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With the Bundesliga and Serie A returning after short winter breaks (stream games LIVE on ESPN+ in the U.S.), New Year’s weekend is a good time to soak in a bunch of story lines. So let’s set the table for the days ahead, with a look at several intriguing matchups, from Manchester United vs. Aston Villa on Friday to Huesca vs. Barcelona on Sunday.

Jump to: Surprising contenders | Clash of styles | Are Leverkusen for real? | Green-apalooza| Sexiest game of the weekend | Dortmund’s redemption | Challengers close in on Liverpool | Barca as Not-Barca

Two surprising (in different ways) Premier League contenders

Manchester United vs. Aston Villa (Jan. 1, 3 p.m. ET/8 p.m. GMT)

The general aura of Manchester United’s 2020-21 season to date is one of slight disappointment. The Red Devils lost three of their first seven league matches, and despite looking spectacular in wins over both Paris Saint-Germain and RB Leipzig, they lost three of their last four Champions League group-stage matches and parachuted in to the Europa League. Despite ongoing defensive issues, however, they’ve gone unbeaten in their past nine Premier League matches, and they’re second in the table behind Liverpool.

Villa, meanwhile, are back in the top five. Dean Smith’s squad suffered through a miserable November, but racked up 11 points in five December matches. Early January offers a massive test — at United on Friday then, after some rest, home vs. Tottenham Hotspur and Everton on the 13th and 16th. Smith has used the smallest rotation in the league to date, but it’ll be refreshed at the right time.

FiveThirtyEight’s club ratings give Villa a 23% chance of reaching the Champions League — up from 2% at the start of the season and 8% at the end of November — and their statistical profile is sound. But these next three matches are enormous.

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(“1st60GD” = goal differential over the first 60 minutes)

A clash of styles

Tottenham Hotspur vs. Leeds United (Jan. 2, 7:30 a.m. ET/12:30 p.m. GMT)

It’s a testament to the depth of the Premier League that even midtable teams are unique, tough outs at the moment, and it gets no more unique or tough than Marcelo Bielsa’s Leeds.

Leeds force you to play their game: up-tempo (most possessions in the league), pressure-heavy and somehow both vertically minded and friendly to high possession rates. Basically, they really want to stress you out. Bielsa’s side are going to take a ton of shots and risk you doing the same. When it works, it’s gorgeous, as recent 5-0 and 5-2 wins over West Bromwich Albion and Newcastle United respectively can attest. But when it doesn’t, it really doesn’t — they lost 6-2 to Man United recently and fell 4-1 to both Leicester City and Crystal Palace in November.

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What happens when Leeds plays the team with maybe the second-strongest identity?

Jose Mourinho’s Spurs have established fully Mourinho-ian ideals at this point, sacrificing possession for defensive solidity and, through Harry Kane and Son Heung-Min, some of the most potent counterattacking the league has seen in quite some time. They aren’t in amazing form at the moment — two points from their past four matches — but they know what they are. They will have plenty of countering opportunities, but Leeds will also test their defensive structure as well as anyone can.

Other early Saturday matches of interest: Rangers vs. Celtic (7:30 a.m./12:30 p.m., stream live on ESPN+)

Are Leverkusen serious contenders?

Eintracht Frankfurt vs. Bayer Leverkusen (Jan. 2, 9:30 a.m. ET/2:30 p.m. GMT, stream live on ESPN+)

Like a lot of other European heavyweights, Bayern Munich have leaked a few more points than usual early this season. The eight-time defending German champs are on pace for 78.5 points in 34 matches; only twice in their title streak have they finished with fewer than 82. Two seasons ago, they managed just 78 and almost lost the title to Borussia Dortmund.

It would surprise no one if the champs found fifth gear after a short break and with Champions League play on the back burner for a while. But until they do, we will treat the Bundesliga race like an honest-to-god title fight.

Two teams in particular have stood out as contenders in this fight: RB Leipzig and Bayer Leverkusen.

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Bayern seized the league lead just before the break, prevailing 2-1 in Leverkusen with a stoppage-time winner from Robert Lewandowski. Without it, Leverkusen would have topped the table by one point.

Bayern will likely earn three points against Mainz on Sunday (11:50 a.m. ET/4:50 p.m. GMT, stream live on ESPN+), but both Leverkusen and Leipzig have tricky challenges, with the latter playing at seventh-place Stuttgart on Saturday (2:20 p.m. ET/7:20 p.m. GMT, stream live on ESPN+) and the former playing against an Eintracht Frankfurt team that has been nearly awesome, losing just twice but suffering eight draws.

