At the top...published at 12:10 British Summer Time 2 September 2023
Manchester City, the only side with a 100% record in the Premier League, will return to the top of the table if they beat Fulham later on.
RESULT: Brighton 3-1 Newcastle
RESULT: Man City 5-1 Fulham
RESULT: Burnley 2-5 Tottenham
RESULT: Chelsea 0-1 Nottingham Forest
RESULT: Brentford 2-2 Bournemouth
RESULT: Sheffield United 2-2 Everton
Phil Dawkes
Manchester City, the only side with a 100% record in the Premier League, will return to the top of the table if they beat Fulham later on.
Luton Town 1-2 West Ham United
Meanwhile, Luton Town manager Rob Edwards was "really disappointed" with his side's 2-1 defeat by West Ham United.
Luton Town 1-2 West Ham United
West Ham manager David Moyes praises his side's "brilliant" 2-1 victory over Luton Town as they go top of the Premier League.
Luton Town 1-2 West Ham United
Bobbie Jackson
BBC Sport
Jarrod Bowen continued his fine start to the season to help West Ham to a victory at Luton that puts them top of the Premier League.
After dominating possession throughout the first half, West Ham found the breakthrough shortly before half-time when Lucas Paqueta's tantalising cross was headed in by Bowen, although Luton goalkeeper Thomas Kaminski may feel he should have done better.
Luton, despite being without the ball for long periods, posed a threat on the counter and carved out eight chances in the opening half of the first Premier League game at Kenilworth Road in their history.
However, they failed to register an effort on target as Ross Barkley fired wide on two occasions and Carlton Morris - who has scored Luton's only goal in the Premier League this season - headed on to the roof of the net.
Elijah Adebayo and Morris had good chances in the second period but the former got the ball caught under his feet and the latter blazed over from seven yards.
Kurt Zouma scored West Ham's second in the closing stages with a header from a James Ward-Prowse corner.
Luton's first shot on target came in the 92nd minute and set up a tense finish when defender Mads Andersen headed in, but the Hammers held on for victory.
West Ham have won their last three games to reach the Premier League summit while Luton, playing at home for the first time this season after delays over work at their stadium, are rock bottom without a point to show from their opening three matches.
This is the second match of the Premier League weekend, with the first one ending in some happy Hammers...
Manchester City v Fulham (15:00 BST)
Adama Traore and Raul Jimenez tell Football Focus reporter Michael Timbs why they both felt they had to leave Wolves and how happy they are to be reunited at Fulham.
Watch the full interview on Football Focus, 12:00 BST on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.
Available to UK users only
Sheffield Utd v Everton (12:30 BST)
Shamoon Hafez
BBC Sport at Bramall Lane
Everton supporters were left disappointed on Friday with no new signings on transfer deadline day.
There were outgoings with Alex Iwobi, Neal Maupay, Tom Cannon and Jean-Philippe Gbamin all leaving the club.
The Toffees are bottom of the table and are yet to score in the league this season, so will the travelling faithful finally get some cheer with points incoming?
They're up against a Sheffield United side who themselves are without a point in their opening three games, so something has got to give this sunny lunchtime in south Yorkshire.
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Everton are doomed this season, three players leaving and nobody signed to replace them, and have two goalkeepers on the subs bench.
Andy
I'm not an Everton fan but even I can't quite believe the sheer lunacy of allowing three attacking players to leave on deadline day, when you haven't even scored this season. Championship beckons.
Luke
Liverpool v Aston Villa (Sunday, 14:00 BST)
Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp urges UEFA to "protect" football as European leagues are "vulnerable" facing the financial might of the Saudi Pro League.
Liverpool v Aston Villa (Sunday, 14:00 BST)
Phil McNulty
BBC Sport chief football writer
Liverpool made their position crystal clear that Mohamed Salah was not for sale with the instant rejection of an offer that could have brought them £150m from Al-Ittihad.
The club's stance was that the 31-year-old was untouchable and the matter was considered closed at Anfield - but the complication may be that it is not considered closed in Saudi Arabia.
