Category Archives: Arsenal

MATCH REPORT: Burnley 0 – 5 Arsenal

Burnley (0) 0 Arsenal (2) 5

Premier League

Turf Moor, 52-56 Harry Potts Way, Burnley BB10 4BX

Saturday, 17th February 2024. Kick-off time: 3.00pm

(4-3-3) David Raya; Ben White, Gabriel Magalhães, William Saliba, Jakob Kiwior; Martin Ødegaard (c), Declan Rice, Kai Havertz; Bukayo Saka, Leandro Trossard, Gabriel Martinelli.

Substitutes: Aaron Ramsdale, Emile Smith-Rowe, Eddie Nketiah, Cédric Soares, (Jorge Luiz Frello Filho) Jorginho, Reiss Nelson, Mohamed Elneny, Mauro Bandeira, James Sweet.

Scorers: Martin Ødegaard (4 mins), Bukayo Saka (41, 47 mins), Leandro Trossard (66 mins), Kai Havertz (78 mins)

Yellow Cards: Bukayo Saka

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 66%

Referee: Jarred Gillett

Assistant Referees: Darren Cann, Dan Robathan

Fourth Official: Simon Hooper

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Paul Tierney; AVAR Neil Davies

Attendance: 21,311

This afternoon’s match against Burnley may possibly be a milestone one for us, as we could begin a calendar year with five consecutive league wins for the first time in our illustrious history. However, we have won thirteen of our last fourteen Premier League matches against newly promoted opposition, with the exception of a 0-1 defeat against Nottingham Forest last May. Sadly, Emile Smith-Rowe, Takehiro Tomiyasu, Gabriel Jesus, Oleksandr Zinchenko and Fábio Vieira all missed the six-nil (yes, six-nil!) victory against West Ham United at the London Stadium last Sunday, and it remains to be seen if any of these players mentioned feature in today’s match against the The Clarets at Turf Moor.

Although the home side started quickly, it was us that settled down and opened the scoring after just four minutes, when a pass from Gabriel Martinelli found the feet of our captain, whose one-touch beautiful left-footed shot from outside the penalty area ended up in the bottom right-hand corner of the net! A great start to the game. We then started to pass the ball around which frustrated the home side immensely; in fact, Aaron Ramsey picked up the first yellow card of the game when he committed a bad foul on Bukayo Saka, which in essence, was probably built out of frustration more than malice. Picking up a delightful through ball by Bukayo Saka, a confident Leandro Trossard sprinted towards the direction of the goal and tried to go around goalie James Trafford, who managed to get a foot to the ball in order to thwart our attempt to grab a second goal. We were generally playing confidently, using the whole width of the pitch in order to break the Lancastrians down, which overall is a plan that was working very well, and we appeared to be in total control here. Declan Rice and Martin Ødegaard were masterly controlling the central area of midfield and when the boys used the full width of the pitch they looked really dangerous in attack. Our pressure on the Burnley defence was absolutely relentless, as we were not giving them time to think on (or off) the ball, which must surely lead to another Arsenal goal sooner rather than later (we hope). Suddenly, after winning a free-kick just inside the Burnley half, Martin Ødegaard quickly took the free kick and slotted the ball to Bukayo Saka, who zipped off down the flank, but his exceptional low cross was scrambled away for a corner kick by a shell-shocked Clarets defence. After some strange wrestling inside the Burnley penalty area, this time between Ben White and Zeki Amdouni, we were awarded a penalty kick when Lorenz Assignon brought down Leandro Trossard (and received a yellow card for his trouble); an extremely cool, calm and collected Bukayo Saka made no mistake from the penalty spot just four minutes away from the half time break. Despite some good chances for us to increase our goal tally, the first half finished with Arsenal being two goals to the good with no reply from the home team.

