Summary

  1. Hearts claim late equaliser in Edinburgh derbypublished at 07:36 Greenwich Mean Time 28 October

    Hibernian 1-1 Hearts

    Celtic and Rangers both won in the Scottish Premiership on Sunday, while teenager James Wilson secured a dramatic late point for Hearts in the Edinburgh derby, to keep Hibernian rooted to the bottom of the table.

    Mykola Kuharevich's close-range strike with his first touch following Marvin Ekpiteta's header off the crossbar put Hibs in front in the second half at Easter Road.

    Wilson, 17, got the final touch on James Penrice's long throw with the hosts caught on their heels in the box.

    Earlier, Martin Boyle's header was palmed by visiting goalkeeper Craig Gordon and Dwight Gayle's free header was right at the Scotland international.

    Neil Critchley remains undefeated in his first three games as Hearts head coach and they remain above Hibs on goal difference.

    Media caption,

    Watch highlights as Hibs draw 1-1 against Hearts in the Scottish Premiership.

  2. Mateta goal gives Palace first win of the seasonpublished at 07:32 Greenwich Mean Time 28 October

    Crystal Palace 1-0 Tottenham

    Jean-Philippe Mateta and Marc Guehi celebrate Crystal Palace's win over TottenhamImage source, Reuters

    Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner says his side's performance against Tottenham is the "benchmark" after they claimed a much-needed first Premier League win of the season.

    Jean-Philippe Mateta's first-half strike lifted them out of the relegation places and up to 17th, with a trip to second-bottom Wolves to follow next weekend, after Wednesday's visit to Aston Villa in the Carabao Cup.

    Pressure was also mounting on Glasner, who was appointed Palace boss in February, after picking up just three points in their opening eight games.

    And he told BBC Match of the Day: "We have to show it again in three days against Aston Villa and then against Wolves. This is the benchmark. You can score and concede, this is football."

    After being reinstated to the starting line-up, the Frenchman broke the deadlock after Spurs defender Micky van de Ven was easily dispossessed deep in his own half and, following a scramble in the box, Mateta powered home his third goal of the season.

    Ange Postecoglou's side responded well after falling behind and Van de Ven's spinning effort from a corner deflected off the thigh of team-mate Brennan Johnson before bouncing off the post.

  3. Palmer scores winner as Blues beat Magpiespublished at 07:25 Greenwich Mean Time 28 October

    Chelsea 2-1 Newcastle

    Cole Palmer celebrates scoring for Chelsea against NewcastleImage source, Reuters

    Cole Palmer scored his seventh goal of the season as Chelsea beat Newcastle to continue their impressive start.

    Palmer struck early in the second half when his clean strike from just inside the penalty area beat Nick Pope at his near post.

    Nicolas Jackson's fifth league goal of the campaign had given the Blues an 18th-minute lead, when he fired home from Pedro Neto's square ball after Palmer's delicious pass set Chelsea away.

    But Newcastle were level 14 minutes later thanks to Alexander Isak's tap-in. Isak perhaps should have levelled towards the end of the game after rounding goalkeeper Robert Sanchez, but his attempt to walk the ball in was thwarted by Chelsea defenders.

    Chelsea thought they had a late penalty when Christopher Nkunku went down inside the box under a challenge. It was initially given but the decision was overturned following a review by the video assistant referee after it appeared Nkunku slipped.

    In the end, Palmer's seventh goal in just nine Premier League games secured the three points that for a short while elevated Chelsea to fourth in the table, before they dropped back to fifth after Arsenal's draw against Liverpool later on Sunday.

  4. Late Bowen penalty eases pressure on Hammers' bosspublished at 07:19 Greenwich Mean Time 28 October

    West Ham 2-1 Man Utd

    Jarrod Bowen celebrates scoring for West Ham against Manchester UnitedImage source, PA Media

    Jarrod Bowen scored an injury-time penalty to condemn Manchester United to a 2-1 defeat in the Premier League, easing pressure on West Ham manager Julen Lopetegui but piling it high once again on Erik ten Hag.

    Casemiro thought he had grabbed a point for the visitors when he headed home with less than 10 minutes left to cancel out Crysencio Summerville's 74th-minute opener.

    But United were furious as referee David Coote was sent to the pitchside monitor by the video assistant referee to review Matthijs de Ligt's challenge on Danny Ings in the box.

    Despite protests from United's players over a handball by Ings, Coote pointed to the spot and Bowen calmly converted, slotting past Andre Onana.

  5. get involved

    Get Involved - Phil McNulty Q&Apublished at 07:15 Greenwich Mean Time 28 October

    #bbcfootball, WhatsApp 03301231826, text 81111 (UK only, standard rates apply)

    As you can see, our man Phil McNulty was at Sunday's big game at Emirates Stadium, so that would be a great place to start with today's Q&A.

    There are plenty more talking points on the back of Sunday's games - such as the penalty drama involving Manchester United (more on that shortly) - so please, have a think what you'd like to ask Phil about and get those questions into us.

    You can contact us via the usual channels listed above.

  6. Salah earns Liverpool entertaining draw at Arsenalpublished at 07:11 Greenwich Mean Time 28 October

    Arsenal 2-2 Liverpool

    Phil McNulty
    BBC Sport chief football writer at Emirates Stadium

    Mohamed Salah celebrates scoring for Liverpool at ArsenalImage source, Reuters

    Mohamed Salah's late equaliser gave Liverpool a point against Premier League title rivals Arsenal in an eventful encounter at Emirates Stadium.

    Arsenal led twice but were undermined by injuries to key defenders Gabriel and Jurrien Timber in the second half, having already been without the suspended William Saliba.

    The setbacks allowed Liverpool to apply pressure and take a point, leaving Manchester City at the top of the table - with Arsenal now five points adrift of the relentless reigning champions.

    Arsenal were rewarded for a fast start when Bukayo Saka bamboozled Andy Robertson to score his 50th Premier League goal, striking at the near post after nine minutes.

    Their lead only lasted until the 18th minute when Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk equalised, nodding in from close range after Luis Diaz headed on Trent Alexander-Arnold’s cross at the near post.

    Mikel Merino put Arsenal ahead again with a powerful header from Declan Rice's free-kick shortly before half-time.

    Liverpool improved after the break and Salah equalised with a routine finish from Darwin Nunez's unselfish square ball after he had been set clear by Alexander-Arnold's superb pass. It leaves them a point behind Manchester City in second place.

  7. Good morningpublished at 07:04 Greenwich Mean Time 28 October

    And welcome to today's live page. It was quite an eventful Sunday in the Premier League, so make yourself comfortable because we're going to begin by having a recap of the best action and the big moments.

    BBC Sport's chief football writer Phil McNulty will also be joining us for a Q&A so get your thinking caps on... Sunday's action sure threw up a few potential talking points.