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Sutton's predictions: Brighton v Newcastlepublished at 11:05 BST
11:05 BST
I was impressed by Newcastle when I watched them against Nottingham Forest. Their midfield is so powerful, and they have got good options out wide.
I don't think they will start firing properly up front until Yoane Wissa is fit to help Nick Woltemade but, defensively, they look pretty solid and that has been backed up by their results on the road.
Newcastle have drawn all three of their away games in the league this season, without scoring or conceding.
The goals will come, but I don't see them as having enough to beat a Brighton team who always look dangerous even when they are not playing that well.
The Seagulls have drawn two out of three at home so far, so I guess this has got a draw written all over it too.
Brighton v Newcastle: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 19:42 BST 17 October
19:42 BST 17 October
Tom McCoy BBC Sport journalist
Comeback kings Brighton take on a Newcastle side with more Premier League clean sheets than anyone else this season. BBC Sport examines some of the key themes before Saturday's match.
Jan Paul van Hecke's late equaliser salvaged a point for Brighton away at Wolves in their last game, maintaining the Seagulls' formidable record of coming from behind under Fabian Hurzeler.
Since the German's appointment in June 2024, Albion have gained 30 points from losing positions, at least four more than any other Premier League side.
Hurzeler called the display at Molineux "a good performance but not a great performance", adding "we can play better football but are not machines".
There is certainly room for improvement at the back. Brighton are one of only three teams still awaiting a first Premier League clean sheet of the season and have shut out the opposition just once in their past 19 top-flight games.
They do have an excellent record at home to Newcastle, having avoided defeat in all eight of their Premier League home matches against the Magpies. However, given the visitors' strong defensive record, Albion will be keen to avoid playing catch-up again this weekend.
Miserly Magpies a tough nut to crack
The international break arguably came at the wrong time for Newcastle, who registered back-to-back wins for the first time this season by beating Union Saint-Gilloise and Nottingham Forest, scoring a total of six unanswered goals in those victories.
Goalscoring has been an issue for the Magpies, with only Forest and Wolves netting fewer so far in the Premier League. However, summer signing Nick Woltemade has made a strong start to life on Tyneside, scoring in each of the past three games, easing concerns about the impact of losing Alexander Isak to Liverpool.
At the other end of the pitch, Newcastle have proved a tough nut to crack, keeping five clean sheets in seven Premier League matches. That is the joint-highest total in the top five European leagues, matching Lyon's total in Ligue 1.
It is all the more impressive given Eddie Howe has had to contend with several injuries to his rearguard. Tino Livramento and Lewis Hall are not expected back until next month at the earliest, while Fabian Schar also missed time before returning as an unused substitute against Forest.
Why Woltemade is no 'tall camel'published at 15:52 BST 17 October
15:52 BST 17 October
Ciaran Kelly Football reporter
Image source, Getty Images
The towering Nick Woltemade looks like a typical battering ram.
The forward has scored half of his goals for Newcastle with his head and he even opened his account for Germany after getting on the end of a corner against Northern Ireland on Monday.
But appearances can be deceptive.
Woltemade's team-mates at Newcastle have quickly realised they can give the frontman the ball and he can keep hold of it under pressure, wriggle away from his marker or play a pass that brings others into the game.
According to football stats database FBref, he has received 108 passes for Newcastle - which illustrates the trust of those around him, as well as his ability to hold on to possession.
The technical forward also boasts one of the top five pass completion percentages (82.6%) at the club.
As well as being a focal point, Woltemade can drop deep and link play, feeding rapid wingers such as Anthony Gordon and Anthony Elanga, and the majority (71) of his 132 touches have been in the middle third of the pitch rather than the final third.
Former team-mate Luca Durholtz said "this striker profile doesn't really exist" elsewhere while friend Jorik Wulff, similarly, added that "most teams do not have a player type like him" after rising through the ranks with Woltemade at Werder Bremen.
"He doesn't move like a striker who's two metres tall," Wulff said. "He wants the ball at his feet and tries to dribble and go past defenders, so he's not the typical player you expect when you see him.
"Because he's so tall, most defenders think he's just strong in the air, but his technical ability is very good for a player of his size. That makes him special."
'Ambitious and determined' - Howe on Wilson and management teampublished at 12:30 BST 17 October
12:30 BST 17 October
Ciaran Kelly Newcastle United reporter
Image source, Getty Images
Eddie Howe did not need reminding.
"I've been going through them!" the Newcastle United head coach laughed after Ross Wilson became the club's third sporting director in four years.
But the mood music feels different this time.
When Wilson's predecessor, Paul Mitchell, arrived in the summer of 2024, Howe warned there was no point saying he was "happy staying at Newcastle if the dynamic isn't right".
