luton town – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sat, 20 Apr 2024 17:29:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png luton town – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Luton’s Survival Hopes Battered By Brentford, Burnley Still Alive https://artifex.news/lutons-survival-hopes-battered-by-brentford-burnley-still-alive-5486474/ Sat, 20 Apr 2024 17:29:59 +0000 https://artifex.news/lutons-survival-hopes-battered-by-brentford-burnley-still-alive-5486474/ Read More “Luton’s Survival Hopes Battered By Brentford, Burnley Still Alive” »

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Luton’s hopes of Premier League survival were hammered by Brentford’s 5-1 rout at Kenilworth Road, while Burnley thrashed Sheffield United 4-1 to remain in the fight to stay up on Saturday. Brentford realistically secured their top-flight status with a dominant display despite missing England striker Ivan Toney through injury. Yoane Wissa and Bryan Mbeumo had to carry the offensive burden for the Bees during Toney’s ban for breaking gambling rules in the first half of the season. They combined for a spectacular opening goal as Wissa smashed Mbeumo’s pass into the top corner.

Wissa’s second just before half-time was more scrappy as he bundled the ball in from close range.

Ethan Pinnock crashed in a header from a Sergio Reguilon corner before Keane Lewis-Potter stole in at the back post to turn in Mbeumo’s cross.

Kevin Schade made it 5-0 but Luke Berry netted a Luton consolation in stoppage time.

Luton’s heaviest home league defeat of the season leaves the Hatters still one point adrift of Nottingham Forest, who visit Everton on Sunday in a huge clash at the bottom of the table.

Burnley are now within two points of Luton and three of survival after cruising to victory at rock bottom Sheffield United.

Two of the Clarets’ five league wins this season have come against the Blades.

Burnley scored twice in two minutes just before half-time through Jacob Bruun Larsen and Lorenz Assignon.

Gustavo Hamer pulled a goal back for the home side early in the second period.

But United are destined to head straight back down to the Championship due to their woeful defending.

Lyle Foster was given far too much room in the box to turn in Assignon’s cross.

Johann Gudmundsson rounded off the scoring with a fine finish into the far corner.

Chris Wilder’s men remain 10 points adrift of safety with just five games remaining.

Arsenal will aim to revive their title challenge later on Saturday when the Gunners visit Wolves.

Mikel Arteta‘s men have not won for three games after losing 2-0 at home to Aston Villa in between a Champions League quarter-final elimination by Bayern Munich.

However, that was Arsenal’s only league defeat of 2024 and they can move back to the top of the table with victory at Molineux.

Manchester City have a two-point lead over Arsenal and Liverpool with six games to go for each of the title contenders.

However, City are not in Premier League action this weekend as they take on Chelsea in the FA Cup semi-finals.

Liverpool are also looking to bounce back from a shock defeat to Crystal Palace last weekend when they visit Fulham on Sunday.

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Tottenham Hotspurs’ Top Four Bid Rocked By Fulham, Luton Draw With Nottingham Forest https://artifex.news/tottenham-hotspurs-top-four-bid-rocked-by-fulham-luton-draw-with-nottingham-forest-5254204/ Sun, 17 Mar 2024 03:04:28 +0000 https://artifex.news/tottenham-hotspurs-top-four-bid-rocked-by-fulham-luton-draw-with-nottingham-forest-5254204/ Read More “Tottenham Hotspurs’ Top Four Bid Rocked By Fulham, Luton Draw With Nottingham Forest” »

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Tottenham wasted a chance to move into the Premier League’s top four as they slumped to a shock 3-0 defeat at Fulham, while Luton salvaged a crucial 1-1 draw with relegation rivals Nottingham Forest on Saturday. Ange Postecoglou’s side would have climbed above Aston Villa into fourth place with a win, but instead they handed the initiative back to their top-four rivals. Fifth-placed Tottenham were punished for a sloppy performance as the in-form Rodrigo Muniz netted twice either side of Sasa Lukic’s first goal for Fulham.

A 4-0 win at Villa last weekend was expected to act as Tottenham’s springboard to finish above Unai Emery’s team in the battle to qualify for next season’s Champions League.

Instead, the north Londoners crashed to a first league defeat at Craven Cottage since 2008 and failed to score for the first time in 40 games.

They sit two points behind Villa, who can extend that lead to five if they win at West Ham on Sunday.

“We were careless on the ball. It goes down as a bad day at the office but we don’t accept it. It wasn’t our normal levels. We didn’t have the same intensity,” Postecoglou said.

“We’re two points behind Villa. There’s so much football left. It’s about how we play.”

With Micky van de Ven sidelined by a hamstring injury, Radu Dragusin made his first Tottenham start.

Worryingly for Postecoglou, Romania centre-back Dragusin, signed from Genoa in January, was often exposed in a rocky display.

Fulham took the lead in the 42nd minute when Muniz cleverly drifted away from Dragusin as the Brazilian forward found space to meet Antonee Robinson’s low cross with a clinical finish from 10 yards.

Tottenham’s defensive deficiencies were exposed again four minutes after half-time.

Iwobi was allowed to advance unchecked and he slipped a pass to Timothy Castagne, whose cross hit Lukic and deflected into the net.

Tottenham were in tatters and Muniz struck again in the 61st minute.

Joao Palhinha’s header reached Calvin Bassey and when his shot was saved by Guglielmo Vicario, Muniz reacted quicker than Dragusin to stab home.

‘We’ve got to fight’

As the fight to avoid relegation comes to a head, Luton and Forest met in a vital showdown at Kenilworth Road.

Forest, beaten in their previous three games, took the lead through Chris Wood‘s 34th minute strike.

But Luke Berry came off the bench to equalise from close-range in the 89th minute.

