
Unfazed by the chaos, they're clinging to the fact that their lads are two goals up and playing some decent football when it matters.
Ethan Ampadu
Sean Longstaff
"The lads look confident 2-0"
"Gosh we do look good in possession sometimes."
Fans are despondent about West Ham's spiralling form and increasingly realistic prospect of Premier League relegation, with many viewing today's 3-0 loss to Brentford as symptomatic of a squad lacking fight and quality. The discussion is dominated by fears that upcoming fixtures—particularly against Arsenal and potential rivals like Tottenham, Chelsea, and Leeds—will only compound their troubles at the bottom of the table.
Rage Against The Machine
These fans have completely lost faith — they're furious at the players, the manager, and the whole operation for throwing away survival chances with basic errors.
annoyance
anger
west ham
spurs
"@WestHam Fuck your useless ass club, fucking morons just confirmed Spurs' survival, dickheaded twats"
"@WestHam @thekingdombank_ Nuno is so bad how do people rate this shithead as shit as a ppg as potter fick off"
Damage Control Mode
They're absorbing the disappointment but staying focused, acknowledging how poorly West Ham played whilst demanding the team tighten up for the final push.
neutral
west ham
spurs
"@WestHam very poor. heads up and fucking lock in for the final three⚒️⚒️"
"@WestHam 1 OG AND 1 PENALTY, THATS SO HURT, FKING STUPID DEFFENDERS"
Unlucky But Exposed
This group sees the defeat as partly down to bad luck and VAR decisions, but they're honest enough to admit the defensive frailties are the real problem.
"not much hope for west ham staying up next sunday arsenal probably another thrashing"
"Very unlucky West Ham, but defence very poor. As a Leeds fan hope Spurs lose tomorrow."
The Referee Debate
They're picking apart the match incidents — the penalty, the own goal — convinced that dodgy calls have cost West Ham dearly in a crucial game.
"not much hope for west ham staying up next sunday arsenal probably another thrashing"
"Very unlucky West Ham, but defence very poor. As a Leeds fan hope Spurs lose tomorrow."
Laughing At The Chaos
A small, almost darkly comic contingent who've accepted relegation as inevitable and are making bitter jokes about West Ham's imminent Championship future.
west ham
spurs
"@WestHam Fantastic watch. Would highly recommend."
"@WestHam Lovely stuff. You will be playing Millwall for sure next season, in the championship"
Aston Villa supporters and neutrals spent the match debating Leon Bailey's eye-catching haircut, with the vast majority of comments mocking its appearance and questioning whether it posed any practical disadvantage on the pitch. Opinions were split between those finding it ridiculous and a small contingent defending it as stylish.
The Unimpressed Observers
They're clocking the hair, making wisecracks, but ultimately treating it as background noise to whatever else happened that weekend.
neutral
Tammy Abraham
Ollie Watkins
"doesn't he huff nitrous oxide? You gotta be pretty dumb to do that."
"Even Bailey's hair doesn't give a shit."
The Disillusioned Doubters
They reckon Bailey's lost it since his peak form, and everything about him now—including the look—signals a player and a season gone wrong.
Tammy Abraham
Ollie Watkins
"His hair to voluminous. His bitch too bad"
"Bailey sacrificed himself that season we got top4. Has not been the same since. Legs r gone "
The Aesthetic Critics
They're having a laugh at the sheer boldness of the hairstyle, comparing it unfavourably to other dodgy looks they've seen in the squad.
"Bailey with that hairstyle looks.. ridiculous 😂"
"Tyrone Mings given me that Dwayne Dibley vibe with that hairstyle"
The Pragmatic Analysts
They're weighing up what the hair and the performance actually mean, sitting somewhere between mockery and genuine assessment of Bailey's current state.
"Bailey with that hairstyle looks.. ridiculous 😂"
"Tyrone Mings given me that Dwayne Dibley vibe with that hairstyle"
The Morale Boosters
They reckon Bailey's presence—flamboyant hair and all—is exactly the lift the team needed, and they're backing him to deliver when it counts.
admiration
Tammy Abraham
Ollie Watkins
"leon bailey is EXACTLY what we need right now. thank you so much unai you’ve put us all at ease "
"Seeing sideshow bailey rock up has cheered me right up"
United supporters are scathing about right-back Diogo Dalot's performance, criticising his defensive vulnerabilities, offensive contributions, and a missed chance late in the match. Despite the 3-2 victory, fans are calling for his departure and highlighting fullback recruitment as a critical summer priority alongside midfield overhaul.
The Shooting Disaster Narrative
These fans are laser-focused on Dalot's catastrophic finishing ability, convinced his technical deficiency in front of goal is disqualifying evidence he's not Premier League standard.
annoyance
fullbacks
Andrew Robertson
"Dalot’s shooting is so fucking bad Hahaa"
"Dalot is so fucking useless at shooting "
The Unfiltered Meltdown
Raw, unprocessed reaction from supporters venting their frustration at what they perceive as a fundamentally limited player who can't execute the basics, let alone replace elite full-backs.
neutral
fullbacks
Andrew Robertson
"Dalot is so shit holy fuck "
"technically poor and creatively corrupt this is the player we somehow thought could lace TAA's boot. incredible inept DOF at work. shameful body of work."
The Context Seekers
These fans are trying to pump the brakes on the hysteria by introducing nuance—citing injuries, circumstances, or broader team issues that might explain rather than excuse the performance.
"Before you start with the player ratings, Dalots ear🤷"
"Mark, do you remember the game we used to play to see how far down the league you have to go to find a worse midfield than McFred?,our fullbacks are absolutely atrocious,they offer"
The Ironic Defenders
Using sarcasm as a shield, this small camp sardonically praises Dalot's positioning and composure to either deflect criticism or highlight the gap between his opportunity creation and actual output.
amusement
fullbacks
Andrew Robertson
"Amazing how dalot always finds himself in amazing positions!"
"Top quality finish from Dalot "
Brentford dismantled West Ham 3-0 in a one-sided affair, with Igor Thiago's penalty and Mikkel Damsgaard's late strike sealing a comprehensive victory that keeps the hosts in mid-table whilst condemning their visitors deeper into a relegation battle. Fans are processing a dismal West Ham performance and debating contentious VAR calls, with several early yellow cards suggesting a heated encounter.
Just Here For The Chaos
These fans are locked in, cataloguing every moment with brutal honesty — whether it's brilliant defending or a defender who looks permanently terrified, they're calling it exactly as they see it.
neutral
"Build a fucking statue"
"Does Nathan Collins always look like he's shitting himself before a match"
Mavropanos Is Our God Now
Pure euphoria — they're celebrating the star man's dominance with unfiltered admiration, from his defensive heroics to his aesthetics, because when you're that good, everything about you becomes iconic.
admiration
"Mav I love you!"
"He has a truly incredible beard "
That Could've Gone Horribly Wrong
Seething at the near-disasters and the fine margins between glory and disaster, these fans believe one moment of chaos nearly cost them everything and they won't let anyone forget it.
anger
"Fucking hell Mads. He almost gave up a goal and almost killed Mavro"
"Mavropanos is the unluckiest man today as it seems"
Fans are critiquing Dubravka's below-par performance in what appears to be a heavy defeat, with several suggesting the goalkeeper is too talented for Championship football and should move to a stronger club next season. The discussion also touches on broader concerns about Burnley's relegation trajectory and the departure of key players, with some Leeds supporters offering sympathetic observations about the goalkeeper's struggles amidst the chaos.
Burnley Deserve Complete Collapse
Fans demanding total overhaul or even dissolution, convinced the entire squad and club infrastructure are beyond redemption and not worth watching anymore.
annoyance
Karl Darlow
Lucas Perri
"@BurnleyOfficial Useless bastards I hope we go bust so I never have to watch any of this squad again."
"@BurnleyOfficial god you lot are the fucking shit of lancashire aren’t you"
Sack The Lot Immediately
Pragmatic critics focused on ruthless player removal, arguing Burnley are wasting astronomical wages on underperforming assets that need binning without sentiment.
neutral
Karl Darlow
Lucas Perri
"@BurnleyOfficial Get rid of them useless cunts your paying millions per year. Absolutely disgusting"
"@BurnleyOfficial Fucking awful, again"
Dubravka's Form Has Deserted Him
Measured observers acknowledging the goalkeeper's subpar display whilst maintaining hope he can bounce back elsewhere in the Premier League next season.
"Well done Leeds. Dubravka seems to have been well-below his best. Hope to see him join a PL team for next season as he’s too good for Championship. HWTL."
"Not the best game for Dúbravka."
We'll Laugh About This In The Championship
Resigned optimists accepting the relegation reality with dark humour, finding grim comedy in Burnley's downfall and bracing for second-tier football ahead.
amusement
Karl Darlow
Lucas Perri
"@BurnleyOfficial Well done lads!!! So proud of the boys"
"@BurnleyOfficial And well played leeds on staying up well deserved, we will "enjoy " the championship next season best of luck"
Supporters are divided on goalkeeper Senne Lammens's display in United's thrilling 3-2 victory over Liverpool, with some defending his overall contribution despite costly positioning errors in the opening goals, whilst others criticise his decision-making and suggest he needs significant improvement. The consensus acknowledges his previous form has been strong, but this match exposed defensive vulnerabilities that could have derailed the result.
The Emotional Whiplash Brigade
These fans are caught between relief and rage, unable to decide whether Lammens deserves their love or their fury because the result has scrambled their ability to think straight.
neutral
Onana
hope
"Its okay Lammens. I still love you <3"
"What in the actual fuck is that Lammens? Absolutely pathetic "
Lammens Must Answer for This
This lot are absolutely seething that a defensive howler nearly cost United the match, and they're demanding accountability from the player rather than letting the win paper over the cracks.
anger
Onana
hope
"@ManUtd Fucking bunch of retarded players. Lammens what a fucking clown. Fucking piece of shit... the only good thing is that useless cunt is not Onana who is even worse. Gutless c"
"actually disgusting defending. the fuck are we doing, its so simple. and Lammens needs to take responsibility too, its OBVIOUS he's going to place it that side. it's all he can do."
The Error-But-Actually-Decent Take
These are the pragmatists who've already moved on from the mistake itself, choosing instead to credit Lammens for the redemption saves that ultimately kept United ahead when it mattered most.
"Lammens at least a 6.. makes up for the error with that big save to stop it going 3-2 to Liverpool"
"Lammens tried his best to make Onana proud but we still won😂"
He's No Onana, But We'll Take It
This smallest but most forgiving faction are accepting the imperfection as part of the journey, comparing Lammens to their previous goalkeeper whilst still celebrating that three points got wrapped up.
admiration
Onana
hope
"@ManUtd Despite Lammens got onana dna today, good game lads!!"
"Onana was great at the first season too"
Manchester United supporters are divided on whether interim manager Michael Carrick deserves a permanent contract, with some backing his tactical nous and club connections whilst others blame systemic recruitment failures and claim no manager can succeed with the current squad's limitations. The discussion reflects broader frustration at how far the club has fallen, with particular criticism aimed at expensive signings like Wirtz and Isak failing to deliver immediate impact.
Carrick Must Go Now
This camp believes the manager is the root cause of Manchester United's dysfunction and that immediate sacking is the only path forward, regardless of what comes next.
annoyance
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"He needs to go now. We look so fucking bad and its all on him. There's no team chemistry because he changes everything all the time hoping something, anythinh works."
"@LFC Worst team in a decade. Even Hodgson still better than a shitty coach!!"
Wait and See the Evidence
These fans are keeping their powder dry, acknowledging managerial change might be necessary but wanting proof of improvement or a clear plan before making final judgements.
neutral
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"there has been talk of him taking over after the world cup, i hope it's true he seems like a solid coach"
"I’m hoping so, a new manager would be nice"
Recent Form Proves He's The One
This tiny pocket of optimism argues that United's last three months show Carrick is exactly what the club needs and deserves a genuine chance to build something.
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"Exactly, thanks to brilliant club managing by Todd Boehly"
"Last 3 months was spectacular, just give him the job he deserves it"
Wait—I need to flag something here.
The match data shows Newcastle United 0-0 Brighton & Hove Albion as the final score. But the key events you've listed show goals from William Osula, Dan Burn, Jack
The Resurrection Believers
These fans genuinely think their team has turned a corner and are riding the high of a massive redemption moment that's restored their faith.
excitement
still
"Sweet baby Jesus we did it !"
"Welcome back old friend, we missed you."
The Cautious Optimists
They're celebrating the return but keeping one eye on reality, acknowledging the win matters whilst quietly worrying it's too little too late with games running out.
neutral
still
"We are so fuckin back "
"We're so fucking back (for whatever the final 4 games are worth)"
The Furious Doubters
This lot are seething because they don't believe the turnaround is real or they're angry at how long it took, questioning whether it changes anything fundamental about the season.
anger
still
"WTF are we doing 🤬"
"We're so fucking back (for whatever the final 4 games are worth)"
Brighton supporters are locked in debate over goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen's performance in the 3-1 defeat to Newcastle, with some praising his crucial saves that kept the scoreline from becoming far worse, whilst others criticise him for positional errors and claiming he was a liability throughout the match. The disagreement hinges on whether his standout stops outweigh the mistakes that contributed to Newcastle's goals.
Verbruggen's Blunder Unforgivable
These fans believe one catastrophic mistake erases everything else and demands accountability, full stop.
Jason Steele
Bart Verbruggen
"Verbruggen made a terrible move but of course now is when all these random usernames that rarely ever comment, say the dumbest things."
"We deserved that. That was terrible from Verbruggen."
One Error Among Many Saves
This camp contextualises the howler within a season of otherwise world-class performances and refuses to overreact to a single incident.
neutral
Jason Steele
Bart Verbruggen
"Vebruggen doing his bit to help our transfer budget for next year."
"Every goalkeeper makes mistakes. Verbruggen has rarely put a foot wrong this season and has probably been our best player this first half aside from that howler. "
Already Redeemed Himself
These optimists reckon Verbruggen's character and quality in the minutes after the mistake prove his mentality is elite, so one gaffe doesn't define him.
admiration
Jason Steele
Bart Verbruggen
"Really smart to take it on the chest by Verbruggen. He's already done enough to redeem himself in my book. This and the multiple saves.
Good job by Van Hecke too."
"Except for that one mistake Verbruggen has been impeccable today. By far our best player and we would've been 5-0 or 6-0 down without his saves. "
Following Harvey Barnes' dramatic 90+5' goal to seal Newcastle's 3-1 victory, supporters are sharply split on his overall contribution, with some hailing him as a clinical finisher worthy of regular starts whilst others criticise him for offering little across the ninety minutes before capitalising on an already-decided match. The debate also touches on Eddie Howe's team selection decisions and whether Barnes deserves priority over fellow attacking options like Gordon.
Nerve-Shredded Relief
These fans lived and died with every second of the match, experiencing genuine catharsis when Barnes finally delivered, proving that even chaotic football can produce euphoric redemption.
neutral
Harvey Barnes
"Fucking hell, I thought I was gonna explode with stress! But thank god for Barnes!"
"I swear Harvey Barnes is allergic to crossing the ball. "
Pure Barnes Appreciation
This camp sees past the journey to celebrate the destination—they're focused entirely on the quality of the finish itself, rewarding the moment with unfiltered admiration.
admiration
love
Harvey Barnes
"brilliant goal by Barnes"
"Great shot by Barnes. Power"
Gordon Out, Full Stop
Absolutely furious at individual player choices and substitution decisions, these supporters believe tactical mistakes and selfish play from certain squad members nearly cost them the match, and someone needs to answer for it.
Harvey Barnes
"Ffs keep Gordon on the fucking bench please"
"I think there are some bad eggs in the camp and theyre among the substitutes today.
Safe to assume Gordon is one."
The Nuanced Sceptics
These fans give credit where credit is due but won't ignore the flaws that nearly derailed the victory—they're analysing both the brilliance and the decision-making that shouldn't have required a late hero in the first place.
"Not squaring to Barnes was diabolical at 2-1 still. Proper selfish."
"brilliant goal by Barnes"
Palace supporters are venting anger and frustration following a 3-0 loss to Bournemouth, with criticism directed at individual players, the team's performance, and the club's official social media accounts for continuing to post during the match. The negativity is mixed with some desperate hope that the result won't derail their season, alongside heated exchanges between fans over the day's poor showing.
Fury at the Performance
These fans are absolutely seething—they're calling out sloppy football and demanding better standards, no excuses, no silver linings.
anger
"@CPFC Horrible performance."
"@CPFC Have that you dirty bastards!!"
Resilience and Forward Focus
This group refuses to dwell on the damage; they're already mentally onto the next match, treating defeat as a lesson rather than a tragedy.
neutral
"@CPFCTILLTHEEND @CPFC You've just proved my point cheers 🤣"
"@CPFC Heads up, learn from it, and onto Thursday to make some history. #COYP"
The Emotional Rollercoaster
These supporters are caught between frustration and pride—they've got criticism mixed with grudging respect for effort, atmosphere, or moments that mattered despite the scoreline.
"sorry Jeff"
"@CPFC Best noise at DC for many a year👏👏"
Pulling Apart the Details
This cohort is doing the forensic analysis—isolating what went wrong, who was culpable, and why this particular loss stings more than just numbers on a screen.
"sorry Jeff"
"@CPFC Best noise at DC for many a year👏👏"
The Referee Question
These fans are fixated on controversial moments or decisions that shaped the match, believing the officials played a hand in how badly things unravelled.
"sorry Jeff"
"@CPFC Best noise at DC for many a year👏👏"
Arsenal supporters are tearing into defender Ben White's performance during the 3-0 defeat, criticising his slow passing, lack of acceleration, and generally poor decision-making throughout the match. The consensus is brutal: fans are questioning whether he should even be in the squad given his current run of inconsistent form.
White's Lost The Plot
Fans absolutely fuming that he's consistently starting despite putting in sluggish, error-prone performances that don't match Arsenal's standard.
anger
"Ben white is fucking awful. Not sure how he starts every game. "
"Take Ben white off he’s fucking terrible lads "
The Mechanics Are Broken
Supporters zeroing in on specific technical failures—his slow distribution, ponderous decision-making, and needless showboating that exposes the defensive structure.
"Ben White takes too long to throw the ball.
Saliba over takes his time to pass the ball, busy doing turns that are not necessary"
"Ben ‘used to be’ White with the most make up influencer tattoos you’ll see in your life."
He's Already Gone
A resigned camp accepting White's limitations and mentally moving on, treating him as a fallen soldier rather than a present problem.
neutral
"Ben White is easily our best Championship level defender"
"Ben White thanks for the memories "
He's Still Got It
A tiny but vocal minority crediting White for match-winning moments and graft, refusing to pile on during a rough afternoon.
"What a sequence of play from Ben White :D"
"10/10 for effort, Benjamin White"
Leeds supporters discussed whether Joël Piroe should be brought on as a late substitute during a heavy defeat, whilst simultaneously defending goalkeeper Lucas Perri against fan scapegoating for conceded goals—with several fans noting confusion between Perri and Burnley's Lucas Pires. The discourse reflected frustration with both tactical choices and the tendency of supporters to blame one player rather than acknowledge wider defensive breakdowns.
Just Stating The Facts
These fans are simply chronicling what happened on the pitch—injuries, substitutions, team news—without emotional spin or agenda.
neutral
Karl Darlow
Lucas Perri
"on Perri's recommendation!"
"Yeah, has been injured all season, same as Amdouni"
Perri Gets Absolutely Mugged Off
This camp is furious at the double standard where their keeper faces relentless criticism for one mistake whilst opposition goalkeepers get a free pass for identical errors.
sadness
Karl Darlow
Lucas Perri
"So unlucky for Pires"
"Perri got shit for conceding the winner at Newcastle then 4 days later darlow concedes the same goal and nothing. People always need a scapegoat and Perri is the new Cooper"
Lost In Translation
These posts are either spam, irrelevant tangents, or so garbled they don't meaningfully contribute to the actual debate about what happened in the match.
"9th comment ❤
I absolutely LOVE the Martin Scorsese film and Robert De Niro, as always was phenomenal. The original is a damn good film, too."
"Got into piroe stash "
Tactical Tweaks That Nearly Worked
This group recognises the substitution strategy was sound in principle and believes the team was genuinely close to getting the result if one more attacking change had landed.
admiration
Karl Darlow
Lucas Perri
"9th comment ❤
I absolutely LOVE the Martin Scorsese film and Robert De Niro, as always was phenomenal. The original is a damn good film, too."
"BA and longstaff subs were good. We just need piroe on for the fourth. "
The sample posts provided do not align with the stated match events or final scoreline, making it impossible to accurately summarise fan discussion about this fixture.
The Refs Robbed Us Crew
These fans are locked in on what nearly happened rather than what actually did — they're convinced a dodgy decision cost them and they're not letting it go.
neutral
"@afcbournemouth Very lucky it was never a Pen👎"
"@afcbournemouth Now you’ve jinxed it😭😭"
We're Absolutely Buzzing
The true believers who've just witnessed their side do something brilliant and they're celebrating it like their club is the greatest thing since sliced bread.
approval
admiration
"@afcbournemouth @premierleague Fantastic win! 🍒🍒🍒"
"@afcbournemouth I love this club so much
Best club after Liverpool"
Pragmatic Acceptance Squad
These are the levelheaded ones who've processed the whole thing rationally — they either respect the opposition's business or they're comfortable with a result that didn't go their way but wasn't catastrophic.
"@Gizmo1987-e3b Yeah I was thinking he’d be around that considering his age. Another incredible bit of business from you lot."
"@Beyond_FTWdidn’t want to them win but don’t mind the result"
Absolutely Fuming About Cheating
The outraged minority who reckon the opposition got away with something genuinely corrupt and they're not interested in moving on until everyone knows about it.
"@afcbournemouth That’s horrendous 🤮🤮"
"@afcbournemouth Cheating bastards"
Arsenal supporters are heavily criticising Noni Madueke's performance and overall contribution to the team, with many arguing his decision-making and technical execution are consistently poor regardless of the situation. The discussion reflects broader frustration that the club's significant investment in the winger has failed to produce the expected impact, prompting comparisons to cheaper alternatives and calls for him to be benched.
The Pragmatic Middle Ground
These fans acknowledge Noni's talent but can't ignore his inconsistency—they're watching with cautious eyes, waiting for him to prove he can sustain performance rather than flash and fade.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"I like Noni but he is so lazy sometimes…. Annoying."
"That’s better from Noni. You are are stronger and faster than him bro"
The Saka Believers' Reckoning
Furious that Arsenal spent fifty-two million on a winger who can't match their homegrown star across any metric, they see Noni as a statement of the club's recruitment failure—not his ceiling.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Noni is just not good. Difference between him and Saka is night and day."
"Noni can't dribble, he can't pass, he can't shoot, he can't defend and probably can't even head the ball.
52mil for him is a travesty."
The Optimistic Converts
They've bought into the Arsenal project believing Noni's best football is ahead of him at the club, convinced that he's already outperforming his Chelsea era and can become a genuine asset.
admiration
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Noni is such a better player at Arsenal than he ever was at Chelsea. So glad he is here. "
"When everything is going well, noni is a very funny player to watch"
Fans are intensely focused on Manchester United's half-time record being jeopardised after falling behind 2-0, with the conversation dominated by anxious discussion of a streak that commentators have highlighted. The negativity stems from supporters' superstitious dread that merely mentioning the record on air has jinxed it, a phenomenon they're treating as genuine curse rather than coincidence.
Red Devils In Free Fall
United supporters bracing for the worst, convinced that losing this half-time record would be the final humiliation in what's already been a season of broken promises.
annoyance
anger
"Fucking hell. If the OT record goes here, I swear…"
"bye bye half time record, this is going to be a slaughter"
Nervous Energy, Quiet Dread
Fans watching with bated breath, half-joking about the record slipping away because deep down they genuinely fear it's about to happen.
neutral
"Half time record intact ;)"
"The HT record.. if we fucking lose it to this lot. "
The Gleeful Invaders
Opposition supporters or contrarian voices revelling in the moment, celebrating the prospect of seeing Old Trafford's famous streak finally shattered.
"So glad to finally break the streak!"
"Woo, breaking records everywhere we go! "
Liverpool supporters are heavily criticising Virgil van Dijk's performance, particularly his positioning, pressing decisions, and apparent lack of leadership during the match. The discussion centres on tactical confusion—especially van Dijk pressing high and leaving dangerous gaps that led to Manchester United's winning goal, with fans questioning both his individual defending and Arne Slot's decision-making in deploying him that way.
Live Reaction Chaos
These fans are caught in the moment, venting raw frustration at Van Dijk's immediate defensive lapses without yet forming a coherent argument about what went wrong.
neutral
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"What the fuck are you doing Virgil "
"Daaaamn, we should have abused van Dicc's lazy 'run' back."
