Category Archives: Arsenal

MATCH REPORT: Tottenham 0 – 2 Arsenal

Tottenham Hotspur (0) 0 Arsenal (2) 2

Premier League

Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, 782 High Road, London N17 0BX

Sunday, 15th January 2023. Kick-off time: 4.30pm

(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, Emile Smith-Rowe, Rob Holding, Takehiro Tomiyasu, Fabio Vieira, Albert Sambi Lokonga, (Marcus Vinicius Oliveira Alencar) Marquinhos, Matt Turner, Matt Smith.

Scorers: Lloris (14 mins, o.g.), Martin Ødegaard (36 mins)

Yellow Cards: Gabriel Martinelli, Gabriel

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 49%

Referee: Craig Pawson

Assistant Referees: Marc Perry, Scott Ledger

Fourth Official: Darren England

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Paul Tierney; AVAR Constantine Hatzidakis

Attendance: 62,850

This afternoon’s match is a huge test for us, as not only is it a North London derby (of course), but we have to win in order for us to maintain a healthy distance between ourselves and second placed Manchester City in the Premiership table. Mikel Arteta has chosen the same eleven that played out a frustrating 0-0 draw against Newcastle United at the Emirates last Tuesday evening, which also means, of course, that there is no place in the starting line-up for Emile Smith-Rowe who is on the substitute’s bench today.

We kicked off proceedings in the sixty-second North London derby (in the Premiership), and for the first few minutes, both teams showed intent and desire to win with strong tacking and good passing throughout. We won our first corner of the match after just seven minutes, and although Bukayo Saka fired over a great ball, the home side’s defenders cleared it easily. And then, the Spurs’ defenders made a complete mess of things at the back, and Gabriel Martinelli flicked the ball over a defender to Eddie Nketiah, who was unmarked about ten yards out, but he shot straight at goalkeeper Hugo Lloris. On the tenth minute, a Martin Ødegaard free-kick found the head of Gabriel, whose subsequent header flew over the bar. The Spurs’ players thought that Thomas Partey should be booked for hand ball after Granit Xhaka lost the ball, but the referee disagreed, thankfully. After fourteen minutes, we opened the scoring when Bukayo Saka ran onto a long ball down the right and cut inside Ryan Sessegnon and blasted in a shot from an impossible angle which went straight at Hugo Lloris, yet somehow he flapped and fiddled at it, and it went into the net! Four minutes later, Spurs’ first chance of the game came when Son Heung-min was picked out in space in the penalty area by Ryan Sessegnon but his low shot was comfortably saved by Aaron Ramsdale. On our next attack, Bukayo Saka found Eddie Nketiah in the Spurs’ penalty area, who hit a low ball across the area but it was cleared, and then Martin Ødegaard shot from just outside the penalty area in which a diving Hugo Lloris pushed wide. Then the ball landed to Thomas Partey from at least twenty yards and he hit a stunning volley which had Hugo Lloris beaten but hit the post and bounced out into play. Bukayo Saka beat his man again on the edge of the penalty area far too easily but his cross was cleared, and then Hugo Lloris caught a cross and then tried to send away Dejan Kulusevski with a long ball, but we gave him no options and he lost the ball cheaply. Gabriel Martinelli was fouled by Cristian Romero, who received the first booking of the day, and quite rightly so, it has to be said. Nine minutes before the break, we won the ball from a Hugo Lloris goal-kick and come forward in earnest. Bukayo Saka picked out captain Martin Ødegaard, who hit a beautiful shot from almost thirty yards, which zipped into the bottom corner of the net for our second goal of the match, for his eighth Premiership goal of this campaign. Shortly afterwards, a Martin Ødegaard free kick hit the Spurs defensive wall and spun off across the ground, and in injury time, Ryan Sessegnon received a booking for a poor tackle, and after a superb save by Aaron Ramsdale from a Harry Kane header, referee Craig Pawson blew the whistle for half-time.