The head coach was soon defending his recruitment record after Mitchell claimed the club's processes had not been "fit for purpose".
However, on Friday morning, Howe repeatedly said he was "really happy" following the arrival of Wilson and CEO David Hopkinson.
"We have got a strong group of people that are very ambitious and determined to take everything forward," he said. "All I ever ask for is support and help.
"It's a challenging job and you just need support and help to take the leaps forward that we need. Every other club are so progressive – and we need to be the same. We have got a good chance of delivering that now."
Wilson will be responsible for helping to plot the club's medium to long-term strategy as well as development and recruitment across the men's, women's and academy teams.
It will fall to the Scot, for example, to take the lead on player contracts, with Kieran Trippier and Fabian Schar among those who are entering the final months of their deals.
Wilson has already met department heads as well as players and staff – but it is a little early for transfer summits just yet.
"I think I'll let him sit down first in his new surroundings before bombarding him with that," Howe said.
Howe on injuries, new sporting director and contractspublished at 11:15 BST 17 October
11:15 BST 17 October
Josh Lobley BBC Sport Journalist
Newcastle United boss Eddie Howe has been speaking to the media before Saturday's Premier League game against Brighton at Amex Stadium (kick-off 15:00 BST).
Here are the key lines from his news conference:
Howe confirmed that every player has returned from the international break OK. There was a "little concern" around Joelinton, but he seems to be OK.
Elsewhere in the squad, Yoane Wissa is back training on the grass for the first time but the timeline of his return has not changed. Jacob Ramsay has trained well and Howe expects him to be in the squad on Saturday.
Lewis Hall had a second scan on his injury, which Howe described as "positive" and he is expected to return to action before the November international break.
On newly appointed sporting director Ross Wilson: "The first impressions of him and his work have been very good. He is a really good person and has fitted in really well so far. I am sure he can make a huge difference."
Howe was asked about his level of involvement in the appointment, to which he said he was neither "totally away" or "heavily involved".
On Saturday's opponents: "It is a team that we always have tough games against; they are well managed and coached and have some very good players in their squad. I thought we played well at their place last year, one of our better away performances, and that point ended up being so valuable for us."
Howe isn't aware of any contract talks with players like Sandro Tonali, Tino Livramento and Sven Botman, adding that the club were waiting for Ross Wilson's arrival as he will lead talks.
Should Wissa go to Afcon?published at 09:00 BST 17 October
09:00 BST 17 October
Image source, Getty Images
Ex-Newcastle defender Steve Howey says his former club have a decision to make over Yoane Wissa's participation at the Africa Cup of Nations in January.
The Congolese striker is yet to make his debut for the Magpies since signing in the summer for £55m from Brentford.
He did however play two games for his country during the September international window, suffering a knee injury that seems set to keep him out until next month.
Congo's first game at Afcon is on Tuesday, 23 December.
"He will have a rough idea of what he wants to do but situations change," Howey told BBC Radio Newcastle.
"It could be that he gets a few games under his belt and he might just decide he wants to stay here and do some extra training."
Boss Eddie Howe will likely be asked for an update on Wissa's fitness in his news conference on Friday morning.
Gossip: Newcastle want Anderson reunionpublished at 07:06 BST 17 October
07:06 BST 17 October
Nottingham Forest midfielder Elliot Anderson is certain to feature on a long list of summer transfer targets for Newcastle, who are keen to bring the 22-year-old England international back to the north east. (Mail - subscription required), external
Magpies 'need a period of stability' after 'significant addition' of Wilsonpublished at 15:18 BST 16 October
15:18 BST 16 October
Ciaran Kelly Newcastle United reporter
Image source, Getty Images
The transfer window may be shut, but Newcastle United made a significant addition last week in the form of sporting director Ross Wilson, who arrived from Nottingham Forest.
The club had been operating without such a crucial figure since Paul Mitchell's departure back in June.
Mitchell's exit was the latest chapter in a period of boardroom upheaval stretching back 18 months.
Former owners Amanda Staveley and Mehrdad Ghodoussi moved on; Dan Ashworth, who was Mitchell's predecessor, left to take up a role at Manchester United; and chief executive officer (CEO) Darren Eales had to step down after being diagnosed with chronic form of blood cancer.
However, just a few weeks after David Hopkinson's arrival as CEO, Wilson has followed.
It felt instructive that the Scot spoke about how the "trust, cohesion and alignment we're building already feels strong" in his opening remarks.
Following so much change, upstairs, Newcastle need a period of stability as Wilson helps plot the club's medium to long-term strategy.
Did the international break come at a bad time for Newcastle?published at 11:52 BST 16 October
11:52 BST 16 October
Ciaran Kelly Newcastle United reporter
Image source, Getty Images
Did the international break come at a bad time for Newcastle United?