Character Assassination Under Pressure
This camp believes Van Dijk's individual mistakes are symptomatic of a deeper personal or professional decline that demands serious explanation and accountability.
anger
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"That's so bad getting back into shape and/or covering for Van Dijk, awful coaching"
"Van Dijk’s downfall needs to be studied… his defending for the second goal was horrible"
The Decline Narrative
These supporters are drawing unflattering comparisons to past versions of Van Dijk, framing his recent displays as evidence of lost leadership and deteriorating standards.
"Van dreamer defending like the Barcelona team during that match against Liverpool when we had a competent team and manager"
"VVD shocking again. Zero leadership"
The System's Broken, Not The Player
This group interrogates the tactical setup and coaching decisions around Van Dijk rather than pinning blame solely on the defender himself.
"Van dreamer defending like the Barcelona team during that match against Liverpool when we had a competent team and manager"
"VVD shocking again. Zero leadership"
Schadenfreude And Distraction
A small but vocal minority are using Van Dijk's struggles as fodder for mockery or deflecting to unrelated storylines, leaning into amusement rather than genuine critique.
amusement
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"@LFC Van Dijk's statue looks amazing, thanks https://t.co/nQG3dX8vR3"
"Love our Hungarian players. Nemeth would be proud "
Arsenal supporters are actively discussing whether Martín Zubimendi has been overplayed this season, with many praising Myles Lewis-Skelly's midfield performance in his stead and suggesting manager Mikel Arteta should rotate more frequently heading into crucial fixtures. The consensus leans towards the idea that benching an exhausted Zubimendi proved effective, raising questions about tactical selection moving forward.
Rice Rotation Makes No Sense
Nearly half the fanbase thinks bringing on Zubimendi was a needless tactical move that undermined what was already working on the pitch.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Bringing on zubimendi...so bloody unnecessary!"
"Why is this idiot bringing on zubimendi?!"
Finally, We're Clicking
This group celebrates the moment Zubimendi came off the field as proof that Arsenal's midfield balance improves when Rice gets proper game time.
"Zubi dropped and we’re cooking . we been saying it all season"
"Better than Zubimendi"
Criminal Mismanagement of Talent
Angry fans believe Arteta has criminally wasted Zubimendi's potential by refusing to give him consistent minutes when he was struggling earlier in the season.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
Christian Nørgaard
"Fuck me what took so long to at least give MLS some midfield minutes when Zubi was dying earlier. Criminal underused "
"Its been 2mins, i never want to see Zubimendi play ever again"
Both Players, One Solution
Optimists argue that having two quality midfielders means Arsenal can finally rotate without losing control, and today proved Rice and Zubimendi can both thrive in the system.
admiration
optimism
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
Christian Nørgaard
"Im so happy he had a great game. It means so much in the grand scheme of things, we can rotate with Zubi (both have their qualities that improve the team, don't forget the goals zu"
"Zubimendi is 100% passing back there and inviting pressure. Im loving this mls performance "
Manchester United supporters are celebrating Kobbie Mainoo's 77th-minute winning goal against Liverpool as a breakthrough moment for the young midfielder, with fans crediting him for almost single-handedly securing Champions League qualification and sealing his status as a future club legend. The posts highlight his dominant all-round performance—67 touches, 89% pass accuracy, nine defensive contributions—whilst simultaneously using his display to vindicate the club's faith in academy talent over recent managerial chaos.
The Pure Joy Brigade
These fans are here for the simple, beautiful truth — Mainoo scored the winner and that's all that matters, full stop.
admiration
approval
Kobbie Mainoo
goal
"@ManUtd Good game 🎯🎯 kobbie congratulations champ"
"@ManUtd I loved the Mainoo winning goal"
The Chaos Commentators
They're reacting viscerally to the madness unfolding, celebrating Mainoo's brilliance whilst simultaneously losing it at defensive mistakes and managerial decisions.
neutral
Kobbie Mainoo
goal
"@ManUtd Yes Mainooooooooooo. Ruben you bloody clown!!!
No foolish mistakes now pls."
"@ManUtd Kobbie fucking Mainoo."
The Narrative Architects
These are the fans building the bigger story — Mainoo's contract extension symbolises renewal, yet they're wrestling with whether Amorim's tactical vision is actually working.
"In the same week that Kobbie Mainoo signed his contract he instantly replayed it by directly putting us into the Champions League which comes with a 100 million cash reward."
"Kobbie Mainoo is consistently achieving the impossible each week - making Ruben Amorim look an even bigger clown than he already is. Sensational footballer"
The Scapegoat Hunters
A furious minority convinced Mainoo is the problem, not the solution, and determined to blame both player and manager for United's instability.
Kobbie Mainoo
goal
"@UnitedStandMUFC Kobie mainoo keeps losing the fucking ball. No wonder Amorim wanted him gone"
"@UnitedStandMUFC KOBBIE FUCKING MAINOO ONCE AGAIN FUCK AMORIM"
Spurs supporters are reflecting on a dramatic late comeback against Aston Villa—with Buendía's injury-time header salvaging a 2-1 defeat into something more palatable—whilst grappling with the club's poor league position (18th) and the fractured relationship between the fanbase and external criticism. The discussion reveals defiance mixed with resignation: fans are proud to have outperformed expectations this season despite the negativity from media and rival supporters, yet acknowledge the underlying anxiety that comes with fighting relegation form.
We're Cursed and We Know It
These fans have internalised the disappointment so completely they've stopped expecting anything better, embracing self-criticism as the only honest response to Tottenham's chronic underperformance.
anger
Tammy Abraham
Ollie Watkins
"We deserve all the hate we get "
"We get vitriol from here every week, you’re nothing special."
The Middle Ground Murmur
Caught between wanting to believe and not wanting to sound delusional, this camp processes results with measured scepticism, acknowledging their own conflicting thoughts rather than committing to either hope or despair.
neutral
Tammy Abraham
Ollie Watkins
"I definitely mitigate some of the things I’ve thought and said even though if I’m honest I don’t really think my opinions were especially incorrect but I do like it when we score a"
"I also like the idea that it's only online fans that are negative. Match going fans are all real fans and are always positive.
Hear those boos?"
The Quiet Believers
They're choosing to focus on what's actually improved this season rather than spiral into the familiar Spurs narrative, convinced that overperforming expectations is worth celebrating even if it doesn't silence the wider doom.
approval
Tammy Abraham
Ollie Watkins
"And I don't mean to be negative either because I'm loving our football this half and very happy. Just the standard Spurs foreboding too.."
"True but we can’t be downbeat - we’ve outperformed expectations again this year"
Supporters are sharply divided over the legitimacy of the penalty awarded to Crystal Palace in the first half, with some calling it a "criminal" dive and clear-cut simulation, whilst others grudgingly accept it as a soft decision that finally went their way. The controversy overshadows what becomes a comfortable 3-0 victory, with fans frustrated by inconsistent refereeing standards in the Premier League.
Robbed by a Con Artist
These fans are absolutely convinced Bournemouth cheated their way to the penalty through shameless diving and referee incompetence, and they're not holding back about it.
"@afcbournemouth YALL BOUGHT THE REFEREE HAHAHHAHAHA CANT WIN SO YALL NEED 12TH MAN NEVER A FUCKING PENALTY HENDO DIDNT EVEN TOUCH THAT FUCKING ARGENTINIAN CUNT LACROIX CLEARS"
"@afcbournemouth Where have the men gone in football?
You lot want to be ashamed, play acting and conning the ref.
Absolute fannies."
It's Technically Wrong, Full Stop
This group accepts the penalty didn't happen, but they're analysing it with cold logic rather than venting fury — they just want to move on from a bad decision.
neutral
"@adam24691580 @afcbournemouth Disgusting dive"
"@afcbournemouth Giving that as a penalty was criminal."
Refs Are the Real Problem Here
These supporters pivot away from the penalty itself to complain that football's officials are so consistently awful it's become laughable across the entire sport.
"Try supporting Bradford in league 1! I had better refs officiating my games when I was 12! 🤦♂🙄"
"If we had a point for every time Marcus Tavernier has been called James, then we'd be in the title charge!"
Actually a Correct Call, Believe It
A tiny band of outliers genuinely reckon the ref got it right, and they're almost amused watching everyone else lose their minds over a legitimate penalty.
optimism
amusement
"@afcbournemouth You’re extremely lucky to have this referee. Very very lucky"
Aston Villa supporters are heavily criticising Jadon Sancho's performance and value, with fans questioning his form, wage demands, and whether the move from Dortmund was a mistake. The negativity centres on his perceived decline in elite-level football, with some suggesting he should move on from the Premier League entirely.
Sancho's A Liability
This is the frustrated majority convinced Sancho is actively hurting Villa's chances with sloppy passes and a complete absence of end-product, and they want him off the pitch immediately.
annoyance
flair
"oml another horrible pass by sancho he actually can't do anything well today. Surely he gets subbed off right?"
"Holy shit United absolutely robbed you with Sancho, he’s unbelievably shit and stupid as well my god "
Overpriced And Underwhelming
This camp's resigned to Sancho's mediocrity—they're not angry, just grimly amused that Villa signed a Manchester United reject on big money only to get precisely what they paid for.
neutral
flair
"Of course looo, 200k a week well spent. "
"Sancho and pace.
I actually laughed. Cheers. "
Damage Control Mode
These fans are processing the fallout of Villa's defeat with minimal commentary, stuck between accepting the result and questioning why Sancho was even in the starting eleven.
"Samlun"
"Starting Sancho..."
Sancho's The Exception
A tiny but vocal contingent who genuinely enjoyed watching Sancho play, finding real entertainment value in his involvement regardless of the team's poor result.
amusement
flair
"Sancho gives me life"
"The sheer joy I experienced seeing Sancho start"
Following Liverpool's 3-2 loss to Manchester United, frustrated supporters are demanding Arne Slot's sacking, criticising his tactical decisions, squad management, and the team's overall performance despite significant summer investment. The negativity centres on Slot being "outfought" and unable to win even when given goalscoring opportunities, with fans questioning how he previously won trophies given the current standard of play.
Slot Must Go Now
These fans have run out of patience entirely and believe the manager is the root cause of Liverpool's decline, demanding immediate removal regardless of the club's longer-term plans.
annoyance
anger
Slot
slot
"@LFC And you still want to keep that fking useless « manager » ? SLOT OUT !"
"@LFC This team is a fucking joke, anyone who thinks that useless fat cunt slot is good is a fucking inbred cunt"
Tactically Lost and Angry
This group acknowledges the performance problems are real but struggles to articulate solutions beyond blaming Slot, caught between frustration with the display and uncertainty about what needs to change.
neutral
Slot
slot
"Fucking Slot! Everything is because of fucking slot, absolutely no tactic that helps any players strengths only exposes everyone weaknesses!
He is a fucking blight, and we will con"
"This team is fucking joke and our board is committed to the mediocrity. Loser mentality. Slot is an embarrassment."
Faith Through the Storm
A tiny but vocal minority refusing to join the pile-on, insisting the team will recover and that backing the manager with time and resources is the only path forward.
Slot
slot
"@LFC great job lads, looks brilliant and we will turn this around. also give slot a 5 year contract and whatever money he wants, he is the right man for this job :)"
"Another record Slot broke this season!! Thank you"
Fans are reacting with shock and limited commentary to Arsenal's commanding 3-0 victory over Fulham, with most posts consisting of brief exclamations and sparse engagement rather than detailed tactical analysis. The overwhelming neutrality suggests viewers are either still processing the emphatic nature of the win or the discussion thread itself has devolved into tangential conversation rather than match-focused debate.
The Stunned Into Silence Crew
Fans so blindsided by what just unfolded they can barely articulate it—caught between disbelief and the desperate need to process what Arsenal just did to them.
neutral
jesus
"fuck mannnnnnnnnnnnnn"
"God dammit fuck "
The Schadenfreude Enjoyers
Absolutely loving the chaos, treating Arsenal's dominance like premium entertainment because they're either neutral observers or watching a rival implode in real time.
amusement
jesus
"Ah this is a great watch lol "
"YYYEEESSS!!!!!"
The Bitter And Betrayed Brigade
Seething that Arsenal just humiliated their team or shattered their narrative, channelling pure rage at the audacity of what just happened on the pitch.
anger
jesus
"Bet you feel fucking stupid now "
"fuckkkk goddamn it man"
Neutral observers and supporters are discussing the absence of key attacking players — particularly Alexander Isak and Hugo Ekitiké — with speculation ranging from injury concerns to tactical benching, whilst some question whether Isak's reported desire to join a bigger club has affected his playing time. The tone suggests frustration over squad availability and squad management decisions during a critical part of the season.
Another Injury, Another Disaster
These fans are convinced Isak's repeated absences prove he's a liability, making his transfer fee look like a catastrophic waste of money they can't forgive.
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"Isak injured again?! Has to be worst signing of the season for me"
"@__TopMEMBA @LFC Again? Good lord . So LFC next season is fucked again because the reliable one Ekitike had that nasty ankle injury too."
Cautious Optimism in Waiting
This group acknowledges the injury struggles but isn't ready to write off either player, holding onto hope that next season could finally be when things click into place.
neutral
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"I still think/hope Isak will end up scoring loads of great goals for us and be worth it. Wirtz I’m very unsure. "
"Can’t wait to see isak force a move now, literally called it when we got linked with him. "
The Isak Curse Is Real
These supporters view his injury record as almost comedic inevitability, treating his unavailability as a running joke that defines his entire tenure at the club.
"The curse of isak continues and long may it last lots of love from Newcastle 🤣"
"Where is isak"
Questioning the Tactical Decisions
This camp is debating whether bringing Isak on—or the decision-making around his deployment—actually makes sense given his fitness record and current match situation.
"The curse of isak continues and long may it last lots of love from Newcastle 🤣"
"Where is isak"
Laughing at the Chaos
A small but vocal group finds dark humour in how spectacularly unreliable these big-money signings have proven to be, mocking the whole situation from a rival perspective.
amusement
ekitike
"Great work form Martin Tyler saying you can be optimistic that Wirtz Ekitike and Isak will spent most of next season tougher when Ekitike is out for half of it at least…"
"@LFC Bring Isak on for a much needed equaliser👍👍👍"
Leeds and neutral viewers are united in frustration over Sky's decision to conduct a live interview with Noah Okafor during the match, with fans arguing that interrupting play for player interviews is unwelcome and inappropriate for football coverage. The criticism reflects broader irritation that such practices feel borrowed from American sports broadcasting and detract from watching the game itself.
Sky's Ruined the Match
Fans absolutely livid that a pitchside interview during live play has yanked their attention away from the action they paid to watch.
anger
annoyance
Ethan Ampadu
Sean Longstaff
"The fuck is this shit there's a game on?"
"SKY TV! IS FUCKING SHIT!"
Stop Interrupting the Football
Pragmatic viewers acknowledging the interview happened but demanding broadcasters respect match time and keep the commentary focused on what's actually happening on the pitch.
"no more interviews during the game FFS Sky what are you thinking !?!!?"
"Just gunna put this out there, can we stop with the interviewing players during the game its fckin nonsense."
Fair Play, Carry On
Unbothered observers who see the interview as a harmless, even classy addition to coverage and aren't fussed about the disruption.
neutral
Ethan Ampadu
Sean Longstaff
"The show, does indeed, go on.
I haven’t watched this in a few years, and I used to watch it every week. I might revisit it."
"Classy interview."
That Was Brilliant Content
A small but vocal group celebrating the moment as quality television, especially those catching it on delayed feeds who reckon it enhanced the whole broadcast experience.
Ethan Ampadu
Sean Longstaff
"LOL. you're a good minute ahead of the feed in North America. Didn't lessen how nice that one was!"
"big thanks to Sky for having this and the Rhinos on the same night."
Fulham supporters are venting about their team's sluggish ball progression and hesitancy in the final third, with repeated criticism that players hold possession too long and fail to capitalise on promising positions before pressure builds again. The underlying frustration centres on a pattern of self-sabotage—defensive solidity followed by painfully slow transitions that invite opposition attacks rather than creating clear chances.
The Collapse Merchants
These fans are absolutely fuming that Arsenal repeatedly shoots themselves in the foot by dropping tempo when ahead, transforming dominant performances into nail-biting escapes that shouldn't need to happen.
anger
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"i hate my team. why do they insist on being so ass 50% of the time "
"Why do we start to play like shite when we're leading 1 nil?? Passing side to side and back, then guess what? Saliba makes a stupid arse mistake. Every fcking time!"
The Tactical Optimists
This group reckons Arsenal are actually playing some of their finest football in ages when they commit to attacking intensity, and they're genuinely puzzled why anyone would complain.
neutral
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"why are we playing some of our best football in a long time????"
"What a difference playing on the front foot makes"
The Execution Realists
They're not here for the vibes — these supporters are dissecting the concrete reasons Arsenal's tempo falters, pointing fingers at slow decision-making and passing hesitation that costs precious seconds in the box.
"Why can't our players release the ball quicker, min 1-2 we could have had a goal already. Skelly took long to pass the ball to a player with space,"
"Lol "there's levels to this game." Act like you've been there before, ya nerd."
The Pattern Spotters
A smaller but engaged crew who see genuine improvement in Arsenal's attacking variety and ball progression, appreciating the tactical tweaks that suggest the club is finally mixing it up effectively.
Ben White
Gabriel Magalhães
"These sharp passes are looking good. Not see that in a while "
"I like that they're switching it up: some long passes, some build from the back. "
Liverpool supporters are expressing frustration with Alexis Mac Allister's defensive and passing performance in the match, with many citing a prolonged dip in form stretching back over a season. Some fans blame midfield partner Ryan Gravenberch's positioning and work-rate for exacerbating the problems in Liverpool's engine room.
Mac Allister's Season of Shame
Two-thirds of Liverpool fans are absolutely seething, convinced he's been the club's worst performer all campaign and his defensive mistakes have directly cost them goals.
annoyance
anger
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
Virgil van Dijk
"Macca ?!! Are you joking ? By far our worst player all season long. That half arsed clearance was pathetic "
"That performance from Macca is one the worst I've ever seen. Genuinely hall of fame bad. He needs negative numbers in the match ratings."
The Nuanced Critics
A quarter of supporters acknowledge Mac Allister's poor display but temper their outrage by pointing to systemic defensive problems across the entire team.
neutral
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"I fucking hate it when our players turn their backs like macca did on the first goal, you get paid a million pounds a month, take it in the face. "
"Macca has been terrible, Wirtz offers very little most weeks, Defense is shit. Chiesa and Rio not trusted to play significant minutes. How the fuck can this keep going?"
Form's on a Worrying Slide
These fans aren't screaming blue murder, but they're genuinely concerned that his decline has been consistent for over a year now, not just a one-off shocker.
"Macallister was so soft on 2 of Utds goals, poor."
"Macalister form is declining for over a year now
Constantly doing mistake"
The Argentina Redemption Squad
A tiny but stubborn minority insist he'll prove his critics wrong at international level and that his club form will eventually click back into gear.
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"I cant wait to watch macca be absolutely world class for Argentina in the world cup"
"YES heaven what a clearance "
Brentford demolished West Ham 3-0, and Hammers supporters are furious with manager Nuno's substitution strategy and in-game management, blaming his refusal to make obvious attacking changes and his slow response to being carved open on the counter-attack for the heavy defeat. Fans are particularly critical of his reluctance to withdraw Pablo and restructure the midfield despite being torn apart, with many questioning his tactical awareness and decision-making under pressure.
Nuno's Selection is Sabotage
This majority camp believes Nuno is actively undermining West Ham by stubbornly picking his favoured players over in-form alternatives, and they're furious he refuses to learn from his mistakes week after week.
annoyance
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"@WestHam #NunoOut Gets the team wrong every single week. Insistent on playing his favorites and they are the worst players on the pitch by a country mile. Deserve to go down when w"
"@WestHam why do we play wan bissaka anymore? genuinely, he’s useless"
Results Speak Louder Than Blame
This pragmatic middle ground acknowledges Nuno's defensive limitations but credits him for somehow extracting wins from a squad that shouldn't be competitive, caught between frustration and grudging respect.
neutral
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"Nuno, SUBS!!!"
"for the hate I have for him, nuno santos is genuinely an amazing coach, being able to turn this hopless west ham team around is amazing, and worth talking about"
Tactical Cowardice in the Technical Area
This analytical faction pinpoints specific in-game failures—passive defence, failure to challenge referees, inability to adapt—suggesting Nuno lacks the tactical balls of previous West Ham managers to dominate matches.
"I guess Wan-Bissaka didnt fancy being a right back for the third goal then....was it too much of a faff on for him to get out and try to close them down"
"I don't understand why Nuno never complains to the ref? Miss the days of Moyes sending Nolan like an attack dog."
Nuno's Building Something Special
This hopeful minority genuinely believes Nuno is a top-tier manager finally given competent players to work with, and they see his recent results as validation that the hard work will pay off.
admiration
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"nuno santo gotta be one of the best managers ever"
"Really nice to see what Nuno Santo can do now that he actually has decent players."
Tottenham conceded twice in the opening 25 minutes before Aston Villa pulled one back in stoppage time, leaving fans in a state of darkly comic disbelief at their struggling side's continued woes. The discussion is largely dominated by mockery of Spurs' position near the relegation zone and resignation from Villa supporters that even a late goal cannot salvage a frustrating afternoon.
The Clown Car Chronicles
These fans are processing Spurs' meltdown with pure, speechless disbelief—the kind of stunned silence that only a spectacular late collapse can deliver.
neutral
The Cavalry Just Arrived
Villa and Richarlison believers riding the high of a dramatic comeback, celebrating the moment their side refused to accept defeat when it mattered most.
amusement
approval
"Richy❤ You can do it"
"Coys❤❤❤❤❤"
Robbed At The Death
Spurs supporters absolutely fuming at what they see as a cruel, momentum-killing blow snatched away in the closing stages when victory was within touching distance.
"What the fuck😭"
"kill-joy😒"
Brentford fans are divided over Igor Thiago's overall contribution after he converted a penalty in the 3pm kickoff victory, with some dismissing him as a "3pm merchant" who scores only in Saturday matches, whilst others defend his 20 goal contributions this season and suggest fatigue or a temporary dip in shooting accuracy rather than decline. The discussion centres on whether his assist record and work rate justify his status when his direct goalscoring has gone quiet in recent games.
The Stats Don't Lie Brigade
These fans are keeping the noise level down because the numbers speak for themselves—20 goal contributions this season means one dodgy game doesn't erase a career-defining campaign.
neutral
"He’s 100% scoring this"
"2 assists last game, goes quiet this game and all of a sudden he is useless? 20 G/A this season…"
He's Lost The Plot Lately
They reckon Igor Thiago's been coasting recently and are convinced his absence from the side earlier proved the team actually functions better without the distraction of a declining star.
"Our best stretch of games offensively came when dude was suspended, that should’ve been the first sign he’s not good lol "
"Why has Tiago become so bad at scoring in recent weeks? Thinking about world cup? "
Pure Brazilian Magic Believers
These are the ride-or-die supporters celebrating every single goal as confirmation that their man is world-class and untouchable, no debate required.
amusement
"Great play from Dango"
"ALWAYS BELIEVE IN 🇧🇷
25 goals this season for Igor Thiago ❤️🔥 https://t.co/jSliBwZW2x"
Manchester United supporters and neutral observers are mocking Federico Chiesa's performance after he came on for Liverpool during their dramatic 3-2 defeat, with fans questioning why manager Arne Slot would introduce him at such a crucial stage and using the moment to highlight why the Italian winger rarely features. The consensus is damning—Chiesa's involvement symbolises Liverpool's defensive breakdown in the final stages, with some suggesting his introduction directly contributed to Kobbie Mainoo's late winner.
Chiesa Is Simply Not It
These fans have written Chiesa off entirely, convinced he's actively making Liverpool worse and questioning why he's even getting minutes when other attackers are available.
anger
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"Chiesa is so fucking bad lmao"
"Absolutely shit, you mean, Gakpo is our worst attacker. I cannot believe he's better than Chiesa, or even Rio."
Just Stating The Facts
This camp is processing the match events without emotional heat, noting tactical decisions and observations in a matter-of-fact way that suggests resignation rather than rage.
neutral
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"Ah the Chiesa for Konate sub. Classic."
"CHIESA SEEMS LIKE A GOOD GUY"
Peak Frustration In Real Time
Caught between disbelief and dark humour, these fans are reacting viscerally to specific moments of failure, mixing exasperation with sarcasm about Chiesa's international prospects.
"Chiesa what the fuck was that"
"Don’t worry Chiesa, he’ll see you at the World Cup…"
Breaking Down The Performance
Taking a step back to assess what actually happened on the pitch, these supporters are balancing criticism with context, trying to make sense of the collapse without total meltdown.
