The Full Time Report — Ep.14: VAR Wars, Title Maths, and Xabi's Move

Bumper forty-eight hour Tuesday edition: Arsenal survive a VAR storm at West Ham to go five points clear and could be champions as early as Monday 18 May — if Man City drop points against Crystal Palace tonight. Leandro Trossard's 83rd-minute winner, a disallowed 95th-minute equaliser reviewed seventeen times, and Gary Neville calling it "the biggest moment in VAR history." Plus: Chelsea vs Man City FA Cup Final preview (Saturday, Wembley), Xabi Alonso to Chelsea confirmed by Romano AND Ornstein, full GW36 wrap, David Raya's Golden Glove hat-trick, Bruno Fernandes FWA Footballer of the Year, and the injury boards ahead of both the UCL and UEL finals.

The Full Time Report — Ep.14: VAR Wars, Title Maths, and Xabi's Move
Bumper forty-eight hour Tuesday edition: Arsenal survive a VAR storm at West Ham to go five points clear and could be champions as early as Monday 18 May — if Man City drop points against Crystal Palace tonight. Leandro Trossard's 83rd-minute winner, a disallowed 95th-minute equaliser reviewed seventeen times, and Gary Neville calling it "the biggest moment in VAR history." Plus: Chelsea vs Man City FA Cup Final preview (Saturday, Wembley), Xabi Alonso to Chelsea confirmed by Romano AND Ornstein, full GW36 wrap, David Raya's Golden Glove hat-trick, Bruno Fernandes FWA Footballer of the Year, and the injury boards ahead of both the UCL and UEL finals.
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The Full Time Report — Episode 14: VAR Wars, Title Maths, and Xabi's Move

Published: Tuesday 12 May 2026 Coverage window: 2026-05-10T08:57Z → 2026-05-12T08:33Z (bumper 48-hour edition) Runtime: 16 minutes 43 seconds Host: Tom Episode: 14

Summary

Arsenal survive one of the most controversial VAR decisions in Premier League history to go five points clear at the top — and could be champions by next Monday if Man City drop points against Crystal Palace tonight. We run through the full GW36 results, the title-race maths, three individual awards, a proper FA Cup Final preview for Saturday's Chelsea vs Man City showdown, a transfer desk led by double Tier One confirmation on Xabi Alonso to Chelsea, and the full injury board ahead of both European finals.

Chapters

#TitleStart
1Opening Hook0:06
2West Ham 0–1 Arsenal and the VAR Storm0:44
3GW36 Wrap and Title Race Maths2:47
4Individual Awards6:16
5FA Cup Final Preview7:14
6Transfer Desk9:43
7European Finals Injury Board12:22
8What to Watch For15:37

Full Transcript

[INTRO MUSIC — 6 seconds]
Arsenal are five points clear at the top of the Premier League. They could be champions by next Monday.
But to get there, they had to survive one of the most extraordinary VAR controversies this league has ever seen.
Welcome to The Full Time Report, Episode fourteen — Tuesday edition. I'm Tom. It has been an absolutely packed forty-eight hours of football, so we're doing a bumper one today.
We've got the West Ham-Arsenal VAR saga, the full GW thirty-six wrap, the title race maths — which are getting very interesting — individual awards, a proper FA Cup Final preview, transfers including a massive Xabi Alonso development, and the injury board ahead of both European finals.
Right. Let's get into it.