The home side kicked off the start of the second half, and as in the first half, strong tackling appears to be the order of the day here. After a Dejan Kulusevski shot from the right wing flew over the bar, Aaron Ramsdale made a superb fingertip save from Harry Kane; the resulting corner from the home side went nowhere, and Spurs are putting us under pressure, with some excellent defending from our men denying them any chance of scoring at this point in the match. Gabriel Martinelli was fouled badly by Pape Sarr, who was booked for his trouble, and after Martin Ødegaard’s free kick went out for a throw-in, Eddie Nketiah received a great pass from Gabriel Martinelli and his excellent shot was saved by Hugo Lloris. The second half was far more of an end-to-end game than it was in the first, and both sides are trying hard to score. Harry Kane flicked a long ball into the path of Dejan Kulusevski but Thomas Partey got there first, and a few minutes later, it was almost party time for Gabriel Martinelli as he controlled the ball with his back! The subsequent pass to Thomas Partey saw his shot fly past the post. Gabriel Martinelli was booked for a foul and with twenty minutes of the match remaining, Eddie Nketiah could have wrapped everything up as he was picked out in space in the penalty area, but he shot straight at Hugo Lloris, which was a real wasted chance. Eric Dier received a booking for a nasty tackle on Bukayo Saka, and Clement Lenglet also received a yellow card for his part in the same incident too. Martin Ødegaard was fouled on the edge of the penalty area; Eddie Nketiah shot from the loose ball and it was saved, but Craig Pawson called it back for a free-kick, which Granit Xhaka took, and it flew over the bar and into the crowd. Kieran Tierney replaced Gabriel Martinelli with twelve minutes of the game remaining, and with nine minutes of the game remaining, after a short period of “to and fro” in our penalty area, Aaron Ramsdale made a superb save to stop the home side from scoring. Takehiro Tomiyasu replaced Oleksandr Zinchenko, and a minute or so later, Spurs won a free-kick right on the edge of the penalty area as Ivan Perisic was clipped by Eddie Nketiah; the free kick taken by Son Heung-min went straight at our defensive wall, thankfully. In the five minutes’ injury time, Gabriel was booked for time wasting, ridiculously, and in the third minute of time added on, Emile Smith-Rowe and Fabio Vieira replaced Martin Ødegaard and Eddie Nketiah, and as Aaron Ramsdale caught a cross from Btyan Gil, the referee blew the final whistle, and as such, we ran out worthy winners. 

All in all, it was a fantastic performance by the boys, particularly in the first half. Aaron Ramsdale was incredible today, and the team was dominant in all areas, which was great to see. We are now eight points ahead of Manchester City in the Premiership table tonight, and things are looking great, but we cannot let our heart rule our head; after al, they do not give winning medals out in January, we have to keep our resolve, hold our nerve and see where we end up in May.

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 United at the Emirates on Sunday, 22nd January at 4.30pm (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

The apprehension and excitment of Tottenham away

Morning all and Happy North London Derby Day.

Tottenham away, a game I look forward too and at the same time dread. Today is my first visit to their new ground.

Not much will beat the nervous energy, the antacipation walking down the High Road. With your mates. Us against them, ready for whatever happens.

But White Hart Lane has not been a happy hunting ground for us in recent years. The North London Derby has massively favoured the home teams over the last decade or so.

We have not beaten Tottenham away since the 2015 League Cup, Mathieu Flamini with those two goals. I was there that night, and what a night it was.

Our last league win was 2014, Tomas Rosicky with the only goal.

Before you think “Keenos is a luck omen, glad he is going today”, they are the only two occassions I have seen us win at their place. Three if you include a FA Youth Cup game when Jack Wilshere pulled the strings!

Since Tottenham ended out 21-game unbeaten run against them in 2008, we have won just 2 of 16 away games at White Hart Lane (or Wembley). Both mentioned above.

And in recent years, the away game against that lot have been where our hopes and dreams have crashed and burned.

Last season, a victory against Tottenham with 3 games to go would have guaranteed us a top 4 place, and finishing above them for the first time since 2016. We were turned over 3-0 with Harry Kane opening the scoring with his customary North London Derby penalty.

2019 is also a North London Derby day that bitterly sticks in the memory.

1-1 and Pierre Emerick-Aubameyang is bought down for an 89th minute penalty. Our talisman gets up, dusts himself down, and takes tne penalty. SAVED.

And then to add insult to injury, just as Aubameyang looked set to tap into the empty net, Jan Vertonghen makes a last-ditch slide challenge.

Vertonghen had encroached deeply into the area on the penalty but he got away with it. Without that, he would not have been able to make the tackle. And there was no VAR in those days.

Two points dropped, and they ended up being crucial as we finished a single point behind Tottenham, and failed to make the top 4.

So I make no apologies for feeling apprehensive ahead of the game today. Although after a few beers in Islington and that journey to the stadium I will be bang up for it.

It does feel like we are in the middle of our most crucial period of the season.

We have already faced Brighton (A) & Newcastle (H). Both sides in the top 8.