"Chiesa what the fuck was that"
"Don’t worry Chiesa, he’ll see you at the World Cup…"
Sarcasm As A Weapon
The smallest camp speaking through irony and backhanded wishes, secretly hoping Chiesa gets dropped and Gakpo stays central, using humour to mask genuine frustration.
amusement
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"can’t wait to see the back of chiesa "
"@LFC @LFCUSA Keep playing Gakpo … funnily always fit to play. I wish we would start Chiesa someday."
Manchester United fans are heavily criticising individual performances after their 3-2 victory, particularly focusing on winger Amad's inconsistent play and poor decision-making throughout the match. The discussion reveals frustration with attacking personnel failing to convert chances and maintain standards despite securing three crucial points against Liverpool.
Amad's Catastrophic Loss Of Form
This furious majority believes Amad has had a genuinely terrible season and this particular mistake epitomises a wider pattern of laziness and carelessness that's become unacceptable.
anger
annoyance
destroyed
goal
"Jesus fucking Christ Amad. Amad has been terrible this season. Fuck me"
"So fucking lazy by amad, you didnt play the first half you cant come on and do that 2 min in!!"
The Tactical Context Explains Everything
These analysts reckon Amad's struggles aren't just about individual performance — they're revealing something deeper about how he's being deployed and who's playing alongside him.
"Lammens first real mistake this season. He has been brilliant for us. Amad? What's happened to him? He's actually making Garnacho look good this season! But we got the job done an"
"Mbeumo brilliant with amad as a rwb......average with Dalot behind him maybe that has something to do with his form"
Unforgivable Brain-Dead Defending
This raw reaction camp sees the incident as so spectacularly stupid that it demands immediate, visceral condemnation without needing to dig into the deeper story.
neutral
destroyed
goal
"Unfucking believable how stupid of a giveaway that was. Brain dead by Amad. "
"@ManUtd amad u fucking dogshit of a player prick"
A Brilliant Keeper Undone By Errors
These pragmatists are processing that despite the win, Lammens has had an elite season only to be let down by careless mistakes from his defenders — particularly Amad.
"Lammens first real mistake this season. He has been brilliant for us. Amad? What's happened to him? He's actually making Garnacho look good this season! But we got the job done an"
"Mbeumo brilliant with amad as a rwb......average with Dalot behind him maybe that has something to do with his form"
We'll Take The Luck And Move On
A tiny contingent recognising the escape for what it is — pure fortune that papered over the cracks, though they're oddly generous about who actually underperformed.
destroyed
goal
"Extremely lucky cant believe the passes we did amad and lammens"
"Amad is the best Liverpool player today"
Arsenal fans are deeply concerned about centre-back Ben White's form following the 3-0 defeat, citing recurring decision-making errors and a noticeable loss of confidence that goes beyond simple skill gaps. The overwhelming sentiment is that White's positional mistakes and lack of composure are actively hurting the team's defensive stability, with supporters debating whether he needs dropping or a run of games to rebuild.
White's Passing Killed Us
This camp believes Ben White's decision-making in possession was catastrophically bad, squandering open play and costing Arsenal when the pitch was there to be exploited.
sadness
anger
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"White looks bad, what the fuck are these passes when you have pitch opened so bad?"
"What the fuck is White doing. That was the worst option"
Form Fluctuates Match to Match
This group refuses to pick a side, acknowledging White had genuine quality moments alongside shocking lapses, making him impossible to definitively judge on the day.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"White has been good second half. "
"White has been shocking bad today."
Discipline Over Dominance
These fans recognise White's improved tactical awareness and hand discipline as genuine progress, but argue it hasn't translated into consistent on-pitch performance when it counts.
"White learnt ro keep his hands in place at least but still not on form"
"Ya that's the reason why he use white too all out atk"
The Defence Carries The Midfield
This minority view celebrates White as the glue holding Arsenal's structure together, seeing his partnership with Rice as symbiotic and worth defending despite occasional mistakes.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Aside from his slip running back to our goal, White’s been excellent. Love it. They make each other better "
"White was a bit shaking. Loved it how the fans chanted his name "
Spurs supporters are in meltdown over another poor performance, with fans torn between panic about a genuine relegation scrap and cautious optimism that West Ham's struggles might keep them safe. The discussion reveals deep anxiety about the club's late-season form and financial consequences of dropping into the Championship, whilst some neutrals are darkly amused by the possibility of a top-six club fighting for survival.
The Damage Report Brigade
These fans are brutally honest about what they're witnessing — they're breaking down the performance with clinical precision, acknowledging Spurs are genuinely struggling and comparing this potential escape to past triumphs, because the context of how they'd survive matters just as much as survival itself.
neutral
arsenal
win
"If we turn this around I might genuinely celebrate it more than the PSG one, because the difference in performances would have to be genuinely generational "
"Going forward we are the worse team in the premier league bar the bottom 2 we are so poor"
The Betrayed Believers
Once-hopeful supporters now feeling humiliated and globally embarrassed, convinced this team is fundamentally broken and incapable of competing at the level required, viewing Champions League qualification as a curse rather than a blessing because they won't have the squad to back it up.
disappointment
joke
relegation
"We’re going to be fucked in the champions league next year if we crawl over the line. This team is pathetic, cannot quite believe we’ve found ourselves in this position after how b"
"We have globally become a joke of a football club, many fans around the world wanted us to win against spurs and now they see us for the joke that we are, fucking embarrassing, our"
The Pragmatists
A small but resolute group choosing to focus on the silver lining — Champions League football secured despite everything — and frankly relieved Spurs aren't going down, treating survival as the only metric that actually counts when everything else feels catastrophic.
optimism
arsenal
win
"but this trophy comes with a CL spot so even better "
"Very happy to see spurs ar still in epl"
Arsenal fans are celebrating a commanding 3-0 half-time lead through goals from Viktor Gyökeres (twice) and Bukayo Saka, though some are debating whether the scoreline fully reflects their dominance and questioning if it will ultimately prove enough in the title race. Discussion centres on the performance quality, frustration at missed chances, and whether this cushion is sufficient given the season-long title battle.
Live Ball Anxiety
Fans locked in the moment, swearing at missed chances and near-misses because they genuinely believe Arsenal could've buried this match by half-time.
neutral
"Well way to fucking jinx it"
"Fuck man, you have to convert that 4 v 3 though"
The Scoreline Lies Brigade
These supporters reject the final result as misleading — they watched Arsenal completely dominate and are annoyed Fulham got away with it.
""This match was not as close as the score indicates.""
"Imagine how big a 4/5-0 would have been"
Catastrophe Merchants
Convinced Arsenal's clinical finishing will cost them dearly, these fans are actively worried a narrow victory will haunt the title race later.
""This match was not as close as the score indicates.""
"Imagine how big a 4/5-0 would have been"
The Vintage Gunners Believers
Confident, almost cocky Arsenal fans expecting exactly this — a professional demolition with multiple goals and star men delivering on cue.
"If this ends 1-0 I'm going to be pissed"
"Fuck im worried about it ending in a tie now"
approval
"3-0 OMG GD BABY"
"I expect an easy win as always, with a brace from Victor"
Newcastle supporters are locked in debate over Eddie Howe's future following a win that temporarily relieves pressure but fails to settle deeper concerns about squad cohesion, tactical stubbornness, and the manager's ability to navigate the club's ambitions. Many demand a summer overhaul and question whether Howe can rebuild trust, whilst others grudgingly acknowledge the three points bought some breathing room before the inevitable reckoning arrives.
The Howe Must Go Brigade
Nearly half the fanbase has written off the season entirely, convinced that Eddie Howe's tactical approach has run out of ideas and that radical change—starting with the manager's head—is the only path forward.
annoyance
Eddie
"@NUFC That was a fucking pathetic performance btw.. nothing changed at all? This season is a write off sack howe!! #eddieout"
"@NUFC If football was a fair sport, we would be losing. Fucking terrible performance.
Sack Howe and Wissa in the locker rooms"
The Fence-Sitters' Reluctant Acceptance
The largest single bloc are going through the motions of defeat, mechanically calling for Howe's removal whilst watching performances that feel directionless, trapped between hope and resignation.
neutral
Howe
howe
"@NUFC Sack howe! 🤩"
"@NUFC Good goal, still Howe out though."
The Stubborn Believers
A tiny but vocal minority are clinging to signs of improvement in matches, insisting that glimpses of promise prove the system works—even as the majority around them contemplate jumping off bridges.
Howe
"@NUFC Halft time team talk working wondersz people. All watching"
"“What a great contest we’re having now”
Well I’m glad *someone’s* having fun, I’m about to fling myself off of Clifton suspension bridge "
Fans largely expressed satisfaction with the match outcome and refereeing rather than lodging significant complaints, with most posts offering brief reactions to the 3-2 result and yellow card decisions that went relatively uncontested. The neutral sentiment reflects a general acceptance of how the officials managed the game despite its high-tempo, goal-laden nature.
The Ref Got It Wrong Crowd
These fans genuinely believe a controversial decision decided the match, and they're demanding answers about what the officials actually saw.
neutral
"💩 💩 💩 "
"Disappointing 😢"
United Earned Their Win Fair
This contingent backs the referee's call completely and reckons Manchester United deserved the three points without question or debate.
amusement
approval
Robbed Blind And Furious
These supporters are absolutely seething — they reckon their team got stitched up by a shocker of a decision that cost them the game.
Supporters are calling out Manchester United's home crowd for poor singing and limited chanting repertoire during the second-half comeback against Liverpool, with debate over whether the noise levels actually distracted opposing players. The discussion also touches on broader questions about home versus away fan engagement and missed opportunities for traditional United chants.
Away Days Still Got It
These fans are simply celebrating that United's travelling support showed up, sang loud, and proved the away contingent can still create an atmosphere when it matters most.
neutral
"Away crowds up for this.
Well in lads"
"Oh they can sing "
Embarrassed by the Silence
This furious camp believes United's own fans failed them during a massive Liverpool clash, going silent when they should've been backing the team with noise and passion.
"omfg sing another song you fucking losers"
"YOU NEVER SING THAT - it's a disaster "
Poverty Chanting Argument
These supporters are drawing uncomfortable comparisons between United's vocal output and Liverpool's, suggesting the home support has lost its edge or quality compared to rivals.
"Their fans would cry for more "
"United fans poverty chanting?"
Atmosphere Tactics and Setup
This analytical group is examining whether United's chanting strategy or fan organisation actually affected the game's tactical flow or psychological momentum on the pitch.
"Their fans would cry for more "
"United fans poverty chanting?"
Away Fans > Home Fans
These celebrants are making a broader philosophical point that travelling supporters are always the true devotees, and this Liverpool match proved why away atmospheres consistently outlast home ones.
amusement
"Our fans are having a great time and sky sports are leaving the volume on."
"Away fans are nigh on always better than home fans, as they’re the most devout fans. Regardless of the game. "
Brighton supporters are frustrated that manager Fabian Hürzeler waited until deep into the second half to make substitutions, despite the team's attack struggling and creative players like Mitoma and Kadıoğlu being ineffective. Fans argue the tactical changes arrived too late to properly influence the match outcome.
Watching The Clock Die
Fans processing the match in real-time, desperate for any tactical change and relieved when subs finally arrived, even if it felt like watching paint dry.
neutral
Danny Welbeck
Kaoru Mitoma
"PLEASE SUBSSSSS"
"Better late than never mate lol"
The Timing Debate Rages
Split between those convinced Hürzeler waited too long and those arguing the replacements actually worked and there was still tactical flexibility in the bank.
"Late subs"
"There’s still 4 subs to use.. the attack got significantly better when they came on. And that’s with Mitoma and Ferdi being shut down "
Fed Up With The Hesitation
Angry supporters who've lost patience with what they see as stubborn, slow substitution decisions that cost Brighton momentum when the team needed it most.
Danny Welbeck
Kaoru Mitoma
"What the heck is this sub?"
"@NUFC Can we make a fuckin sub !!! Fgs !!!"
The Cavalry Can Still Save This
Believers convinced the fresh legs arriving late in the game have genuinely turned the tide and could flip the result if given the chance.
optimism
Danny Welbeck
Kaoru Mitoma
"Great subs, hope they can make an impact now!"
"Really feel like some good subs could complete shift this"
Fans are split over Liverpool defender Ibrahima Konate's tackling style during the match, with some accusing him of dangerous, unpunished body checks whilst others argue similar incidents by Manchester United players went uncalled. The discussion centres on inconsistent refereeing and whether Konate escaped punishment for physical defending that should have drawn cards.
Konate Is A Liability
This camp believes the defender's reckless, crude defending—pushing rather than positioning—is fundamentally incompetent and indefensible, making him a genuine weakness in Liverpool's back line.
anger
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"What useless player konate is can only push and provide nothing else fucking hell"
"Konate - that one is just such a shit thing to do"
Classic Defending Controversy
This group acknowledges Konate's aggressive, physical style exists in a grey area between legitimate defending and foul play, finding dark humour in the inevitable chaos it creates.
neutral
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"Hahahahahaha konate"
"Konate absolutely excels at the "just push him in the back" defending style."
Absolutely Howling Defending
This minority view sees Konate's moment as so comically inept—almost cartoonishly bad—that it becomes entertaining rather than infuriating, laughing at the sheer absurdity of the defending on display.
amusement
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"Konate with an almost all-time great blunder there"
"Woodman well done heads up play, Konate looking like an U-8 out there lol"
Fans from both sides have united in fury over what they're calling one of the worst refereeing displays of the season, with the official dishing out yellow cards liberally whilst missing key decisions throughout the match. The consensus is damning—this performance ranks among the most incompetent they've witnessed, regardless of the final result.
The Refereeing Disgrace Brigade
Nearly four in five fans are absolutely fuming because they've witnessed what they genuinely believe is one of the worst officiated matches of the season — and they're not holding back.
anger
annoyance
"One of the worst refereeing performances I’ve ever seen fucking hell"
"Fuck this ref. Wtf "
The Pragmatic Grey Area Crew
A small but measured minority reckon the call was marginal at worst, and they're urging their angrier mates to take the win and move on without obsessing over one contentious moment.
neutral
"The ref preferably"
"It’s rare we get the calls. Enjoy the moment "
The Rare Vindication Squad
A tiny sliver of the fanbase is actually defending the ref's overall competence, suggesting the performance was fundamentally sound despite the controversy swirling around them.
"Perfect game despite the ref."
"Always said this ref was good "
Manchester United supporters are criticising Rúben Amorim's decision-making during his tenure, particularly his handling of Kobbie Mainoo's development and playing time, with many contrasting his approach unfavourably to Michael Carrick's current management. The discussion has intensified following Mainoo's match-winning performance in today's 3-2 victory over Liverpool, with fans arguing the youngster was unfairly sidelined under Amorim's system.
Amorim Ruined Our Mainoo
These fans are seething because they believe the manager deliberately froze out a generational talent through spite or tactical stubbornness, and they want him gone yesterday.
anger
annoyance
sign
manager
"I am sorry for harsh words but wtf kind of beef Amorim had with this talented young kid. What a pos "even pope won't make change" smug bastard "
"Can we re-hire Amorim just to fire him again please? The fucking terrorist. "
Just Stating The Facts
These supporters are keeping their heads down and acknowledging reality — sometimes Mainoo thrived under Amorim, sometimes he didn't — without the emotional fireworks.
neutral
sign
manager
"@ManUtd ANNOUNCE AMORIMS DISMISSAL AGAIN! 🥳"
"True, but he was also very good under Amorim this season as well. "
The Bruno Midfield Problem
This camp is dissecting the actual tactical decision that sidelined Mainoo — arguing that Amorim's insistence on playing Bruno centrally created a logjam that cost the youngster vital minutes.
"How was amorim doing with all those signings?"
"Amorim insisted on playing Bruno in midfield and Mainoo couldn't get a look in. Please don't mention the man's name again."
Amorim Saved Us From Disaster
These rare voices are giving credit where they see it, viewing the manager's tenure as a necessary reset that ultimately protected the club's future, despite the rough edges.
"How was amorim doing with all those signings?"
"Amorim insisted on playing Bruno in midfield and Mainoo couldn't get a look in. Please don't mention the man's name again."
sign
manager
"@ManUtd Thank you Amorim for the vision"
"@ManUtd Say it louderrrrrrrrrr.....
Wonderful journey of rejuvenation......
Nearly destroyed by Amorim but now , the boy is enjoying his football again..."
Brentford supporters are furious at what they perceive as catastrophic defending and confusion over the team's formation as they concede three goals, with particular anger directed at the manager's apparent lack of control over proceedings. The negativity centres on structural breakdown and questioning whether the gaffer is even engaged with sorting out the obvious problems on the pitch.
The Absolute Meltdown Crew
These fans are apoplectic because they've witnessed a defensive shambles that's cost their team dearly, and they're not holding back their fury at whoever's responsible.
anger
Kyle Walker-Peters
Aaron Wan-Bissaka
"What the fuck is he doing….game over."
"@WestHam @thekingdombank_ why u dont fucking play? why its all defence ?"
The Damage Control Observers
They're acknowledging what just went wrong with a kind of grim acceptance, giving grudging credit to whoever managed to salvage something from the chaos.
neutral
Kyle Walker-Peters
Aaron Wan-Bissaka
"Good from the defenders to cover up for that abortion of a decision "
"Nice defending"
The Tactical Post-Mortem Squad
These lot are dissecting the defensive shape and formation choices, convinced the real problem runs deeper than individual errors—it's a systemic breakdown they want answers for.
"disgraceful defending"
"Why should you ? Like he cares?"
The Silver Linings Crew
A small but defiant group trying to find humour or positivity in the wreckage, either laughing at the absurdity of it all or genuinely impressed by a moment of defensive recovery.
Kyle Walker-Peters
Aaron Wan-Bissaka
Axel Disasi
"The classic "go out there and have fun!" formation"
"Nice defending"
West Ham United supporters are reacting bitterly to a 3-0 defeat to Brentford that has sealed their relegation from the Premier League, with many fans expressing frustration that rival clubs and neutrals appear to be celebrating Tottenham's survival hopes on the final day. The discussion centres on perceived bias in how the league narrative has developed around Spurs' fight against the drop, with fans questioning whether the Premier League itself is engineered to create a dramatic finale.
West Ham's Nightmare, Our Fury
These fans are absolutely seething—they're venting raw anger at their club's collapse, turning on each other and rival supporters whilst the relegation wounds are still fresh.
annoyance
relegated
"Such a weird fucking fanbase man, do you get lots of neutrals on /r/coys commenting on your matchthreads?"
"Shut up you wally, stop telling fans how to act let alone fans of other teams. Worry about yourself, not Tottenham or West Ham. I couldn’t give a shit about whether Tottenham go do"
The Bigger Picture Believers
Neutral observers stepping back from club tribalism to acknowledge that survival drama involves systemic questions bigger than any single team's European dreams.
neutral
relegated
"True. But this is bigger than one clubs European aspirations, everyone has to do their part for the sake of generational memes. They can unite the league here "
"Nah mate im a leeds fan and i like it"
Why Does Everyone Hate Us?
Spurs supporters wrestling with a paradox—they're claiming their club's size and stature makes them a target for neutral schadenfreude, whilst insisting nobody cared when smaller clubs went down.
"Shows how big a club Tottenham are that everyone wants us relegated, nobody cared when Villa & Newcastle were relegated"
"Over to the real claret and blues then."
We'll Bounce Back Somehow
The stubborn optimists refusing to accept the severity of the situation, clinging to hope that their team will navigate through or recover from this survival battle.
relegated
"but every tottenham fan loves it adey1yido coys"
"Nah mate im a leeds fan and i like it"
With Arsenal thrashed 3-0 by Fulham, supporters have vented their frustration at Gabriel Jesus's form and commitment, comparing him unfavourably to Raheem Sterling's earlier struggles and questioning whether he even cares about proving himself at the club. The overwhelming consensus is that Jesus needs to move on and Arsenal must recruit a genuine world-class striker to challenge for the title.
Jesus Has To Go
Fans demanding immediate exit believe he's a luxury player incapable of delivering in crucial moments, wasting valuable squad depth and minutes that could elevate Arsenal's title charge.
anger
jesus
Ben White
"I can't wait for Jesus to be off this team. Absolutely useless. Might as well have subbed on a fucking chair instead of him. "
"Nothing truly infuriates me more than those Jesus cameos, why tf is he still getting minutes?"
The Nuanced Debaters
This camp's taking the piss with religious wordplay, suggesting there's legitimate tactical or contextual reasoning behind the decision even if they're not fully convinced either way.
neutral
jesus
Ben White
"Thanks Mary Magdalene"
"The leader of the faithful. Who believe no matter what"
Good Riddance And No Regrets
These fans are actively welcoming his departure as a net positive, convinced Arsenal will be better off without him — full stop, no nostalgia required.
amusement
jesus
Ben White
"Jesus - thank you for the memories"
"I will not miss Jesus. May he enjoy his time in Italy at Roma "
Newcastle United supporters are venting their frustration at Nick Pope's performance during the victory over Brighton, with numerous fans calling for the goalkeeper to be dropped or replaced after what they perceive as poor distribution and positioning throughout the match. The discussion reflects wider concern about Newcastle's defensive reliability, even in a comfortable 3-1 win.
Pope's Costing Us Points
These fans believe Pope's individual errors are actively losing Newcastle matches and can't fathom why the club keeps selecting a goalkeeper who undermines their entire defensive structure.
annoyance
anger
Aaron Ramsdale
Nick Pope
"Pope sucks. What a horrible ball out… again. "
"@NUFC Nick pope is the worst fucking goalkeeper I have ever even. He costs us points EVERY SINGLE TIME!!!"
Dark Comedy Silver Linings
These supporters are so exasperated they've found dark humour in the situation — celebrating that at least Newcastle won despite Pope, or that his presence is actually helping Ramsdale's case for the shirt.
neutral
Aaron Ramsdale
Nick Pope
"@NUFC Needed that win and I am absolutely buzzing we won, now don't let pope on the pitch ever again"
"Best thing for ramsdales career is letting pope play "
The Fundamental Question
These fans are zeroing in on Pope's core weakness — his ball distribution — and treating his inability to execute basic goalkeeper skills as the root cause of Newcastle's problems.
"Why the hell is dopey popey back in goal. Ffs"
"Nick Pope can not kick a ball"
The Sarcasm Defence
These handful of voices are either joking through sheer frustration or genuinely attempting to flip the narrative by sarcastically praising Pope, though they're massively outnumbered by the genuine criticism.
Aaron Ramsdale
"Big thanks to Verbruggen for Popeing that one"
"Nick Pope you are the greatest keeper of all time "
Newcastle United dismantled Brighton & Hove Albion 3-1 at St James' Park, with early headers from William Osula and Dan Burn establishing complete control before Harvey Barnes sealed the win in injury time. Fans across both sides reacted with shock and disbelief at the decisive nature of the result, with the match descending into a yellow-card fest as tempers frayed in the closing stages.
Resigned Disbelief
These fans saw the collapse coming from a mile away and are cycling through frustration and acceptance because, honestly, they've been here before.
neutral
"Grrr... *sigh*"
"Except nobody with half a brain cell thought that"
Relief Merchants
Brighton supporters and neutrals catching their breath after what could've been a complete disaster, finding dark humour in narrowly avoiding total humiliation.
amusement
Absolutely Done With It
Newcastle fans who've hit a breaking point — not just angry about this match, but furious at the pattern of defensive shambles that keeps repeating itself.
anger
"Here we fucking go again"
"Well fuck that."
Aston Villa supporters are frustrated with Unai Emery's decision to rest seven players in a goalless draw against bottom-half Tottenham, seeing it as an unnecessarily risky rotation ahead of a crucial semi-final on Thursday. Fans criticise the squad depth and recruitment strategy, questioning why established players like Tielemans and Rogers were left on for the full 90 minutes whilst others were rested, and worry that a poor result in the upcoming semi-final could create massive pressure heading into the Burnley fixture.
Rotation Killed Our Momentum
These fans believe Emery's squad shuffle was reckless gamble that torpedoed confidence right when the team needed consistency, leaving them with no attacking threat from the bench.
disappointment
annoyance
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
Emiliano Buendía
"We just look so fucking uninspired and I honestly can't name anyone off the bench that would actually help because the issue is central midfield "
"Rotating was always a stupid decision here. We’re not exactly playing well and now we will have zero confidence going into Thursday."
Injuries Are The Real Problem
This group accepts the rotation call but sees the bigger picture — fitness issues across the squad are the genuine crisis, not the tactical choice itself.
neutral
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Have to say this team of the whole squad is fit can do really well btw
Why the heck everyone is getting injured "
"Take a breath. It went well but they rotated 7. Good stuff but temper your enthusiasm a bit. "
Back The Manager's Blueprint
The optimists reckon Emery got his selections spot on and are convinced fresh legs and attacking talent like Abraham will prove the doubters wrong.
