Half of the Premier League sides are due to play on Saturday, as Arsenal look to gain ground on the top three when they face West Ham.
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Scorers: Guéhi 53′ (OG); Muñoz 90+4′
Newcastle left Selhurst Park with just a point, as Marc Guéhi netted an unfortunate own goal.
Eddie Howe’s men forced the opener when a well-worked free-kick saw Lewis Hall feed Sandro Tonali in the box, who allowed Antony Gordon to fire a cross-come-shot towards goal, which was turned in by Palace defender Guéhi.
It looks as though the Magpies would leave Selhurst Park with the three points, until Daniel Muñoz crashed in a late equaliser with a header at the far post.
That point lifts the Eagles out of the bottom three on goal difference.
Scorers: Wood 49′ (PEN)
Nottingham Forest returned to winning ways as another goal for Chris Wood saw them win 1-0.
The teams went in at half-time goalless, but the second half started with a bang when Ipswich forward Sammie Szmodics brought down Jota Silva in the box, and the referee awarded a penalty.
Up stepped the in-form Chris Wood and duly converted, as the striker equalled Brian Roy as Nottingham Forest’s joint-all time top Premier League goalscorer.
Ipswich are still in the bottom three, sitting equal with Wolves with both sides on nine points.
Scorers: Kluivert 3′ (PEN), 18′ (PEN), 73′ (PEN), Kerkez 8′; Strand Larsen 5′, 69′
Justin Kluivert scored a hat-trick of penalties for the first time in Premier League history as Bournemouth defeated Wolves by a 4-2 scoreline.
The match began with a Bournemouth penalty when Evanilson was brought down by Toti Gomes in the box, and after a VAR check, the spot-kick was converted by Justin Kluivert.
But the home side hit back almost immediately as a sublime cross in from Jean-Ricner Bellegarde was met by a diving header from Jørgen Strand Larsen.
These two sides were determined to go all out in attack, and it wasn’t long before Bournemouth were back in front as Marcus Tavernier picked out Milos Kerkez, who smashed his shot into the top corner.
It seemed like every chance would result in a goal in this crazy game, and soon Bournemouth had a second penalty when José Sa clipped Evanilson in the box.
Kluivert then stepped up to take his second of the day and went the other way, and although Sa guessed correctly, there was nothing he could do to stop it.
Wolves were not ready to give up though, and Strand Larsen bagged his second with a top-class finish from a Gonçalo Guedes pass.
But once again they could not capitalise as Sa clattered Evanilson and Bournemouth were awarded their third penalty of the game. Kluivert stepped up to take his third penalty of the game, which he confidently rolled into the net.
That result leaves Wolves inside the bottom three, equal on points with Crystal Palace and Ipswich.
Scorers: Buonanotte 21′; Wissa 25′, Schade 29′, 45+8′, 59′
New Leicester boss Ruud Van Nistelrooy was watching in the stands as the Foxes lost 4-1 to Brentford.
Leicester were ahead when Jamie Vardy put in some stellar work down the left-hand side, shrugging off his marker to lay on a tap in for Facundo Buonanotte.
Yet Brentford are strong at home and they were back level after just four minutes after Yoane Wissa finished from close range as a result of a low cross from Kevin Schade.
The tables were turned when another good move from the Bees as goalscorer Wissa worked the ball wide for Bryan Mbeumo to cross, and Schade was able to crash his shot low beyond Hermansen.
And as the first half went deep into stoppage time, Schade had his second with a dinked finish over Mads Hermansen.
Schade completed an extraordinary hat-trick just before the hour mark, after Nathan Collins curled in a superb ball that allowed a confident Schade to finish low beyond Hermansen.
That result pushes Brentford up to seventh in the table.
There’s a huge day of Premier League action to come on Sunday, with struggling Manchester City’s trip to Anfield to face Liverpool the pick of the bunch.
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