Two minutes after the restart, we grabbed our third goal with style and panache, courtesy of our young star striker, Bukayo Saka, who received the ball from our captain, and then simply switched feet in front of a confused defender, and hit a magnificent right-footed shot from the right side of the penalty area in which the ball simply flew like a rocket into the top right-hand corner of the net. Surely a contender for Goal of the Month! Game, set and match to the Arsenal, who were now both comfortable and confident which showed in their general attitude to the match so early on in the second half as well. The match had just simply stagnated, as we were in complete and utter control and were keeping possession and stroking the ball around. Having said that, we were still more than keen to score even more goals; a Leandro Trossard left-footed shot from the centre of the penalty area went narrowly wide of the mark. On the sixty-sixth minute, our fourth goal was scored when Leandro Trossard’s left-footed low shot from the centre of the penalty area ended up into the bottom left-hand corner of the net. Twenty-one minutes before the end of the match, Mikel Arteta made three substitutions with an eye on the Porto match on Wednesday night; Bukayo Saka, Ben White and Leandro Trossard were replaced by Reiss Nelson, Cédric Soares and Eddie Nketiah all of whom would be getting a runout late in the game. Kai Havertz grabbed our fifth goal of the day with a right-footed shot from the centre of the penalty area with twelve minutes of the match remaining, and as our elated supporters were chanting “we want six!” it certainly looked as if that request was entirely possible now. As Emile Smith-Rowe replaced Kai Havertz with six minutes of the game left to play, we casually pressed the home side way back into their own half. Martin Ødegaard crossed a ball into the penalty area for Gabriel to head the ball down into the bottom right-hand of the goal, but it was saved by James Trafford, in an athletic manner. As the Burnley supporters were leaving Turf Moor in their droves, and the game slowed down to its final conclusion, we can all look at these ninety minutes as a job well done. In the six minutes injury time, Martin Ødegaard, Eddie Nketiah and Emile Smith-Rowe were desperately unlucky in not scoring our sixth goal, but it is to our credit as we kept going right until the final whistle, which we did of course, as all great challenging teams must surely do.

It does not matter which way you look at it, this was a superb day out for us in Lancashire. With sixty-six per cent possession, sixteen shots on goal (seven on target) and five goals in the back of the Burnley net, there was absolutely no doubt who were the dominating team in this match today. As we have scored twenty-one goals in the past five Premiership matches, our credentials are there for all to see, as we are now just two points behind Liverpool in the Premiership table, and with an excellent goal difference to boot. Every man played their part in this top notch, five-star performance at Turf Moor, and each game has now become an event, not just ninety minutes of football. The boys are back on Champions League duty in Portugal on Wednesday night, and Newcastle United are the visitors to the Emirates next Saturday night. Exciting times. 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: Porto at Estádio do Dragão on Wednesday, 21st February at 8.00pm(Champions 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 go to Burnley looking to make it 5 from 5

Turf Moor is one of just 3 current Premier League stadiums I have yet to visit – the other two being Luton Town (just promoted, did not get a ticket for this season) and Wolves (no idea why not).

It is not that I have not tried to go. A few years back there were no trains to or from the game so me and my mates hired a mini bus. It got to just outside Coventry before breaking down.

3-hours and a quick temporary repair later, we were in a pub in Coventry whilst the mini bus driver searched for a garage for a more permanent fix to get us home. As 10 of us marched into this pub, we were met with comments such as “why don’t you support your local team” and “didn’t fancy going to the game did you?”. Clearly the locals thinking we were students or something. We soon put them right.

Today I will once again miss out on the trip to the suburb of Manchester as I will be away! I will miss the entire game while travelling.

Mikel Arteta has been cagey when it has come to team news saying “hopefully we’re going to get a few back for tomorrow” and refusing to rule anyone out. I am not sure if these comments include the long term injured trio of Fabio Vieira, Thomas Partey and Jurrien Timber.

Later in his interview, he did clarify that both Partey and Vieira were close to returning, and Porto is a more realistic target.

He really did not get any more away, speaking on David Raya, Kai Havertz and Kylian Mbappe. As always, I would advise everyone to spend 5-minutes reading every word from Arteta rather than just the click bait headlines.

You can not expect a West Ham performance every weekend. A win against Burnley will make it the first time in our history that we have won the first 5 league games of the calendar year. Whether it is 6-0 or 1-0 it will be 3 points. And that is what matters.

