Monthly Archives: October 2023

Saka embarks on pointless travels

What was the point in Bukayo Saka making the trip from London to Burton-on-Trent to be assessed by the England medical staff and then sent straight back home.

Does Gareth Southgate really think that Mikel Arteta would leave out his best player for the most important game of the season if he was not injured? It shows a complete like of trust from the England manager.

Southgate should have accepted Arteta and Arsenal’s instruction that Saka was injured and just said “no worries, see you at the next one B”.

It is not like we have essential games coming up where Southgate could be thinking “the situation could change in a week”.

England firstly play Australia in a pointless friendly. That is followed up by a home game against Italy in Euro 2024 qualifying.

With 13 points from the first 5 games, England have 3 more games left to play. The top 2 qualify for Euro 2024. We basically need 3 points from 3 games to qualify.

With Italy, Ukraine and Macedonia all to still play each other, the most points 3rd place can get is 17. that will be if Ukraine or Macedonia win all 3 of their remaining games, and Italy (who have played a game less), win 3 out of their final 4.

With a +14 goal difference, 12 better than any other team in the group, you can not see a situation where England get 17 points and finish 3rd.

Considering we still have Macedonia (a) and Malta (h) to play, we could easily lose against Italy and still qualify with a game to spare.

I do feel for Saka.

Some Arsenal fans are saying “Saka should have refused to go”. But he loves his country and is also a respectful, obedient young man. We do not want him to grow that ego where he begins to pick and choose when he plays for club and country. And as we have said before, top players play every game they are fit for.

Likewise, Arsenal should not be pulling players out of international duty unless they actually are injured.

Many players, like Saka, love playing for their country. Teams forcing players to miss games for no real reason can quickly lead to a deterioration of relations between those individuals and managers.

It is very easy for fans to call for players to not go when they are representing a country different to their own. Would they be as happy if Delhi told the Indian Cricket Team that they were unable to pick Virat Kohli?

Saka will now get a two week break. He will spend much of it at London Colney getting some rehab, ensuring that he is completely free from his injury. Ready for that Chelsea game. And then we go again…

Keenos

MATCH REPORT: Arsenal 1 – 0 Manchester City

Arsenal (0) 1 Manchester City (0) 0

Premier League
Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU
Sunday, 8th October 2023. Kick-off time: 4.30pm

(4-3-3) David Raya; Ben White, William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhães, Oleksandr Zinchenko; Martin Ødegaard (c), (Jorge Luiz Frello Filho) Jorginho, Declan Rice; Gabriel Jesus, Eddie Nketiah, Leandro Trossard.

Substitutes: Aaron Ramsdale, Thomas Partey, Emile Smith-Rowe, Gabriel Martinelli, Jakob Kiwior, Takehiro Tomiyasu, Fábio Vieira, Reiss Nelson, Kai Havertz.

Scorers: Gabriel Martinelli (86 mins)
Yellow Cards: Jorginho, Gabriel Jesus
Arsenal Possession Percentage: 51%

Referee: Michael Oliver
Assistant Referees: Stuart Burt, Lee Betts
Fourth Official: Tim Robinson
VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR John Brooks; AVAR Darren Cann

Attendance: 60,233

Unfortunately Bukayo Saka is not playing today after limping off during the Champions League defeat by Lens last Tuesday, and Gabriel Martinelli is expected to miss a sixth successive game because of a hamstring issue (editors note: we write these match reports prior to and during the game so that they tell the story of the day!), although he appears to be fit enough to take his place on the substitute’s bench. With the apparent absence of Rodri, John Stones and Kevin De Bruyne, this could be a very good opportunity to grab three points from the Premiership champions today.

The match kicked off in a cracking Sunday afternoon atmosphere here in North London. William Saliba won an aerial challenge with Erling Haaland within the first two minutes, so obviously this duel between these two players will be a feature of the game.

Declan Rice headed the ball off the line and Nathan Aké’s follow up shot went way over David Raya’s crossbar and into the crowd. We won our first corner of the match after ten minutes and Martin Ødegaard’s delivery was not handled convincingly by Phil Foden but eventually the visitors’ defence cleared the ball.

