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BREAKING: UNAI EMERY REVEALS THE REAL REASON BEHIND HIS COLD ARTETA HANDSHAKE SNUB NOW

Unai Emery explains why he skipped the post-match handshake as Arsenal’s 4-1 win ends Aston Villa’s 11-game streak at the Emirates.

Breaking: Unai Emery reveals the real reason behind his cold Arteta handshake snub now
Emery snubs Arteta's handshake

Unai Emery said he didn't shake Mikel Arteta's hand right after Aston Villa lost at the Emirates Stadium since the Arsenal manager kept him waiting.

This loss stopped Villa's winning streak at 11 games, their first in almost two months.

Villa held their own in the first half, but Arsenal scored early in the second when Gabriel got to the ball before Emi Martinez on a corner.

Martin Zubimendi quickly made it 2-0, and Leandro Trossard scored a third goal a little after an hour had passed.

Soon after entering the pitch, Gabriel Jesus scored, making it 4-0. Ollie Watkins was able to respond by tapping in a goal late in the game after Donyell Malen's nice play.

After the game, Emery waited to shake Arteta's hand, but he went to the locker room since Arteta was still celebrating with his team.

It’s easy to see. I like to do things fast,” Emery said when asked about why he didn’t shake Arteta’s hand.

“I shake hands, then I go to the dressing room with my players and coaches. I was waiting.

“Arteta was busy with his coaches, so I went inside. It’s not a big deal for me.”

About the match, Emery commented, “We played great in the first half, and things were going our way. We had corners and defended well. We didn’t let them get a corner in the first half.

“We felt good, but we let in the first goal in the second half. Onana getting hurt didn’t help since he’s important for set pieces and in the midfield.

“We didn’t quit, and we kept playing hard. We scored one goal and almost scored more. Arsenal is the best team in the league and should win the title.

“I’m not sure which day it is since we’ve played Arsenal twice already, and we still have to play Nottingham. But I’m happy with our goals and how we're trying to attain them.

RED CARD MYSTERY: WHAT DID DANIEL FARKE SAY TO THE REFEREE AT FULL-TIME?

Daniel Farke was sent off at full-time as Leeds United fell 1-0 to Man City despite multiple missed chances by Calvert-Lewin.

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Daniel Farke RED CARDED after Leeds fell 1-0 to Manchester City

Leeds United faced off against Manchester City under the Elland Road lights, hoping to keep their impressive home record alive. The atmosphere was electric, and Leeds started strong. Just four minutes in, they should've been ahead. Jayden Bogle slipped a perfect pass down the right, Brenden Aaronson whipped in a great ball, and Dominic Calvert-Lewin found himself unmarked six yards out. Somehow, he sent his shot wide.

That was only the beginning for Leeds. They kept creating chances. Calvert-Lewin spun past Marc Guehi in the box but fired narrowly wide. Aaronson had another go, poking a shot wide off another Bogle cross. Their best opportunity, aside from Calvert-Lewin’s miss, came when Anton Stach sent Aaronson through one-on-one. The American’s first touch let him down, and Gianluigi Donnarumma scooped up the ball.

City barely got a sniff early on, pressed back by Leeds’ energy. But once they settled, Pep Guardiola’s side found its feet and carved out a couple of decent openings. Filling in for the injured Erling Haaland, Omar Marmoush forced a sharp save out of Karl Darlow with a low shot from the left. Seconds later, Nico O’Reilly wasted a free header, aiming it straight at Darlow.

Pascal Struijk then came up big, cutting out a dangerous Marmoush chance after O’Reilly sliced open the defence. The first half looked set to finish goalless until Rayan Cherki produced a bit of magic in stoppage time. He sliced through the Leeds back line with a gorgeous pass, finding Rayan Ait-Nouri down the left. Ait-Nouri’s cross found Antoine Semenyo, who crashed home from close range. City up 1-0 at the break.

No changes after halftime. Leeds kept pushing. Stach picked out Calvert-Lewin on the left, but Matheus Nunes blocked the shot, forcing a corner. City struck back with a quick chance of their own; Nunes crossed for Marmoush, who flashed his shot wide. Marmoush was in the thick of it again as the hour mark passed, stretching to meet a Ruben Dias cross-shot but sending it well wide.

City started turning the screw. Ait-Nouri smashed a shot just over the top corner, and Semenyo forced a deflection for a corner. From there, Darlow pulled off a brilliant save to deny Marc Guehi’s header.

Farke tried to shake things up. Lukas Nmecha came on for Aaronson, then Dan James and Willy Gnonto entered for Bogle and Gruev. Leeds switched to a back four and threw everything forward. Gnonto got stuck in right away, helping whip in a series of crosses as the crowd roared, desperate for an equaliser.

James swung in a beauty from the left, and late sub Jaka Bijol rose highest, but his header flew wide. That was Leeds’ last real chance. They threw bodies forward in the final minutes, but couldn’t find a way through and felt robbed when a strong penalty shout for handball went ignored.

City managed the final six minutes of stoppage time, hanging onto their narrow lead. Even then, the drama wasn’t over. As soon as the final whistle blew, Daniel Farke stormed onto the pitch to confront referee Peter Bankes. Bankes didn’t hesitate, flashing a red card and sending the Leeds boss off.

SCOTT PARKER LABELS LATE ASHLEY BARNES HANDBALL DECISION AS "SO HARSH."

Burnley 3-4 Brentford: Read Scott Parker’s reaction to the VAR drama, Ashley Barnes’ disallowed goal, and his "pure pride" today.

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Scott Parker’s Philosophical Stand Against Modern VAR Perfection

Scott Parker couldn’t hide his pride, even after Burnley’s gut-wrenching loss to Brentford. He didn’t get too deep into the late VAR drama; either he just didn’t want to.

Honestly, that doesn’t even cover how wild this match was. Drama everywhere. Burnley had not one but two goals chalked off. They clawed their way back from three goals down, somehow levelled it at 3-3, only to see all that hard work undone at the very end.

When someone asked Parker if he felt robbed by those bizarre VAR calls (which dragged the game out forever), he just shrugged. “I’m not sure,” he said.

“We’ve had some tough results this year, and I’ve talked about disappointment and frustration before. I’ve probably even said I was proud of the team when we got a result.

“But today? Today, I just feel pure pride. More than ever, actually. I’m proud of these players, of everything they did out there.

“Sure, we picked our game apart. We were harsh at halftime, and we needed to be. We started slow. We were soft in too many moments. But the way this group responded – their spirit, their determination, the way they fought back – I can’t help but feel proud.”

After the final whistle, Burnley fans were furious. Ashley Barnes thought he’d equalised, but VAR ruled it out for an accidental handball. Watching the replays, nobody could say for sure whether the ball even touched his arm.

Parker didn’t have much to say on the incident. “Honestly, I haven’t even seen it back,” he said. “I caught it on the big screen. It looked like his hand was by his side.

“I don’t want to go too far; someone will quote me, and maybe I’m wrong, but it just feels so, so harsh.

“We scored five goals in about an hour, which is incredible when you think about it.

“We got ourselves back in it. But this is the world we’re in now. Everyone’s chasing perfection, whether it’s the game or just a photo you take of yourself. That’s football now.

“So, the first goal’s offside by a tiny margin. That’s just how it is. When you have the technology, you can always fall back on it. Well, it’s the correct decision. ’ Depends what you want, really. Yeah, it’s disappointing.”

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