Category Archives: Arsenal

Match Report: Aston Villa 2 – 4 Arsenal

Aston Villa (2) 2 Arsenal (1) 4

Premier League

Villa Park, Trinity Road, Birmingham B6 6HE

Saturday, 18th February 2023. Kick-off time: 12.30pm

(4-3-3) Aaron Ramsdale; Ben White, William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhães, Oleksandr Zinchenko; Martin Ødegaard (c), (Jorge Luiz Frello Filho) Jorginho, Granit Xhaka; Bukayo Saka, Eddie Nketiah, Leandro Trossard.

Substitutes: Kieran Tierney, Emile Smith-Rowe, Gabriel Martinelli, Jakob Kiwior, Rob Holding, Takehiro Tomiyasu, Fabio Vieira, Reiss Nelson, Matt Turner.

Scorers: Bukayo Saka (16 mins), Oleksandr Zinchenko (61 mins), Emiliano Martinez (o.g. 90 +3 mins), Gabriel Martinelli (90 +5 mins)

Yellow Cards: Bukayo Saka

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 67%

Referee: Simon Hooper

Assistant Referees: James Mainwaring, Mark Scholes

Fourth Official: John Brooks

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Stuart Attwell; AVAR Scott Ledger

Attendance: 42,066

After the defeat against Manchester City last Wednesday, we desperately need to get back to winning ways. We have made two changes from the last match, namely Leandro Trossard and Jorginho, who are both more than capable of changing the outcome of a game in a heartbeat. We’ll see. Black armbands are being worn today by both teams in memory of the former Newcastle United player Christian Atsu, who tragically lost his life in the Turkish earthquake disaster.

Arsenal got today’s proceedings underway, kicking towards the Holte End rather sluggishly, it has to be said. The home side were by far the more assertive in the early stages of the game; the first shot of the day came from Douglas Luiz as he hit the ball from about forty yards which went flying into the Arsenal supporters behind Aaron Ramsdale’s goal. Unfortunately we went one down after five minutes, when Oli Watkins moved outside of William Saliba and hit a low left-footed shot past Aaron Ramsdale into the bottom corner of the net, which was a very troubling start for us, as Aston Villa have been putting us under a lot of pressure in the early stages of the match. However, just a few minutes later, Tyrone Mings hooked the ball onto the crossbar right in front of Eddie Nketiah as he dived in to meet Ben White’s cross, but the linesman’s flag went up for offside against Ben White, so even if we scored, it would not have counted anyway. This event certainly woke us up, and on the sixteenth minute, we grabbed the equaliser when Ben White chipped the ball into the penalty area for Tyrone Mings to head the ball straight to the feet of Bukayo Saka, who drove a fantastic strike past the hapless Emiliano Martinez and into the top corner of the Aston Villa net. Superb goal. It was then our turn to apply pressure on the home side, when Oleksandr Zinchenko tried his luck from a distance, but it ended up into the arms of the Villa goalkeeper, after some excellent build-up play. We are now controlling the play with the home side mainly pinned down in their own half. Granit Xhaka received a warning from referee Simon Hooper over a seemingly innocuous tackle on Oli Watkins, and just after the half-hour mark, the home side took the lead again when Philippe Coutinho slotted a low shot past the outstretched arm of Aaron Ramsdale, which was very disappointing to say the least. Emiliano Martinez had to kick the ball behind for a corner as Bukayo Saka put pressure on Alex Moreno, and as the match continues, it is becoming obvious that we are concentrating our attacks down the right hand side with some interesting clashes happening between Bukayo Saka and Alex Moreno which are becoming more and more apparent as the game advances. In the two minutes injury time, Tyrone Mings caught Martin Ødegaard with his studs on the follow through, which led to a minor fracas between both sets of players that somehow saw Bukayo Saka receiving a yellow card for his trouble. The first half finished with us being on the wrong side of the scoring, so it will be interesting to see what happens in the second half, which will be an extremely important forty-five minutes for us.