This is another fun contrast-in-styles matchup, with Leverkusen playing a slower, possession-heavy match and Eintracht wanting to get the hell up the pitch when possible. Leverkusen allow few shots, but grant you some good counterattacking opportunities, while Eintracht take few shots but generate high-quality chances when they do. They will test Leverkusen’s transition defense.

Watch Bundesliga action live on ESPN+. See the weekend’s full slate of games here.

A Julian Green-apalooza

Greuther Furth vs. St. Pauli (Jan. 3, 7:30 a.m. ET/12:30 p.m. GMT, stream live on ESPN+)

When ESPN+ acquired Bundesliga rights, it also acquired rights to a select number of 2. Bundesliga matches, and this week’s marquee game in Germany‘s second tier could be of particular interest in the States.

Greuther Furth hosts a struggling St. Pauli, hoping to keep up in the race for one of two auto-promotion spots atop the league. Furth have their own brand of Moneyball going on, stocking their midfield with former big-club academy players and boasting maybe the sturdiest, most creative midfield in the league. Sturdiest and most creative of all: Julian Green. The 25-year old United States international and former World Cup goal scorer has combined 14 shots on goal with 15 chances created, and fellow midfielders Paul Seguin and Sebastian Ernst are thriving, too.

Furth beat top-division Hoffenheim last week in the DFB-Pokal: they are both dangerous and fun.

The sexiest game of the weekend

Atalanta vs. Sassuolo (Jan. 3, 9:00 a.m. ET/2:00 p.m. GMT, stream live on ESPN+)

If you enjoy things like “shots” and “goals,” Serie A has been an awfully attractive league of late, and not just because of the high number of penalties. The teams move pragmatically, and only a few press with any major intensity, so lots of clubs have figured out ways to create high-quality opportunities.

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For Atalanta, that has meant a high tempo and a tilted pitch: they rank second in the league with 102.6 possessions per 90, and 55% of opponents’ passes have come in their own half of the field, most in the league.

For Sassuolo, it’s meant playing keep-away. Led by manager Roberto De Zerbi, the Neroverdi have the highest possession rate in the league at 59.9%. They hog the ball and create decent opportunities, and while they allow a ton of shot attempts themselves — only Cagliari allow more shots per possession — they don’t allow any good ones (only Udinese allow lower xG/shot). Their defensive base is sound.

As they did in 2019-20, Atalanta appeared to sacrifice some points in league play while focusing on Champions League advancement, but they took eight points from their final four matches before the festive break, stomping AS Roma and drawing at Juventus in the process. They’re back to within four points of the top four. Sassuolo? In the top four. They’ve lost only to the Milan clubs thus far. Their xG differential suggests that keeping up this pace might be awfully difficult, but De Zerbi uses all of his subs and lots of different players, and his resourcefulness has paid off so far.

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Watch Serie A action live on ESPN+. See the weekend’s full slate of games here.

BVB’s redemption begins?

Borussia Dortmund vs. VfL Wolfsburg (Jan. 3, 9:30 a.m. ET/2:30 p.m. GMT, stream live on ESPN+)

So far in 2020-21, Borussia Dortmund have done the big things right. They won their Champions League group, dropping the opener to Lazio, but taking 13 of the remaining 15 available points. In league play, meanwhile, they’ve generated the second-best xG differential to date (+1.09), ahead of Bayern’s (+0.86) by a decent amount and behind only RB Leipzig’s (+1.17). They are the most possession-heavy team in Germany at 63.7%, and they allow opponents to finish only 29% of their possessions in the attacking third (again, only Leipzig are better).

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1:21

Steve Cherundolo says Salzburg’s coach, American Jesse Marsch, would fit Borussia Dortmund like a glove.

Yet you have to turn expected goals into actual goals and points. In their last seven league matches of 2020, they lost four times and drew once. In four of those five blemishes, they held the xG advantage, but on Dec. 12, BVB lost to Stuttgart, 5-1 in Dortmund, and manager Lucien Favre — upon whom the xG gods smiled in previous seasons — got canned. Assistant Edin Terzic was named interim manager for the rest of the season.

It didn’t help Favre’s cause that striker Erling Haaland was on the sideline, sitting for six matches with a muscle injury. He is a one-man xG breaker — he’s scored 17 times for BVB, on just 11.3 xG, in all competitions this year. He’ll supposedly be ready to roll on Sunday, and not a moment too soon: fifth-place BVB face fourth-place Wolfsburg at Signal Iduna Park. Wolfsburg are an up-tempo team that can sometimes get stretched thin on defense and give up high-quality opportunities. Haaland is a walking high-quality opportunity.