Third-bottom Luton, who blew a three-goal lead in Wednesday’s disastrous 4-3 defeat at Bournemouth, are without a win in their last nine games in all competitions.

They lie three points behind fourth-bottom Forest and boss Rob Edwards said: “You get knocked down on Wednesday and it was very tough for us all. We performed really well today in difficult circumstances.

“This group just keep going. We’ve got to fight. We’ve had to do that for a long time.”

Forest boss Nuno Espirito Santo added: “We did enough to win it with the chances we had and the way we played.”

At Turf Moor, second-bottom Burnley kept alive their faint survival hopes with a 2-1 victory against Brentford.

Vincent Kompany‘s side took the lead in the 10th minute when Vitinho sprinted onto Josh Cullen’s pass and was about to shoot when he was pulled down by Sergio Reguilon.

The Spanish defender was shown the earliest red card in the Premier League this season, after a VAR check, and Jacob Bruun Larsen stepped up to convert the spot-kick.

David Datro Fofana, on loan from Chelsea, struck in the 62nd minute with a composed finish into the far corner.

Kristoffer Ajer got one back in the 83rd minute with a diving header from Bryan Mbeumo’s cross, but the Clarets held on for their first league win in 11 games.

They are now eight points from safety with nine games left.

“It had been coming. On another day we could have scored more,” Kompany said.

Brentford have won only three of their past 18 league games and sit just four points above the relegation zone.

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Sunny Singh Gill Set To Become First Referee Of Indian Descent In Premier League https://artifex.news/sunny-singh-gill-set-to-become-first-referee-of-indian-descent-in-premier-league-5205938/ Sat, 09 Mar 2024 11:03:09 +0000 https://artifex.news/sunny-singh-gill-set-to-become-first-referee-of-indian-descent-in-premier-league-5205938/ Read More “Sunny Singh Gill Set To Become First Referee Of Indian Descent In Premier League” »

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Sunny Singh Gill was standing at the proverbial career crossroads one year ago. He had the option to continue as a prison officer or concentrate on carrying forward his family’s rich footballing legacy by chasing his refereeing dream. Cut to 2024, the 39-year-old will script history at Selhurst Park on Saturday when he becomes the first Indian-origin and British South Asian to referee in an English Premier League fixture (Crystal Palace vs Luton). “This weekend I’ll be proud to see Sunny Singh Gill taking to the pitch as the first South Asian to referee a Premier League match,” said British PM Rishi Sunak, addressing an awards ceremony organised by the Asian Media Group (AMG) earlier this week.

“It is a reminder of the incredible contribution of South Asian people to our economy and our society. It’s a reminder too of the values we share: hard work, family, education and enterprise. There is so much for us to celebrate,” he said.

It will not be the first time that a member of the trailblazing Gill family claims a slice of history though. Sunny’s father Jarnail Singh was the first turbaned referee in the history of English League football (EFL). He officiated 150 matches between 2004 and 2010.

“Football has always run in the family,” Sunny said.

His brother Bhupinder was the first Sikh-Punjabi to serve as a Premier League assistant referee when he ran the line during the Southampton versus Nottingham Forest game last year.

“Me and my brother grew up loving the game and like most young kids, we just wanted to play but in our household, it was a bit different because when we were going to primary school, we knew our dad was going out to referee on a weekend,” he told EFL last year.

“There were times he was a fourth official in the Premier League and our friends would say they saw him on Match of the Day!” But it was not refereeing that he dreamed of as a child. Like umpteen children in Britain, Sunny too aspired to play football professionally.

“I remember when I was nine years old we went to watch Arsenal play Everton, that was our first Premier League game,” Sunny said.

“Dermot Gallager was the referee and dad was the fourth official. At that age you don’t really think about being a referee.

“I remember looking around Highbury and watching Ian Wright for Arsenal thinking, ‘wow, this is what I want’.

“We took a picture on the pitch underneath the goalposts and all I thought about was how amazing it would be to score a goal there, not give a penalty there or something!” He was scouted by Queens Park Rangers but was released soon after the trials at the club’s youth academy. But his passion for football remained intact.

It wasn’t until watching his father referee a game between Wolves and Burnley in front of 35,000 fans that Sunny understood what his calling was.

“After watching him walk out of the tunnel that day that’s when I thought, ‘yeah, I want to be a referee’. I was a little bit older and more realistic and I knew what it was like to go through that matchday routine as a referee.” At 17, Sunny took charge of his first Sunday League. But the teenager found it difficult to handle footballers on the field and went on a five-year hiatus from officiating.

“I got put off it. Part of it was because I wanted to play football with my friends, but also I was only 17 and refereeing was hard.

“Players behave in a certain way, I was young, perhaps a little bit immature and I didn’t have the man-management skills to cope with that.” An encouraging chat with his father put him back on the path of refereeing.

In April 2021, Sunny (fourth official)and Bhupinder (assistant) became the first pair of British South Asians to officiate in the same Championship match and in November last year, he became the first South Asian since his father to referee a Championship game.

Alongside officiating in the EFL, Sunny also worked at Feltham Prison and Young Offender Institution. Fatigued, he eventually gave up the latter to focus on training as a referee.

“It was tough, doing full-time shift work during the week then going off officiating at the weekends, you have to think how it will affect your life but I knew it was what I wanted to do.

“I asked my family to just stick with me because I knew it would be worthwhile one day when I could have a professional career in football and I did.” It hasn’t been an easy journey for Sunny who now wants to realise his dream Premier League dream and scale greater heights.

“It’s been a lot of hard work training away from the pitch, improving in every department with the help of the PGMOL and my coaches.

“I now want to set more goals and fulfill my dream of becoming the first South Asian to referee in the Premier League.”

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