Jorginho was booked for a frustrating tackle on Phil Foden, and as the match was starting to settle down, both evenly matched teams were looking for chinks in each other’s respective armour, which is only to be expected. However, after some quick passing by the visitors as they were atempting find an opening in our defence, Ruben Dias played the ball forward, looking for Phil Foden, but Jorginho read the danger extremely well.

After just eighteen minutes, we were extremely lucky not to concede a goal when we were closed down as we attempted to play out from the back and as the ball was played back to a nervous David Raya, who took far too long to clear the ball, and unbelievably his kick was blocked by Julian Alvarez; the ball was deflected into the side netting but it could very easily have gone into our open goal.

Bernardo Silva hacked down Eddie Nketiah as he attempted to get forward and he was quite rightly booked for his troubles.

David Raya was looking very nervous today as he hit a pass straight to opposition players on the edge of our penalty area, but the visitors could not capitalise on his error, thankfully.

A great chance to score the opening goal from Eddie Nketiah as he was just inside the opponents’ penalty area which went wide of Ederson’s post, and after a nasty challenge by Mateo Kovacic on our captain which was checked by VAR and he was awarded a yellow card by referee Michael Oliver, when many in the stadium felt that it was a red card.

After a foul on Gabriel Jesus which led to a free kick which was taken by Martin Ødegaard that was easily plucked out of the air by Ederson, Erling Haaland held the ball up and brought Julian Alvarez into play, but thankfully his a shot flew high over the crossbar from just outside the penalty area.

Mateo Kovacic caught Declan Rice on the ankle, which was a nasty foul; it was definitely a second yellow but the referee waved away our protests.

There were some very strong tackles flying in from both sides, and the game was starting to look very spikey indeed.

With five minutes of the first half remaining, Phil Foden sent Josko Gvardiol away down the left wing and he whipped in a ball that David Raya just about got his fingertips to, doing just enough to ensure Erling Haaland was unable to reach it thankfully. Very few opportunities to score occurred in injury time, so both sides went into the break goalless.

Gabriel Martinelli replaced Leandro Trossard at the beginning of the second half, and as we kicked off, we were all hoping that we can get three points from this encounter. Gabriel Martinelli put a fantastic ball into the penalty area from the left wing, but a leaping Eddie Nketiah was unable to reach it.

David Raya just cleared the ball away in time as Julian Alvarez put him under pressure in the early minutes of the second half. A couple of minutes later, Eddie Nketiah won a corner as his cross deflected behind Ederson’s goal. The resulting corner kick into the penalty area was cleared as far as Martin Ødegaard, whose strong shot flew over the crossbar.

Gabriel Martinelli gathered the ball up on the left-hand side, but his strong shot was too close to Ederson, and the City goalie saved it easily.

Eddie Nketiah was picked out inside the penalty area by a high pass, but Ruben Dias prevented him from turning in on the City goal and after Rico Lewis got the ball into the back of our net (which was cancelled out for a foul), we started to dig in and look for opportunities to score the opening goal of the game.

Some really good build up play by our boys ended with Gabriel Jesus sneaking past Phil Foden on the right but his cross just could not beat Nathan Aké sadly. We were subsequently awarded a corner, which ended up with Oleksandr Zinchenko whacking a superb effort over the crossbar as the ball was half cleared to him.

After Matheus Nunes tried to close down David Raya which led to a corner that went nowhere, a long-range shot from our captain flew over the bar. Kai Havertz, Thomas Partey and Takehiro Tomiyasu replaced Jorginho, Eddie Nketiah and Oleksandr Zinchenko with fifteen mintues of the game remaining in order to bring fresh legs into the fray.

Declan Rice superbly robbed Matheus Nunes of the ball in a dangerous position on the edge of our penalty area, and a few minutes later we had a shout for a penalty turned down as Gabriel Jesus was clearly brought down in the City six-yard box.

With just four minutes of the match remaining, we finally broke the deadlock when Takehiro Tomiyasu headed the ball down into the path of Gabriel Martinelli, whose right-footed shot flew into the City net, off the head of Nathan Aké that caught Ederson wrong-footed.

The goal gave us a massive confidence boost and we were pushing hard for a second goal. In the four minutes’ injury time, Gabriel Jesus received a pointless yellow card for a confrontation with Ederson, but despite some heavy tackling from boith sides, we ran out one-nil victors here tonight. 

