Another wild weekend in the Premier League is done and dusted. We get you caught up on the action with the Weekend Review.

JUMP TO: #EmeryOut | Klopp's Liverpool = Fergie's United | Pep adds a bit of ... Pep | Saints' slow march to redemption | Chelsea thrive under Funtime Frankie | Ake shows United what they're missing | What's eating West Ham? | Hats off to Coleman | A final word on VAR

Arsenal have all the evidence they need to sack Emery

On the face of things, sacking a manager who has lost only two games all season, one of which was to Liverpool, would be an extremely bold move. But you could hear the sound of straws breaking camel's backs after Unai Emery's postmatch news conference on Saturday.

"The result is a bad result, but tactically I think we worked how we wanted," Emery said after Arsenal's 1-1 draw with Wolves, laying out in the clearest possible terms that this isn't a set of players failing to follow their manager's instructions or things not quite going to plan. This was the plan. This was what was supposed to be happening.

When Raul Jimenez scored Wolves' equaliser, 14 minutes remained plus what would be four minutes of injury time. However, despite playing a side that had not beaten Newcastle and Southampton in the previous two games, thousands of Arsenal fans did not think it was worth sticking around. The queues for trains and buses after games at the Emirates Stadium can be a pain, but not that much of a pain. They made a shrewd choice, though.

Emery's reaction was to bring on Sead Kolasinac for Kieran Tierney as Nicolas Pepe and even Joe Willock gathered dust on the bench. Arsenal had one effort in the rest of the game -- Sokratis Papastathopoulos' header went wide -- and a Mesut Ozil cross might have resulted in a shot, but that was it. In the game as a whole, Wolves had 25 attempts to Arsenal's 10.

A managerial change should not be just a reaction to bad results but should be more about stopping a slide before it becomes terminal; spotting not just when things are going wrong but also when they are not going to improve. Arsenal played as their manager wanted on Saturday. Really, that is all the evidence the board should need.