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Another step towards Europe for Bournemouth, another glimpse of Rayan’s talent, his goal a moment of calm amid high-octane hustle. Tempers boiled over, both teams reduced to 10 men by first-half losses of reason. Fulham fought for every ball in their own quest to play European football. Falling short here, and in recent weeks, opens up deep questions of their future direction.

A new contract offer to Marco Silva has stayed unsigned since November. The manager who re-established a Premier League club is free to field offers. Europe, a long-term ambition, veers beyond reach. Silva has never received sufficient backing to achieve that goal, an opinion he has freely expressed. To achieve it now might keep him at Fulham but such outcome probably now relies on permutations beyond his control.

With Marco Rose coming in, uncertainty at Bournemouth lies in the future of outgoing manager Andoni Iraola. If Crystal Palace’s interest is made plain, further vacancies at Manchester United and Chelsea may arise. Perhaps now Liverpool following Arne Slot’s lunchtime barracking at Anfield.

What legacy can Iraola leave? Bournemouth’s push for history was unaided by the events of Friday. Adam Smith played right back role, Álex Jiménez suspended pending a club investigation into social media activity. Ryan Christie had recently featured as a midfield closer and started instead of Tyler Adams. He did not last beyond half-time, red-carded for a scraping lunge down the back of Timothy Castagne’s calf. Fulham’s Joachim Andersen survived barely much longer, committing a similar offence when ripping into Adrien Truffert.

Should Silva depart, Craven Cottage will miss his sense of adventure. Club traditions of expansive, enjoyable football have been adhered to, modernised in five years by the Thames. In shirt-sleeve conditions cooled by a summer breeze, Rodrigo Muniz started as striker, goalless since the opening day of the season. Injuries have curbed the impact of a striker Silva was desperate to keep when Atalanta came calling last summer. The Brazilian headed wide the best chance of the first half hour, having struggled to match the dynamism of a midfield support group in constant positional rotation.

Iraola’s team struggled to impose their will in a scratchy first half, Fulham nothing like as submissive as Crystal Palace the previous Sunday. What would prove the key battle was Rayan’s duel with Antonee Robinson, watched by his national team coach, Mauricio Pochettino, sat by former Fulham manager Roy Hodgson. At half-time, another former manager, Jean Tigana, was shown off to mark the 25th anniversary of a glorious promotion campaign. With the World Cup looming, Christie’s indiscretion happened in front of his Scotland coach, Steve Clarke.

A fair criticism of the Iraola regime has been a failure to capitalise on opportunities. Their 16-match unbeaten run featured eight draws and once Christie departed, another draw looked a best-case scenario only for Andersen, who had rattled the crossbar with a looping header in the moments after Christie’s departure, to himself lose control.

The second half began with a similar lack of cheer, Muniz booked for ripping Marcos Senesi to the floor, both teams kicking lumps out of the other. Bournemouth were, though, much improved amid, taking far better to the extra space now on offer. Eli Junior Kroupi hit the crossbar and Rayan’s goal followed soon after. Cutting inside, finally free of Robinson, his low shot beat Bernd Leno, the keeper possibly unsighted but slow to react. The teenage Brazilian’s physique and shooting prowess suggest he may soon move centrally. One for Rose to consider next season.

Fulham attempted to rescue both the match and ambitions. Oscar Bobb, on as substitute, smashed over when given time and space to do rather better before having another shot blocked by Rayan’s bulk. Kevin, another of Fulham’s phalanx of zippy attackers, forced a fine save from Djordje Petrovic.

Bournemouth sat back, dangerously so. Whoever Iraola manages next will use the counterattack as a central strategy. When Rayan’s loping solo run beyond the Fulham defence in a rare break, Castagne intervened. It set up a furious conclusion. Amine Adli, with goal gaping, committed one of the misses of the season at one end, Fulham’s Josh King rattling the crossbar at the other.