A final thought, I have quickly calculated that I have also been to 14 of the 24 Championship stadiums. So only 13 out of 44 missed! Hopefuly I will be add Wolves ground soon…

If you are going today, enjoy. And if your bus breaks down outside Coventry, go to the Tudor Rose!

Keenos

5 reasons why Arsenal have ZERO INTEREST in signing Kylian Mbappe

Transfer fee

Right off the bat, I would not pay what PSG are going to ask for.

Mbappe’s contract expires this summer, but they reportedly retain a one-year extension option (although there has been some disputing this). They will trigger the clause to ensure they get the transfer fee they want – north of £150m and maybe even above £200m.

That would be our entire transfer budget gone for next season.

Whilst Mbappe is a world class performer, we need more than a single signing to remain competitive into next season. His recruitment will mean no further midfield or defensive reinforcements.

Personally, I would rather see us spend in the region of £60m on a new striker (Ivan Toney), £50m on a new midfielder (Zubimendi?) and have another £40m to potentially buy another winger and central defender, rather than spend £150m+ on Mbappe. And if Mbappe is “free”, he would merely demand the transfer fee to be paid as an additional singing on fee.

Wages

And the wages Mbappe will demand will be ludicrous.

He is reportedly being around £1m a week by PSG. I can not imagine him leaving for much less than that.

Paying a single player north of £500k a week is structure breaking. It will cause ramifications throughout the squad and will be a misappropriate use of funds.

The other issue is he turns 26 towards the end of this year. Whoever buys him will be tying up a huge fee and massive wages for a player who could soon fall off a cliff.

The cliff

Mbappe made his debut before his 17th birthday.

He was just 18 when he joined PSG and had already played 60 senior games for Monaco. In December, he turns 26. He would have played in excess of 450 games for club and country by this point, in a senior career that would have seen him play regular week in week out football for 8 seasons.

Mbappe relies a lot on his explosive pace. The way he burst onto the scene and stayed there, alongside his reliance on pace, makes comparisons to Michael Owen and Fernando Torres easy.

At 26, Owen was a busted flush. He had left Real Madrid and was sitting in Newcastle’s medical room week in week out. His career might as well have ended there. Likewise, Torres was also on the wain at 26.

The Torres story is the warning for those looking to spend big on Mbappe – Chelsea spent £50m bringing the Spaniard to the club and it quickly became clear that he was not the player he once was. In his 4 and a half years at the club Torres would score just 20 Premier League goals.

Now both Torres and Own did suffer injuries throughout their career, whilst Mbappe has stayed relatively clear from any issues. But I would be surprised if Mbappe is still playing at his current level in 2-3 years time.

And as we saw with Thierry Henry, when a player who has such blistering pace begins to lose it, they fall off the cliff.

But what about Messi and Ronaldo?

What makes Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo the greatest two footballers of all time was the way they reinvented themselves as their physical attributes changed.

Both begun their careers as rapid, tricky wingers. By the time their European careers ended they were very different players.

Ronaldo turned himself from a fancy dan trick merchant into an out and out number 9, whilst Messi went one stage further and went from winger to number 9, then played deeper in the 10.

I am not sure Mbappe has either the capability or drive to adapt his game as his natural pace reduces. He is already behind Ronaldo and Messi in terms of his deadliness in front of goal, and he does not have either of their technique.

Once Mbappe’s pace is gone, he will be done.

The Man

Mbappe clearly thinks he is bigger than PSG, and his influence on both the dressing room and wider structure of the club has been evident for decades,

The fact he has announced he will leave when it is not his choice shows his character.

I have always felt Mbappe and Neymar are bad eggs which is why both decided to stay in PSG so long. no top club would tolerant either demands.

Whoever signs Mbappe will be getting someone who has been pampered in France all his career and never faced the challenge of playing for a top club.

I also wonder if he can handle the physicality of playing Premier League football week in week out compared to Ligue 1 which is a level below. He certainly will not get the protection he gets from referees.

A chip on his shoulder, if he comes to the Premier League, my theory is he will be complaining about the weather, the food and the rough treatment within 6-months.

Kylian Mbappe – Arsenal will be right to stay well clear.

Keenos