And with the Saudi transfer window not shutting until 7 September, there was immediate talk that Al-Ittihad were likely to return with an offer nearer to £200m in an attempt to make Liverpool blink.
Liverpool have no intention of blinking as they would not be able to re-invest any money until January at the earliest and manager Jurgen Klopp has also made it clear the brilliant Egyptian, who has 187 goals in 308 games for the club, would not be sold.
Salah has remained silent but his agent Ramy Abbas Issa wrote in a social media post on 7 August, when speculation of Saudi interest started: "Mohamed remains committed to Liverpool. If we considered leaving Liverpool this year, we wouldn't have renewed the contract last summer."
There is nothing to suggest anything has changed - but that may not stop Al-Ittihad making another even more eye-watering offer for Salah. He would be the biggest coup of all for the Saudi Pro League and further evidence of the existential threat posed to the Premier League.
Brighton v Newcastle (17:30 BST)
Brighton and Newcastle meet in the late game and both sides have plenty of big nights to look forward to over the next few months.
In the Champions League draw on Thursday, Newcastle, back in the competition for the first time since 2003-04, got named alongside European heavyweights Paris St-Germain, Borussia Dortmund and AC Milan.
The next day, Brighton wondered if they would get big names in their first ever European campaign and weren't disappointed with former European champions Ajax and Marseille among their opponents in the Europa League.
Champions League draw (English sides only)
Group A: Bayern Munich, MANCHESTER UNITED, FC Copenhagen, Galatasaray.
Group B: Sevilla, ARSENAL, PSV Eindhoven, Lens.
Group F: Paris St-Germain, Borussia Dortmund, AC Milan, NEWCASTLE.
Group G: MANCHESTER CITY, RB Leipzig, Red Star Belgrade, Young Boys.
Europa League draw (English sides only)
Group A: WEST HAM, Olympiakos, Freiburg, TSC Backa Topola.
Group B: Ajax, Marseille, BRIGHTON, AEK Athens.
Group E: LIVERPOOL, Lask, Union St-Gilloise, Toulouse.
Europa Conference League draw (English sides only)
Group E: AZ Alkmaar, ASTON VILLA, Legia Warsaw, Mostar Zrinjski.
Brighton v Newcastle (17:30 BST)
One of the standout signings from Friday, was Brighton's capture of 20-year-old forward Ansu Fati, who has moved to the south coast from Barcelona on a season-long loan.
Spanish journalist Guillem Balague talks to The Football News Show about Fati's loan move from Barcelona to Brighton.
Chelsea v Nottingham Forest (15:00 BST)
Chelsea manager Mauricio Pochettino tells Football Focus that he knew the transfer window would be tough and they are ready to win trophies this season.
Chelsea v Nottingham Forest (15:00 BST)
This was Chelsea's third transfer window under new owner Todd Boehly and their spending showed no signs of slowing down.
The London club spent more than £380m on 10 players in this transfer window, more than any other side in Europe. The highest summer spend by any club in the world before now had been Real Madrid's £292m spree in 2019.
Chelsea's outlay on players across three transfer windows since Boehly took charge is now more than £1bn.
Their spending this summer has been partially offset by significant player sales, with nine players leaving on permanent deals, including Havertz to Arsenal and Mason Mount to Manchester United for an initial £55m.
Sheffield United v Everton (12:30 BST)
Phil McNulty
BBC Sport chief football writer
Everton raked in cash on deadline day with the sale of Alex Iwobi to Fulham for £22m and young striker Tom Cannon to Leicester City for an initial £6m potentially rising to £7.5m with add-ons, while Neal Maupay went off the wage bill in a loan move back to former club Brentford.
The money will be staying in the bank as Everton failed to add any new additions before the window closed, with time in the build-up once more spent on attempting to convince Leeds United to sell Wilfried Gnonto - despite being told on several occasions there was no deal to be done.
The Toffees' new £25m striker Beto made a good impression against League Two Doncaster Rovers in the Carabao Cup, at least hinting he could fill a goalscoring gap that has been left vacant in a strategy bordering on negligence for more than a year.