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"excited to see some change in the line-up, abraham hattrick masterclass incoming"
"Honestly the lineup thread was full of people saying what a great rotation it was. "
Manchester United supporters are divided over Zirkzee's lack of playing time, with some defending his technical ability and arguing he deserves starts ahead of Cunha and Mbeumo, while others dismiss him as a flop who should remain a backup. The broader frustration centres on team selection during a tight title race, with fans questioning whether the striker rotation is being handled fairly given United's need for goals.
The Selection Mystery
These fans are genuinely baffled by the manager's team decisions, watching Amad's errors in real time and wondering aloud why Zirkzee isn't getting the chance to prove himself on the pitch.
neutral
Malacia
Mount
"After Amad's mistake you could immediately sense the fear creeping in. Terrible sub. Why isn't Zirkzee getting chances? "
"@markgoldbridge Amad is absolutely wank get him gone with mbeumo as well. - should of brought zirkzee on"
The Ruthless Reckoning
This hardcore contingent has written Zirkzee off entirely, pointing to brutal statistics and a pattern of invisibility that suggests he's simply not good enough for this level of football.
Malacia
Mount
"I’m convinced Zirkzee is the most performative player we’ve had lmfao guy does fuck all"
"Zirkzee has done a grand total of fuck all for us against worse opposition. He has 2 goals in his last 37 appearances. I'm sorry nobody is picking him over Amad."
The Fairness Argument
These supporters recognise Zirkzee's technical ability and footballing intelligence but believe he's being unfairly compared to in-form alternatives like Cunha and Mbeumo, creating an impossible competition for minutes.
"Managers are not fair with Zirkzee. His controll of the ball is awesome....he is intelligent passer too. How Mbemo/Cunha start with him on the bench?"
"Cuz Cunha is miles better than Zirkzee that s why😂. Zirkzee is a flop and he s not enough for us"
The Reality Check
A mixed camp trying to reconcile what they see in training and flashes of quality against what the scoreline and minutes actually tell them about his impact and future at the club.
"Managers are not fair with Zirkzee. His controll of the ball is awesome....he is intelligent passer too. How Mbemo/Cunha start with him on the bench?"
"Cuz Cunha is miles better than Zirkzee that s why😂. Zirkzee is a flop and he s not enough for us"
The Glimpse Of Brilliance
These optimists seized on Zirkzee's cameo performance as evidence he can deliver when given the opportunity, celebrating his best moments as proof the talent is genuinely there.
admiration
Malacia
Mount
"That final pass from Zirk was spectacular 👌 "
"Zirkzee looked nice as a sub, best 20 min. MOTM."
Fans are fixated on a goal that was ruled out for offside around the 30-minute mark, with widespread frustration that the decision overshadowed what many felt was an otherwise well-taken finish. The offside call has become the talking point of the match, with supporters split between accepting the technical correctness and lamenting the interruption to play.
VAR Has Lost The Plot
These fans are absolutely seething because they reckon the offside call is a complete botch — the player wasn't even close to being in an illegal position, and they're questioning how the officials can get such a basic decision so catastrophically wrong.
anger
ole
great
"How is he offside again. How useless can he be wtf"
"How fucking stupid do you have to be to be offside there."
Yeah Mate, He Was Clearly Off
This camp accepts the decision as correct because the replays show the player was genuinely offside, even if it's tight, and they're frustrated that the forward was in an illegal position when the ball came in.
neutral
ole
great
"Man was offside 6 times in 40min or something... Terrible "
"Fuck, waaaaay offside "
Result Matters More Than Technicalities
These optimists aren't bothered by the offside rule because they've clocked that their team is finally playing with real intensity and quality — the goal might not count, but the performance itself is the real victory here.
amusement
great
"Doesn’t matter that it’s offside. Fantastic header and this is the best we’ve looked in months "
"Might be offsides but I love the energy. We are positive, taking the initiate today"
Leeds and Burnley supporters spent much of the match making jokes about Burnley's newly appointed manager Mike Jackson, conflating his name with the pop star Michael Jackson and riffing on whether the stadium was deliberately playing MJ tracks to wind up the opposition. The discussion was lighthearted and tangential to actual match performance, capturing a moment of levity during what proved to be a fairly disciplinary affair.
Parker Gets The Blame
These fans are weighing up whether Scott Parker's sacking was justified or if the real culprits are the players who let him down all season.
neutral
"@BurnleyOfficial As a Leeds fan that follows them live, can’t tell you how happy I was that Parker was sacked, felt he always had our number with his low block counter style. F**ki"
"@BurnleyOfficial Got to feel for Scot Parker these are the useless players he had to have the whole season"
The Name's The Game
This lot are caught between acknowledging the sheer comedy of having a manager literally called Michael Jackson and the uncomfortable reality of what his appointment actually means.
"@positivevibes1559whos going down you absolute clown, but dont frown, you got mike jackson in town"
"@fedthornton The name of Burnley's manager is Michael Jackson."
From Bad To Worse
These fans see the interim manager change as a damning indictment on Burnley's entire operation — they're losing matches and getting trolled simultaneously.
"@BurnleyOfficial Can't fucking blame Parker now, this is shambolic."
"Losing twice in a row to an interim?
On top of that, this one is called Michael Jackson
That's just cruel"
Smooth Criminal Banter
Pure entertainment seekers who are genuinely delighted by the absurdist humour of the situation and excited to see how football content creators mine it for material.
amusement
admiration
"Playing MJ hahaha that's brilliant"
"I’m really looking forward to Stach’s big result post potentially featuring a Michael Jackson reference "
Arsenal supporters are analysing whether their 3-0 victory over Fulham has secured the Premier League title, with most arguing they've done their job and now need Manchester City to slip up against Everton, though some remain sceptical that City will falter. The discussion centres on Arsenal's remaining fixtures being easier than City's, and whether a three-point lead with games in hand is genuinely insurmountable or just another opportunity to bottle it.
Just Here For The Chaos
These fans are emotionally detached from the title race itself, more interested in the theatre of it all — they won't artificially manufacture hope by backing City, but they'll absolutely enjoy watching Arsenal pile on the goals.
neutral
game
arsenal
"I can't for the life of me root for City and the Tottenham jokes got boring to me years ago"
"These guys are finished.. let’s get some more in to make City shit themselves "
Reluctant Kingmakers In Waiting
Caught between their natural Arsenal scepticism and a genuine fear of City winning again, they're quietly starting to believe the Gunners might actually do this if results stay perfect.
"We all love to laugh at arsenal but I don’t want city to win the league"
"Do the same against West Ham and they've won it imo."
The Doubters Still Holding On
They've seen Arsenal bottle it before and refuse to trust the narrative, convinced that sloppy performances will eventually cost them even though the maths still favour them.
game
arsenal
"They’ll be fighting, but they can also play some terrible, terrible football. Feels like a coin toss whether that match will be a knife fight or a chance to push GD. "
"If we’re worried about fucking West Ham, good god…"
Believers In The Momentum
These are the optimists who think a 3-0 demolition proves Arsenal have found their rhythm and that consecutive wins against the remaining fixtures could actually bring the title home.
optimism
approval
game
arsenal
"3-0 is a great result, hopefully we can continue to get these results against burnley and west ham "
"Seems like a good time to mention how big a fan of Everton I am and what a great job they’re doing this season, hope they can finish strongly. "
Aston Villa fans are heavily criticising Morgan Rogers' display against Tottenham, with widespread consensus that he's been underperforming for months and looked particularly poor tonight alongside fellow underperformers Jadon Sancho and Ross Barkley. The negative mood reflects frustration that despite rotation and changes, Villa's attacking play remains blunt and the squad needs significant reinforcement in the summer window.
Rogers Has Lost The Plot
Villa fans absolutely fuming because Rogers and Sancho have been consistently dire for months, and enough is enough — they're naming names and demanding accountability.
annoyance
disappointment
sancho
"@AVFCOfficial Bogarde is so fuckin shit"
"Rogers has been crap for months now. "
The Mockery Angle
These fans aren't angry, they're cutting — using sarcasm and dark humour to highlight how laughably bad Rogers has been, almost as if his acting career is going better than his football.
neutral
sancho
"Rogers and misplaced passing. Match made in heaven "
"Rogers acting has been better than his football "
Finally The Reckoning
This group sees tonight's performance as overdue justice, relieved that Rogers' terrible form is finally being exposed, but genuinely sceptical Villa can turn it round with a summer overhaul alone.
"It's about time. Played like chit up until today"
"Rogers started tonight mate and he was dogshit. We aren't going to magically become a force to be reckoned with after making the seven changes back on Thursday.
We need a big sum"
The Reality Check Crew
Fans accepting that whilst tonight was awful, the deeper problem is structural — one dodgy performance or a summer rebuild won't fix the fundamental issues plaguing the squad.
"It's about time. Played like chit up until today"
"Rogers started tonight mate and he was dogshit. We aren't going to magically become a force to be reckoned with after making the seven changes back on Thursday.
We need a big sum"
Was That Decision Even Right
These fans are questioning whether the tactical or personnel decisions being made are justified, debating whether the blame lies with the player or the system putting him in that position.
"It's about time. Played like chit up until today"
"Rogers started tonight mate and he was dogshit. We aren't going to magically become a force to be reckoned with after making the seven changes back on Thursday.
We need a big sum"
Fans are heavily criticising Wolverhampton's midfield performance, particularly targeting a player's inability to finish chances despite positioning himself well and his reluctance to engage in physical battles. The discussion reflects frustration with Rob Edwards' tactical decisions and squad selection, with supporters questioning why certain underperforming players remain on the pitch whilst others are withdrawn.
The Measured Middle Ground
These fans acknowledge Bentley's flashes of quality and improvement over recent weeks, but won't commit to calling him a solution because inconsistency keeps undermining the potential.
neutral
Daniel Bentley
still
"Better than before he came on haha last week was terrible from everyone all around. I still stand by Rodrigo makes the team better "
"In all fairness, that was a great ball at the end. Few and fair between though.
Cant have someone who’s apparently ‘skills’ are carrying the ball being scared of the ball, the ot"
The Furious Accountability Squad
These supporters are absolutely fed up with individual errors deciding matches, naming names and demanding better from players who keep making the same mistakes that cost points.
Daniel Bentley
still
"wow that was a pathetic pass from Mane, holy"
"@stoneeeeeh96 @Wolves Stupid bastards found the only way we could possibly lose with a point. If Rob started Rodrigo, Lima, Sutherland, Edozie, etc and we lose, I wouldn't care. No"
The Frustrated Optimists
These fans see the right ingredients in Bentley's game—positioning, movement, awareness—but are torn between hope and despair because he keeps bottling the actual finishing.
"I'm in such two minds with him cause he gets himself into good positions constantly, but somehow cannot put his foot through it haha"
"Yeah absolutely. I'm hoping he kicks on next season bc he often makes really good runs, reads etc. but then can't finish it off"
The Rodrigo Evangelists
These believers are convinced Bentley is being criminally underused by the manager and that starting him every match would transform Wolves' results, not just cameo performances.
approval
still
"We are so much better every single time Rodrigo is on the pitch. Why doesn’t Rob see this and start him every game? We have been saying this since the start of the season "
"Yeah absolutely. I'm hoping he kicks on next season bc he often makes really good runs, reads etc. but then can't finish it off"
Wolverhampton supporters are venting their frustration at striker Tolu Arokodare's woeful proficiency in front of goal, with fans questioning how a player who scored 14 goals in Belgium can be so consistently poor with both his touch and his decision-making in the final third. The overwhelming consensus is that selling him in the summer would be a relief for the club.
Complete Meltdown Mode
These fans have absolutely lost patience — they're furious at Arokodare's inability to finish and openly questioning why Wolves haven't already offloaded him.
"Tolu is so embarrassing, it’s like he’s fucking blind"
"@Wolves How much money do I have to pay to make you sell tolu, that was so painful to watch"
Sarcastic Acceptance Activists
They've resigned themselves to the reality that he's staying put, so they're channelling their frustration through cutting one-liners and dark humour about his limitations.
neutral
"@Wolves Genuinely the strongest part of tolus game is getting his hair pulled"
"Be an absolute miracle if we can sell Tolu in the summer "
The Credential Questioners
These supporters are genuinely baffled by how Arokodare ever scored 14 goals in Belgium, suggesting his record doesn't match what they're actually witnessing on the pitch.
"How Tolu scored 14 goals in a season in Belgium will never be short of a mystery to me. I've never seen someone so uncomforatable infront of goal."
"Be an absolute miracle if we can sell Tolu in the summer "
The Credential Questioners
These supporters are genuinely baffled by how Arokodare ever scored 14 goals in Belgium, suggesting his record doesn't match what they're actually witnessing on the pitch.
"How Tolu scored 14 goals in a season in Belgium will never be short of a mystery to me. I've never seen someone so uncomforatable infront of goal."
"Be an absolute miracle if we can sell Tolu in the summer "
The Credential Questioners
These supporters are genuinely baffled by how Arokodare ever scored 14 goals in Belgium, suggesting his record doesn't match what they're actually witnessing on the pitch.
"How Tolu scored 14 goals in a season in Belgium will never be short of a mystery to me. I've never seen someone so uncomforatable infront of goal."
"Be an absolute miracle if we can sell Tolu in the summer "
Manchester United supporters are heavily criticising Casemiro's positioning and decision-making during the match, with particular frustration directed at his absence from key defensive moments and a high free-kick that he should have been covering. Fans are debating whether the midfielder's poor positioning directly contributed to Liverpool's goals, whilst also questioning inconsistent refereeing decisions around his involvement in the play.
The Clinical Observers
These fans are reading the play with cold logic, acknowledging Casemiro's physical decline whilst respecting what he still brings to the pitch—because they reckon a past-prime midfielder doing damage is actually the story here.
neutral
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"Casemiro s ability to be unmarked in the box is unmatched. "
"Nice analysis, I completely agree, 25 year old casemiro would fix that issue, but his legs are gone. Still doing amazing at that age, DMs don't tend to last much after 32-3. "
Furious At The Injustice
They're convinced the officials got it dead wrong and that Casemiro's been stitched up, turning a defensive lapse into a referendum on refereeing incompetence rather than the player's actual performance.
anger
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"Holy shit Case, that was fucking ass..."
"This ref is giving us fucking nothing, how is that not a foul on Casemiro "
The Emotional Loyalists
These are the die-hards willing him to stay forever, drowning out analysis with pure sentiment because they'd rather chant his name than confront the uncomfortable truth about what age does to even the greatest defenders.
"casemiro one years more pls 😢😢"
"CASEMIRO DUH DUH DURRUH"
The Game Management Merchants
They're celebrating Casemiro's brass and football intelligence—reframing defensive mistakes as calculated gamesmanship because they've bought into the narrative that experience beats everything, even physics.
amusement
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"Love what Case did there. "
"Fucking love Casemiro’s game management. "
Neutral observers and Palace supporters are divided over whether referees cost Crystal Palace in their 3-0 defeat to Bournemouth, with some pointing to poor officiating across the season whilst others argue the club's abysmal performance and individual errors—including a penalty conceded—are entirely self-inflicted. The loss has intensified concerns about Palace's form and their ability to maintain their league position with four matches remaining.
The Referee Ruined Everything
Palace fans are absolutely furious that a soft decision has overshadowed what was already a catastrophic defensive performance, turning their frustration into anger at officialdom rather than their own failings.
disappointment
"That first half from Palace was embarrassing. Could have been 5-0 or worse. "
"That's unbelievably soft, I'd be so pissed if I was a Palace fan"
Let's Analyse This Properly
These are the measured voices cutting through the hysteria, refusing to be swept up in outrage and instead examining whether the call actually holds water or if emotion is clouding judgement.
neutral
"Let’s go palace"
"Well done Crystal Palace. Fills us all with confidence ahead of the FPL double gameweek 😬"
Season's Slipping Away Fast
Forget the referee drama — these fans are laser-focused on the bigger picture, spotting that Palace's form has completely evaporated and their top-four rivals are circling with games running out.
"With 4 matches to go Palace haven't got a win in them . Both Spurs and West Ham can catch them"
"Need I remind all the palace fans about the ridiculous penalty you were given in the 97th minute of the reverse fixture"
"With 4 matches to go Palace haven't got a win in them . Both Spurs and West Ham can catch them"
"Need I remind all the palace fans about the ridiculous penalty you were given in the 97th minute of the reverse fixture"
"With 4 matches to go Palace haven't got a win in them . Both Spurs and West Ham can catch them"
"Need I remind all the palace fans about the ridiculous penalty you were given in the 97th minute of the reverse fixture"
West Ham supporters are heavily criticising El Hadji Malick Diouf's performance during the 3-0 defeat to Brentford, with fans questioning his Premier League quality and suggesting he's become a defensive liability despite occasional crossing ability. The discourse reflects broader frustration at the club's recruitment, with several calling for his departure and arguing he should never have started in such a crucial match.
Diouf's Defensive Disaster
The majority are absolutely furious that a player who cannot defend is anywhere near the starting line-up, convinced his presence cost West Ham the match.
annoyance
anger
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"Diouf, fuck off man, what the hell."
"Dogwater refs this game. Diouf and Pablo shouldn't be anywhere near starting. Didn't deserve to lose but absolutely didn't deserve to win either."
The Unfortunate Trade-Off
A smaller, pragmatic camp acknowledges Diouf's attacking prowess but accepts the brutal reality that his defensive weaknesses are a genuine problem the club must manage.
neutral
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"@WestHam Diouf is so much better going forward than defending, unfortunately for us he is a defender"
"@WestHam DIOUF IS WANK"
Refereeing Theatre
These fans are caught between debating whether specific incidents were correctly adjudicated, questioning if bookings were fair and whether contact actually warranted punishment.
"The one where Diouf wiped a guy out?"
"Nahhh no way Scarles is getting booked for getting the ball"
System Failure
This segment argues the real issue isn't Diouf as an individual but how West Ham's tactical setup leaves him exposed and unprotected in defensive situations.
"The one where Diouf wiped a guy out?"
"Nahhh no way Scarles is getting booked for getting the ball"
The Cold Assessment
A level-headed minority simply state the facts of what happened on the pitch without emotional investment, documenting the key moments that defined the defensive collapse.
"The one where Diouf wiped a guy out?"
"Nahhh no way Scarles is getting booked for getting the ball"
Newcastle supporters are concerned about goalkeeper Nick Pope's lack of playing time and his visibly unhappy demeanour on the bench during the Brighton match, with many suggesting he could leave the club in the summer if his situation doesn't improve. The discussion centres on frustration with Eddie Howe's treatment of the goalkeeper and sympathy for Pope's difficult position at the club.
The Worried Watchers
These fans are tracking Pope's situation closely, sensing something's wrong but hoping it's just a temporary blip rather than a sign of deeper trouble.
neutral
"Nickolassssssssss! 🤣 "
"Oof Nick. Not looking good. Hope it was just timing..."
The Furious Faithful
These supporters are genuinely angry at how Newcastle have treated Pope, convinced the club is either mismanaging him or failing to back a world-class keeper properly.
sadness
annoyance
"@NUFC Shit way to treat Nick"
"@DoodleDrawsKt Nick can’t kick. Stop gazing over him. Just as useless."
The Pragmatic Survivors
Now that relegation fears have eased, these fans are demanding Pope gets actual playing time to prove himself and boost confidence before next season kicks off.
"Now that we’re safe (I know not mathematically yet) please for the love of god can Big Nick get some minutes "
"Who doesn’t likes a sneaky sausage…"
The Technical Doubters
These contrarians believe Pope's flaws—particularly his distribution—are real problems that get overlooked, and they're not convinced he deserves the golden-boy treatment from Newcastle's fanbase.
"Now that we’re safe (I know not mathematically yet) please for the love of god can Big Nick get some minutes "
"Who doesn’t likes a sneaky sausage…"
The Optimistic Believers
This small but vocal crew genuinely rates Pope and wants to celebrate him, convinced he'll come good if given the chance and backing he deserves.
"Big Nick looks delighted... "
"Nickolassssssssss! 🤣 "
Tottenham supporters are posting defiant "COYS" (Come On You Spurs) chants and messages of backing despite their side losing 1-2 to Aston Villa, with the mood showing resilience rather than capitulation even after a late Buendía header denied them a draw. The discussion captures a fanbase determined to maintain morale around Roberto De Zerbi's project despite their struggling league position.
The Glass Half Full Brigade
These fans are riding high on the performance itself, convinced that Spurs showed enough quality to turn the corner and that better days are just around the bend.
love
coys
"I’m so hype. Let’s keep on. COYS"
"Niiiiice!! Thanks mate! COYS!!"
The Unfinished Business Merchants
They're locked in on the raw emotion of the moment—frustrated that the job wasn't completed, but channelling that anger into demands for immediate redemption rather than despair.
neutral
coys
"We need one fucking more let's go coys !!!"
"COYfuckingS"
The Where's It All Going Wrong Pessimists
A small but vocal crew convinced this defeat reveals something broken at the club's core, and they're questioning whether the current direction is salvageable at all.
anger
coys
"COYG? God I hate we are at that point "
"What in the actual fuck?? Coysss"
Tottenham supporters are using their team's improved performance under new management as a springboard to heavily criticise former boss Thomas Frank, arguing he systematically misused key players like Palhinha and Bentancur during his seven-month tenure. The negativity stems from frustration that the squad's obvious quality was being wasted under Frank's stewardship, with fans now viewing his departure as the best thing that could have happened to the club.
Frank's Tactical Disaster Show
Spurs fans are absolutely furious that Thomas Frank's management decisions have cost them dearly, and they're not holding back their contempt.
anger
annoyance
frank
thomas frank
"I fucking hate Thomas Frank even more now. "
"Fuck Thomas Frank. It’s all his fault "
The De Zerbi Comparison Game
These fans are processing the collapse by contrasting Frank's passivity with De Zerbi's dynamic coaching style, using it as evidence of what better leadership looks like.
neutral
frank
thomas frank
"Look at De Zerbi love that. Frank would have stood there chomping gum"
"Love the username 😆 You should have a flag with Frank's face on it and your username 🤣🤣"
Frank as Football's War Criminal
A small but vocal minority are so relieved to move past Frank that they're celebrating the tactical revolution with dark humour, positioning the new era as redemption regardless of league position.
frank
thomas frank
"This is an amazing turnaround. If we can survive this then im pretty excited for next season. What a joke Tudor was. "
"This is incredible football. RDZ is a genius and Frank needs to be tried at The Hague"
Leeds supporters are venting their frustration at what they perceive as a pattern of poor and biased refereeing decisions throughout the match, with particular anger directed at the official's seemingly arbitrary use of yellow cards and inconsistent application of the rules. The discussion suggests fans believe the referee is either incompetent or actively working against Leeds, with references to previous controversial decisions compounding their sense of injustice.
Bramall's Got a Leeds Vendetta
Three-quarters of fans are absolutely convinced the referee has a personal vendetta against the club and are demanding answers from the FA about systematic bias.
anger
annoyance
leeds
"@LUFC Thomas Bramall makes my blood boil. Totally imcompetent shithouse."
"Fucking pathetic decision again from Brammal. How the fuck is this Leeds hating cheat allowed to keep reffing us "
The Inconsistency Brigade
A smaller but vocal segment acknowledge the ref made a dodgy call but frame it as part of a wider pattern of unfair treatment rather than isolated incompetence.
neutral
leeds
"Honestly, the guy could run for mayor Leeds (or some other type of elected official in the city) and he would probably get close to a win on the back of Leeds United fans alone.
A"
"This ref is such an obvious Leeds hating bastard - the club needs to write to the FA saying stop letting this Sheffield cunt ref our games "
Fans from both struggling sides are reacting to a heavy defeat that deepens their playoff and relegation anxieties, with dark humour and resignation dominating the conversation as the mathematical margins for survival narrow further down the table.
The Breathless Spectators
Fans caught in the moment, processing the chaos of relegation drama with stunned reactions rather than taking a moral stance either way.
neutral
"Underrated comment😂"
"Fuck me… phew!!"
The Schadenfreude Squad
Supporters revelling in the downfall of rivals, finding pure entertainment value in watching Leeds and Burnley face the axe with approval and dark humour.
amusement
approval
"Great minds 😉"
"Absolutely agree with this! 👏"
The Desperate Believers
Fans emotionally invested to the point of fury, still fighting for their team despite the mathematical reality closing in on them.
"FUCK'S SAKE, COME ON 🗣🗣🗣"
"Fuck me… phew!!"
Arsenal supporters are frustrated and seeking detailed explanation of the VAR decision that ruled out a goal in the 30th minute, with multiple posts calling for greater transparency and documentation of what officials actually saw. The neutral sentiment reflects confusion rather than outright anger—fans want answers about a decision that directly impacted the match flow.
The Rulebook Readers
These fans want the technical details examined frame-by-frame because they reckon the decision either stands up to scrutiny or it doesn't — no emotion, just the facts.
neutral
"put 10 past 'em fuck it. lets send a message"
"That’s a lot of ifs"
Move On, We're Winning
This lot are backing the call and already celebrating the bigger picture, convinced Arsenal are so dominant that one disallowed goal won't derail their momentum.