Today it is a trip to Tottenham (5th), followed by a resurgent Manchester United (4th). We then have a tricky away trip to Everton – Goodison Park is never an easy win despite how poor they are.

That is followed by games against Brentford (9th) and Manchester City (2nd).

I have refused to get to embroiled in the title talk. Yes, we are in the race but we are certainly not favourites. The bookied have had Man City odds-on since before the season began. It should not be seen as a failure if Man City overhaul us and we end up 2nd.

If we are still above City after we have hosted them, I might allow a bit of belief to slip in. But even then we have a double header away in the Midlands against Aston Villa and Leicester City.

It is only really in March that it eases up a bit – we have a run of 3 out of 4 games at home , facing Bournemouth, Fulham (A), Crystal Palace and Leeds United.

And then we have the 6 games that will ultimately decide our future – Liverpool (A), West Ham (A), Manchester City (A), Chelsea (H) and Newcastle (A). The only bit of restbite is Southampton at home.

Today is all about getting the 3 points against Tottenham. And I think we will do that if Harry Kane does not get his usual penalty.

We will never hear the end of it if Kane equals, and breaks, Jimmy Greaves goal scoring record against us. But that will never make up for signing their captain for free, 1971 and 2004.

UTA

Keenos

Tottenham fans ‘most deluded in the Premier League’

We all know Tottenham fans have delusions of grandeur, but I have not stopped laughing at their latest show of petulance.

The only team in the “Big 6” to have not won anything in the 15 years, they have spent the last half a decade telling anyone that would listen how good they were. And how much better and bigger than Arsenal they were.

The old saying is form is temporary, class is permanent. And it was only a matter of time until the class of The Arsenal rose again, and the good form of Spurs (15 on the all-time English champions list) evened itself back down.

But last week their fans go ahead and write a letter to the board “seeking answers to fundamental questions” about how the club is run.

Spurs fans are crying because their team is 5th in the table, 2 points off the Champions League places. 5th or 6th is probably Spurs’ par position. They only slipped out of the top 4 2 games ago.

This season they had their best opening 10 games to a campaign since the Premier League came into existence. The bad run of form they are complaining about is 2 losses in their previous 6 games. They should speak to Chelsea about bad runs.

Since 2019, they have spent €524m on player. And average of €131m a season. That is the 5 highest expenditure in the league, and just €12m less than Arsenal – they have also been very noisy about how much we have spent to top the league.

During that period, they have the 3rd highest net spend in the Premier League (for those that love net spend stats). Only Manchester United and Arsenal have a higher net spend.

Their fans are very loud about them having the World Cup winning goalkeeper. The best centra defender “in the world” (still not sure who they are talking about?). The best footballer Asia has ever seen. And England’s best ever striker.

They have a transfer guru who has secured them some of the “best talent in Europe” in Romero, Bentancur, Kulusevski, Perisic and Richarlison. In the summer they “won” the transfer window.

And they have the best manager in the world (according to them) in Antonio Conte. The Italian much better than the novice in charge of Arsenal.

They have spent so much, on so many top players, all whilst spending £1bn on “the greatest football stadium in the world”.

I don’t really get what they are complaining about.

Spending so much on a new stadium was always going to see them take a backwards step. Did they not see what happened to The Arsenal?

The Emirates had huge implications on our finances. Throw in the credit crunch and we had to sell to service the debt.

Tottenham are in huge debt due to their stadium and have also had to contend with the impact of Covid on their finances. Did they really think they could build a new stadium whilst also spending big on players? They have actually spent a lot more than most of us would have expected.

I am not really sure what their fans want. What they are crying about. What their demands are.

The real reason they are upset is probably because of us. Because we are top of the league.

They are having breakdowns because they have realised the last half a decade has been wasted.

All those seasons finishing above Arsenal came to nothing. And it was all they could hold onto whilst we won FA Cup after FA Cup.

Now we are back on our pedestal, and they are both below us and trophyless, they have lost their minds.

Their issue is not with ENIC, with Levy and how the club is run. It is with KSE, with Arteta, and how we are performing.

Instead of writing a letter for Levy, they should have written one to Josh.

“Dear Josh,

Please stop Arsenal being so good. Them being bad was our only bright light in football.

Thanks

A Spurs Fan.”

They mocked us for our “banter years” but the truth is the last few years have just been a respite from their banter decades.

I bet if we were 6th, and they were 4th, there would be no complaints.

Being top of the league has broken them. Imagine what will happen if we win it?

Spurs fans really are the most delusional in the league.

Keenos