Category Archives: Arsenal

Arsenal’s top stars need to wake up

This is our best chance of winning the league since 2016. But if our top stars do not wake up, we could throw away the opportunity to be champions.

Let’s start with the incompotent refereeing in the 1-1 draw v Brentford.

There equaliser should not have stood, with the PGMOL coming out and admitting their officials messed up.

There were actually mutiple reasons the goal should have been disallowed, starting before either of the two offside calls. The first was the foul on Zinchenko as the original free kick was swung in.

Zinchenko was clearly tasked with marking Ivan Toney. But as the ball was put into the box, he was clearly being held by a Brentford player which stopped him challenging for the ball.

This foul gave led to Toney being on his own in the box, able to put the cross in without any pressure.

In the fianl frame, Zinchenko has finally be released by the Brentford player and is back close to Toney, but not close enough.

Had Zinchenko not been fouled in the build up, he would have been on Toney, challenging him in the air in the box. Instead Toney was able to play the ball back across goal with his right foot.

VAR should have picked up on the foul and disallowed the goal.

At the same time, you also have Gabriel being blocked. The player blocking him was comitting two infringements.

The first, he was fouling Gabriel. That foul stopped the Brazilian getting closer to Toney. And secondly he Ethan Pinnock was clearly offside.

By blocking Gabriel, regardless of whether or not it was a foul, he was interfering with play.

VAR should have picked up on either the foul or offside and disallowed the goal.

Then finally, we have the offside prior to Toney putting the ball into the back of the net that was not even checked.

VAR should have picked up on the offside and disallowed the goal.

4 infringements, VAR missed them all, and Arsenal dropped two points.

A draw was probably the right result, and had we have won 1-0 it would have gone in the “champions win when playing poorly” box.

Brentford are a decent outfit. They play to a game plan which is to slow the game down and focus on set pieces.

The blocking at corners and free kicks were by design, not accident. They knew exactly what they were doing in fouling Zinchenko to get Toney free. It is the sort of infringement VAR was bought in to stop.

They have now gone 10 unbeaten. In 7 games against top 6 sides, they have lost just once – to The Arsenal. We got away with a draw but it could have ended worse had Brentford taken their two clear cut first half chances.

We are still top of the league going into the Manchester City game, but to win the league we need to see our stars wake up.

In 2015/16, we were top after 22 games. 5 wins in 15 saw us drop to 4th before we eventually finished 2nd.

Dropping points against the likes of Stoke, Southampton, Swansea, West Ham, Crystal Palace and Sunderland in the second half of the season cost us. Those 5 games were 13 points dropped. We ended up 10 behind Leicester.

We had Everton last weekend and Brentford this. With Manchester City up next before away trips to Aston Villa and Leicester City, we could easily enter a downward spiral similar to what derailed us in 2016.

The last few games, Bukayo Saka, Martin Odegaard, Gabriel Martinelli, Thomas Partey and Granit Xhaka have all looked off the pace. Not at the races.

You can accomodate one or two of them having a drop off in form, a bar run. But to have all 5 struggling at the same time is costing us points.

For us to win the league, they need to wake themselves back up and get back to the high performance level that they have played at for much of the season.

Leandro Trossard looked a livewire when he came on for Martinelli, scoring the goal that should have seen us win the game. It was the substitution that was the game changer I predicted.

Trossard has to start against Manchester City, with Martinelli on the bench

Also, Gabriel Jesus can not come back soon enough.

Eddie Nketiah has been fantastic since coming in for him, but we need to re-energise the front line. And Jesus has the infections energy that just brings the best out of those around him.

Jesus would also be an option in the wider positions. We could easily play him wide right, Trossard wide left and Nketiah through the middle. That would give a break to Saka and Martinelli who both look like they are running out of steam.

After the back to back Midlands away day, we face Everton, Bournemouth, Crystal Palace and Leeds at home – with a trip to Fulham sandwiched between.

This is when I expect Arteta to rotate his front line. Mix and match. Give Saka and Martinelli a break.

In terms of Xhaka, he has been phenomenal this season but has just come off the boil.

We could opt to play Zinchenko further forward, and Kieran Tierney or Takehiro Tomiyasu at left back. That might freshen things up. The option to play Zinchenko instead of Partey is also present.

The Man City game is not one where we should be making wholesale changes. Perhaps just Martinelli for Trossard.

We might blame the officials for the draw against Brentford, but we also did not help ourselves.

Newcastle, Everton and Brentford all played a similar way.

Slow the game down, men behind the ball, look to maximise set pieces. We struggled to break down all 3. The fast, snappy passing was not there.