"THREE MORE THREE MORE THREEE MORE THREE MORE. I AM SO HAPPY YOU GUYS DON'T EVEN FUCKING KNOW"
"One more would be fantastic "
Robbed And Ready For War
These supporters believe the goal was wrongly chalked off and want Arsenal to respond immediately on the pitch by putting more past their opponents as a statement.
"need a second one asap whilst these lot are ratted "
"u/poorlydrawnarsenal another vote "
Neutral observers and Burnley supporters are directing widespread criticism at midfielder Hannibal for what they perceive as dirty, hostile, and antagonistic play — spitting at fans, reckless challenges, and general conduct that has earned him sustained booing throughout the match. Despite acknowledging he's made an impact on the game, fans are united in their contempt for his disciplinary record and aggressive demeanour on the pitch.
Character Assassination Campaign
These fans see Hannibal as a genuinely toxic presence — not just a dirty player, but someone whose behaviour off the ball represents everything wrong with modern football, and they want him gone.
annoyance
anger
ole
"I can't think of a player I hate more than Hannibal, just a horrible, dirty disgusting person
Spits at fans, goes for injury tackles, hostile, just a prick all around."
"Hannibal is such a dirty player. Annoying to see him. "
Just Another Matchday Distraction
These supporters are treating Hannibal's return as background noise to the actual result, acknowledging his presence without letting it dominate their post-match analysis.
neutral
ole
"Wish it was Hannibal!"
"Hannibal receiving a warm Elland Road welcome…."
Spotting The Irony In The Chaos
These fans are clocking the absurdity of the situation — whether it's the comedic timing of his name, the historical references, or the dark humour lurking in the anger around him.
"Why are they booing Hannibal, is it to do with the elephants thing or the A-Team thing?"
"I assume it would be entirely inappropriate for everyone near the exit tunnel to give Hannibal an impromptu saliva shower on the way off the pitch."
"Why are they booing Hannibal, is it to do with the elephants thing or the A-Team thing?"
"I assume it would be entirely inappropriate for everyone near the exit tunnel to give Hannibal an impromptu saliva shower on the way off the pitch."
"Why are they booing Hannibal, is it to do with the elephants thing or the A-Team thing?"
"I assume it would be entirely inappropriate for everyone near the exit tunnel to give Hannibal an impromptu saliva shower on the way off the pitch."
A high-engagement discussion thread has emerged where supporters are overwhelmingly validating a specific viewpoint about the match, though the sample posts don't reveal the exact argument being endorsed. The sheer volume of affirmation—with minimal dissent—suggests fans have latched onto a consensus observation that resonates across the United and Liverpool fanbase alike.
The Vindication Chorus
Nearly half the fanbase are absolutely buzzing because they've finally been proven right about something they've been saying all along, and they're revelling in that moment of collective validation.
approval
admiration
"1000% spot on!! "
"Which is incredible "
The Resigned Acceptance
A significant chunk of supporters are acknowledging an uncomfortable truth they've seen coming from a mile away — it's disappointing but not surprising, and that's somehow worse than outright shock.
neutral
"Sad but true"
"Ahh bummer"
The Furious Minority
One in ten fans are absolutely seething at what's just happened, viewing it not as inevitable or vindication but as a genuinely unacceptable failure that shouldn't have been allowed to occur.
"That is fucking staggering. "
"That's ridiculous "
United supporters are expressing strong approval of defender Ayden Heaven's performances, treating a low-cost signing as exceptional value after his solid display in the 3-2 thriller against Liverpool. The discussion highlights genuine optimism about Heaven's development as a future starter, with fans also acknowledging other defensive contributions in a thrilling, high-scoring encounter.
Heaven's The Answer Now
This contingent are absolutely sold on the 19-year-old's immediate impact, convinced he's the missing piece that transforms United's defence and deserves to be a permanent fixture in the starting XI.
admiration
love
"I am thoroughly impressed with Heaven. Brilliant first half. The team looks sharp!!!"
"i love Ayden Heaven!"
Show Me More First
This group acknowledge Heaven's potential and composure beyond his years, but they're keeping judgment reserved until they see sustained performance whilst also questioning whether other defensive issues—like Martinez's injury record—need addressing alongside him.
neutral
"Heaven has big balls for a 19 year old."
"@markgoldbridge Martinez should be sold in my opinion.
Injuries happening too often.
Yoro x Heaven need to start their partnership together.
Maguire last season next year.
"
Fans are divided over the legitimacy of several yellow card decisions throughout the match, with particular focus on whether late-game cautions were justified or overly harsh. The discussion centres on players accumulating yellows for fouls they dispute, and whether the officiating was consistent across the 90 minutes.
Robbed By The Referee
This camp believes the officials bottled crucial decisions — missed penalties, ignored fouls, inconsistent card distribution — and actively cost their team the result.
Richarlison
Randal Kolo Muani
Mathys Tel
"That penalty you didn’t get was fucking crimes against humanity criminal lol "
"How the fuck have Abraham and Bogarde not picked up yellows? Clear stopping of a promising attack and a nasty challenge. Already being fucked over by the refs ffs"
It Could Go Either Way
This group acknowledges the ref made borderline calls throughout but accepts that these marginal decisions happen in football and aren't egregious enough to complain about.
neutral
Richarlison
Randal Kolo Muani
"Richy and Gallagher should both probably have yellows realistically, but just his average calls and playing on have been great"
"GOOD FOUL "
The Chaos Chronicles
These fans are simply reacting to the mayhem unfolding — some yellows feel right, others feel harsh — and they're documenting the madness without taking a firm stance.
"good lili white...👍"
"Completely unnecessary yellow at the end to allow that continuation of play"
The Ref Got It Right
This minority camp actually backs the official's card, seeing it as a necessary and correct decision that maintained control of a heated match.
admiration
Richarlison
Randal Kolo Muani
"Great yellow "
"good lili white...👍"
Aston Villa supporters are furious after their side surrendered a two-goal deficit to draw 2-2 at home against lowly Tottenham, squandering a crucial opportunity to strengthen their Champions League credentials in the run-in. The narrative centres on Villa's recurring inability to close out matches when it matters most, with fans expressing both resignation and rage at what they see as a characteristically wasteful performance.
The Betrayed Are Furious
These fans believe Villa have systematically bottled their Champions League ambitions through six months of terrible football, and they're beyond angry about being let down by players who should know better.
anger
"@AVFCOfficial I hate this bottle job team. We have been fucking terrible for 6 months. We don’t deserve top 5 or a final."
"@AVFCOfficial Fuck every single one of you. You make me sick. You’ll bottle the europa league as well cuz your fucking bottlejobs."
The Sardonic Analysts
This group is using dark humour and criticism to process the result, essentially saying "look at how badly we've executed when it mattered most" with a knowing, bitter laugh.
"What's this highlights of on how to bottle up and how not to play if you are fighting for champions league spot 😂 🤷"
"Bottle"
The Darkly Comic Observers
These supporters are almost entertained by the collapse itself, treating the bottle job as an inevitable punchline rather than a genuine tragedy, pointing and laughing at the predictability of it all.
neutral
"@AVFCOfficial I hope we bottle champions league"
"@atomicathletehq @SpursOfficial Be the funniest thing if you bottle this 😂"
The Ironic Believers
A tiny sliver of fans are so resigned to Villa's bottling habits that they're joking about it with grim acceptance, essentially saying "we're just bottle job specialists, that's who we are."
approval
"@Citizenology1 @AVFCOfficial Oh we will be. I’m sure of it. Bottle job specialists we are!"
"@SpursOfficial I hope you guys don't bottle this. Good luck"
Neutral supporters are tracking the live score and working out how many more goals are needed to climb the league table, specifically to leapfrog Crystal Palace into 13th place through superior goal difference. The discussion reveals fans doing the maths on goal tally comparisons between teams level on points, with some eyeing a potential 6-0 victory to maximise their climbing potential.
Math Homework Never Stops
These fans are doing live goal-difference arithmetic in real time, treating every goal like a calculator keystroke because the maths suddenly matters for survival.
neutral
"Goal difference could really pull us a couple places here let's have fucking 6"
"Don't wanna be greedy or anything, but another 5 and we have a positive goal difference "
One Goal Away Glory
They're riding the emotional high of each moment, convinced that every single strike is a step up the table and the springboard to something special.
approval
"I have a feeling we are going to make the last 3 games interesting"
"One more goal then we're above Palace, let's go boys!"
The Fixture List Conspiracy
They're furious at the rigged-feeling schedule and the cruel irony of potentially overtaking rivals only to watch them play next week, convinced the system is designed to mock them.
"By the time we next play it will be one game in 6 months we’ve lost by more than one goal (Arsenal) - that is ridiculous!"
"Will be a shame to go above Palace and then have to support them on Sunday"
Aston Villa supporters are absolutely fuming with Unai Emery's team selection and tactical approach in the 0-0 draw against Tottenham, with fans singling out the bizarre decision to deploy Tammy Abraham and Ross Barkley in a high-pressing system that exposed Villa's defensive vulnerabilities and ultimately cost them the match. The discourse has shifted into outright criticism of Emery's management style, with some fans suggesting his tactical choices are deliberately designed to undermine Arsenal — even as Villa themselves fail to capitalise on a winnable fixture.
Emery Out, No Questions Asked
The majority are absolutely seething — they reckon this performance was unforgivable, Emery's lost the plot tactically, and it's time for him to go full stop.
annoyance
disappointment
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"That fk is a fucking disgrace, this performance our worse in a very long time, everyone including Emery need to hang their heads and all of them to be docked wages "
"@AVFCOfficial Absolutely fucking shit. Does Emery want to go home? That was an, "I've had enough of living in this shithole" display."
Blame Everyone, Trust No One
A smaller contingent are too furious to think straight, lumping criticism on Emery and the players alike without parsing who's actually responsible.
neutral
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"I hate Emery so much. He ruins everything all the damn time. Bums. "
"@AVFCOfficial Fucking bastards, just sack Emery and these fucking „PLAYERS”"
Lost In The Noise
A tiny pocket of contrarians are clinging to the positives — Emery's personality, random acts of loyalty — whilst the stadium burns around them.
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"I absolutely love the way that Emery says the word "fantastic""
"@AVFCOfficial Merry Christmas spurs love from emery"
Supporters are furious about what they perceive as an unusually long period of added time at the end of the match, with many claiming the referee extended play well beyond the standard five minutes initially announced. The controversy intensifies because a last-gasp goal arrived in that extended period, leaving fans divided on whether the extra time was justified or a controversial gift.
The Live Commentary Crowd
These fans are simply calling out what they're seeing in real-time, treating stoppage time like a dramatic countdown without yet taking a side on whether it's fair or not.
neutral
mins
"5 mins boys, 5 mins!!! "
"15mins !!!!!! "
The Robbed Brigade
Convinced the referee's watch was running on a different planet, these supporters believe the added time was transparently excessive and cost their team what should have been a clean escape.
anger
mins
"Extra time was total bs. The fuck it got to most 7 min. "
"6 fucking minutes is a joke"
The Sceptical Middle Ground
This lot sees something fishy about how the clock was managed but aren't entirely sure the ref got it catastrophically wrong, wrestling between frustration and grudging acceptance of the result.
"Why were there 40 extra seconds anyways? Felt pretty standard and should have blown at 5 minutes. "
"Way too fucking long to blow that but we take the win"
The Lucky Bastards
The few fans whose team actually benefited from the extended stoppage are either genuinely bemused by the generosity or quietly pocketing the three points without asking too many questions.
amusement
mins
"I was so happy to see just 1 minute added on for an unlikely stoppage time goal. "
"Good thing for us, there haven’t been any stoppages this half. "
Manchester United and Liverpool fans are debating urgent squad reinforcements needed ahead of next season, with both sets of supporters identifying midfield, defence, and attacking options as critical priorities. The discussion reflects concern that current squads lack the depth and quality required to compete effectively in a congested fixture calendar, particularly with injuries to key players like Lisandro Martínez limiting defensive reliability.
The Squad Needs Surgery
These fans have diagnosed the exact problems—dodgy midfield, lack of pace—and they're demanding serious structural changes, not tinkering around the edges.
neutral
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"I’m seriously disgusted at the makeup of this squad. I want dogs back in midfield and pace in the attack. I like Wharton as a player but again he is another one, nice and tidy in p"
"Yeah. A competant midfield to bring in would have been a huge boost."
We're Doomed Before We Start
They've already written off the summer because they reckon no elite player will touch the club, so they're bracing for disappointment before a ball's kicked.
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
Curtis Jones
"And none of the best players willing to sign for us... Its gonna be a depressing summer"
"Anyone who believes that one signing would help prevent goals in transition, you probably have an IQ of a gorilla. Also i tell you, if all of our injured players are available, we "
One Brilliant Window Fixes Everything
They believe a world-class midfielder and upgraded wingbacks are the missing puzzle pieces that'll transform the team into genuine contenders next season.
approval
Alexis Mac Allister
Dominik Szoboszlai
"I’m excited to see what he does next season with rapid wingers"
"Time for some great signings
From what I have seen a world class midfielder, and an upgrade on wingbacks is a must"
Newcastle supporters are furious that Joelinton escaped punishment for multiple off-the-ball fouls and aggressive challenges throughout the match, with many convinced the midfielder receives preferential treatment from referees who overlook his notoriously dirty playing style. The negativity centres on the perceived injustice that such behaviour goes uncarded while other players face yellow cards for far less.
Joelinton's The Villain
These fans believe Joelinton's selfish decision-making and poor discipline actively cost Newcastle the game, and they're not holding back about it.
"So so selfish from Joelinton that. Just square it you idiot."
"Joelinton is so unbelievably cunty. I wouldn't put it past him to knock out one of our players today and get away with it."
He's Just Winding Us Up
These fans are venting pure frustration at Joelinton's behaviour without deeper analysis — they've simply had enough of what they're seeing.
neutral
"joelintons a cunt x2"
"Joelinton is such a douche"
Context Changes Everything
These fans acknowledge Joelinton's mistakes but weigh them against tactical circumstances — his value depends entirely on whether he's carrying a yellow card or not.
"Be sweet if we scored right after Joelinton's fuck up."
"Yea I don’t dislike Joel unless he’s on a yellow. His skills don’t offer as much on a card. "
Results Would've Rewritten This
These fans suggest that if Newcastle had capitalised immediately after Joelinton's error, the entire narrative around his performance would've shifted dramatically.
"Be sweet if we scored right after Joelinton's fuck up."
"Yea I don’t dislike Joel unless he’s on a yellow. His skills don’t offer as much on a card. "
Newcastle United supporters are calling for Eddie Howe's dismissal following repeated defensive lapses and poor decision-making they believe cost them in matches against top sides like Arsenal and today's loss to Brighton. Fans are particularly frustrated with his goalkeeper selections and in-game management, with many demanding his removal during or immediately after the fixture.
Absolute Meltdown Mode
These fans have completely lost patience with the manager's performances and are demanding immediate sacking, convinced he's become a liability destroying the team's prospects.
anger
annoyance
sack
"@_TH0RP3_ @NUFC No. I think he maybe the worst footballer to ever disgrace the jersey, and I’ve seen some shite believe me."
"@NUFC He's fucking shite!!"
Pattern Recognition Panic
They're not just angry about today — they're tracking a recurring tactical nightmare across multiple competitions and opponents, suggesting systemic failure rather than a one-off bad day.
"@FoggyPigeonsame against Arsenal last week, today, Marseille away, cost us, Liverpool in the cup semis. It’s constant. As is his poor kicking. Don’t really care about their team or"
"This is not the same guy from Brentford, it must be his brother or something"
Pragmatic Detachment
Safe from relegation, these supporters can afford to be clinical about the situation, separating emotional frustration from strategic reality and already mentally preparing for the summer reset.
neutral
sack
"He’s absolutely got a NUFC -> Frankfurt -> Barca/AC Milan redemption arc in him."
"@NUFC Excellent, we’re safe. Now sack him and get ready for the summer"
The Hopeful Minority
A small but vocal group clinging to moments of quality and potential redemption arcs, refusing to join the pile-on despite mounting evidence around them.
sack
"@NUFC He's looked great these first 10 minutes"
"@NUFC Excellent, we’re safe. Now sack him and get ready for the summer"
Arsenal supporters are celebrating Declan Rice's performance in a dominant 3-0 win, with particular focus on his repositioned role as a deep-lying defensive midfielder sitting between the centre-backs rather than in a traditional box-to-box capacity. The discussion splits between praise for how this tactical shift unlocked Arsenal's attacking play and some frustration that Arteta kept key players on the pitch too long given a crucial midweek fixture ahead.
The Damage Control Brigade
These fans are in crisis-response mode, frantically cataloguing what's going wrong the moment Rice leaves the pitch, convinced the team falls apart without him anchoring the midfield.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"5 minutes without rice and these lot have lost it"
"Rest Saka and Gyoks!!! Rice maybe too? Can't play white against Atletico sorry his been so bad."
The Vindication Merchants
They're riding high on Rice's box-to-box dominance, using this performance as proof that their faith in him was justified and demanding more of exactly what they're witnessing.
admiration
approval
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"This is the perfect time for this performance. This should energize the team and crowd going into the home leg of the ucl semis. Now rest Rice and keep on pumping in goals!"
"Best performance of 2026 so far. That first half was scintillating. Thats what i wanna see from my club. Good link up and attacking football. Rice as the 6 and MLS in midfield is w"
The Tactical Auditors
These are the deep-dive analysts tracking Rice's positioning shifts and forward runs, building a case for how his defensive repositioning is actually unlocking Arsenal's attacking potential.
"Those box to box runs from Rice should keep coming the whole game time"
"Best performance of 2026 so far. That first half was scintillating. Thats what i wanna see from my club. Good link up and attacking football. Rice as the 6 and MLS in midfield is w"
The "Show It Every Week" Skeptics
They're impressed but not convinced, essentially saying "yes, this is brilliant football, but where has this been consistently and will he maintain it when it matters most?"
"Those box to box runs from Rice should keep coming the whole game time"
"Best performance of 2026 so far. That first half was scintillating. Thats what i wanna see from my club. Good link up and attacking football. Rice as the 6 and MLS in midfield is w"
The Exhausted Exilers
Done with the conversation entirely, they've moved past critique into pure frustration, ready to see Rice benched rather than watch another moment of what they perceive as underperformance.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@Arsenal I'm really tired of saying this..... RICE IS A MACHINE!"
"Fuck it… just take Rice off now. "
Supporters are using "Peppa Pig" as a humorous nickname for the referee, sarcastically crediting the official with deciding the match outcome through controversial decisions rather than actual play. The meme-driven discussion reflects frustration with the officiating across a competitive, card-heavy encounter.
The Absurdist Philosophers
These fans have transcended the result entirely, treating Peppa Pig's involvement as peak surrealism that deserves philosophical acceptance rather than complaint.
neutral
"I, for one, welcome our new pig overlords."
"I have just discovered the Peppa Pig merch is only for children..."
The Reluctant Defeat Processors
They're coming to terms with the loss by half-joking that they literally lost to a cartoon pig, turning genuine pain into dark humour as a coping mechanism.
"Peppa pig became a game changer"
"Lost to Peppa Pig basically."
The Conversion Evangelists
These supporters have genuinely pivoted to backing Peppa Pig as a brilliant addition to the squad, unironically praising the pig's abilities and impact on their team's fortunes.
admiration
"Peppa pig on 4-th place as well btw, it's just so good"
"Peppa pig has been a great signing for spurs."
The Seething Holdouts
A small but furious contingent who recognise the injustice has crossed a line, moving past humour to genuine outrage that even a fictional referee could derail their season.
"Peppa Pig does not appreciate teams with "ham" in their name"
"After today, fuck it let’s roll with the pig. "
With Mohamed Salah absent from the 3-2 loss to Manchester United, Liverpool supporters are split between those who believe his absence proves he carried the team to last season's title, and those arguing the defeat exposes deeper structural problems beyond any single player's injury or suspension. The discussion reveals frustration over Liverpool's drop from contention and questions about whether the squad has genuinely declined or simply lacks a world-class performance from their star to mask other weaknesses.
The Collapse Narrative
Fans furious that Liverpool's title defence has crumbled without Salah carrying the entire team, viewing this defeat as proof the squad was built on one man's brilliance rather than genuine strength.
sadness
salah
"What a horrible title defence. Totally irrelevant to the title discussion without Salah putting on a one man show."
"This lot are getting dogged by us without Isak and Mo. How shite are these scums?"
The Farewell Watchers
Supporters processing what feels like an inevitable departure, already mentally preparing for life after Salah and treating each match as a potential goodbye rather than fighting for the present.
neutral
salah
"@LFC We giving salah a good farewell"
"@ManUtd @sthedoingtingss Get it in boys, do it Mo Salah, a little something for his departure"
The Hypocrisy Hunters
Fans calling out the contradiction that Liverpool dismissed injuries as excuses for years whilst now using Salah's absence to explain away their own disappointing campaign.
"Funny, I was told by Liverpool fans for years that injuries aren't an excuse. Spent half a billion on absolute shit and it's come back to bite you because Salah's too old to keep t"
"What a horrible title defence. Totally irrelevant to the title discussion without Salah putting on a one man show."
The Replacement Believers
Optimistic voices insisting Salah's individual heroics have masked structural problems, and that bringing in the right reinforcements next summer can rebuild Liverpool into genuine contenders again.
approval
salah
"So glad we'll get more of him next season.
We'll just need to buy someone to replicate Salah's insane numbers from last season and we will be there."
"Salah is the biggest reason we won the league, this season has just shown how much he carried"
Brighton supporters are venting frustration after a disappointing performance, with many pointing the finger at manager Fabian Hürzeler's decision to give the squad a week off from training as the culprit for their lack of cutting edge in attack. The criticism centres on the notion that fixture congestion and inconsistent preparation throughout the season have left the team poorly conditioned and unable to sustain attacking threat when it matters.
The Rest Ruined Us
Fans convinced Hurzeler's decision to give players a week off killed momentum and left the squad mentally sluggish when it mattered most.
"@OfficialBHAFC PLAYERS SLUGGISH !!! HURZELER SHOULD NEVER OF GIVEN THEM SIX DAYS OFF !!!!! HE KNEW THEY ONLY HAD FOUR GAMES LEFT . THAT IS WHY WE WONT GET EUROPE !!!!!!"
"THIS IS WHAT FUCKING HAPPENS WHEN WE TAKE THE WEEK OFF OF TRAINING"
Sarcasm And Resignation
Observers processing the disaster with bitter irony, using the rest day excuse to mock both the players' lack of intensity and the manager's tactical gamble.
neutral
"@OfficialBHAFC 5 days off went well For the squad"
"@OfficialBHAFC Go on, give them another week off, wankers"
The Bigger Picture Question
Analysts probing whether the week off exposed deeper structural issues at the club beyond just fixture congestion, hinting at unresolved problems behind the scenes.
"No one behind the scenes for 2 summers."
"I really hope the half a performance a week was addresses in the meeting this week."
The Lone Believer
A handful of optimists either genuinely backing the recovery plan or hoping the squad bonding time will pay dividends in matches ahead.
optimism
approval
"@OfficialBHAFC Hope they really enjoyed their 5 days off"
"@OfficialBHAFC 5 days off went well For the squad"
West Ham supporters are venting their frustration at Pablo's anonymous performance during the 3-0 defeat to Brentford, with fans criticising his lack of impact, poor movement, and minimal attacking contribution across 600-plus minutes of football this season. The discourse centres on whether he offers anything of value for the Hammers, with some calling for him to be dropped entirely from the squad.
Pablo's Finally Lost The Room
West Ham's striker has become the focal point of fan fury, with supporters convinced his performances have deteriorated so badly that questions need asking about who green-lit his signing in the first place.
annoyance
anger
Pablo
Jarrod Bowen
"Omg Pablo is so fucking garbage man. EVERY WEEK HE LOOKS WORSE HOW???? stop defending this STRIKER "
"@WestHam @thekingdombank_ Questions need asking who sanctioned the signing of Pablo, absolutely fucking dreadful"
The Effort Versus Results Debate
A smaller contingent refusing to write Pablo off entirely, pointing to his work rate and occasional moments of skill whilst acknowledging the disconnect between commitment and actual output on the pitch.
neutral
Pablo
Jarrod Bowen
"@yakkstar @WestHam No. Pablo is amazing because he runs alot. Keep up 🥱🤦🏼"
"Did Pablo just sell one of the best dummies I’ve seen in a long time… or was that just a comedy of errors?
Genuinely can’t tell"
Manchester United supporters and neutrals have erupted over Gary Neville's allegedly partisan commentary during United's dramatic 3-2 defeat, accusing the Sky pundit of showing clear bias towards his former club and going silent when Liverpool scored. The criticism centres on Neville's inconsistent reaction to goals and his general demeanour throughout a thrilling encounter that saw United stage a comeback before ultimately falling short.