West Ham 0–1 Arsenal and the VAR Storm

West Ham nil, Arsenal one. Sunday afternoon at the London Stadium. Leandro Trossard, eighty-third minute, wins it for Arsenal.
A scrappy, tight game for most of it. Arsenal not at their fluid best, West Ham organised and dangerous on the counter. And then Trossard finds the corner. Job done, or so it looked.
Because in the ninety-fifth minute, Callum Wilson pokes home what West Ham, the London Stadium, and probably half of English football thought was an equaliser.
It was disallowed. After the referee Chris Kavanagh went to the monitor. Seventeen times.
Seventeen. That is not a typo. He reviewed that monitor seventeen times in just over four minutes. The VAR ruled that Pablo Fornals had fouled David Raya in the build-up — a sustained arm block that prevented Raya from coming for the ball.
Gary Neville said it was — and I'm quoting him directly — "the biggest moment in VAR history." He backed the call as correct, by the way. He said the Fornals challenge on Raya was not a natural challenge for the ball. It was deliberate obstruction.
And honestly? The footage backs that up. You watch the slow-mo, Fornals wraps his arm around Raya and holds him there. If that's not a foul, nothing is.
But seventeen reviews. Four-plus minutes. You can understand why West Ham are furious. Jarrod Bowen questioned the consistency of these decisions — and that's a fair point even if the call itself was right.
West Ham have since formally complained to PGMOL. As of this morning, PGMOL haven't publicly responded. This one is going to run and run.
Mikel Arteta's post-match was brilliantly measured. Arsenal doing their job, he said. Get the three points. That's all that matters.
Table after that result: Arsenal seventy-nine points. Man City seventy-four points — but City still have a game in hand. Five-point gap. We'll get to the maths in a moment.

GW36 Wrap and Title Race Maths

First, the rest of the GW thirty-six picture.
Saturday's games. Liverpool one-one Chelsea. Gravenberch for Liverpool, Enzo Fernandez for Chelsea. A draw that probably suited neither side's ambitions but we'll come back to Chelsea in the Cup Final preview.
Man City three-nil Brentford. Foden scoring twice, Haaland with the third. City back to winning ways and putting pressure on Arsenal — but they needed Arsenal to slip, and Arsenal didn't.
Brighton three-nil Wolves. Mitoma, Welbeck, Pedro for Brighton. Wolves relegated. Confirmed. Thirty-nine seasons in the top two tiers of English football and they're down to the Championship. A sad one, that.
Fulham nil-one Bournemouth, Senesi with the only goal. Sunderland nil-nil Man Utd — a nothing game, really. Crystal Palace two-two Everton. Burnley two-two Aston Villa — more on Villa later when we talk European finals.
Nottingham Forest one-one Newcastle. Barnes gave Forest the lead, Anderson equalised for Newcastle eighty-eight minutes in. Vitor Pereira will have wanted more from that — Forest sitting third.
And then Monday night — Tottenham one-one Leeds United. We need to talk about this one because it touches the relegation battle.
Mathys Tel scored a genuine stunner on fifty minutes. One of those goals where you rewind it twice just to check it was real. Curler into the top corner, Spurs in front.
Then Tel fouled Ampadu in the box, seventy-fourth minute. Penalty given. And Dominic Calvert-Lewin — on loan at Leeds — steps up and buries it. One-all.
Leeds are safe — forty-four points, fourteenth. Promotion from the Championship last year confirmed in style. Spurs, though, are in deep trouble. Ten home games this season, one win. One. They sit on thirty-eight points, just two clear of West Ham. We'll talk about the drop zone in a second.
Right. The title maths. And this is where it gets genuinely exciting.
Arsenal seventy-nine points. Man City seventy-four — but City have one game in hand. City still play Crystal Palace tomorrow night, Tuesday the thirteenth of May. If City win that, the gap is back to two points with two games each to play. The race is alive.
But — and this is the big one — if City drop points tomorrow against Palace, Arsenal can win the title at home to Burnley on Monday the eighteenth of May.
Arsenal's maximum from their last two games is eighty-five points. City's maximum even if they win all three remaining is eighty-three. So Arsenal cannot be caught if they win both. The question is just when.
Opta have Arsenal at eighty-seven percent probability to win the title. Man City thirteen percent. Those numbers will shift depending on tomorrow night.
Quick note on GW thirty-seven scheduling. No Saturday fixtures — FA Cup Final weekend. The week kicks off Friday the fifteenth: Aston Villa versus Liverpool. Sunday has a cluster of games including Man Utd versus Forest and Newcastle versus West Ham. Then Monday the eighteenth, Arsenal versus Burnley — potentially the title party. Tuesday the nineteenth, Bournemouth versus City and Chelsea versus Spurs.
And speaking of relegation — Burnley are down, Wolves are down. Spurs on thirty-eight, West Ham on thirty-six. If West Ham win at Newcastle on Sunday and Spurs lose at Chelsea on Tuesday, they could be level. There are three or four games of genuine drama still left at the bottom.