As we enter the second half of the season, more teams will now sit deep, pack the midfield and deny us space. We need our superstars to re-find their form so that we can break down these teams.

Failure to do so will result in too many dropped points and a repeat of the 2015/16 fall-away.

We are still top of the league. We have won 4 from 7 since coming back from the World Cup. 14 points from a posisible 21.

If we maintain that form between now and the end of the season, we will end up with 85 points. I am not sure that will be enough!

Keep backing the boys and we go again Wednesday.

Keenos

Match Report: Arsenal 1 – 1 Brentford

Arsenal (0) 1 Brentford (0) 1

Premier League

Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU

Saturday, 11th February 2023. Kick-off time: 3.00pm

(4-3-3) Aaron Ramsdale; Ben White, William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhães, Oleksandr Zinchenko; Martin Ødegaard (c), Thomas Partey, Granit Xhaka; Bukayo Saka, Eddie Nketiah, Gabriel Martinelli.

Substitutes: Kieran Tierney, Jakub Kiwior, Rob Holding, Takehiro Tomiyasu, Leandro Trossard, (Jorge Luiz Frello Filho) Jorginho, Fabio Vieira, Matt Turner, Amario Cozier-Duberry.

Scorers: Leandro Trossard (66 mins)

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 69%

Referee: Peter Bankes

Assistant Referees: Eddie Smart, Nick Greenhalgh

Fourth Official: Simon Hooper

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Lee Mason; AVAR Adrian Holmes

Attendance: 60,254

Sadly, we remain without injured pair Gabriel Jesus and Mohamed Elneny, and today’s match also comes too soon for Emile Smith-Rowe, who is recovering from a thigh problem. Reiss Nelson, who has not played since November because of a hamstring issue, has resumed training but is not ready to return, unfortunately. Still, all these things considered, three points against Brentford is a must for the chaps this afternoon.

A steady start by us here at the Emirates, but somehow an early opportunity for a goal happened for our captain Martin Ødegaard, who was in a lot of space on the edge of the penalty area, but sadly his effort was blocked. Shortly afterwards, a lovely pass from Martin Ødegaard as he spotted the run of Gabriel Martinelli in the visitors’ penalty area, hoping that he could exploit the space that he had found himself in; but his first touch was heavy and he was pushed wide, earning a corner for his trouble. Oleksandr Zinchenko was completely unmarked in the Brentford penalty area when the corner fell for him but his shot flew up high into the stand. After about a quarter of an hour, Martin Ødegaard had somehow managed to bundle the ball through in the penalty area to Bukayo Saka who limply poked the ball at goalkeeper David Raya from close range as he was put under pressure by Bees’ defender Rico Henry. Suddenly and surprisingly, the visitors broke out and just inside our penalty area, Bryan Mbuemo and Ivan Toney played a clever one-two. Terrifyingly, the ball came back to Ivan Toney in the middle of our penalty area and his shot bounced off the crossbar, which was the visitors’ best chance of the match so far, and thankfully it was wasted. Our overall play today is far superior to Brentford, and it is a shame that our clever play and determination has not lead to a goal as yet. With about five minutes or so before half-time, Ben White chipped a lovely ball to the back post for Granit Xhaka to run onto, but defender Mads Roerslev got there before him to head it behind for an Arsenal corner, which went nowhere. Then, picking up on a loose ball, Martin Ødegaard played a couple of one-two’s with Eddie Nketiah before the latter appeared to place it comfortably into David Raya’s arms, who looked relieved at the ease in which he caught the ball. In injury time, yet another superb Ben White cross found Bukayo Saka who disappointingly headed it into the ground and it was easily cleared by a Brentford defender. Although we have the lion’s share of possession in this half, it has not converted into goals, unfortunately. We need to do a lot better, and become far more clinical in the second half in order to grab maximum points today.

