Southampton hold Bournemouth but Manolo Gabbiadini blows chance of win by @News Sport 24/7 - Post Details

Southampton hold Bournemouth but Manolo Gabbiadini blows chance of win

The Observer Premier League  Eddie Howe admitted Bournemouth were below their best as they stuttered to a goalless draw against Southampton. “I don’t think we really got going. It’s frustrating from our perspective, we know we can play better than that,” he said. “We never had our fluency. We created a few chances, the best went our way but we didn’t capitalise on them.”  While Southampton played their part in a tight encounter, they have gone 385 minutes without finding the net. Mohamed Salah strike settles nervy Liverpool win over Huddersfield Read more  In a physical opening period, the Bournemouth full-back Adam Smith burst into the box but fluffed his attempt after receiving the ball back from Callum Wilson, while David Brooks later fired wide when well placed.  Pierre-Emile Højbjerg , who had earlier had a volley blocked, conjured the game’s first attempt on target in the 45th minute, although it was directed straight at Asmir Begovic.  The recalled Charlie Austin also had a sight of goal but after latching on to Højbjerg’s through ball the Southampton striker tried to round Begovic and dribbled the ball out of play.  Bournemouth, looking to extend their unbeaten home run to six league games, could have been ahead within a minute of the restart when Josh King glanced narrowly wide from Jefferson Lerma’s whipped cross.  Southampton’s hopes of breaking the deadlock seemed to rely entirely on Højbjerg and he was again thwarted by Begovic after unleashing a powerful volley that was tipped over. Kadeem Harris seals first win for Cardiff against a Fulham in freefall Read more  The hosts finally mustered a goal-bound effort with 18 minutes to go when Nathan Aké’s header from a Ryan Fraser corner was comfortably caught by Alex McCarthy.  Southampton ended strongly and went close to a breakthrough on three occasions. Shane Long’s thumping shot from a tight angle was blocked bravely by Begovic, before his fellow substitute Stuart Armstrong missed his kick from close range after the ball fell to him in the box.  Manolo Gabbiadini, the third player introduced from the bench by Mark Hughes, had a golden opportunity in stoppage time but headed over with the goal gaping following Nathan Redmond’s cross.  “Clearly we did enough to win the game,” Hughes said. “We had three or four clear-cut chances that on another day you want to take.” Premier League The Observer Bournemouth Southampton match reports Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share via Email Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Google+ Share on WhatsApp Share on Messenger Reuse this content

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how to live healthy and longevity : https://goo.gl/3L1CLn how to learn super speed? https://goo.gl/cPZGKt FIFA's Secret 19: https://goo.gl/FfPqWF Premier League  Fulham’s progress under Claudio Ranieri is being measured in small steps. The Italian and his players departed this tight contest vaguely dissatisfied to have taken only a point having led Leicester City through much of the second half, their mood coloured by the sight of Denis Odoi wastefully scooping a shot over the crossbar in stoppage time. Yet in the cold light of day, the improvements seen here should suggest a brighter future awaits.  The weight of the division still bears down on the Londoners but they are not the soft touch they were a few weeks ago. Three games into Ranieri’s tenure and some of the naivety has been drummed out of them. There were long periods while confronting a team with top-half credentials when Fulham even felt in control, their lead established against the run of play but their shape well-enforced thereafter and a threat carried on the counterattack. The frustration, of course, was that all it took was one moment of carelessness with the end almost in sight to undo a lot of their hard work. Lingard earns point for Manchester United after De Gea hands Arsenal lead Read more  Leicester conjured their equaliser when the substitutes Demarai Gray and Shinji Okazaki combined slickly down the visitors’ right flank and the latter, allowed space by a disoriented Alfie Mawson, pulled the ball back to the penalty spot. There loitered James Maddison, the classiest attacking talent on the pitch, to dispatch a crisp first-time finish into the bottom corner. The hosts’ wait for a first clean sheet of the season had been extended. “At this moment, when we make mistakes, the big opponents score,” said Ranieri. “But we continue to progress. Slowly, slowly.”  This had been an emotional experience for the Italian against the team with whom he claimed the only top-flight title of his managerial career to date. He had offered his tribute to the late Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha prior to kick-off, acknowledged the chants of the away support and saw four key members of his Premier League winning side start in Leicester’s ranks. Yet, other than a quick “hello” to familiar faces, he concentrated purely on Fulham’s latest opportunity and gained encouragement from much that he witnessed.  Fulham could point to the substitute Tom Cairney fizzing a shot just wide of the post while their lead still stood or that late miss by Odoi. Leicester threatened repeatedly in the first half and Kelechi Iheanacho should have scored the game’s opening goal early on. But at the other end Kasper Schmeichel was forced into an astonishing fingertip save to deny Callum Chambers – a makeshift defensive midfielder who seems destined to bring the best out of opposing goalkeepers having tested Chelsea consistently on Sunday – as he belted a volley from Odoi’s nod back towards the far corner. Liv