Category Archives: Arsenal

MATCH REPORT: Arsenal 0 – 2 Liverpool

Arsenal (0) 0 Liverpool (0) 2

FA Cup Third Round

Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU

Sunday, 7th January 2024. Kick-off time: 4.30pm

(4-3-3) Aaron Ramsdale; Ben White, William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhães, Jakob Kiwior; Martin Ødegaard (c), (Jorge Luiz Frello Filho) Jorginho, Declan Rice; Bukayo Saka, Reiss Nelson, Kai Havertz.

Substitutes: Emile Smith-Rowe, Gabriel Martinelli, Eddie Nketiah, Cédric Soares, Leandro Trossard, David Raya, Ethan Nwaneri, Lino Sousa, Reuell Walters.

Yellow Cards: William Saliba

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 54%

Referee: John Brooks

Assistant Referees: Lee Betts, Nick Greenhalgh

Fourth Official: Josh Smith

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Simon Hooper; AVAR Adrian Holmes SVAR David Coote

Attendance: 58,538

For some of the third round ties, there is also a support VAR official in place, whose “duties will include assisting the VAR and AVAR with evaluating incidents and assisting with the communication between the officials,” according to the FA official website, apparently. More importantly, our players will wear an all-white kit at the Emirates for the first time in Arsenal’s history as part of a campaign against knife crime and youth violence, entitled “No More Red”, which is a joint venture which was launched with Adidas two years ago. Additionally, our ladies team will also wear the kit for the first time when they face Watford in the Women’s FA Cup fourth round game at Meadow Park on Sunday, 14th January. It is to be noted that the all-white kit will not be put on sale to the general public, but a new bespoke “Community T-shirt” will be available to purchase from Arsenal stores for £30, with all profits going to their charity partners. With regards to today’s match, Aaron Ramsdale is back in goal, and Kai Havertz starts today also. Interesting to note that three of our youth players, Ethan Nwaneri, Lino Sousa and Reuell Walters also sit on the substitute’s bench for this exciting FA Cup third round tie against Liverpool this afternoon.

The visitors started the proceedings today, and both teams started to show their intent early on in this game. Within the first two minutes, we should have taken the lead through some quick thinking from both Aaron Ramsdale’s clearance and the quick feet of Reiss Nelson, but sadly his sterling effort found the side netting of Liverpool’s goal. So close, so early in the game. We were putting Liverpool under pressure in the early stages of the game, with our players finding the gaps in the Liverpool defence quickly and easily, it seems. Kai Havertz took a half chance which Alisson just about got to, and a couple of minutes later, following some great play in the visitors’penalty area, our captain’s shot hit the crossbar and bounced out into open play. By rights, in the first quarter of an hour of this game, we should have scored at least four goals, but were desperately unlucky not to, it has to be said, as we were putting Liverpool under serious pressure. The match started to settle down with both sides challenging for loose balls in the midfield and chances started to come few and far between as the game was tightening up. Trent Alexander-Arnold moved forward before releasing Darwin Nunez out wide, who crossed it into our penalty area, which was cleared out for a corner that went nowhere thankfully, and at the other end, some great play ended with a Bukayo Saka shot that was saved by Alisson, who managed to save our man’s attempt on goal. On the half hour, a beautful assist by Martin Ødegaard found the feet of Kai Havertz, whose left-footed shot from the centre of the goal went wide of the mark. On the right wing, Bukayo Saka was moving around the Liverpool defenders with apparent ease, and with ten minutes to go before half-time, he slotted the ball to Ben White, whose cracking twenty yard shot was tipped over the bar by Alisson. After winning the ball back just outside the Liverpool penalty area, our captain slotted the ball to Kai Havertz, who took far too long to shoot, and as such, when he did finally take a shot, Alisson easily picked it up. At the other end, Trent Alexander-Arnold curled a shot towards the net from just inside our penalty area which rattled against our crossbar, and although we had a couple of chances during injury time, the first half finished goalless. Unbelievably.