What a match! So tight at times, so dogged.

Declan Rice, William Saliba and Gabriel Martinelli were outstanding today, and although David Raya was nervous, even hesitant at times, we were well organised and incredibly resilient in defence, keeping Erling Haaland at bay, and in the end, all of our hard work was rewarded with the winning goal, albeit with it coming through a deflection off Nathan Aké.

We are now equal points at the top of the Premiership with our “friends” from N17, and after the international break of next weekend, we have a small matter of a London derby with Chelsea over in SW6. Well done chaps!

Remember everyone, keep the faith, get behind the team and the manager, as this season is going to be crucial for our future success in all competitions. Stick with the winners. Our next match: Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Saturday, 21st October at 5.30pm (Premier League). Be there, if you can. Victoria Concordia Crescit.

Steve

Too Dearly Loved To Be Forgotten: Arsenal v Racing Club de Paris 1930-1962 by Steve Ingless (Rangemore Publications, ISBN 978-1-5272-0135-4) is now available on Amazon

Arsenal need to beat Manchester City to have any hope of winning the title

1997/98
Arsenal 3–2 Manchester United
Manchester United 0–1 Arsenal
Champions

2001/02
Arsenal 3–1 Manchester United
Manchester United 0–1 Arsenal
Champions

2003/04
Arsenal 2–1 Chelsea
Chelsea 1–2 Arsenal
Champions

The proof is in the pudding. If you want to win the Premier League, you have to beat your nearest rivals.

Last season, we played Manchester City twice, we lost twice. A 12 point swing. We finished 5 points behing City in second.

It was similar in 2002/03 when we failed to beat Manchester United – losing once and drawing at home. We also finished that season 2nd, 5 points behind the champions.

Had we beat Manchester City twice last season, we would have comfortably won the league.

Another 6 points to our tally would have seen us finish on 90. 6 points less for Man City would have seen them get 83 (although they also may well have won their last two instead of got 1 point from 2 games once the title was won).

And it is not just the 3 points, it is also the momentum.

The Manchester City victory against us in in February kicked off a run that would see them gain 37 from 39 points. We did well during this time to keep ourselves a nose ahead.

In April, we would face them again 5 points clear, but with City having 2 games in hand. Victory would have seen us go 8 points clear with 5 to play. Momentum could have swung our way and those defeats to Brighton and Nottingham Forst might never have happened.

Victory over Manchester City today could see Arsenal return back to the top of the league following City’s defeat away to Wolves last weekend.

Considering our perceived slow start, to be in a position to top the table after 8 games shows that last season was not a fluke.

Manchester City go into the game without probably their two best players – Kevin de Bruyne and Rodri. John Stones and Bernardo Silva will also be missing.

This will lead to some saying “Arsenal will never have a better opportunity to beat City” and “if we do not beat City it is a failure”. But this ignores that we have our own injury headaches.

Jurrien Timber is out long term. He was signed for games like today. Gabriel Martinelli and Thomas Partey are also both out.

It perhaps shows our increased strength in depth that despite 3 key players being out, we probably still go into the game as favourites.

Timber is repalced by the ever reliable Ben White, whilst Declan Rice as an upgrade on Partey. Leandro Trossard and Fabio Vieira were both on the bench against Bournemouth last weekend so you would expect both to be fit enough to start.

As for City, Rodri to Matheus Nunes or Kalvin Phillips is a huge drop off. Neither are in the Spanairds class.

Kevin de Bruyne’s natural replacement is Bernardo. Without the pair expect Julian Alvarez to slot into that position behind Erling Haaland. They certainly look less creative with Foden, Alvarez, Jeremy Doku, Jack Grealish and Oscar Bobb.

I would not be surprised if Pep Guardiola sets up to hit Arsenal on the counter. They will leave Doku high and wide and hope that he can exploit the space in behind White.

That will force William Saliba to come across to cover, which could leave Erling Haaland occupying the greater space between Saliba and Gabriel. If Olexsandr Zinchenko then does not keep an eye on Phil Foden, he could be constantly free at the back post.

My feeling is win today and we can talk about a title challenging team. Lose and then we are probably looking at 2nd, depending on the result against Liverpool towards the end of the year.

UTA!

Keenos