The Magpies had rediscovered some momentum after recording back-to-back wins for the first time since April.
Eddie Howe's side had previously struggled to find the back of the net, but defeated Nottingham Forest and Union Saint-Gilloise by an aggregate scoreline of 6-0 before a host of key players jetted off to represent their countries.
That being said, this has been a productive period for a number of the club's senior internationals.
Anthony Gordon impressed for England, Bruno Guimaraes grabbed a couple of eye-catching assists for Brazil and Nick Woltemade opened his account for Germany.
The challenge faced by the trio, and others, is to quickly recover and take such form into Saturday's trip to Brighton.
This has long been an awkward fixture for Newcastle, who have never won at the Amex in the Premier League in eight visits.
The visitors cannot afford a sluggish start if they are to get something from the south coast.
What expected goals tell us about the start to the Premier League seasonpublished at 09:04 BST 16 October
09:04 BST 16 October
Chris Collinson BBC Sport statistician
Image source, Getty Images
The Premier League table is starting to take shape and while results are obviously what matter most, they don't tell the whole story in terms of how teams have been playing so far.
Expected goals (xG) tells us how much teams have been dominating games by creating lots of good chances up front and restricting opponents to few, bad ones at the back.
Penalties are excluded because they distort a team's numbers on how threatening or vulnerable they are in general, especially at this early stage.
Below is a graphic showing how good teams have been in attack and defence, with the most dominant teams in the top-right corner and the least impressive in the bottom-left corner.
Arsenal and Manchester City have been the most dominant sides, with the Gunners having the best defence and fourth-best attack and City the joint-best attack and fourth-best defence.
High-flying Crystal Palace are the only side to rival City's attacking threat, while Newcastle are living up to their name by being almost as impregnable at the back as Arsenal.
Both Manchester United and Chelsea have one of the top five attacks in the league but worryingly also rank in the bottom five defensively.
Liverpool's back-to-back defeats following five straight wins gives a more accurate picture of how they have been playing, while Tottenham have needed to be very efficient to make up for their lack of dominance in games.
Aston Villa's early-season struggles are no longer to do with finishing - they have now scored six non-penalty goals from an xG of 6.0 - but simply because they have not been playing well.
While promoted sides Leeds and Sunderland have adapted quite well to the top-flight, Burnley have struggled to make the jump so far with both the worst attack and the worst defence.
'The hard work starts at club level' - Gordon on World Cup chancespublished at 12:44 BST 15 October
12:44 BST 15 October
Image source, Getty Images
Newcastle United forward Anthony Gordon believes he will need to perform at club level as well as for England if he is to secure his place in Thomas Tuchel's squad for next summer's World Cup.
"My last three performances have been my best for England," Gordon told BBC Radio 5 Live's Football Daily podcast. "But I can't rest on that, I still feel like I can do more.
"I could have scored two goals in this match and got an assist or two, so if I want to be an elite, world-level winger then I've got more to do.
"I'm not scared of competition at all - it pushes me to be better. It's more something that I cherish."
Gordon is aware that being picked for the travelling squad is one thing, but securing a starting XI spot will be another - with the likes of Marcus Rashford and Bukayo Saka providing competition in that area of the pitch.
When asked what it would mean to represent England at the World Cup, Gordon replied: "Everything. Every young lad in England dreams of playing in the World Cup, so there's not many words you can use to describe that feeling.
"The hard work starts back at club level. I'm not lost on the competition or the fact that being successful in the qualifiers means I'm going to end up playing. That's definitely not the case.
"I need to go back to Newcastle, perform and get into the next camp."
Gossip: Ter Stegen not planning to leave Barcelonapublished at 07:14 BST 15 October
07:14 BST 15 October
Barcelona goalkeeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen, 33, has made it clear he has no plans to leave the club despite attracting interest from clubs including Newcastle United and Manchester United. (Diario AS - in Spanish, external)
New sporting director Ross Wilson will lead an audit into the contract situation of the club's top players to try and head off a repeat of the transfer saga that led to Sweden striker Alexander Isak joining Liverpool. (The I - subscription required), external
Time to reflect on four years under this ownershippublished at 12:34 BST 14 October
12:34 BST 14 October
Charlotte Robson Fan writer
Image source, Getty Images
This month marks four years since Newcastle United was taken over by a consortium of the Saudi Public Investment Fund, the Reuben brothers, and PCP Capital Partners, so it feels like a great time to reflect on how it has all been going.
On the pitch, we have had an amazing time. Two seasons in the Champions League, plus finally winning a trophy, plus seeing some of the best players in the world in our squad. No complaints here.
Off the pitch? Slightly more tumultuous.