The second half started with much expectation from our supporters to take ourselves into the fourth round of this illustrious competition. As in the first half, we started positively, winning balls and pushing Liverpool back into their own half. Kai Havertz was fouled in the centre circle, but the referee waved play to go on, and shortly afterwards, there was a superb run by Bukayo Saka who went deep into the Liverpool half, but Joe Gomez somehow managed to clear it. The game became real end-to-end stuff now, with chances going begging for both teams at either end of the pitch. A well-worked free-kick exposed the visitors’ defence and Kai Havertz found Bukayo Saka but he hooked it over the bar. William Saliba received a yellow card for a silly foul on Diego Jota, and just afterwards Gabriel Martinelli replaced Reiss Nelson with twenty-seven minutes of the game remaining, and almost immediately he made a positive impact on the match with some exciting runs. Amazingly, the game appeared to speed up as it came to the last quarter of an hour, and out of the blue, Diego Jota set up Luis Diaz but fortunately his shot was saved by Aaron Ramsdale to keep us in the match at this late stage. The visitors started putting pressure on us, and a Diogo Jota header hit the crossbar which fell into the path of Darwin Nunez who blasted it wide thankfully, which was a massive let-off. Unbelievably, the visitors went a goal ahead when a ball came into our penalty area and it simply flicked off the head of Jakob Kiwior for an own goal, which was immensely disappointing. With three minutes of normal time remaining, Leandro Trossard and Emile Smith-Rowe replaced Kai Havertz and Jakob Kiwior, in an effort to score an equaliser and to try to grab a replay at Anfield next week. We were awarded a free-kick when our captain was brought down by Ryan Gravenberch who was booked for his troubles, but the resulting set piece was both wasted and disappointing in equal measure. In the four minutes injury time, in our efforts to score a goal, we were caught cold at the back and Luis Diaz finished the job clinically for Liverpool, which ultimately meant that we were unceremoniously ejected from the FA Cup. 

Let us be honest, we should have held a healthy advantage by half-time but we were let down by a major flaw, namely the lack of a decent striker of any shape or form. Because of our ineptitude in front of goal over the past few matches, we are now five points off the pace in the Premier League and out of the FA Cup, and if this carries on, and we crash out of the Champions League against Porto in late February/early March, then all of our hard work and effort in the early part of the season could all be in vain. We all know the question, but only Mikel Arteta knows the answer to this problem, and if he does not address it, and quickly too, then things could unravel quite dramatically at the Emirates. So disappointing for everyone.

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: Crystal Palace at the Emirates on Saturday, 20th January at 12.30pm (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

No excuses for Arteta to not play strongest XI

FA Cup 3rd round day is finally here for The Arsenal.

It is our competition. We have won 4 of the last 10. And I am certainly not one of those who says “it’s only the FA Cup”. I love the tournament.

But in between those wins, we do not have great memories.

After a brilliant run under Arsene Wenger, where we had never been knocked out of 3rd round in his first 22 years, our form outside of winning has been shakey.

In his first 22-years at the club, Wenger’s Arsenal only got knocked out in the 4th round or earlier (and it was never earlier), 4 times. An incredible record. Since or 2017 win, we have made it past the 4th round just one (and went on to win it).

Wenger would almost always put out a weakened team in the early stages. His justification was that he was putting out an XI that he thought would win the game. It his view was almost proved correct. then we face Nottingham Forest away.

Not only was Forest in 2018 the first team we had been knocked out of the 3rd round, it was also the first time in decades a team from a lower division had beaten us. It was a game where we were not at the races and confirmed that Wenger’s time at Arsenal was up.

The next season, we were thrashed 3-1 at home to Manchester United, and in 2020 and much changed Arsenal team lost away tou Southampton. Both defeats coming in the 4th round.

In 2021, Mikel Arteta made a numbder of changes as we went once more to Nottingham Forest in the 3rd round. A midfield of Albert Sambi Lokonga and Charlien Patino were overwhelmed and we crashed out again. Then last season we were beaten in the 4th round by Manchester City 1-0 in a close game that we might had won had Arteta not made so many changes.

So today we face Liverpool. And if we live by Wenger’s view that we “put out a team that should win”, we need to play our strongest XI. And with a “winter break” coming up, there is not reason for Arteta to shuffle the pack.

Yes, I get Aaron Ramsdale coming in for David Raya as is the norm for almost every team in the cup. But after that it should be our strongest XI.

White, Saliba, Gabriel, Kiwor (if Zinchenko is out), Rice, Odegaard, Havertz, Saka, Jesus, Martinelli.

I will understand if, for example, Arteta goes for Jorginho instead of Havertz and pushes Rice wider to help make the left hand side a bit stronger defensively. But beyond that, we need to win this game.

We will not win the league this season. One point in three has left us a little too far back. The fA Cup is our best chance to lift silverware.