This means Everton's incoming business has seen 38-year-old Ashley Young signed on a free transfer, Arnaut Danjuma and Jack Harrison join on loan - the latter injured on arrival from Leeds United - with Beto and teenage striker Youssef Chermiti brought in from Sporting Lisbon for £14m.
Given Everton's abysmal start to the Premier League season, three losses and no goals scored, there will be understandable consternation and concern that there were no deadline-day signings for a squad reduced in numbers from last season and already looking desperately short of quality.
Everton's squad is threadbare and vulnerable, with real concerns in central defence, where numbers are low after the departures of Yerry Mina and Conor Coady, who figured last season.
This, sadly, is also a reflection of the desperate financial reality Everton now face after years of mismanagement and money squandered which has led to fan revolt against owner Farhad Moshiri and chairman Bill Kenwright as many continue to call for change at boardroom level.
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Sheffield United v Everton (12:30 BST)
Shamoon Hafez
BBC Sport at Bramall Lane
Sheffield United make six changes to the side that were beaten on penalties by Lincoln in the second round of the Carabao Cup on Wednesday.
Wes Foderingham, George Baldock, Anel Ahmedhodzic, Jack Robinson, Vini Souza and Gustavo Hamer all start.
Adam Davies, Jayden Bogle, Chris Basham, Auston Trusty, Souleymane Coulibaly and Andre Brooks drop out.
New loan signing Luke Thomas is on the bench.
Sheffield United XI: Foderingham, Baldock, Ahmedhodzic, Egan, Robinson, Larouci, Souza, Norwood, Hamer, McBurnie, Archer.
Subs: Davies, Trusty, Basham, Traore, Thomas, Bogle, Ben Slimane, Osula.
Everton make five changes after scraping past League Two Doncaster on Wednesday.
Summer signing Beto, who came of the bench to score in that game, gets his first Toffees start.
Idrissa Gueye, James Tarkowski, Jarrad Branthwaite and Ashley Young all come in.
Ben Godfrey, Michael Keane, Vitalii Mykolenko, Lewis Dobbin and Youssef Chermiti drop out.
Dwight McNeil returns from injury and is on the bench which contains only five outfield players and two goalkeepers.
Everton XI: Pickford, Patterson, Tarkowski, Branthwaite, Young, Onana, Gueye, Garner, Doucoure, Danjuma, Beto.
Subs: Virginia, Lonergan, McNeil, Mykolenko, Godfrey, Chermiti, Onyango.
Two of the biggest transfers in Europe this summer involved England players.
Three Lions captain Harry Kane joined Bayern Munich from Tottenham for £86.4m, while midfielder Jude Bellingham moved to Real Madrid from Borussia Dortmund for £88.5m.
Barcelona signed Ilkay Gundogan on a free transfer after the midfielder left Manchester City, before sealing deadline day loan moves for City defender Joao Cancelo and Spain forward Joao Felix from Atletico Madrid.
The most expensive deal of deadline day was Paris St-Germain's capture of France striker Randal Kolo Muani from Eintracht Frankfurt for £64.2m plus £12.8m in add-ons.
There were two transfers that hit the £100m mark this summer, with Chelsea signing midfielder Moises Caicedo from Brighton for a £100m fee that could rise to a British club record of £115m, while Arsenal signed England midfielder Declan Rice from West Ham for £100m plus £5m in add-ons.
Along with deadline day signing Nunes, Manchester City bought defender Josko Gvardiol for £77m from RB Leipzig, winger Jeremy Doku from Rennes for £55.4m and midfielder Mateo Kovacic, who arrived for £25m from Chelsea.
Manchester United signed Denmark striker Rasmus Hojlund for £72m, while fellow Champions League side Newcastle United brought in Italy midfielder Sandro Tonali for £55m and Leicester forward Harvey Barnes for £38m.
As well as Rice, last year's Premier League runners-up Arsenal added Kai Havertz from Chelsea for £65m and Ajax defender Jurrien Timber for £34m.
Liverpool strengthened their midfield with moves for Dominik Szoboszlai from RB Leipzig for £60m, Alexis Mac Allister from Brighton for £35m and Wataru Endo from Stuttgart for £16.2m.