Hooligan Soccer
·16 de agosto de 2025
Premier League Preview: Brentford

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Yahoo sportsHooligan Soccer
·16 de agosto de 2025
Brentford was like a 10th century medieval monastery, a ripe target for marauding vikings keen on plunder. That’s a touch dramatic, but not necessarily untrue. First, Tottenham Hotspur made manager Thomas Frank an offer he couldn’t refuse. He left, and took three of his technical staff with him (a fourth departed on their own). Second, Bryan Mbuemo departed for Manchester United, though the club extracted as much cash (over $96M) from the deal as they could. Third, team captain Christian Nørgaard left for Arsenal. Other blows include farewells from goalkeeper Mark Flekken and a continuing debate over the future of Yoanne Wissa, who is reputedly unhappy and seeking a transfer to Newcastle United.
There is some upside. Irish keeper and perennial #2 at Liverpool Caoimhín Kelleher came on board. The club also invested in some young talent on the cheap: Dutch midfielder Antoni Milambo and Italian defender Michael Kayode. Former Liverpool icon Jordan Henderson also returned to the Premier League after uneventful stints in Saudi Arabia and the Eredivisie.
But it won’t feel the same.
One cannot avoid a pervading sense of dread and pessimism entering this season. Mbuemo and Nørgaard accounted for 37% of the Bees’ goals. Add Wissa into that and it jumps to 65%.
Obviously, it’s imperative to keep the Congolese striker happy and wearing red and white stripes. Put on top of all the chaos, tumult and uncertainty of the summer a very limited pre-season, and you’ve got a recipe for, well… I don’t know.
Of all the sides coming into this PL campaign, this is the most mysterious. And not in a good way. Brentford are a strong contender for relegation, and this opening five game stint will be crucial to set the tone.
Players come and go; so do managers. But few epitomized a club like Thomas Frank. He brought the team up from the Championship, and delivered four seasons of top-flight soccer. I’ve got no beef with new gaffer Keith Andrews, and respect promoting from within the ranks, but I cannot think of a more intense and terrifying position for a first-time manager. At least we know the set-pieces should be solid (his last position was a set-piece coach).
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