Hopefully Arteta respects the competition, respects Liverpool and respects the fans and puts out his first team. We need to make winning trophies the norm at Arsenal, and the cups are a good way to help build that winning habit.

Sometimes, some foreign managers just do not get what the FA Cup means to English fans.

I have seen a video of Brentford manager Thomas Frank bemoaning the fact that his team have an FA Cup replay following a home draw against Wolves.

For a start, it does annoy me when foreign managers are happy to come to England and earn the huge money they do (in comparison to what Frank would earn managing a mid-table German, Italian or French team), but then moan about the structure of our football the provides that income.

FA Cup replays are an integral part of our great game and, in the past, Brentford have benefited hugely.

Back in 2005 Brentford were £7m in debt. They drew Southampton at home in the FA Cup 4th round and earned a replay. That replay earned them £500k – a huge sum for a then League One team. Without that replay, Brentford might and went a big way to helping the Bees improve their financial situation.

Secondly, Brentford only have themselves to blame for not being able to beat Wolves at home.

Frank made 4 changes to his first team, and Wolves have a man sent off after 9 minutes. Calling for the FA Cup to scrap replays is just Frank deflecting for his and his teams failure to win a game having played 90% of it with an extra man.

If you want to manage less games, go to France or Gremany. And then take the pay cut that comes with it.

Finally, please remember there are train trikes after the game today. If you are not able to go and have not yet sold your ticket in the Ticket Exchange, please do so now! We need to make sure every seat is filled!

Keenos

Arteta on transfers, injuries and form ahead of FA Cup clash

Morning! Bit of a late blog today and for once it is not because I had a session yesterday!

New Year, New Me, and all of that bollocks. I was up early, smashed a gym session, put a load of washing on and the goat curry in the slow cooker. This is now a coffee and writing break before I am back on it with cleaning!

There was plenty to be taken from yesterday’s pre-FA Cup press conference.

The comments regurgitated the most were about our January transfers was Mikel Arteta said “that is a possibility” that we might not bdo any business at all.

I am not sure why some felt this was such big news. Of course it is a possiblity that we might not do any business. If the right players are not available at the right place, we should not do any business. Buying for the sake of buying leaves you withj Lucas Perez and takes money out of next summers transfer kitty.

Better to buy no one, then buy someone who in 6-month is deadwood.

Arteta also spoke on Oleksandr Zinchenko’s injury saying “he is progressing well. We have another training session tomorrow and we will evaluate whether he is available or not to play and start the game.”

This is why I do not think a new left back will not be on our radar in January,.

At worst, Zinchenko will be back for Crystal Palace, afterwhich we have 3 more games league games until Takehiro Tomiyasu is back from the Asian Cup. Any left back that comes in will have to be a better option than the Japanese full back, and I am not sure that sort of quality player will be available in January.

Arteta backed up my view by saying “first of all focus on the players that we have.”

“As for the rest, there is no actual news” was Arteta’s response to the rest of the walking wounded, although he did then go on to talk about Thomas Partey’s omission from the Ghana national team calling it “common sense” that he had not been selected. He would go on to explain that Partey was not yet back in first team training so “it didn’t make a lot of sense for him to be involved.”

Finally, for those getting their knickers in a twist over our current form, the Boss outlined the situation brilliantly saying:

“Until Christmas Day we were top of the league. Six days later, we are fourth, so you can be very tempted to look at things with a microscope or with a telescope and look a little bit further and with a little bit more perspective.

“My job big time is to look through the telescope and have perspective and analyse things in the proper way, and not get affected by one performance. Not the result, one performance.”

We live in such a reactionary “fast food” world fuelled by social media where after 2 or 3 bad games, fans and pundits begin to ask questions and demand changes.

You do not build a successful team for the long term by continually changing tactics, playing personnel and manager everytime you have half a dozen poor games. As our match reporter Steve says, you stick with the winners and Arteta and this squad of players have shown plenty in the last 18 months as to why we need to stick with them.

Liverpool have gone through the same with Jurgen Klopp over the years. Last year there were calls for him to be sacked and Mohamed Salah to be cashed in on. They are now top of the table and Salah sits top of the combined goals and assists charts.

The likes of Gabriel Martinelli, Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Jesus might be going through a tough spell, but you do not just dump them due to this. That is not how you build a great team.

Bit game tomorrow as the FA Cup is probably our most realistic chance for a trophy this season.

Stick with the winners.

Keenos