Individual Awards

Before we move on — three individual awards that deserve a proper mention.
David Raya, Golden Glove — hat-trick. Third consecutive season. Eighteen clean sheets in thirty-six games this campaign. Only the fourth player in Premier League history to win it three years running.
Donnarumma needed to overtake him this season and was mathematically eliminated. So that's that. Three Golden Gloves, back to back to back. Remarkable.
Bruno Fernandes — FWA Footballer of the Year. Forty-five percent of the Football Writers' vote. Declan Rice second, Haaland third. Twenty assists in the league this season — a new Premier League record. The man has been extraordinary for a United side that has had a difficult, chaotic year off the pitch. On it, Bruno has just kept delivering.
And Morgan Gibbs-White takes the April Player of the Month. Second Forest player to win it this season. Good shout — he was excellent in April when Forest were picking up results against the odds.

FA Cup Final Preview

FA Cup Final. This Saturday. Three o'clock. Wembley. Chelsea versus Man City.
For context: this is City's fourth consecutive FA Cup Final. Fourth in a row. That is a genuinely historic achievement — I don't think it has ever been done before in the modern era.
For Chelsea, it's a chance to end a horrible run. Six consecutive cup final defeats. Six. They haven't actually scored at Wembley in four straight finals. That's a psychological scar at this point.
But there are real reasons to think this could be their year. Callum McFarlane's team news is cautiously optimistic. Neto and Garnacho — both missed the Liverpool game — are described as "very hopeful" for the final. Levi Colwill played his first full ninety minutes in ten months against Liverpool, coming back from that ACL. McFarlane said he was exceptional and will almost certainly start.
Reece James came off the bench for twenty-seven minutes against Liverpool as well. That's a huge boost. Whether he starts or provides impact from the bench, having James available is a different proposition altogether.
Robert Sanchez is still in concussion protocols so Jörgensen starts in goal. And tactically, watch for Cucurella operating as an attacking left wing-back. He scored and got an assist against Liverpool in that role, and it stretches City across a different axis.
City's side. Guardiola called the cup final "like life or death." That tells you how much it matters to him, especially with the league slipping away potentially. He did hint at rotating ahead of the Palace game on Tuesday, with Marmoush coming on and scoring against Brentford, but I'd expect a near-full-strength side on Saturday.
Rodri, Gvardiol, Khusanov — all minor injuries, none expected to miss the final. So City should be close to full strength.
The Haaland stat that I cannot get out of my head: nil goals in nine FA Cup Finals appearances for Man City. Fifteen shots. Nil goals. Every final, he shows up, has chances, and it just doesn't happen for him.
City are unbeaten against Chelsea in their last thirteen meetings. Ten wins, three draws. Chelsea have had some of the worst days of their recent history against this City side.
But cup finals are weird. They don't follow recent form. They don't follow head-to-head records. They're ninety minutes, they're at Wembley, they're decided by moments. This one feels genuinely open to me.
Referee is Darren England. Live on BBC One and TNT Sports. Saturday, three o'clock. Get your plans sorted.