Gary's Got Us Seething
These fans are absolutely livid that Neville's commentary reveals his United bias so blatantly, making an already painful defeat feel like a personal insult from a former club legend.
annoyance
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"I hate this... I hate all of this.... I hate commentators harping on every fucking team we play against.... "
"Want Gary Neville to stub his toe on the way out of the commentary gallery. What a nasty fucking wanker he had become the last few years."
The Carragher Redemption Arc
This camp reckons Jamie's actually more balanced and hopeful about United than Gary, which is genuinely mental when you think about which ex-player should be the biased one.
neutral
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"I somehow like Carragher more than Gary - guy talks like he’s the VOICE of football."
"I do like it aswell but the fact that it seems like carragher is more hopeful for united than neville"
Caught Red-Handed Live On Air
Fans pointing out the smoking gun — Neville goes silent when Liverpool scores but suddenly finds his voice the moment United equalise, proof of bias you can literally hear.
"How biased do you want to be?
Neville: Yes"
"Neville went mute when Gakpo scored & came to life when Mainoo scored 😂 square headed muppet"
He Moves The Goalposts Every Week
This lot watches Gary shift his narrative constantly, setting different standards for United than other clubs, then acting confused when called out on the inconsistency.
"How biased do you want to be?
Neville: Yes"
"Neville went mute when Gakpo scored & came to life when Mainoo scored 😂 square headed muppet"
Silver Lining Merchants
The rare optimists actually laughing at how Gary will inevitably spin this loss into something positive, finding humour in his predictable excuse-making rather than rage.
amusement
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"he would definitely say we made momentum in the second half and that was good to see."
"I eagerly await Gary Neville moving the goalposts again. "
West Ham supporters are venting frustration at Jarrod Bowen's invisible performance in the 3-0 defeat to Brentford, with multiple fans questioning whether he's injured, out of form, or simply not fit for purpose in his current role. The discourse centres on his lack of defensive work rate and creative spark, with some arguing he should be dropped entirely and others suggesting a managerial reluctance to make the call.
Bowen's Lost His Bite
This majority faction believes the winger has completely dropped off the pace and is actively hurting West Ham's chances — they want answers on whether injury or form is to blame.
disappointment
annoyance
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
Taty Castellanos
"Why is Bowen even on the field. He is so useless these days. Is he injured or something? Just wabbling around doing next to nothing in defense or attack. The ref is shit and cost u"
"@WestHam Another Pathetic performance from Bowen and Summervile not acceptable"
Fantasy Football Obsessives
These fans are locked into their own game, treating Bowen as a points machine rather than engaging with his actual on-pitch performance or the team's tactical struggles.
neutral
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"@WestHam @thekingdombank_ Finally. Bowen AWB combo for 3 goals now"
"@WestHam I triple captained Bowen he must deliver"
The Worried Pragmatists
This camp recognises Bowen's quality still exists in the numbers, but fears he's genuinely struggling right now and needs either rest or a move to a bigger stage to rediscover himself.
"Bowen come to Liverpool you deserve better than this"
"I think I'd rest Bowen against Arsenal. We won't win it anyway and he looks a shadow of himself even though his numbers are good. The only hope now is that Villa win tomorrow which"
The Rare Optimists
A tiny sliver of supporters who actually backed Bowen's performance or are betting on him to bounce back, standing firm when everyone else is circling the wagons.
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"@WestHam Will take bowen thankyou"
"@WestHam I triple captained Bowen he must deliver"
Aston Villa fans are tearing into Ross Barkley's performance against Tottenham, with 138 posts criticising his inability to shield the ball, resist pressure, or control the midfield during Villa's embarrassing defeat. The discourse has broadened into a wider attacking of the midfield's collective collapse—with Jadon Sancho and Ian Maatsen also singled out for underperforming when it mattered most in the title race.
The Reckoning Has Come
These fans have reached breaking point — they're naming names, demanding wholesale changes, and questioning whether the players even care anymore because mediocrity dressed up as ambition just isn't good enough.
disappointment
annoyance
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"@AVFCOfficial Absolutely useless. Mings, Maatson, Bogarde, Tielemans, Barkley absolutely woeful. Shame we can’t substitute 9 players!!!!! 🤬🤬🤬"
"Done with this team til next season. If the players don’t give a shit, why should us fans. We desperately need a clear out in the summer cause there are wayyyyy too many useless, h"
Checking The Teamsheet
Casual observers processing what's happening on the pitch in real time, some spotting Barkley's involvement for the first time and weighing up whether his presence makes tactical sense.
neutral
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Ross Barkley in 2026 is crazy work.
Didn't even realise he was playing "
"Barkley on seems like a good idea, he'll at least bring energy"
Frustrated But Fact-Finding
These supporters are caught between fury at individual performances and a nagging sense that systemic pressure is the real villain — they're diagnosing a pattern rather than just venting.
"shameful performance from sancho and barkley"
"It’s a trend now. We like being this underdog flying under the radar but yeah whenever the pressure is on to actually perform too many of these players do not show up.
I know he’"
The Last Believers Standing
A tiny hardcore convinced that finding the right version of what Barkley represents — energy, experience, fight — could actually unlock something for the team if everything aligns.
Ross Barkley
Youri Tielemans
"Boss Barkley still in the prem in 2026, incredible scenes"
"If we could find a young version of Barkley it would improve our team so much."
Arsenal supporters are processing a disallowed goal in the first half (likely the Riccardo Calafiori decision at 30 minutes), with reactions ranging from frustration about the offside call to resigned acceptance and dark humour about their team's fortunes. The discussion reflects typical fan sentiment when marginal VAR decisions go against them — a mix of disappointment, sarcasm, and coping through jokes.
The Frame-By-Frame Merchants
These fans are locked in genuine technical debate about whether the offside call was actually correct, genuinely unsure if Arsenal got robbed or if VAR got it right.
neutral
"That dummy 🤌"
"Broooooo. Teaaarrrssssss 😭😭😭😭😭😭"
The Vindicated Neutrals
These supporters — likely non-Arsenal fans — are celebrating that the correct decision was made and the rules were properly enforced, no matter how tight the margin.
approval
amusement
"🙌🏻"
"🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉 Great weekend 🥹😍🫶🏼🥹🎉"
The Robbed And Bitter
These Arsenal faithful are absolutely convinced the decision was a travesty that cost them vital points, and they're not interested in hearing the technical justification.
"sorry?😭😭😭😭😭😭"
"😢😢😢😢offside"
Fans are divided and furious over Igor Thiago's 54th-minute penalty, with many claiming it was a dive or soft decision, whilst others argue West Ham's Pablo should have had a penalty earlier and that a Konstantinos Mavropanos incident went unpunished when Brentford scored. The controversial spot-kick decision has sparked widespread debate about inconsistent refereeing and VAR application in what turned into a 3-0 defeat for the Hammers.
Robbed By The Ref
Absolutely convinced the referee's failure to award a clear penalty has cost their team the result, and they're not having it.
penalty
striker
"What the fuck how is that not a penalty?!?!! This is a scam"
"Damn in real time that looked like an awful challenge "
It's A Stonewall Argument
Split between those seeing a legitimate penalty claim and those calling out deliberate deception, turning the incident into the real talking point of the match.
"2:38
How is this not a penalty?!!"
"Dive for the penalty shhhhhhhhhh. Another week another piece of ingrained cheating."
The Theatrical School Of Diving
Unbothered by the controversy and instead having a laugh at the sheer acting performance on display, treating it as pure entertainment rather than a genuine grievance.
neutral
penalty
striker
"He’s good at falling"
"Lmao that dive was Gal Gadot level acting "
Actually Brilliant Gamesmanship
The tiny minority willing to admit the dive was technically impressive, spinning it as old-school football craft rather than something to be ashamed of.
amusement
penalty
striker
"Yeah, still a great dive though"
"Old fashioned PES scripting, those games were more realistic than I ever thought "
Arsenal supporters are dominating a discussion about Tottenham's dire league position (18th), with posts laced with rivalry banter, schadenfreude, and accusations that online moderators favour Arsenal. The discourse reveals deep North London Derby animosity, with some posts touching on antisemitic undertones amid Tottenham's relegation battle, whilst others defend the traditional rivalry as a genuine fixture passion rather than outright hatred.
Relishing The Rivalry Collapse
These fans are openly savoring Tottenham's relegation struggle because it validates years of frustration with a club they view as arrogant rivals deserving comeuppance.
annoyance
arsenal
tottenham
"Yupppp couldn’t be happening to a bigger group of pricks. I spent all day on cloud 9 yesterday thinking about the r/soccer hate watchers misery."
"Yep, this is why we don't like Arsenal fans."
Calling Out The Arsenal Echo Chamber
This group recognises the subreddit's heavy Arsenal skew and is pushing back against what they see as biased discourse rather than celebrating the actual football.
neutral
arsenal
tottenham
"They have more fans on here than any other English club, boss"
"Ah yes. This sub is famously pro arsenal. "
The Gracious Winners (Barely)
A tiny sliver of Arsenal supporters are trying to take the high road with measured optimism, though their tone suggests even they know mockery is the dominant mood.
amusement
arsenal
tottenham
"Arsenal fan,I'm happy for you guys."
"I am sure Arsenal feel joyous over the fact that they can save Spurs next sunday "
Fans are expressing total exasperation with Burnley's dismal performance and behaviour—poor organisation, lack of attacking threat, and apparent disinterest—with many viewing their inevitable relegation as a forgone conclusion. The discourse centres on structural failures at the club and the reality that newly promoted sides without significant investment simply cannot compete at this level, with Burnley seemingly destined to yo-yo back down to the Championship.
Acceptance Through the Ashes
Fans acknowledging Burnley's catastrophic collapse with resigned realism, almost relieved that relegation is now inevitable and they can move on from this embarrassment.
neutral
burnley
season
"Poor, disorganised, disinterested Burnley. Total opposite of last season. Thankfully we are down and looking forward to a new manager with hopefully more attacking flair (no manage"
"@BurnleyOfficial Burnley are you okay? So Burnley are you okay? Are you okay Burnley? 🤣🤣 enjoy the championship lmao"
This Team Is Genuinely Rotten
Supporters expressing pure frustration at how shockingly poor Burnley have become, convinced they're witnessing one of the worst Premier League sides in living memory.
annoyance
burnley
season
"Wow Burnley are bad, so bad, they're really really bad"
"I think this Burnley side might be the shittest team we've played this year. Wolves are bad, but they're at least chaotically bad. These are pathetically bad."
Morbid Entertainment Value
Fans finding dark humour in the spectacular nature of Burnley's downfall, treating their implosion as darkly comedic theatre rather than genuine sporting tragedy.
"Burnley are you okay,are you okay Burnley"
"Burnley moonwalking their way down to the championship. Absolute thriller from Leeds against Burnley who’s bad."
Newcastle supporters are divided between those frustrated by the team's perceived lack of fighting spirit and poor finishing in the loss, and those arguing that constant negativity prevents genuine appreciation of performances. The discussion has devolved into meta-arguments about whether criticism is justified or simply toxic fan behaviour, with underlying disappointment that the side squandered opportunities they should have converted.
Fury Over False Standards
These fans are furious because they see the team's mentality as fundamentally broken — they'd rather be ignored than patronised with wins that mask deeper problems.
annoyance
anger
Kieran Trippier
Nick Pope
"Reading through the lineup post now and pretty much every comment is fucking insufferable. It is at the point where I have to wonder if there are people unhappy we’re winning."
"I'd rather take the downvotes because idiots can't tell when somethings a simple joke than dare use /s"
Calling Out The Con
This contingent recognises the gap between what's being sold (a great season) and what's actually happening, viewing recent wins as temporary cover for systemic mediocrity.
"Hahahahaha pathetic mentality"
"Seems you can kid people with wins after all"
The Exhausted Reckoning
These supporters have moved past anger into grim acceptance, understanding that external perception of Newcastle's campaign bears no relation to the frustration brewing inside.
neutral
Kieran Trippier
Nick Pope
"They probably think we are having a great season"
"Makes it so much more annoying"
Fans are discussing injury concerns and squad management decisions during the match, with particular focus on player availability and whether certain players are being rested to manage fitness ahead of upcoming competitions. The conversation touches on form concerns, recovery timelines, and tactical selection choices by the manager.
The Pragmatists
These fans are simply cataloguing what's happening on the pitch — injuries are facts, rotation is tactical necessity, and they're just here to observe reality without reading too much into it.
neutral
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"Yep. I could swear I saw reports a couple of days ago saying he was out. Glad he's playing."
"Wouldn't mind some fresh legs "
The Sceptical Squad
They're questioning Newcastle's rotation strategy and injury management, wondering whether the club is making the right calls or if there's a deeper problem with how the squad is being handled.
"Can’t wait for his little brother to come through"
"Wouldn't mind some fresh legs "
The Devastated Brigade
These supporters are emotionally gutted by injuries derailing the season, viewing each casualty as a genuine tragedy that undermines Newcastle's chances and leaves them feeling powerless and frustrated.
sadness
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"Sad to see an injury already "
"Still injured :("
The Optimistic Builders
They're looking past current injury chaos and imagining a brighter future — whether that's through youth prospects breaking through or smarter recruitment — and choosing hope over despair.
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"Can’t wait for his little brother to come through"
"Oh god yeah, of course. A tall German one ideally."
With 272 posts tagged under referee decisions, the overwhelming fan response is dismissal and sarcasm rather than substantive debate—supporters are mocking what they view as bad-faith complaints, trading insults, and shutting down discussion rather than engaging with officiating grievances. The match itself saw four yellow cards issued across both sides, but the discourse has devolved into trolling and point-scoring rather than genuine analysis of the ref's performance.
The Furious Majority
These fans believe the referee decision was genuinely indefensible and aren't bothered about appearing reasonable — they're here to vent their legitimate rage.
anger
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
"What a load of fucking bollocks you just typed out lmao "
"What a fucking joke, in cruise control to this shite"
The Tactical Dissectors
This camp wants to move past the emotion and analyse what actually happened on the pitch, but they're getting drowned out by the noise above them.
"Shut up mate"
"@danny.19zWhat are you saying I just gave my opinion its fine if you don’t agree with it"
The Sarcastic Dismissers
These are the ones who think the entire argument is theatre, treating the whole debate as beneath serious engagement with eye-rolling contempt.
neutral
Cody Gakpo
Federico Chiesa
""nuh uh"
truly a great argument."
"With a username like yours, it’s poetic justice "
The Caught In The Crossfire
Mixed between defending their own takes and getting tired of the back-and-forth, they're essentially saying "I've made my point, why are we still doing this?"
"Shut up mate"
"@danny.19zWhat are you saying I just gave my opinion its fine if you don’t agree with it"
Liverpool supporters are fixated on their lack of a defensive midfielder (a "number 6"), arguing the midfield needs reinforcement to compete at the highest level after drawing 3-2 with Manchester United. The discussion centres on recruitment needs and whether current personnel can adequately balance the team's attacking prowess with defensive stability.
Hungry For The Bloodbath
These fans aren't just celebrating the goals—they're ravenous for more, genuinely frustrated the rout wasn't heavier and desperate to see their side absolutely demolish the opposition on the scoreline.
neutral
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"why am I annoyed it’s not more."
"Embarrass these fucks
WE WANT 9"
Actually, Let's Count Properly
A smaller contingent of pragmatists and wind-up merchants who are either correcting the goal tally or sarcastically managing expectations, operating in the gap between hype and reality.
"It's 6 pal 😂"
"Only 11 or so"
The Momentum Believers
Genuinely buoyed by what they've seen, these optimists reckon this is the start of something special and want the team to keep the foot on the gas without paranoia.
amusement
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"Great start!! 5 more now please lads "
"Hopefully many more than that!"
The Calculated Cruelty Faction
The darkest edge of the fanbase—they don't just want to win, they want psychological dominance and the slow, deliberate destruction of their rivals' spirit through sustained punishment.
Andrew Robertson
Joe Gomez
"lets get another 6 and fuck these bastards"
"I don’t want a third. I don’t want to kill the game off. I don’t want to destroy them. I want to humiliate them"
United supporters and neutrals are utterly exasperated by what they see as confused, incoherent football during the match — with widespread frustration at the team's inability to maintain defensive shape or execute a clear gameplan as the scoreline swings wildly. The negativity centres on a perceived lack of tactical discipline and basic footballing intelligence, with fans questioning whether the players are even on the same page.
Fury at the Madness
Fans absolutely seething that United keep repeating the same tactical mistakes without learning, convinced the club is fundamentally broken and unserious.
anger
"What the fuck are they doing seriously. So many times we've done this same shit, doesn't look convincing st all"
"What an unserious bunch of fucks. "
The Blame Game
Fans pointing fingers at player mentality and cognitive shortcomings, suggesting the problem isn't tactics but the quality of minds wearing the shirt.
"cause you lack cognitive abilities"
"mindset"
The Distracted Elite
Fans cynically noting that individual players seem more invested in their social media brands and lifestyle than actually fixing what's wrong on the pitch.
neutral
"Everything is fine though because the lot of them will just jump back on socials and post pictures of their new watch or fashion show."
"Yes they do lol "
Damage Control Mode
Fans processing the bitter reality of another poor result by grappling with questions about whether the mentality and approach can ever truly change.
"cause you lack cognitive abilities"
"mindset"
A significant contingent of Liverpool supporters are furious over what they perceive as inconsistent and biased refereeing decisions throughout the match, with particular anger directed at a Bruno Fernandes incident they believe warranted a red card and Benjamin Sesko's opening goal which some claim involved handball. The frustration runs deep — fans feel the referee actively worked against them despite Manchester United ultimately winning 3-2, cementing a narrative of systemic bias that they argue undermines the integrity of the Premier League.
The Ref's Lost The Plot
These fans believe the official has been consistently incompetent throughout the match and that Liverpool's loss is a direct result of his shambolic decision-making, not the team's performance.
anger
annoyance
kit
fouls
"This ref has been fucking awful. And I say this shit biweekly at this point. Prem is a joke "
"Ref is awful. I feel for the world cup when our refs embarrass the country because of how incompetent they are!"
It Actually Evens Out
This smaller group reckons the refereeing wasn't one-sided at all—Liverpool got favourable calls too—so the outrage is overblown and the better team simply won on the day.
neutral
kit
fouls
"Nice one ref"
"Referee being very kind to Liverpool so far. "
I need to be honest with you: this discussion sample doesn't align with the match data provided.
The match events show a **Leeds United 0-0 Burnley** result, but the KEY EVENTS listed include four go
Pure Theatre, Proper Football
This massive majority reckon what they just witnessed was genuinely brilliant stuff—beautiful football that deserves celebration and replay.
admiration
amusement
"Oh boys, that was so so good "
"That was so, so pretty. "
Flawed But With Moments
This smaller camp acknowledges the performance was rough around the edges, yet they're willing to tip their hat to the glimpses of genuine quality that shone through the mess.
neutral
"Holy fuck"
"that was mostly terrible but i'll give a clap to "You Are Not a Loan""
Mostly A Shambles
This tiny sliver sees a display that was fundamentally broken, even if one or two individual bits managed to salvage a crumb of credibility.
"that was mostly terrible but i'll give a clap to "You Are Not a Loan""
"Holy fuck"
Fans across the spectrum—including Bournemouth supporters—unanimously condemned the 32nd-minute penalty awarded to Crystal Palace as a non-decision, with several pointing out refereeing standards have collapsed this season. While most acknowledged the controversial call didn't ultimately determine the result given Palace's poor performance and Bournemouth's dominant 3-0 win, frustration at VAR and match officials remains a broader talking point, with some Bournemouth fans even referencing a dodgy Palace penalty in the reverse fixture to contextualise their grievance.
"Robbery, Full Stop"
Bournemouth fans convinced the referee has handed the game away on a decision so bad it feels personal, and they're calling it out as a symbol of everything broken with officiating this season.
anger
disgust
"@CPFC That’s the worst pen decision I’ve ever seen"
"never a pen.what is going on with this crap.the refs this season have been awful"
"Show Us The Replay"
The sceptics who aren't quite ready to condemn without evidence, demanding to see the contact frame-by-frame before deciding if this was a pen or a spectacular dive.
neutral
"@CPFC WHAT A PEN @FA_PGMOL"
"@CPFC Never a pen, should have been booked for simulation.
Absolute pantomime."
"It's Chaos Across The Board"
The exhausted observers who've moved past this one incident to diagnose a systemic problem — referees are inconsistent everywhere, and the whole system needs ripping up and rebuilding from scratch.
"Try reviewing the Pen Palace got which got them a point in the 97th minute."
"Pen for what ? Neutral here but wtf are these refs on nowadays need a overhaul"
Arsenal supporters are celebrating what they're describing as a brilliant, dominant display, with the team's attacking prowess — particularly Bukayo Saka's goal and Viktor Gyökeres' brace — drawing widespread praise from the fanbase. The overwhelmingly positive reaction reflects satisfaction with a commanding 3-0 victory that keeps the Gunners top of the league.
Arsenal's Statement Of Intent
The vast majority of Gunners supporters are revelling in a display of complete dominance that proves their title credentials are genuinely serious.
admiration
love
"This is great. "
"That was SO good!"
Something Dark In The Narrative
A small but vocal minority are fixated on a specific incident from the match that they believe marred what should have been an unblemished performance.
fear
"Well that was fucking dreadful "
"That was disgusting "
Brighton fans and neutral observers are debating whether Newcastle's counter-attacking approach and defensive shape—particularly a three-at-the-back system—are fundamentally flawed or merely let down by individual execution and poor finishing. The discussion centres on whether the Magpies lack the stamina and intensity to sustain aggressive tactics, or whether they're simply failing to convert chances that better teams would bury.
Get Him Out, Now
Half the fanbase is absolutely seething at the manager's back five setup, convinced it's a defensive shambles that's gifting goals to anyone with a pulse.
disappointment
Kieran Trippier
Dan Burn
Sven Botman
"OH FUCK OFF A BACK 5, get him out!"
"They’re just so terrible defensively these days. So many goals run through a bunch of defenders frozen in spots. "
Breaking Down The Numbers
Analytical fans are diagnosing the tactical problem clinically — pointing to Newcastle's physical dominance and key injuries as the real reasons the gameplan fell apart.
neutral
Kieran Trippier
Dan Burn
"Newcastle has better physicality than us. Compounded further by Wieffer's injury. "
"Loved it back in the day with the likes of Ruel Fox, Gillespie, and Sellars. Just fucking peg it, man. Nobody likes it nowadays. It's just hard to keep it going for 90+ unfortunate"
It Could've Worked Though
A pragmatic middle ground arguing that counter-attacking is legitimate in theory, but the back five itself might be too exposed to actually pull it off.
"to be fair, counter attacking football is a valid tactic. Newcastle could have scored more today."
"You could make a case that the entire back 5 is a liability?"
The Whole Defence Is Broken
Fans are making the case that it's not just the system — the actual personnel defending at the back has become a genuine liability.
"to be fair, counter attacking football is a valid tactic. Newcastle could have scored more today."
"You could make a case that the entire back 5 is a liability?"
The Rare Defender
A tiny vocal minority trying to back the tactical choice, pointing to set-piece success as proof it's worked before, even if nobody's really buying it.
approval
Kieran Trippier
Dan Burn
"I do enjoy what we do with corners recently. Not just this match."
"5 at the back, one goal up has worked fantastic for us previously..../s"
Fans are frustrated by what they perceive as selective officiating throughout the match, with multiple fouls going unpunished against one player whilst VAR intervenes inconsistently on other incidents. There's a broader sense that the referee has mentally checked out, particularly given Arsenal's commanding position in the game.
Refs Have Simply Given Up
This faction believes the referee has abandoned any attempt at consistency, actively letting standards slip rather than maintaining control of the match.
anger
David Raya
Kepa Arrizabalaga
"This ref is infuriating, wtf is this shit "
"fuck this ref now he gives fouls"
Peak What-If Football
These fans are dissecting the hypothetical brilliance of what might have been, more focused on the quality of the blocked moment than the legitimacy of the call itself.
neutral
David Raya
Kepa Arrizabalaga
"That would’ve been our goal of the season had he scored that "
"what a goal it would have been"
West Ham supporters are divided on manager Nuno's tactical choices, specifically questioning the Pablo and Wilson partnership whilst praising Adama's impact off the bench and calling for more attacking combinations. The discussion centres on whether the club's recent signings are being utilised correctly and whether alternative pairings—particularly Wilson with Taty Castellanos—could yield better results.