Aston Villa started the business of the second half off, and we started to find one or two gaps in the home side’s defence, with Bukayo Saka continuing to cause confusion and problems down their right-hand side, A few minutes after the restart, Granit Xhaka played in Martin Ødegaard, who cleverly stayed onside before squaring the ball to Bukayo Saka, who took a quick shot that went wide of the Villa goal. A limping Bukayo Saka crossed the ball which was cleared straight to Martin Ødegaard, who played the ball back to Granit Xhaka but his shot was blocked by a Villa defender. Ben White got in behind the Villa defence and chipped a great ball into the middle of the penalty area for Eddie Nketiah, whose header annoyingly bounced off the top of the crossbar. Just after the hour, Oleksandr Zinchenko scored his first goal for Arsenal when he picked up a ball on the edge of the penalty area, and hit a low, left-footed shot past Emiliano Martinez and into the back of the net for our equalising goal. We should have grabbed our third goal of the afternoon when Martin Ødegaard played a superb pass to send Eddie Nketiah away. He was bearing down on the Villa goal, but Tyrone Mings pushed him wide before his chip over the advancing Emiliano Martinez went way over the crossbar. Gabriel Martinelli replaced Leandro Trossard a couple of minutes later, and his input into the match was noticed immediately with more assertiveness up front. However, we are pushing up in search of the third goal but we were almost caught on the counter attack as Oli Watkins was sent away down the left wing. He tried to pick out John McGinn on the other side of the penalty area, but the pass was too close to Aaron Ramsdale, who picked up the ball quite easily. With fourteen minutes of the match remaining, Eddie Nketiah robbed a Villa defender on the edge of the penalty area, squared it to Martin Ødegaard, whose shot went narrowly wide of the mark, when by rights, he should have scored easily. Ben White and Granit Xhaka was replaced by Takehiro Tomiyasu and Fabio Vieira, in order to get fresh legs on the pitch to make a difference. Aaron Ramsdale made a superb match-winning save from Jacob Ramsey that went off his hand onto the underside of the crossbar and out and into open play. As the match started to ebb away into the final five minutes, both sides were frenetically trying to grab a winner, and as such, silly mistakes were being made which are leading to goalscoring chances. Martin Ødegaard put a great free kick into the penalty area but Gabriel was only able to head it over the bar, sadly. With two minutes of normal time remaining, Jorginho passed a lovely ball to Bukayo Saka, who turned quickly on the edge of the penalty area but his shot lacked power and the Villa goalkeeper held it comfortably. Into the six minutes injury time, Aaron Ramsdale made yet another match winning save from Jhon Duran and a minute or so later, we grabbed a third goal when Jorginho hit a first-time effort from the edge of the penalty area that whacked against the crossbar, off the back of the head of Emiliano Martinez and into the net! Mikel Arteta brought on Rob Holding and Kieran Tierney to replace Martin Ødegaard and Oleksandr Zinchenko, and then the greatest drama of the day happened. With Villa goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez up in our penalty area for the last corner of the game, the ball was cleared to Fábio Vieira, who charged down the centre of the pitch before sending Gabriel Martinelli clear. With no goalkeeper to beat, all he had to do was roll it into an empty net and as such was celebrating before scoring! What an ending to an incredible match!

Although our performance at Villa Park today was uneven and ragged at times, and even frustrating, today we showed our mental strength, guts, determination and “never say die” attitude that is synonymous with our great teams of the past, which of course has become our hallmark throughout the decades. Winning titles and cups is all about overcoming adversity under pressure, and doing the simple things right, which is exactly what game we played at Villa Park this afternoon. Twice we came back from being behind, and we had the fortitude and courage to come back at Aston Villa, taking the game by the scruff of the neck and grab all three points with merely seconds left of the game. This match could be a turning point for us, as over the course of a season there are indeed peaks and troughs, as all great teams discover; it’s what you do when you are in the lowest possible ebb that counts. Keep going, 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: Leicester City at King Power Stadium on Saturday 25th February at 3.00pm(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 get back to upsetting others for the right reasons

First things first, we have been charged again by the FA for failing to ensure our players conducted themselves in an orderly fashion.

I was having a discussion the other day with a mate about how often we see these charges after live TV games. Yet similar incidents happen in almost every game across the country at all levels.

It is almost as if the FA only charge teams when it is on TV or an incident goes viral on social media. And that is the wrong way to police the game.

Maybe in response, Arsenal should release a statement apologising for the behaviour of the players and pointing out that it was down to human error.

A public statement by the club like that would be antagonistic, but also point out how fluffy the FA are when it comes to dealing with their referees poor decision making.

They are very quick to punish clubs for failing to control players, punish managers for speaking out against poor decisions, but as soon as the spotlight is on their officials they try and brush it under the carpet.