Transfer Desk

Transfers. And I want to lead with the big one this week, because it is a genuine step change.
Xabi Alonso. Chelsea manager. This is now confirmed by two Tier One sources — both Fabrizio Romano and David Ornstein. That is as close to confirmed as you get before the contracts are signed.
Romano says Alonso is "opening doors to a Premier League move this summer." Ornstein at The Athletic has Chelsea "exploring a deal to appoint Xabi Alonso as new head coach" — and Alonso is open to it, though no decision has been made.
A week ago Romano was saying nothing was advanced or concrete. That update from Romano specifically is a big deal — he doesn't upgrade until something real has shifted. So this feels like it has genuinely moved.
Chelsea's shortlist also includes Andoni Iraola and Marco Silva. But Alonso is clearly the name at the top. If Chelsea get him, it would be quite the appointment.
Anthony Gordon and the Bayern Munich situation. This is still stuck. Bayern offered Gordon a five-year deal — that's from Christian Falk, Tier Two. Barcelona apparently had interest but pulled out over the fee. Newcastle want somewhere around ninety million euros. Bayern's ceiling is lower than that.
Until one of those numbers moves, this isn't happening. We're waiting for a Tier One confirmation and we don't have one yet. Treat it as likely, not confirmed.
Bernardo Silva to Juventus. This is a Nicolò Schira exclusive — Tier Two. Bernardo's Man City contract runs out in June twenty-twenty-six, making him a free transfer. Juve are apparently ready to offer a deal to twenty-twenty-eight with an option to extend, at eight million euros a year.
Spalletti, the Italy manager, considers Bernardo a primary target for the national team setup. That may factor in. No Tier One confirmation yet, but Schira has been reliable on Italian destinations. File it as likely.
Rasmus Højlund to Napoli — this one is confirmed. Romano confirmed it. Fifty million euro total package — forty-four million fee plus a six million loan fee — after Napoli triggered their obligation to buy having qualified for the Champions League. Completed next week apparently.
Ederson and Man United. There are a lot of Tier Three reports flying about — personal terms agreed, five-year deal, forty million pounds — but we have no Tier One confirmation. Sky Sports Paper Talk mentioned interest, which is a step up from nothing, but Romano and Ornstein have not touched it. Treat this as a rumour until one of them speaks.
John Stones — free agent this summer, Ornstein has confirmed he's leaving City. A BBC Gossip column has Everton in talks about a return. Tier Three only on the destination. Worth monitoring but don't bank on it yet.

European Finals Injury Board

Right. The injury boards ahead of the two European finals. First up — the Champions League final in Budapest on the thirtieth of May.
Arsenal versus PSG. Eighteen days away. And Arsenal have a real injury worry going into it.
Ben White left the West Ham game with a knee brace on his right leg. Arteta's post-match assessment was blunt: "It doesn't look good at all." Scan results are pending. If White misses the final, that is a massive blow. He has been one of their best players this season.
Riccardo Calafiori was also subbed at half-time against West Ham. But — and this is a hopeful sign — he sprinted onto the pitch to celebrate with the squad after the final whistle. If you've got a serious injury, you don't do that. Arteta said he'll have a further update this week. Probably not as bad as it looked.
Jurrien Timber is effectively done for the season. Not training. Arteta said it's the most difficult thing to manage. Timber has missed twelve matches. It's a brutal one for a player who looked so good when he was fit.
Mikel Merino is back on individual and pitch training but there is, as Arteta put it, "still a fair bit to do." He's in a race against time for the final. Eighteen days. It might just be enough.
Saka, Odegaard, Havertz — all available. The core is intact. But losing White would genuinely hurt.
On the PSG side. Achraf Hakimi — hamstring. Fabrice Hawkins, who is the go-to Tier One source for PSG news, says Hakimi is "hoped to be available for the final." There is optimism there. Eighteen days is a reasonable timeframe for a hamstring if it is not too severe.
Lucas Chevalier had a thigh problem that was initially described as "several weeks" but there's unexpected optimism emerging there too. Worth keeping an eye on. Pacho, Mendes, and WZE were all rested as load management — they're fine.
Now the Europa League final — Aston Villa versus SC Freiburg in Istanbul. That's the twentieth of May, which is just eight days away now.
Villa first. Amadou Onana picked up a calf injury and the medical estimate has been about three weeks. He is targeting the final, Emery says "hopefully but I don't know." Three weeks from now is very tight, but if he has been working hard and the calf has responded well, it's not impossible.
Villa also face Liverpool this Friday in GW thirty-seven — they need that result for top five and Champions League qualification via the league. Emery's message this week has been "last effort for everybody." This is their season, right here.
Freiburg — two notable absences. Matthias Ginter picked up an injury against Hamburg and is doubtful. He's played in every single European game this campaign, two goals and two assists. Losing him at centre-back for the final would be a real problem.
And Yuito Suzuki is confirmed out — collarbone fracture. Nine goals this season, four in the Europa League. Gone. That is a big loss for Julian Schuster's side.
Just worth putting in context what Freiburg are doing here. This is their first European final in a hundred and twenty-two years of existence as a club. That is a staggering thing. Their manager Julian Schuster is forty-one years old. And they've reached a major final. Whatever happens in Istanbul, that is something their fans will talk about forever.