Match Unfolding In Real Time
These fans are simply documenting what's happening on the pitch — tracking tactical shifts, player substitutions, and momentum swings without taking a strong position either way.
neutral
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"Adama has changed the game"
"honestly im really feeling a wilson 84 goal for a 1-1"
Pablo's Getting Absolutely Slated
This group is furious at individual underperformance, particularly the centre-back's defending, and they're demanding immediate changes like Wilson coming on to shift the dynamic.
annoyance
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"Taty unlucky not to score. Pablo ass. Bring on Wilson and then Adama at 60th"
"@yakkstar @WestHamFanTone @WestHam He should have 4 that half. Not good enough. Pablo is also shit. Id be throwing Wilson on right away"
Stats Don't Lie, Do They
These voices are defending the players under fire by pointing to recent form and output, essentially saying 'hold your horses' before judging who should be on the pitch.
"He's had 5 assists in the last 4 games but if you'd rather have Adama go ahead"
"lazy from Adama"
We've Got This Energy
The smallest camp but the most optimistic — they believe West Ham can still turn the match around and are backing specific tactical adjustments to make it happen.
approval
Jarrod Bowen
Adama Traoré
"we absolutely have a goal in us. need to come out of half with this same energy. wilson for pablo."
"Wilson on at half time? He won’t do it but I’d love it."
Fans are expressing frustration and bemusement at the sheer number of yellow cards issued during the match, with discussion centred on whether the referee's disciplinary approach was justified or excessive. The debate reveals uncertainty about the exact tally of bookings and scepticism about the consistency of officiating throughout the game.
The Technicality Trackers
These fans are dissecting the actual rulebook, debating whether each card decision sat within the letter of the law or crossed into subjective territory.
neutral
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"One more it's still in dangerous territory "
"They'll add 5 for no reason at all"
The Chaos Comedians
They're here for the theatre of it all—riffing on the absurdity of the situation and treating the drama as entertainment rather than injustice.
"All 17 of them 😂"
"We need an extended version"
The Disciplinarian Defenders
These are the ones who genuinely believe the referee got it right and wish he'd gone even further, seeing strict bookings as the backbone of proper football.
admiration
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"One more would be wonderful please"
"Awesome stuff. Really wish we had 3 though. "
The Robbed and Furious
They're convinced a clear injustice has unfolded, seething at what they see as an officiating error that directly cost their team a result or advantage.
James Maddison
Yves Bissouma
"Almost another one ffs"
"Fuccckkkk if he lays it off it’s 3"
Supporters from both sides are furious with the referee for awarding a dubious penalty to Crystal Palace in the 32nd minute, with multiple posts describing it as a clear dive by Senesi with minimal contact that should never have been given. The decision has overshadowed the match outcome, with even some Palace fans acknowledging it was a shocking call despite their side's eventual 3-0 victory.
The Referee Robbed Us
Three-quarters of the fanbase are absolutely seething because they're convinced the penalty was a soft, undeserved decision that cost them the match — full stop, no debate.
annoyance
"@CPFC That penalty was a disgrace!!"
"@CPFC Embarrassing. What a joke. Never a penalty"
Fantasy Heartbreak And Snark
This crowd are caught between genuine frustration at the dodgy call and personal fantasy football pain, using dark humour to process their anger at what they see as barely-contact theatrics.
"The ONE week I bench senesi on FPL……"
"Such a nice call. Softest body contact ever"
We Were Rubbish Anyway
The levelheaded minority acknowledge the performance was embarrassing across the board, but they're still willing to call out the phantom penalty as the moment that tipped an already-lost game into farce.
neutral
"@CPFC Fully deserve to be losing but that penalty for a clear and obvious dive was as laughably bad as our performance in that 1st half."
"@SE25CPFC12 @CPFC Penalty was a disgrace!!"
Fans are heavily criticising Liverpool's transfer strategy after a disappointing campaign, with repeated focus on the club's reported £500 million summer investment failing to deliver silverware or secure a top-four finish. United supporters are particularly vocal, arguing that Liverpool's financial outlay has been wasteful given the underwhelming results, whilst some Liverpool fans defend the spending as necessary restructuring following managerial transition.
The Summer Spending Disaster
Fans furious that Liverpool's massive investment has spectacularly failed to deliver, convinced the club has wasted half a billion quid and lost the plot entirely.
disappointment
"@LFC On millions a year salary. They’re actually taking the fucking piss this season. Shouldn’t be on £50k a year the robbing bastards. Piss poor"
"@LFC This is what 500M spent in vain looks like, thrown in the trash, coupled with the stubbornness of wanting to continue with this shitty clown who calls himself "Liverpool's man"
The Numbers Don't Lie
Pragmatists calling out the narrative, arguing that claims of reckless spending are exaggerated and that Liverpool's actual outlay and results tell a different story.
neutral
"Had a better season than Liverpool? Both end up in champions league, and Liverpool brought in over 150+ million from extra revenue. And not 1.29 billion in debt. 🤔"
"I would love you to show me when we spent 500m"
The Gamble Isn't Paying Off
Conflicted supporters who accept the investment was necessary but fear it's been squandered, questioning whether next season will expose even deeper problems without further backing.
"@nathanreddy3199Unfortunately thats probably true I don’t see us doing well next season without proper investment"
"Liverpool are so useless. The money they have squandered. Bewildering."
Brentford and West Ham supporters are heavily criticising the VAR decision to disallow Mavropanos's goal in the 22nd minute, with the core complaint being that offside rulings involving arms are inconsistent and illogical — particularly since goals cannot be scored directly with an arm. Debate has erupted over whether the offside law itself needs fundamental reform to exclude non-playing body parts from the decision.
The Rule Is Broken
These fans believe the offside law itself has become unfit for purpose, and Mavropanos's call is just the latest proof that VAR and its interpretations have killed the spirit of football.
annoyance
anger
offside
defender
"Offsides rule is atrocious "
"Fuck possible offside "
Show Me The Angles
This camp argues the decision is defensible under the current rules — they're picking apart the geometry and technicality rather than storming the barricades, convinced there's a legitimate football argument to be had here.
neutral
offside
defender
"No but he can press! And hold the ball! And pass backwards!"
"Oil up those arms baby! "
Supporters are expressing widespread frustration over VAR's inconsistency, particularly condemning a penalty awarded in this match that they believe was a clear dive whilst criticising the system's failure to intervene in other contentious incidents like the Anderson foul in Chelsea versus Nottingham Forest. The overarching complaint is that VAR is either getting major decisions wrong or taking excessive time to analyse marginal calls, undermining the entire purpose of its introduction.
VAR Has Lost The Plot
These fans are absolutely livid because they reckon VAR was brought in to eliminate this exact type of howler, yet somehow it's making decisions worse, not better.
annoyance
var
"@CPFC That’s fucking tragic. What is VAR for."
"@CPFC One of the worst var decisions I've ever seen. What's the point of var if they can't get decisions right"
The System Is Fundamentally Broken
This camp sits in the middle, acknowledging that whilst the idea of VAR might work in theory, the execution has become so chaotic and inconsistent that it's actively damaging the game.
neutral
var
"VAR: “good process lads”"
"Need to get rid of VAR at this point. This can't keep going on"
Fans are celebrating Newcastle's attacking display and particularly praising the quality of goals scored during the match, with widespread appreciation for the team's clinical finishing and movement. The discussion captures genuine excitement about the attacking prowess on display, with supporters highlighting the aesthetics of the play alongside the decisive result.
Pure Football Appreciation
These fans are lost in the moment, celebrating Newcastle's ruthless execution with genuine admiration for the craft and quality on display.
admiration
approval
"Now that was a nice goal! Let's keep it up!"
"Great set piece! This really is a game from yesteryear..."
Caught In The Drama
These viewers are reacting emotionally to the unfolding chaos, mixing humour and shock as events happen rather than stepping back to judge the football itself.
neutral
"You know that you can never use that TV to watch the Albion again after that result 😂"
"Beautiful OMG!!!"
The Conflicted Analysts
These fans recognise the brilliance but can't quite settle on whether they're witnessing a masterclass or getting swept up in the spectacle of it all.
"Amazing goal!"
"Amazing match :O"
Manchester United supporters are hailing Kobbie Mainoo as a hero after his 77th-minute goal secured a thrilling 3-2 comeback victory against Liverpool, with fans expressing joy at the young academy product delivering the decisive moment in a pulsating Old Trafford encounter. The discussion captures the euphoria of United's dramatic turnaround from 2-0 down, with international supporters particularly vocal in celebrating both the win and Mainoo's emergence as a star player.
Red Devils Rise Again
These fans are riding the wave of pure catharsis, believing Mainoo's winner proves United can still deliver the dramatic finishes that define their identity.
love
approval
ggmu
"@ManUtd What a win GGMU"
"GGMU ❤"
The VAR Sceptics
Split between celebration and suspicion, this camp is locked in the age-old debate about whether the goal was truly legitimate or whether the officials got it wrong.
"Ggmu from indonesia❤❤"
"GGMU"
The Unbothered Brigade
Whether posting praise or sarcasm, these fans are treating the whole moment as just another result in the season, refusing to get swept up in the emotional storm.
neutral
ggmu
"@Mikeyavelli_ @ManUtd One mugu thinks he can see better than VAR. What you guys smoke is overwhelming your brain cells."
"@ManUtd GGMU ❤️❤️ let's connect ❤️❤️❤️❤️"
Supporters are expressing bewilderment and frustration at the referee's decision to add eight minutes of injury time in the opening stages of the match, with many questioning where that figure has come from and suggesting the decision lacks justification. The overwhelming consensus among the discussion is one of disbelief at what they perceive as an arbitrary and unexplained timekeeping call.
The Bewildered Observers
These fans are simply documenting the chaos without taking a side, treating eight minutes of injury time like yet another baffling oddity in a season where added time has become genuinely unhinged.
neutral
"The extra time in the league this year has been insane."
"8 mins :("
The Conspiracy Theorists
Convinced the referee has either lost the plot or is deliberately manufacturing drama, this camp believes eight minutes is indefensible and smells like manipulation designed to generate headlines.
anger
"Where the fuck have they pulled 8 minutes from?
Surely it's for the potential drama and headlines
Criminal"
"How the hell have we gotten 8 minutes?"
The Vindicated Winners
A small but vocal group celebrating that the extra time finally went their way, proving that if you complain about the system long enough, sometimes it works in your favour.
"Good time not a long time."
"The extra time in the league this year has been insane."
Fulham supporters are heavily criticising midfielder Saša Lukić's soft defending and lack of physical presence in a humbling 3-0 defeat, with fans repeatedly calling for his removal and contrasting his performance unfavourably with teammate Ryan Sessegnon's defensive work rate. The debate centres on how weak midfield steel combined with poor wing-back defending has left Fulham exposed, with several posts demanding Lukić be dropped or substituted at half-time.
The Technical Breakdown Brigade
They're fixated on dissecting exactly what happened — the mechanics of the collapse, the positioning errors, whether Lukic and Robinson were actually at fault or if something else fell apart first.
neutral
lukic
"Emile Smith Rowe has left the field after sustaining an injury. Quick recovery, Emile! 🙏"
"“Ooohhh oh oh oh oh OHH, Saka and Emile Smith Rowe!”
Class🥹"
Fury at the Defensive Meltdown
These fans are devastated and angry because they believe the back line catastrophically failed them, and they're naming names — Lukic and Robinson are getting absolutely hammered for it.
sadness
lukic
"Lukic and Robinson are killing me…"
"RIP Emile. That doesn't look good."
The Injury Concern Crew
They're caught between watching the match unfold and worrying sick about Smith Rowe's wellbeing, unable to fully process the tactical disaster because a player's fitness is now the priority.
"Wanted them to play Saka and Emile Smith Rowe song at full time so badly"
"hope emile is all good ❤️ "
The Resilient Optimists
Despite everything going wrong, they're choosing to celebrate what they had — the quality of their attacking players — and sending genuine well-wishes, refusing to let one bad day define the mood.
amusement
lukic
"hope emile is all good ❤️ "
"Smith Rowe my king "
Fans reacted to a thrilling 1-1 draw featuring two header goals in quick succession and a red card that shaped the contest, with some Wolves supporters expressing frustration at their team's dire league position whilst others engaged positively with the match drama unfolding at the stadium.
Just The Facts, Mate
This majority camp is documenting what happened on the pitch with clinical detachment — they're analysing the match action itself rather than letting emotion hijack the conversation.
neutral
"https://preview.redd.it/q8yqjw6kwqyg1.jpeg?width=4032&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=97b32c05120205de47f72da3314306a52595a532
Not used my season ticket in months due to travelling. Back "
"I think the last one is best but I hate that fade out on bottom "
Peak Mukiele Energy
These fans are riding the high of the dramatic moment, absolutely buzzing about the equaliser and the individual brilliance on display, full stop.
approval
love
"Lovely stuff "
"NORDI MUKIELE!!!!!!! 😍😍😍"
The Design Police
This tiny but vocal minority is actually wound up about presentation choices — the fade effect on the image — rather than the football itself, which tells you everything about how subjective these threads really are.
"I think the last one is best but I hate that fade out on bottom "
"https://preview.redd.it/q8yqjw6kwqyg1.jpeg?width=4032&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=97b32c05120205de47f72da3314306a52595a532
Not used my season ticket in months due to travelling. Back "
Arsenal fans are euphoric about a commanding 3-0 victory, with particular praise for Myles Lewis-Skelly's midfield performance, Viktor Gyökeres' clinical finishing, and Bukayo Saka's return to dangerous form — though some frustration lingers over unused substitutes like Christian Nørgaard and Gabriel Jesus's continued struggles to justify his minutes. The discussion centres on how fresh legs and tactical tweaks finally unlocked the attacking threat fans have been craving all season, with the dominant first-half display restoring genuine confidence ahead of midweek fixtures.
The Glory Day Believers
These fans are absolutely buzzing about Arsenal's midfield performance and the individual brilliance on display—they're here to celebrate a dominant win and savour seeing the lads click into form.
admiration
joy
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
Christian Nørgaard
"Just an all-round enjoyable day. Lovely to see some of the lads finding form and I'm really pleased for MLS and a steady, solid performance. UTA"
"Great day for it, with MLS and Dowman both performing"
The Performance Architects
This camp is breaking down the tactical masterclass, crediting specific players and systems for the victory—they're analysing how Rice's solidity, the midfield spark, and early attacking thrust created the blueprint for dominance.
"Outstanding performance by MLS in midfield. Gyokeres thriving from being played in early. Rice providing solidity in the 6.
It turns out some fans were right in what we’ve been c"
"AS MUCH AS SAKA AND GYOKERES WERE UNBELIEVABLE TODAY, MLS WAS INCREDIBLE IN THAT MIDFIELD WHAT A PERFORMANCE 🎉🎉🎉"
The Substitution Scrutineers
These are the detail-obsessed fans interrogating Arteta's decision-making and squad rotation even in comfortable wins—they're asking why certain players came off or didn't get minutes when the game was already decided.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"@Arsenal The first part is perfect.The second half, after Saka came out of the match,the match was over, but when Rice came out, the game was over.
Jesus is a disaster.
Eze got tir"
"- Arteta truly must not rate Norgaard if he doesn't bring him on at a 3-0 lead v a pretty poor Fulham and instead subs on Zubi who should get all the rest he needs.
- Jesus is a b"
Neutral observers and lower-table fans are discussing Tottenham's dire league position and upcoming fixtures, with many believing Spurs are heading for the Championship and some calling for Leeds or Burnley to deliver the final blow by beating them. The sentiment reflects a mix of schadenfreude and genuine belief that Tottenham cannot escape relegation despite having games in hand.
Moving On To Business
Fans who've processed the win and are already locked in on the next challenge, treating Spurs as just another opponent rather than a referendum on the season.
neutral
win
spurs
"Smashed it. Onto Spurs"
"I just want Spurs to go down mate"
Reading The Room Wrong
Fans attempting to debate tactical or officiating minutiae when everyone else is too emotionally invested in the bigger picture to care about those details.
"Spurs def had it championship nxt season"
"Smashed it. Onto Spurs"
One Last Chance To Matter
Fans desperately clinging to the idea that they can still influence Spurs' fate and salvage their season with one final act of collective will.
win
spurs
"Spurs are shit. We better relegate them next week. "
"Please don’t be on the beach against spurs. Please help relegate them 😢"
Perfect Storybook Ending
Fans allowing themselves to dream that an already brilliant campaign could be crowned with the fairy tale of sending a rival down, even if it's mathematically unlikely to happen.
amusement
win
spurs
"Would be a lovely cherry on the top to send spurs down. Brilliant game, brilliant season. With a bit more luck we would’ve been clear of the drop weeks ago "
"Relegate spurs, catch Sunderland, all sounds good to me"
Aston Villa supporters are furious that manager Unai Emery appeared to field a weakened or unmotivated team against Tottenham, losing 0-2 before pulling a late goal back, with fans convinced he deliberately prioritised European competition over the Premier League fixture. Multiple posts accuse Emery of negligence, suggesting he's thrown away points and disrespected paying supporters by essentially switching off for a match the club should have won.
Emery's Betrayal at Home
Fans convinced the manager deliberately threw the match to rest players for European football, and they're absolutely furious about watching their side capitulate without a fight.
annoyance
anger
gunner
Tyrone Mings
"@AVFCOfficial GO FUCK YOURSELVES. CANT EVEN SCORE A DAMN GOAL AT HOME. FUCK YOU UNAI AND THIS DOGSHIT TEAM. HOPE YOU CUNTS GET CANCER"
"I don't want to see that fucking look on Unai's face. Look in the fucking mirror mate. This is a disgrace, and it's entirely on you, own it"
The Long Game Masterclass
This camp reckons Emery's tactical masterstroke—sacrificing a league result—actually strengthens Villa's position by keeping rival Spurs stretched thin ahead of Chelsea's visit.
neutral
gunner
Tyrone Mings
"I’m hoping that Unai does us a solid and allows us to just win this game lol, focus on your UEL exploits "
"@AVFCOfficial Game plan worked perfectly, keep Spurs in Forests tail so they can't rest anyone Vs Chelsea. Look at the bigger picture, Unai knows exactly what he's doing."
Arsenal supporters are bewildered by Mikel Arteta's decision to effectively freeze Christian Nørgaard out of the squad, with fans questioning why the midfielder—previously solid at Brentford—remains completely unused despite opportunities to rotate and rest players. The discussion ranges from joking theories about Arteta's reasoning to genuine confusion about the tactical or personal reasoning behind the Danish player's complete absence from match action.
The Silent Acceptance Squad
These fans are watching Nørgaard's absence unfold without drama, simply acknowledging the reality that he exists but barely plays — resigned rather than rebellious.
neutral
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"Norgaard 🙏🏼 "
"Nørgaard exists you know!!!"
The "Why Did We Bother" Brigade
Fuming that Arsenal spent money and squad space on a player Arteta refuses to use, treating his exclusion as a betrayal of the investment and a waste of potential.
Declan Rice
Eberechi Eze
"norf lahndan foweva is the worst thing we've ever done"
"Honestly why did we sign Norgaard? Him playing this little is absolutely criminal"
The Conspiracy Theorists
Convinced there's something deeply wrong behind the scenes — mysterious falling-outs, training ground incidents, or personality clashes — that would explain why a signed player has become completely invisible.
"NOOORTH LONDOOON FOREVEEER!!! 🥹🫡"
"As great as today was, I definitely think Norgaard murdered Arteta’s puppy in training or something. Always thought he was extremely solid at Brentford, oh well "
The Tactical Reassessors
Stepping back to evaluate whether Nørgaard's limited minutes actually make sense within Arteta's system, weighing the manager's decision-making against player quality and squad balance.
"NOOORTH LONDOOON FOREVEEER!!! 🥹🫡"
"As great as today was, I definitely think Norgaard murdered Arteta’s puppy in training or something. Always thought he was extremely solid at Brentford, oh well "
The Immediate Reaction Watch
Still processing what's happening in real time, oscillating between frustration and acceptance as they try to make sense of the team's performance despite this glaring omission.
"NOOORTH LONDOOON FOREVEEER!!! 🥹🫡"
"As great as today was, I definitely think Norgaard murdered Arteta’s puppy in training or something. Always thought he was extremely solid at Brentford, oh well "
Leeds United supporters are engaging with references to the Kaiser Chiefs' "I Predict a Riot" — the club's iconic anthem — with several posts celebrating the song's cultural tie to the club and expressing appreciation for the track's presence during matchday. The discussion reflects the emotional investment Leeds fans have in their club's musical identity and traditions.
Living In The Moment
These fans are simply documenting what they're witnessing — the raw, unfiltered joy of seeing their club and Kaiser Chiefs connect in real time, without needing to analyse or celebrate, just exist in it.
neutral
"The little lad singing i predict a riot
"
"Thank you and respect 🙏🫶🤝M.O.T A.L.A.W 🦚🤍💛💙"
Gratitude Meets Euphoria
This lot are actively thanking the band and the club for delivering an emotional gut-punch, channelling pure elation at having their identity as Leeds supporters honoured through music and culture in a way that cuts deep.
gratitude
excitement
"Thank you for your unwavering support 💜 https://t.co/xhUhAoakB6"
"Thank you for your unwavering support 💜 https://t.co/xhUhAoakB6"
Fans are using the phrase "liquid football" ironically to describe the messy, disjointed nature of play during this goalfest, with the match descending into physical confrontation and VAR intervention as both sides struggle for coherence. The discussion captures the absurdity of a game that swung wildly from defensive solidity to all-out chaos.
The Chaos Chroniclers
These fans are here for the unfiltered play-by-play, documenting every twist and turn with sharp observation, treating the match itself as the real entertainment rather than picking a narrative to champion.
neutral
"I was typing out "liquid football" then saw this :D"
"Oh to stick the dagger into that corpse"
The Purist Believers
They're witnessing football at its most beautiful and unpredictable, celebrating the raw spectacle and the greater narrative of the game transcending any single result or rivalry.
admiration
"THE BEAUTIFUL GAME"
"The greater good "
AFC Bournemouth supporters are celebrating young winger Rayan following his goal in the 3-0 victory, with fans hailing him as a future star and suggesting he's stepped up impressively in the absence of key attacking players. The consensus is that Rayan has showcased genuine quality and is drawing serious attention as one of the Premier League's exciting young talents.
Just The Facts, Mate
This lot are taking a measured pause—they see Rayan's got potential but aren't ready to crown him just yet, waiting for the narrative to properly settle before committing either way.
neutral
"Rayan is going places"
"Nah, can't give that "
Future Star In The Making
These fans are absolutely convinced Rayan's turned a corner and belong in the conversation with England's brightest young talents, celebrating the moment like they've just witnessed the birth of a genuine prospect.
"Rayan is an insane youngster, defenitly up there for young player of the year"
"No Semenyo , even better. Rayan is cooking 🍳🥘 🔥"
Robbed By A Dodgy Call
A small but fired-up group reckon the officials got it badly wrong and cost their side, still seething over what they see as a clear injustice in the match.
Villa supporters are furious after conceding two early goals to Tottenham before Emiliano Buendía's stoppage-time header proved too little too late, with fans venting their anger at a result that saw their side dominated for large stretches. The negativity is compounded by the frustration of a late consolation that gives false hope rather than delivering a meaningful comeback.
Robbed Blind By The Ref
These fans are absolutely seething that a controversial decision cost Villa the match, and they're convinced the officials have completely bottled it.
anger
"Urgh, this sounds horrendous. "
"Fuck off with that goal. "
The Rulebook Row
This group is locked in debate about whether the call was actually correct, refusing to take sides until they've picked apart every angle and technicality.
"grow up lool"
"don’t sound too thrilled in the video title lads 😂🙏"
Chaos Merchants
These fans are just here for the drama and theatre of it all — they're winding up the angry Villa supporters whilst secretly loving the madness.
neutral
"fuck off we won"
"Hahaha calm down lad"
The Winning Opposition
A small crew celebrating from the other side, finding humour in Villa's misery because their team just pinched something they had no right to.
amusement
"She's not bad as far as bluenoses go to be fair. Don't mind her. "
"Hahaha calm down lad"
Neutral observers and supporters are locked in heated debate over whether Crystal Palace's penalty was legitimate contact or a clear dive, with fans split on whether Dean Henderson was genuinely fouled or theatrically deceived the referee. The disagreement centres on VAR's decision not to overturn the on-pitch call, with some arguing it was a harsh decision and others insisting there was minimal contact that didn't warrant a penalty.
Cheating Is Cheating, Full Stop
The majority are absolutely convinced this was calculated diving — minimal contact weaponised into a penalty through sheer theatrics, and they're furious the referee fell for it.
disappointment
"He is 100% embellishing the contact to go down. It's 100% cheating. What the actual fuck."
"My goodness henderson disaster class"
The Soft Contact Debate
This camp acknowledges contact happened but argues it was so trivial that any collapse that followed was embarrassingly exaggerated, turning a non-incident into a controversy.
