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W2W4: Arsenal must fix away form; Watford, Wolves target Wembley return

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Foster: Goalkeeping is a lonely business (1:19)

In an exclusive interview with ESPN, Watford stopper Ben Foster discusses the mental difficulties of being a goalkeeper. (1:19)

The Premier League is cming to an exciting conclusion and the FA Cup has reached the semifinal stage. With the business end of the season upon us, Nick Miller lays out the weekend's biggest storylines.

PREMIER LEAGUE

Arsenal need to sort out their away form

There's an air of cautious optimism around Arsenal at the moment. They have already matched last season's points total and have a strong chance of making the top four after two seasons out of it. Tottenham look tired, Manchester United are wobbling and Chelsea are Chelsea. From that perspective, things look good.

The problem is that five of their remaining seven games are away from home, and the only side they have beaten on the road in the Premier League since November is Huddersfield. On Sunday they travel to Everton, and who knows what they can expect there, but if they want to return to the Champions League then they must do something about their travel sickness as quickly as possible.

Could Cardiff be relegated when they're not playing?

Part of the reason Neil Warnock was so upset about Cesar Azpilicueta's incorrectly allowed goal against Chelsea last weekend was because, well, he's Neil Warnock. He gets upset about refereeing decisions he believes have gone against him. It's what he does. But of course the other reason was he watched three precious points trickle down the plughole, which puts Cardiff in an extremely precarious position.

They're five points from safety and don't have a game this weekend, but three of the four teams above them do. Should they all win -- slightly unlikely, admittedly -- then with six games remaining the only realistic team Cardiff could probably reel in is Brighton, who have played a game more.

It's a minor miracle that Cardiff are even in the Premier League, and quite an effort that they've stayed alive for this long. But their scrap could realistically end this weekend, when they're not even playing.

FA CUP

Parking the bus doesn't work against City

Manchester City have played 50 games in all competitions this season. Those games have brought 144 goals. They've scored five or more on 10 different occasions. They've failed to score three times only against Liverpool once and Chelsea twice.

This tells you a number of things, and one of them is that against all but the elite sides, they score goals. On plenty of occasions this term, a smaller side has set up against City to contain, to try to stop them from scoring. It hasn't worked. It doesn't work. City's attack is too good to contain and frustrate.

When Brighton face them in the FA Cup semifinal this weekend (live on ESPN+, Saturday, 12.30 p.m.), the desire to err on the side of caution is entirely understandable. "It's foolish to go toe to toe and I'm not embarrassed to say you have to try and contain them," Chris Hughton said this week. "If you play an open game they have too many options and too many strategies to open you up."

But there is a middle ground here. Being open and parking the bus are not the only two options. There is a way to try being secure but still attack City with some intensity. If a team simply tries to contain, then in all probability they will eventually be picked off. And from a neutral perspective, that will probably make for a pretty boring game. Let's hope that, in the end, Hughton does tell his team to have a go at City.

Watford and Wolves can create something memorable

The idea of winning things is a rather old-fashioned one in modern football. It's a luxury afforded to the very biggest teams, while the rest consider success to be over-achievement based on their finances. Still, given the way the game is structured to prevent all but the very best from winning trophies, they're right to think that way.

Watford and Wolves (live on ESPN+, Sunday, 11 a.m. ET) have arguably been the two biggest success stories of the Premier League this season, and are favourites to finish as "best of the rest." But will they remember that in years to come? Will most fans pour themselves a drink and tell their grandkids to gather round as they tell them about the year when good coaching and some shrewd moves in the transfer market helped them finish seventh?

Of course not. Fans, and clubs, remember moments of glory. They remember goals in big games, they remember emotions, they remember finals. One of these two terrific teams will give their fans something to remember in their FA Cup semifinal on Sunday, and in the end that's all that really matters.