What has been great about the past four years is the stability that Eddie Howe has brought. Yes, we have been through two sporting directors, a chief executive has stepped down and one third of our purchasing consortium has left their post as director of the club... but we've kept the same head coach throughout.
So it was pleasant that at the weekend the club announced the appointment of Ross Wilson from Nottingham Forest to the sporting director role vacant since Paul Mitchell left in May.
Couple this with the appointment of David Hopkinson as chief executive last month and we are almost in a, dare I say, stable position behind the scenes.
A positive about Newcastle's new appointments is that these hires seem to be complementary to Howe and the way he works - for example, people keep saying Wilson is "Eddie's man".
Integrating with Howe is important to the continued success of Newcastle United on and off the pitch, because he knows what he wants to be doing, seems to be able to get it done and he understands the club and the region.
Obviously, time will tell on how successful these appointments will be, but we have got lots of positives over the past four years to happily reflect on.
'You hope Wilson hangs on longer'published at 11:15 BST 14 October
11:15 BST 14 October
Image source, Getty Images
Former Newcastle United defender John Anderson , speaking about Ross Wilson replacing Paul Mitchell as the Magpies' sporting director on BBC Radio Newcastle: "They definitely needed to get somebody in. You just hope Ross Wilson hangs on an awful lot longer than the previous ones did.
"We've had two sporting directors who didn't hang around too long, so they had to get it right this time. They had to take their time. They had to choose carefully.
"The one person with all the power at St James's Park is is Eddie Howe, and that's because he's gone and won a trophy, something that hasn't been done in such a long time.
"I'm not too sure he was on the same wavelength as the two previous incumbents. Hopefully, he will be with Ross Wilson.
"I don't think they want to be finding gems cheaply and then selling them high. They want to find gems cheaply and hold on to them. They do not want another [Alexander] Isak situation. It was really messy.
"We've got [Sven] Botman, who's got 18 months left on his contract. You want to tie your best players down - hopefully they're in negotiations to do that, but I think the Isak situation was a learning curve."
In-form Woltemade happy to break Germany goal duckpublished at 10:02 BST 14 October
10:02 BST 14 October
Media caption,
Woltemade nets first Germany goal
Another game, another goal for Newcastle's record signing Nick Woltemade.
The club record £69m signing from Stuttgart took his tally to four goals in his last five games for club and country on Monday with his first international goal in Germany's 1-0 win over Northern Ireland in a World Cup qualifier at Windsor Park.
The in-form striker has scored four times for the Magpies in all competitions since joining the club in August and found the net for his national team on his sixth appearance in Belfast.
"I'm really happy about it," Woltemade told BBC Sport NI after Germany's win.
"The last game didn't go so well for me so I was really happy today that I score. Maybe it's because I'm in the West of Europe, I score there more often!"
The 23-year-old striker is alluding to his lacklustre performance last time out for the national team against Luxembourg on Friday when Germany won 4-0.
After starting the game, Woltemade was replaced after an hour after registering only one effort on goal but he broke his international duck against Northern Ireland to seal three points for Germany.
"It was really important when you look at the table. We needed this win, it was a difficult away game, but an amazing atmosphere," he said.
"It was a hard game. A lot of long balls. A lot of duals, it was not easy. It was really difficult. They shoot the ball and cross the ball from everywhere so we always have to go on the dual, it was like 50/50 and the ball is dropping somewhere but I think we did really well."
"We knew this would be part of the game but I think we did quite good."
In Belfast, Woltemade came up against a new local rival in Sunderland's Dan Ballard but seemed somewhat disappointed at the lack of physicality the pair were allowed to engage in.
"There was no battle between us [with Dan Ballard]. I think the referee stopped us from the battle.
"It was different from the Premier League. The referee whistles a lot and gives all the time foul for each so it was not the dual I think that it should be in the Premier League."
Newcastle's Woltemade nets first Germany goalpublished at 08:50 BST 14 October
08:50 BST 14 October
Media caption,
A first international goal for Newcastle United's Nick Woltemade was enough for Germany to beat Northern Ireland 1-0 in Belfast and take another step towards automatic qualification for the 2026 World Cup.
The 23-year-old got above Isaac Price from a David Raum corner and nodded past Bailey Peacock-Farrell to score the decisive goal in the 31st minute.
Following debates in Germany's local press this week about their strikers' struggles in front of goal, a first international strike for Woltemade will have been encouraging for manager Julian Nagelsmann.
Did you know?
Woltemade is only the second Newcastle United player to score for Germany after Dietmar Hamann in March 1999, which was also in an away victory over Northern Ireland.
Gossip: Osula may be granted January loan movepublished at 07:08 BST 13 October
07:08 BST 13 October
Newcastle United will consider letting forward William Osula leave on loan in January - but only if all their other striking options are fit. (Football Insider), external