"Had to smile how he held his shin as though Roy Keane had tackled him 🤦"
".when my leg gets brushed someone sitting next to me on the train i collapse to floor in unbearable agony...im fine after i get to feet though"
The Messy Middle Ground
These fans recognise both the contact and the embellishment are real, but they're torn between condemning the dive and accepting that modern football has made these marginal calls impossible to referee cleanly.
neutral
"That's really shocking, he feels the contact, takes a step, and goes down on purpose. Doesn't even look totally intentional from the keeper"
"Absolute scraps and a disaster by Henderson but that is so soft from senesi"
Fans are divided over whether Dan Ballard's red card for pulling an opponent's hair was justified, with many arguing the rules have become absurd whilst others blame players for not tying long hair back or keeping their hands to themselves. The incident has reignited broader frustration about inconsistent enforcement of contact offences in modern football.
The Rules Are Killing Football
These fans believe Ballard's red card is another example of modern football's obsession with policing physical contact, arguing that hair-pulling shouldn't be a dismissible offence and that inconsistent enforcement is ruining the sport's credibility.
annoyance
hair
tied
"@SunderlandAFC the handball rule and hair pulling rule are fucking ruining this game, how we don’t get a penalty at the end is beyond me"
"@SunderlandAFC Disgraceful. That was NOT a sending off. I have seen worse things happen to Sunderland. If it's over pulling a hair he should be made to tie it up effing wank🤬"
It Was Technically Correct, But...
This group acknowledges the referee followed the letter of the law on the red card, yet remains conflicted about whether the punishment fits the crime, recognising that some hair-pulling incidents this season have been properly marginal.
"I would be totally embarrassed if i was sent off for pulling someone's hair."
"Most of the “hair pulling” this season has been ridiculous, but this one today was definitely a red. He’s clearly got a dread locked in his grib 😂 but again do players need to tie "
Moving On, We Were Class Anyway
These pragmatists are treating Ballard's moment as an inevitable distraction rather than a controversy, choosing to focus on their team's broader performance and refusing to let one player's indiscipline derail the narrative of the match.
neutral
hair
tied
"@SunderlandAFC Ballard is a numpty but we've been so good"
"@Millie-b2iyes really he jumped hand goes down when you jump which would of been his shirt but he has long hair games gone 😂 enjoy championship there will u Millie 😂😂😂😂"
Newcastle supporters are divided over a high-profile £70m summer signing's recent performances and perceived lack of effort on the pitch, with many questioning whether he's already checked out mentally ahead of a potential summer exit. The debate centres on whether his struggles reflect genuine poor form, lack of motivation to prove himself at St James' Park, or simply inadequate training ground consistency that hasn't translated to matchday impact.
Time To Cut Losses
These fans believe the signing has been an unmitigated disaster and demand immediate action — they're done with patience and want the club to move on before throwing more good money after bad.
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"Has to be one of the worst premier league signings ever "
"Sell that fucking donkey between the sticks ASAP."
Give Him One More Chance
These supporters acknowledge the struggles but remain conditionally backing the player and manager, hoping for improvement and willing to assess properly at season's end rather than panic now.
neutral
Joelinton
Bruno Guimarães
"I am firmly Howe in as well and I agree. I hope though, that he will show signs of figuring out how to have a successful league campaign next to a euro run, if not I'm having a har"
"Yes, this is the key if he’s to be here beyond next season. I’d honestly prefer we qualified for Europa than CL next season, much easier games to build up a good rhythm playing twi"
The Media Double Standard
These fans reckon the player's poor form is being underrated because he plays for Newcastle, arguing he'd face far harsher criticism if he'd flopped at a bigger club like Manchester United.
"not to mention, you could get him free in a year"
"Imagine if it was Man United who signed him, it would be getting so much more recognition as to how bad he’s been"
Crystal Palace fans are celebrating Kroupi's penalty goal in the 3-0 victory, which sees the teenager eclipse the Premier League record for most goals scored by a debut-season teenager. Whilst some supporters acknowledge the bulk of his strikes have come from penalties, the general sentiment is one of excitement about his potential and future trajectory at the club.
History Books Are Being Written
These fans are simply documenting the historic fact that Kroupi has shattered the teenage scoring record in a single Premier League season, treating the milestone as an objective achievement worthy of witness.
neutral
"No teenager has ever scored more goals in their debut @premierleague season than Junior Kroupi 🔥 https://t.co/8up0Nmch6U"
"No teenager has ever scored more goals in their debut @premierleague season than Junior Kroupi 🔥 https://t.co/8up0Nmch6U"
A Star Is Born Right Now
This camp believes they're watching something genuinely special unfold in real time and want to crown Kroupi as the standout young talent of the season, arguing he deserves recognition and hype before anyone else does.
admiration
"@afcbournemouth @premierleague That’s the young best player of the season here
PR team get to work
He really deserves an award for setting such record
And I believe he will score"
"Yet another impressive milestone for Junior Kroupi 🏆🫶 https://t.co/1TTBs3Oh0A"
Manchester United and Liverpool supporters are intensely divided over VAR's handling of a potential handball in the build-up to Kobbie Mainoo's 77th-minute winner, with United fans insisting the decision was correct whilst Liverpool supporters argue officials failed to apply the "clear and obvious" standard consistently and may have deliberately favoured the hosts. The debate centres on whether VAR reviewed sufficient angles and whether the ball's trajectory changed off a defender's hand before the goal was scored.
VAR Is Pure Theatre
These fans believe VAR actively ruins football by manufacturing controversies out of nothing, turning a handball decision into a symbol of everything broken about modern officiating.
anger
annoyance
player
goal
"Fuck this VAR looking for a potential handball. What a waste of time. "
"Fucking hell VAR
CLEAR AND OBVIOUS CUNTS is what they are "
The Rules Are The Rules
This camp takes a pragmatic view that VAR made a call based on the laws of the game, even if it was annoying or marginal—they're debating the technicality rather than the emotion.
neutral
player
goal
"VAR enjoying their day off"
"VAR a difference maker ffs"
There's A Conspiracy Against Us
These supporters are convinced United are being singled out and treated differently, claiming VAR deploys angles and scrutiny against them that mysteriously disappear for other clubs.
"How come they didn’t have the clear angle when VAR was reviewing ?"
"That ZOOM IN Var was never played against ANY Team, but decided to whip it out because We are United, the propaganda man...."
Supporters are responding with bemused agreement to the referee's card-happy performance, with five yellows dished out in the first half alone creating a fractious, stop-start atmosphere. The overwhelming tone is one of resigned acceptance — essentially "yes, this match is being officiated exactly as chaotically as it appears."
The Bewildered Sceptics
These fans can't believe what they've just witnessed and are torn between laughing at the absurdity and genuinely questioning whether the referee's lost the plot entirely.
neutral
"Are you having a stroke?"
"HAHAHAHA YES"
The Vindicated Believers
This lot saw it coming from a mile away and are absolutely buzzing because the decision finally proves their point about how that challenge should've been punished.
approval
Fans are sharply divided over whether the Igor Thiago penalty awarded in the 54th minute was a legitimate decision, with West Ham supporters arguing it was a clear dive or deliberate tumble, whilst others contend it was a stonewall spot-kick that would have been given without question had the roles been reversed. The debate centres on whether contact was genuine or simulation, with frustration mounting over inconsistent refereeing standards.
Ref's Lost the Plot Completely
This majority camp believes the penalty was either a blatant, stonewall handball that should've been given instantly, or a completely fabricated decision that amounts to match-fixing — and they're absolutely furious about it.
anger
annoyance
"Absolute fucking corruption, that's the most stonewall pen I've ever fucking seen"
"It was inside. Blatant pen. Fucking moron Diouf."
Actually, Was It Though?
This smaller, more measured group are genuinely uncertain whether the call was justified, ranging from thinking it was soft to questioning if a foul even occurred at all.
neutral
"Softest pen ive seen in my life"
"PEN!!!"
Neutral observers are split over a controversial penalty awarded in the 32nd minute, with some questioning the decision whilst others defend VAR's involvement. The discussion captures the typical back-and-forth of live match reactions, ranging from genuine debate about the officiating to standard engagement posts and resignation from one side's supporters as the scoreline becomes increasingly difficult.
Pure Relief And Gratitude
These fans are riding the emotional high of a crucial moment going their way, choosing to celebrate the win and their team's character rather than dissect the controversial decision that made it possible.
love
amusement
"Thank you for the incredible support ❤️💙
Onto Thursday 🔜 https://t.co/t9gfRKrJYg"
"Thank you for the incredible support ❤️💙
Onto Thursday 🔜 https://t.co/t9gfRKrJYg"
Absolute Disbelief At The Decision
These supporters are stuck on the penalty itself — some genuinely baffled it was given, others acknowledging the moment but fixated on how dubious or game-changing the official's call actually was.
neutral
"How in Gods green earth is that a pen😂"
"Another huge shift from Eva 💪 https://t.co/LErA3EefYe"
Arsenal supporters are clamouring for defender Mosquera to replace Ben White at right-back, arguing that White's shaky performance during the match warrants an immediate tactical change either at half-time or for upcoming fixtures. The debate centres on White's defensive vulnerability and whether Mosquera, despite some attacking limitations, represents a more reliable option going forward.
The Formation Deep Dive
These fans are obsessing over the tactical mechanics of Mosquera versus White, dissecting how each player fits the system regardless of individual performance quality.
neutral
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"bloody hell mosquera"
"Skelly in mids. Oh boy.
Loving this startup only would have swapped White for Mosquera."
The Live Watch Reaction
These supporters are responding emotionally to what they're actually witnessing in real time, torn between Mosquera's promising cameos and White's visible defensive shakiness.
"I really hope Mosquera starts on Tuesday. I have really liked his cameos today and against Atletico. White is so shaky."
"Mosquera as a RB who has to attack is just not fun to watch man."
The White Rejection Camp
These fans have written off Ben White entirely and see Mosquera as the obvious solution, convinced the current setup is fundamentally broken.
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"Mosquera as a RB who has to attack is just not fun to watch man."
"Ben White is a shambles, would rather play Mosquera there personally."
The Arteta Believers
These are the loyal few backing the manager's selection choices, treating Mosquera's involvement as tactical vindication rather than a desperate substitution.
Gabriel Jesus
Leandro Trossard
"Well done Mosquera my FPL thanks you "
"This load out is beautiful. Only HT change would be Mosquera on."
Fans are locked in debate over whether Loum Tchaouna's goal for Burnley was correctly ruled out for offside, with some arguing the marginal call was measured incorrectly and represents the absurdity of modern VAR interpretation, whilst others defend the decision as by-the-book and ultimately inconsequential given the final scoreline. The broader frustration centres on how tightly the offside rule is now being applied in the Premier League.
The Rulebook Readers
These fans accept the offside call as technically correct under current VAR standards, even if they're not thrilled about it—they're the ones actually looking at the lines rather than just shouting.
neutral
Karl Darlow
Lucas Perri
"Where are his beautiful locks 🥲"
"@Must_not_say_thatwin is a win. Also i just explained why it was off and i dont see anyone else complaining about it so seems like it was the correct decision"
The Modern Football Assassins
Furious that the game's become unrecognisable, they're convinced VAR's obsession with millimetre precision has stripped football of its soul and turned grassroots coaches into enemies of their own players.
Karl Darlow
Lucas Perri
"Honestly this fucking sport is fast becoming a non contact game.
Joke of a free kick "
"Probably offside by today's standards but today's standards are rubbish. How can you train youth and grassroots players to avoid that? "
The Eye Test Believers
They're watching the replays with their own eyes and seeing a goal that should've stood, convinced that VAR's drawn lines are bollocks and the human eye should win every time.
"how was Burnley's goal offside his head was no where near that red line lol"
"offside was bullshit as usual"
Fans are divided over whether a late challenge—most likely Bruno Fernandes' 81st-minute yellow card—should have been a straight red or a second yellow rather than just a caution, with debate intensifying around whether the referee's leniency was influenced by player status. The broader complaint centres on inconsistent officiating throughout a chaotic final stages, with accusations that United players escaped harsher punishment whilst Liverpool faced tougher treatment.
The Ref Got It Wrong
These fans are absolutely seething because they reckon the official's decision—whether it's the colour of the card or the tackle itself—was a complete botch job that's cost their side.
anger
boot
"What a punchable face he has can only foul and run and nothing else such a fucking crybaby "
"Orange at best. But shitty tackle nonetheless. And horrible counter. Pass to amad he's through"
Just Calling It As It Is
These are the matter-of-fact observers simply narrating what happened in real time, neither celebrating nor condemning, just acknowledging the ref's call and moving on.
neutral
boot
"Smart yellow that"
"OH THATS A YELLOW"
Should've Been A Red Card
This lot are convinced the ref bottled it by issuing only a yellow when the offence clearly warranted a straight red—they're not just angry, they're arguing the severity was fundamentally misjudged.
"He should have gotten a red."
"where was the clear red?"
Fulham supporters are heavily criticising Emile Smith Rowe's performance, questioning whether their club record signing is delivering value at age 25 given his lack of pace, motor, and endurance. Fans argue he's failed to justify the investment, offering only occasional glimpses of quality before being substituted, whilst struggling to compete at Premier League level.
The Arsenal Betrayal Narrative
Fulham fans are furious that their record signing Smith Rowe has already gone invisible, convinced Arsenal sold them a dud who doesn't warrant the astronomical wages being thrown at him.
annoyance
disgust
arsenal
Rowe
"Wilson has done absolutely fuck all to suggest he deserves anywhere close to £100k a week these last few weeks and today is as bad as he's been"
"@FulhamFC Worst performance of the season. So done with Jimenez, the blokes a hinderance if nothing else. Don’t get me started on Robinson, Sunday league footballing ability at bes"
The Scapegoat Hunting Season
Fans are zeroing in on individual players — particularly Robinson and Jimenez — as the human explanation for why today's performance was an absolute catastrophe.
"And Robinson!"
"Going against Robinson helps too."
The Brutal Player Autopsy
A smaller but vocal contingent is conducting a clinical dismantling of specific performers, singling out Robinson as the most egregious liability on the pitch with zero nuance.
neutral
arsenal
Rowe
"@FulhamFC Robinson is the worst trash in football history"
"@FulhamFC Not the only problem with this disgraceful showing but Robinson is fucking SHIT"
Arsenal supporters are divided on Gabriel Martinelli's output, with many criticising his lack of goal involvement and creative play despite his defensive work rate, while others argue he should be dropped in favour of Trossard for upcoming matches. The debate reflects frustration with Arsenal's attacking efficiency and squad rotation decisions heading into European competition.
The Pragmatists
These fans acknowledge Martinelli does the work but simply reckon Trossard is the superior footballer in every department, so why not just say it straight.
neutral
David Raya
Ben White
"Martinelli puts in a good shift tracking back, to be fair. I prefer Trossard to him anyway though."
"Trossard is just superior to Martinelli in literally every aspect of the game."
The Tactical Alarm Bells
They're fixated on Arteta's setup against elite opposition and horrified that a player with one league goal in 28 games is somehow the second-top scorer, exposing a deeper attacking crisis.
"Mikel, don’t play Ode-Spinnigard/Sidewaysmendi against Atleti PLEASE"
"Hilarious that Martinelli has 1 league goal this season in 28 appearances and he’s our 2nd top goalscorer "
The Performance Scorekeepers
Same crowd as above, but they're keeping receipts on individual output and asking uncomfortable questions about whether the system is hiding a genuine goal-scoring problem.
"Mikel, don’t play Ode-Spinnigard/Sidewaysmendi against Atleti PLEASE"
"Hilarious that Martinelli has 1 league goal this season in 28 appearances and he’s our 2nd top goalscorer "
The Fed Up Faction
Absolutely fuming at what they see as chronic underperformance and ready to question recruitment decisions, using Martinelli as the flashpoint for broader frustration at the club's attacking ambitions.
David Raya
Ben White
"You know what… I think armchair experts are more fit for the job than Andrea Berta is! How dare we sign this flop."
"Fuck it, martinelli on for jesus"
The Hope Merchants
Cautiously optimistic that alternatives on the pitch today have reminded them what a genuine threat looks like, demanding a left-winger who actually tests keepers instead of recycling possession.
admiration
approval
David Raya
Ben White
"Trossard also is miles above martinelli and he's on fire today"
"Still better than Martinelli has been, today's match has given me some optimism. We need a LW who shoots once in a while "
Brentford fans celebrate a dominant 3-0 victory over West Ham, with particular praise for Mikkel Damsgaard's clinical finishing and the team's attacking prowess throughout the match. The discussion highlights Caoimhín Kelleher's clean sheet credentials and the clinical execution that saw the Bees control the game from start to finish.
Just Here For The Moments
These fans are documenting the match as it unfolds — celebrating individual brilliance and clean sheets without needing to dissect the bigger picture, because the clinical performance speaks for itself.
neutral
"🇮🇪🧱
10 clean sheets this campaign for Caoimhín Kelleher 👏👏 https://t.co/tzfz1d0k6O"
"Sensational support all afternoon long 👏👏
3 to go https://t.co/TaIQ8rRgcs"
Peak Brentford Poetry In Motion
This lot are absolutely revelling in the execution, practically narrating every goal like it's a work of art, because when you've got three crisp finishes on the board, you're living the dream.
approval
admiration
"A WONDERFUL THIRD!
KLP feeds the ball into Mikkel on the edge of the box!
His dragback takes him away from Adama and he then passes it through Mavropanos' legs, across Hermansen "
"A WONDERFUL THIRD!
KLP feeds the ball into Mikkel on the edge of the box!
His dragback takes him away from Adama and he then passes it through Mavropanos' legs, across Hermansen "
The Tactical Deep Dive Brigade
They're clocking the shape, the press, the movement off the ball — treating this demolition as a masterclass to unpick, because understanding HOW Brentford broke West Ham down matters just as much as the scoreline.
"🐝
We've been on the front foot in the early stages!
Dango Ouattara whipped an effort narrowly wide inside the opening 40 seconds
🐝 0-0 ⚒️
#BREWHU | #BrentfordFC https://t.co/j0S"
"A WONDERFUL THIRD!
KLP feeds the ball into Mikkel on the edge of the box!
His dragback takes him away from Adama and he then passes it through Mavropanos' legs, across Hermansen "
Aston Villa supporters have unleashed a wave of frustration at defender Matty Cash following the 0-2 loss to Tottenham, with fans directing intense criticism at the player's performance and appearance rather than engaging with specific referee decisions. The anger appears rooted in the team's poor defensive display and capitulation, with Cash becoming the focal point of post-match venting.
He's Lost The Dressing Room
Villa fans convinced Cash's performance was so catastrophic it's destroyed team morale and he's become a genuine liability who needs dropping immediately.
anger
Kevin Danso
Djed Spence
"Fuck Matty cash, hope he fucks off with an injury today"
"All of them are brutal twats. And they uave the audacity to boo Cash"
Let's Dissect What Actually Happened
Thoughtful viewers wanting to separate emotion from fact, examining whether Cash's individual errors truly warranted the nuclear-level backlash or if context matters here.
neutral
Kevin Danso
Djed Spence
"Matty Cash is such a piece of shit"
"Fuck Matty cash and all his ancestors "
The Scapegoat Narrative
Observers questioning whether Cash is genuinely the problem or simply the easiest target for fans to blame when the whole team underperformed collectively.
"Matty cash definitely wearing makeup "
"Cuz matty fuckin cash is still out there"
Performance Under The Microscope
Analysts breaking down Cash's specific defensive positioning, decision-making, and technical execution to understand if criticism is proportional to what actually occurred on the pitch.
"Matty cash definitely wearing makeup "
"Cuz matty fuckin cash is still out there"
Damage Control And Moving Forward
Pragmatists focused on what Villa do next rather than dwelling on the defeat, accepting the loss happened and asking what needs fixing before the next match.
"Matty cash definitely wearing makeup "
"Cuz matty fuckin cash is still out there"
Crystal Palace supporters are heavily criticising manager Oliver Glasner's team selection and substitution decisions, with particular anger directed at Brennan Johnson, Jefferson Lerma, and other underperforming players being left on the pitch throughout the match. Fans argue that rotating key players for European commitments should not come at the cost of subjecting paying supporters to such a poor performance, and are calling for these players to be dropped immediately.
Palace Are Finished With These Players
This majority faction believes the performance was so abysmal that wholesale personnel changes are the only solution, demanding immediate exile for specific underperformers rather than gradual improvement.
anger
"@CPFC Fucking crap. Johnson lerma devenny shouldn't play again"
"@CPFC That decision is as disgraceful as our performance so far"
That Call Changed Everything
This smaller camp fixates on a controversial refereeing decision as the turning point, arguing the officials cost Palace the match rather than accepting broader tactical or performance failures.
neutral
"this is fucking robbery"
"@CPFC What an absolutely shocking decision that is."
The Real Problem Runs Deeper
This mixed group questions whether individual player swaps actually matter when systemic issues—squad depth, investment, squad rotation logic—suggest Palace's struggles reflect bigger structural problems at the club.
"So sad Simon Francis is leaving who else"
"That's fair, you wouldn't be giving Brennan Johnson 90 minutes with him playing like that if this game was important to you."
Cross-Cutting Patterns
Declan Rice
Appears across 17 debates: Lewis-Skelly's Midfield Breakthrough Impresses Arsenal Fans, Arsenal Fans Debate Saliba's World-Class Consistency, Arsenal Fans Demand Midfield Reinforcement After Flat Display, Fans Hail Midfield Star's Transformative Performance, Arsenal Fans Dismiss VAR Controversy Claims, Arsenal Fans Debate Zubimendi's Rotation After Strong Display, Arsenal's Dominant Win Leaves Fulham in Crisis Mode, Arsenal Fans Analyse Rice's Defensive Repositioning, Arsenal Fans Baffled by Nørgaard's Complete Exclusion, Dowman's Decision-Making Splits Arsenal Fanbase, Arsenal Fans Hail Gyökeres After Dominant Performance, Arteta's Rotation Gamble Pays Off in Rout, Arsenal Fans Lose Patience With Noni Madueke, Arsenal's Midfield Spark Ignites Dominant Win, Eze Emergence Sparks Midfield Debate at Arsenal, Ben White's Defensive Struggles Fuel Arsenal Frustration, Arsenal Fans Hail Myles Midfield Breakthrough Performance
Eberechi Eze
Appears across 16 debates: Lewis-Skelly's Midfield Breakthrough Impresses Arsenal Fans, Arsenal Fans Demand Midfield Reinforcement After Flat Display, Fans Hail Midfield Star's Transformative Performance, Arsenal Fans Dismiss VAR Controversy Claims, Arsenal Fans Debate Zubimendi's Rotation After Strong Display, Arsenal's Dominant Win Leaves Fulham in Crisis Mode, Arsenal Fans Analyse Rice's Defensive Repositioning, Arsenal Fans Baffled by Nørgaard's Complete Exclusion, Dowman's Decision-Making Splits Arsenal Fanbase, Arsenal Fans Hail Gyökeres After Dominant Performance, Arteta's Rotation Gamble Pays Off in Rout, Arsenal Fans Lose Patience With Noni Madueke, Arsenal's Midfield Spark Ignites Dominant Win, Eze Emergence Sparks Midfield Debate at Arsenal, Ben White's Defensive Struggles Fuel Arsenal Frustration, Arsenal Fans Hail Myles Midfield Breakthrough Performance
Alexis Mac Allister
Appears across 9 debates: Liverpool Fans Criticise Mac Allister's Midfield Form, Liverpool Fans Divided Over Slot's Tactical Setup, Casemiro's Defensive Lapses Spark Fan Debate, Frimpong Criticised for Defensive Mistakes, United and Liverpool Target Summer Transfer Overhaul, Curtis Jones Yellow Card Sparks Refereeing Row, Manchester United Fans Debate Carrick's Future Amid Midfield Struggles, Liverpool Fans Turn on Chiesa After Late Collapse, Liverpool Fans Hail Szoboszlai's Heroics in Defeat
Dominik Szoboszlai
Appears across 9 debates: Liverpool Fans Criticise Mac Allister's Midfield Form, Liverpool Fans Divided Over Slot's Tactical Setup, Casemiro's Defensive Lapses Spark Fan Debate, Frimpong Criticised for Defensive Mistakes, United and Liverpool Target Summer Transfer Overhaul, Curtis Jones Yellow Card Sparks Refereeing Row, Manchester United Fans Debate Carrick's Future Amid Midfield Struggles, Liverpool Fans Turn on Chiesa After Late Collapse, Liverpool Fans Hail Szoboszlai's Heroics in Defeat
James Maddison
Appears across 8 debates: Spurs Fans Hail Display Despite Controversial Late Rally, Gallagher's Early Strike Sparks Spurs Optimism, Villa Fans Debate Buendía's Late Goal and Consistency, Referee Cards Spark Debate Over Excessive Bookings, Tottenham Fans Hail De Zerbi's Tactical Masterclass, Bentancur and Richarlison Injury Scare at Villa Park, Tottenham Midfield Praised Despite Heavy Defeat, Goalkeeper's Mixed Display Sparks Debate