The second half got underway, with a determined Arsenal pinning Brentford back into their own penalty area, which could be a good omen for the rest of the half (maybe). Granit Xhaka placed the ball through to Bukayo Saka, but the angle was tight; he fired it at goalkeeper David Raya, who was forced into an acrobatic save at the near post. After an effort by Brentford that was fairly easily neutralised by our defence, Martin Ødegaard peeled off into space in the penalty area and he hit the ball cleanly on the half-volley, which was impressive. There was a lot of power behind the shot, but the angle favoured David Raya, who held onto it near the goalpost. On the counter attack, the visitors were starting look extremely dangerous, which could of course, be their gameplan today. William Saliba lost the ball just outside our penalty area and Bryan Mbeumo found Mathias Jensen, who in turn, almost telepathically found Ivan Toney, who got dangerously close to opening the scoring when his shot spun around Aaron Ramsdale’s post. In a match that has become end-to-end action, we really need to be more alert and attentive in our own penalty area, otherwise there could be an issue here. We are seeing a lot of the ball today but are incredibly frustrated in front of the visitors’ goal. Granit Xhaka had a “go” from long range but it was easily blocked by a Brentford defender, and shortly afterwards, Mikel Arteta made his first substitution of the afternoon when Leandro Trossard replaced a largely ineffective Gabriel Martinelli, to see if he has the key to unlock the Brentford defensive door. After a frustrating moment in which Gabriel hit the ball straight at David Raya in the Brentford goal, we finally got the goal that our play deserved. Bukayo Saka crossed the ball, and our substitute Leandro Trossard’s left-footed shot from very close range flew past David Raya and ended up in the bottom left hand corner of the Brentford net. The relief amongst our players and supporters is there for all to see, and with twenty-four minutes of the match remaining, the time remains for us to grab more goals if possible. After a couple of chances, the unthinkable happened. Following a scramble in our penalty area, Christian Nørgaard simply poked at the ball and somehow Ivan Toney was there to see it over the line to equalise the scores, despite a heartstopping VAR offside check lasting two or three minutes, as it was thought that Ethan Pinnock was offside in the build-up, but the Stockley Park gang decreed that the goal stood. So frustrating for us, as now in theory, this game could go either way. We immediately flew at them following the restart, and Leandro Trossard flicked it on to Eddie Nketiah but he had his back to the goal so he was able to tee up Martin Ødegaard, who somehow managed to return it to Eddie Nketiah again. Although his pass to Leandro Trossard was blocked, the ball fell to Oleksandr Zinchenko, whose shot bounced harmlessly wide. Fabio Vieira replaced Granit Xhaka, and in our next attack, Ben White curled it in for Leandro Trossard, but Mads Roerslev kicked the ball away at the back post. With minutes left of the match, Leandro Trossard fed the ball through to Eddie Nketiah in the Brentford penalty area, but he was tackled by Ethan Pinnock in a last ditch attempt to stop him, which was successful this time, and then Martin Ødegaard slipped the ball through to Eddie Nketiah but Ben Mee stopped our man from advancing any further by simply taking the ball from him and launching it into the stand. Game management appears to be the order of the day now, and in the four minutes injury time, there was an unpleasant melee when Ivan Toney went to the ground claiming injury, but after a brief hiatus, the match continued. We won a free-kick just outside the penalty area with just seconds to go, but it was criminally wasted and referee Peter Bankes blew the whistle for this disappointing match to end.

After last Saturday’s defeat at Everton, it almost pales into insgnificance that we had sixty-nine per cent possession today, nor that we had twenty-three shots on goal (seven on target), and that we walked away with a point; what is extremely concerning is that we are unable to hold the lead and that we did look extremely vulnerable on the break, along with the problem that we appear not to be able to be clinically ruthless in attack. Full marks to a well-organised Brentford (even though their equalising goal looked to be offside), but if one considers that our next game is against Manchester City in four days’ time, we have to ensure that we go into that game having ironed out these issues, otherwise our Premiership title challenge this year could take a nasty turn for the worst.

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: Manchester City at the Emirates on Wednesday, 15th February at 7.30pm (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

Martinelli / Trossard axis could be devastating

Like many, I was sceptical at the signing of Leandro Trossard.

I viewed him as a fairly average player who was trying to force through a big moves based on a single decent spell. I was not impressed with his behaviour post-World Cup.

But he has shown in the two games since joining just how key a signing he could be.

One of our issues this season has been a lack of attacking options on the bench. If Gabriel Jesus, Bukayo Saka or Gabriel Martinelli were not quite doing it, the only option was Eddie Nketiah.

This meant that Martinelli and Saka would play the full 90 minutes. Even when struggling to break opponents down.

Against Manchester’s United and City, we saw just how dangerous a “fresh pair of legs” can be.

Martinelli started the Manchester United game. His Duracell bunny running drains a full back.

After 65 minutes of facing Martinelli, he was switched out for Trossard. And the new signing was integral in helping to set up our winning goal.

Trossard started in the defeat to Man City and gave young Rico Lewis a torrid time. And on the 66th minute he was taken off for Martinelli.

1-nil down, the substitution rejuvenated us. Martinelli became the biggest threat on the pitch, putting 90 minutes of hard running into a 30 minute cameo.

Whilst against City, the sub failed to lead to a goal, you can see in the future that it is going to have a huge impact.

Martinelli or Trossard will now know that they only need to pace their effort of 65 minutes. And then with half an hour to go, a tired full back is going to face a new electric threat.

There is a lot to be excited about over The Arsenal right now.

Keenos