Man City and Chelsea growing larger in Liverpool’s rearview

Chelsea vs. Manchester City (Jan. 3, 11:30 a.m. ET/4:30 p.m. GMT)

Somewhere around the fourth or fifth goal of their 7-0 pounding of Crystal Palace in mid-December, it very much felt like Liverpool were about to run away with the Premier League. The Reds had slogged through a series of injuries and setbacks and were forced to field much younger and more varied lineups, but they’d pulled ahead of the pack regardless and looked spectacular. Meanwhile, the teams that looked like their biggest challengers heading into the season — Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City and Frank Lampard’s Chelsea — were habitually dropping points. City forgot how to score goals for a month, and Chelsea combined an early run of draws with three losses in four December matches.

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1:29

The ESPN FC panel gauge the Premier League title race heading into 2021.

With wins over lowly West Brom and Newcastle, Liverpool could have headed into this weekend up seven points on second-place Manchester United and up 11 on City and Chelsea. Two baffling draws later, however, they’re only three up on United — who could draw even with a win over Liverpool — and they could be only four up on the winner of this one. (If there is a winner, or even a game, of course: the game is still hanging in the balance following a COVID-19 breakout at Man City that forced their Dec. 28 game to be postponed.)

City are increasingly scary — the Sky Blues have pulled seven wins and three draws from their past 10 matches. They won their Champions League group with ease, and after a dreadful start are now a narrow second in Premier League xG differential. Chelsea are third, by the way, and the only reason they’re seven points back is that they’ve averaged a dreadful and totally unsustainable 0.7 points in matches decided by 0-1 goals (five draws, two losses). That won’t last.

Watching Barcelona as Not-Barcelona

SD Huesca vs. Barcelona (Jan. 3, 3:00 p.m. ET/8:00 p.m. GMT)

Imagine the following analysis:

Against an intense but offensively limited opponent, [Team A] controlled most of the match on Tuesday, attempting 16 shots worth 2.3 xG while allowing nine shots worth 0.6. [Team A] fielded a youthful, but exciting, lineup that featured seven players 25 or younger and brought three more off the bench in the second half. For long stretches, an 18-year old was [Team A]’s best player. Unfortunately, a 21-year old defender misplayed a pass that led to a goal and despite a number of late chances, [Team A] had to settle for a 1-1 draw.

Gifted goals have become an issue for [Team A], but that is frequently just part of the learning curve for a young team with a new manager. [Team A] is sixth in the table but fourth in points per match and first in xG differential. Although there are still some veterans with high contracts that need to be sorted out, [Team A]’s young core is exciting, and the future appears bright.

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1:05

Gab Marcotti feels that manager Ronald Koeman is the reason why Barcelona are struggling so much this season.

Take the team name, and all the preconceptions that come with it, out of the equation and Barcelona’s 2020-21 season could almost be considered intriguing or encouraging. The above copy would make fans of most clubs feel optimistic about the future, but not for a demanding and frustrated Blaugrana.

With an extremely fluid lineup due to both conscious rotation and injuries, Ronald Koeman’s squad has gotten sustained contributions from all sorts of high-upside youngsters that are not yet in their respective primes: wingers Ousmane Dembele (23) and Ansu Fati (18 and sidelined by a meniscus tear), attacking midfielder Pedri (the 18-year-old in question above), utility man Frenkie de Jong (23), American full-back Sergino Dest (20), centre-back Ronald Araujo (the 21-year-old victim above), etc.

Despite injuries, you can see the core of the next great Barca team developing, and you can see an increasing number of truly positive moments.

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You also still see reminders of the last great Barca squad, however, in the form of Lionel Messi (who sat out this week’s draw with a minor ankle injury), Jordi Alba, Gerard Pique et al. And you’re seeing a club used to steady greatness battling itself as it decides whether it’s in a true rebuild or still attempting contention.

A club in a true rebuild would have let Messi walk when he declared his interest in doing so this brief offseason and could have accelerated into the future tense more smoothly. A team in transition might also be giving even more youngsters — erratic 21-year old winger Francisco Trincao, midfielders Riqui Puig (21) and Konrad De La Fuente (19) — more of a run as well to see what they’ve got. The balancing act means that Barca are one torrid stretch from contention, but it’s making the future tense a bit blurrier. There’s a fun, young corps if you squint, though, and that will be doubly true in a couple of months when Fati is involved again.

See the weekend’s full slate of La Liga games here.

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