What to Watch For

Right, let's close out. Three things to keep your eye on over the next few days.
Tomorrow night, Tuesday the thirteenth. Man City versus Crystal Palace. Seven o'clock kick-off. This is the most important game in the title race right now. If City slip up — Arsenal fans can start planning a party for Monday week.
This Saturday. FA Cup Final. Chelsea versus Man City at Wembley. Three o'clock. BBC One and TNT Sports. Colwill back, Reece James back, Haaland still looking for that first cup final goal.
And then Monday the eighteenth — Arsenal versus Burnley at the Emirates. If City have already dropped points, the Premier League title could be lifted in North London. First time since twenty-twenty-four. It could be some night.
That's your lot for Episode fourteen of The Full Time Report. Thank you for listening — whether you're on the commute, the sofa, or halfway through a pint somewhere.
We'll be back with the City-Palace fallout tomorrow morning. Until then — take care of yourselves.
[OUTRO MUSIC — 8 seconds, fade out]

Music and Audio Credits

Theme music: AI-generated instrumental, produced via fal.ai MiniMax Music v2.6 (model: fal-ai/minimax-music/v2.6). Upbeat British sports podcast theme — driving rhythm, electric guitar, brass stabs, stadium ambience bed, ~120 BPM, no vocals. Generated fresh for this episode. Duration: 143.9 seconds. File: assets/music/theme.mp3.
  • Used as: 6-second intro clip (1.2s fade-out) + 8-second outro clip (2.5s fade-out) + full-episode background loop at -26 dBFS
  • This is AI-generated music. No third-party music rights are involved.
Voice synthesis: MiniMax Speech-2.8-Turbo via fal.ai. Voice: English_FriendlyPerson (speed 1.05, pitch 0). Normalised to -18 LUFS.

Sources

  1. Premier League official tables and fixtures — premierleague.com
  2. Sky Sports — West Ham 0-1 Arsenal match report + Gary Neville VAR analysis
  3. The Guardian — 10 talking points (11 May 2026)
  4. Daily Express + Metro — West Ham PGMOL formal complaint
  5. Arsenal.com — Raya Golden Glove confirmation + Arteta post-match presser
  6. The Athletic (David Ornstein) — Xabi Alonso/Chelsea exploration
  7. The Athletic (Simon Johnson) — Chelsea FA Cup final optimism, Colwill/James updates
  8. The Athletic (Jacob Tanswell) — Aston Villa / Onana injury update
  9. Fabrizio Romano (@FabrizioRomano, X) — Xabi Alonso Premier League doors open (12 May 2026)
  10. Fabrizio Romano (YouTube) — Højlund to Napoli €50M confirmed
  11. Nicolò Schira (@NicoSchira, X) — Anthony Gordon/Bayern, Bernardo Silva/Juventus
  12. Christian Falk (@BILD_ChristianF, X) — Bayern five-year offer to Gordon
  13. Fabrice Hawkins (@FabriceHawkins, X) — Hakimi optimism for UCL final (9 May 2026)
  14. Chelsea FC official — Neto/Garnacho FA Cup update, Colwill return confirmation
  15. Evening Standard — Arsenal injury roundup (12 May 2026)
  16. The FA official — FA Cup Final stats (City's fourth consecutive final)
  17. Opta / The Analyst — Premier League title probability (Arsenal 87%)
  18. Birmingham Mail — Freiburg Ginter/Suzuki injury updates
  19. BBC Sport — Spurs vs Leeds match report, Monday night
  20. FWA (Football Writers' Association) — Bruno Fernandes Footballer of the Year announcement
Total sources: 20

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