Today is Aston Villa away. I am already on the train heading to the game. It is initial to get back to winning ways.

We could have easily dealt with the loss to Man City had we picked up at least one win against Everton or Brentford.

VAR aside, we did not perform well against Brentford and Everton was our worst game of the season. If we want to retain any hopes of mounting a title challenge we need 3 points today.

The away boys, as always, will make a lot of noise and back the team for 90 minutes. And that is a reminder that most of what you see on the internet is just bluster.

We had one commentator on yesterdays blog calling for wholesale changes. He also demanded that “questions just be asked of Aaron Ramsdale after that performance”.

Fans like him really are not needed. They jump on players after one poor game demanding all sorts of changes.

Title challenging teams tend to not make knee jerk changes to their side. They tend to play a consistent team. Some fans will never get it!

Hopefully we get another 3 points today. And upset the FA with our players and managers behaviour. And fans behaviour.

When people hate you, you just be doing something right.

UTA

Keenos

Manchester City defeat a reminder that we are still at the beginning of our journey

Arsenal have nothing to be ashamed or embarrassed about.

Even when we were bookies had has odds-on, we never felt we were favourites. It was always going to come down to the first head to head between the two.

Finishing 2nd behind Man City should not be seen by a failure.

Opposing fans will put up imagies of a league table when we were 8 points clear, but at that point we were about 15 games in, they had a game in hand and we were still to play each other twice. 24 hours later, that lead was cut to 5 as they won.

Man City are simply a better, stronger, more developed squad than us. And that should not be a surprise.

They have been financially dopping for decades, leading the Premier League a merry dance with their creative accounting.

Being state funded has meant they have been able to spend huge amounts on players – and it is not just the transfer fees but also the salaries and agents fees.

Their official wage bill is twice the size of Arsenal’s. And you have to wonder how much more is paid into offshore accounts set up for the players.

It is a simple equation – the more you are paying for players, the better they probably are. And that was shown last night.

Whilst Arsenal looked shattered and really suffered from having a few key players out, Man City looked fresh. And a lot of this is due to their squad depth.

Take Riyad Mahrez.

He started just 4 league games for City prior to the World Cup. Since Qatar has has started nearly every game and is the Premier League’s most inform player.

Such is Pep’s squad depth, he can leave a player out for half a season knowing that will enable him to have a huge impact in the second half of the season.

The starting XI Arsenal had out on Wednesday cost us £210million. Manchester City had over £300m worth of talent that did not start last night.

Now this is where some of you will say “this is why we keep demanding the Kroenke’s to spend or sell the club”. The answer to that is simple – look at the charges Man City are facing.

Arsenal are a well run, self sufficient side. We do what we can with what we have, and push for a superstar when we need one.

Do we really want us to go on a Chelsea Supermarket Sweep? Spending £300m in a winter window on players none of us had heard of 6 months previous? Potentially mortaging our future for a quick fix? No.

Likewise, we do not have the finances to accomodate 4 central defenders that all cost £50m+. No one in the Premier League does. Bar Manchester City.

Liverpool competed for City for years. Jurgen Klopp had built a fantastic starting XI. But when push came to shove they did not have the squad depth and City would eventually come out on top.

We are not so different to Liverpool. A fantastic XI, but a few injuries to key players and we struggle. Man City, meanwhile, could put out 7 or 8 different players at the weekend and it would their team would still have cost them £500m and every player be on over £100k a week.

City are simply a financial beast, and the fact that we have lead them for half of the season shows the strides forward we have taken.

It also has to be remembered the age profile of City.

There average age is 26.2, ours just 24.2. They have also been in numerous title challenges, whilst for many of our players this is the first.

We keep doing what we are doing and in 2 years our squad will naturally be better as they age, as they gain more experience.

This is not me saying “we have to wait another two-years to compete” but more “this is our first year of competing.

2017/18 was the first year Klopp had the likes of Salah, Mane, van Dijk together. They finished 4th. The next season they finished 2nd. And then they won it.

You can not be too disappointed in Arsenal, in Mikel Arteta, for going from 8th to 2nd within 12 months.

And this is not me raising the white flag.

We might be 2nd (on goal difference) but the title is still in our hands.

We still have a game in hand. We will still win the league if we win every game despite what City do. We now need to start again.

And that starts tomorrow against Aston Villa.

Keenos