MATCH REPORT: Arsenal 2 – 2 Fulham

Arsenal (0) 2 Fulham (1) 2

Premier League

Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU

Saturday, 26th August 2023. Kick-off time: 3.00pm

(4-3-3) Aaron Ramsdale; Thomas Partey, Ben White, William Saliba, Jakob Kiwior; Martin Ødegaard, Declan Rice, Kai Havertz; Bukayo Saka, Leandro Trossard, Gabriel Martinelli.

Substitutes: Gabriel Magalhães, Gabriel Jesus, Emile Smith-Rowe, Eddie Nketiah, (Jorge Luiz Frello Filho) Jorginho, Fábio Vieira, David Raya, Reiss Nelson, Oleksandr Zinchenko.

Scorers: Bukayo Saka (70 mins, penalty), Eddie Nketiah (72 mins)

Yellow Cards: Mikel Arteta

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 71%

Referee: Paul Tierney

Assistant Referees: Neil Davies, Scott Ledger

Fourth Official: Thomas Bramall

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Darren England; AVAR Dan Cook

Attendance: 59,961

Good to see Gabriel Jesus back in contention for this afternoon’s derby game against the Cottagers, and by being on the substitute’s bench, it certainly looks like he is fit and raring to go. Takehiro Tomayasu is suspended today, and Jakob Kiwior will be slotting nicely into the back four in his absence.

Unbelievably, within a minute of the start, we were a goal down when, after a silly mistake from Bukayo Saka, the ball found Andreas Pereira, whose right-footed shot from outside our penalty area beat Aaron Ramsdale, and ended up in the bottom left hand corner for the visitors to take the lead! We woke up and responded quickly, and in doing so, a curling Gabriel Martinelli shot culed around the post and into the crowd, and then a ball from Leandro Trossard to the back post was met by Bukayo Saka, who flicked the ball back into the middle of the penalty area for a waiting Kai Havertz, but his header went astray. We are slowly dictating play now, with Declan Rice completely controlling his midfield area, and after a nice pass from Gabriel Martinelli, which left Leandro Trossard in a perfect scoring position, his shot was easily gathered up by former Gunner Bernd Leno, who keeps goal for Fulham, of course. The visitors almost grabbed a second goal when a volley from Raúl Jiménez flew over the crossbar, and although the Cottagers look dangerous on the break, their efforts end up going nowhere at the moment. On the half hour, Bukayo Saka found himself in space behind the Fulham defence to meet a cross, but his header was weak, sending it into the ground and bouncing over the bar. After another attack, which came to nothing, a universal groan could be heard from out supporters, who are getting just as frustrated as our chaps are on the pitch. Our captain did get the ball into the net, five minutes before the break, but it was disallowed for offside; a minute or so later, Martin Ødegaard took a strong shot at the Fulham goal, but sadly Bernd Leno gathered that ball up easily. As the rain started to fall, and half-time approaches, everyone in the stadium is starting to wonder what exactly Arsenal have to do to score the equalising goal here today, and as referee Paul Tierney does indeed bring the first forty-five minutes to a close, it is felt across the stadium that it must surely be a matter of time before we score that goal which we so desperately need.

For the second half, Eddie Nketiah replaced Leandro Trossard, in order to refresh the strikers, and we started out completely on the good foot. Bukayo Saka wriggled beautifully between two Fulham defenders on the right wing, cut inside and whacked a shot towards the goal that Bernd Leno stretched into the air to grab. Good start, chaps. Calvin Bassey received the second Fulham yellow card for time wasting, and as consistent pressure from our fowards pressurise the visitor’s goal, it surely must be a matter of time before we score. Eleven minutes after the restart, Fábio Vieira replaced Kai Havertz up front, whilst Thomas Partey was swapped for Oleksandr Zinchenko, and almost immediately they joined the action, when a superb cross from Fábio Vieira was headed out of the Fulham penalty area by Issa Diop. Yet another fine shot from our captain went inches over the bar, and shortly afterwards, he released Eddie Nketiah behind the Fulham defence on the right wing; his low, strong cross found Gabriel Martinelli on the opposite side of the penalty area but the subsequent low ball from him was cleared by the visitor’s defence. And then, a massive beam of light at the end of an existing tunnel appeared when Fábio Vieira got in behind Kenny Tete and the Fulham defender slid in clumsily to take our man down in the penalty area for a surefire penalty! After the usual VAR check (which is always a heartstopper), Bukayo Saka stepped up to the plate, and made no mistake to even up the scores with twenty minutes of the game remaining, and of course, our supporters went wild. Now we really do have a match! Two minutes later, we took the lead, when a Fábio Vieira cross found a waiting Eddie Nketiah, whose right-footed shot from the centre of the penalty area found the centre of Bernd Leno’s goal. Exciting stuff, chaps! Unbelievably, our manager, Mikel Arteta has found himself in the referee’s book for an infringement outside his technical area, and on the pitch, our obvious domination continues with less than ten minutes of the game remaining. The visitors went down to ten men when Calvin Bassey got his marching orders for a second bookable offence after blocking Eddie Nketiah, and literally, with three minutes of the match remaining, the visitors grabbed an equalising goal, courtesy of João Palhinha! How on earth could such a thing happen? Let us hope that in the nine minutes’ injury time, we can grab a winning goal here. Gabriel Jesus replaced Declan Rice in order to get more firepower on the pitch, and we started to literally throw everything at the Fulham defence now, with a spirited shot by Fábio Vieira being saved, and then Oleksandr Zinchenko’s deep cross was nodded away by Antonee Robinson. Tosin Adarabioyo headed away a cross from Fábio Vieira and incredibly a minute or so later, Aaron Ramsdale pulled off a superb match-winning save from a shot by Adama Traore and as the match ebbed away, a final chance to score was punched away by Bernd Leno from the head of Eddie Nketiah, just as referee Paul Tierney blew the final whistle.

The stats tell their own story somehow; seventy-one per cent possesssion, seventeen shots on goal (nine on target) and still we were unable to take all three points here at home. However, we did appear to just switch off at times, and it is to be noted that in both the Nottingham Forest match and today, we conceded goals in the last quarter of an hour of the game, which is something that surely needs addressing as we go through the season. It is still early days of course, but these things must be nipped firmly in the bud before we start our European campaign. A long road ahead.

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, 3rd September 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

Arsenal look to make it 9 from 9 against Fulham

Game day 3. Fulham at home.

When the fixture list was announced, it was important we got off to a winning start following our favourable scheduling.

Nottingham Forest (home), Crystal Palace (away) and Fulham (home) looked like a comfortable start to the season. And with 6 points our of 6, we have done what we have needed to do without coming needing to come out of 3rd gear.

I always feel the team that wins the league is not who comes flying out the blocks quickest, but the side that gets through the opening half a dozen fixtures expending the least amount of energy whilst gaining maximum points.

In recent years, we have seen Manchester City have “slow” starts to the season where they do just enough to get through games. Then in the second half of the season they go up and gear before peaking for the run in.

Last season we flew out the blocks, and we needed to do it. But the consequence was when it came down to the business end of the season, we ran out of steam.

This season it certainly feels like we are holding a bit more back. Ensuring we are getting through games without needing to go 100%. And a home fixture against Fulham should see us go 9 out of 9.

Fulham had an exceptional season last year, driven by a 10-games spell from the end of the World Cup to end of February where only Manchester City, Man U and Arsenal got more points. But they finished the season poorly.

From the beginning of March to the end of the season, they fell away and were one of the worst teams in the league – only the 3 relegated sides alongside Chelsea and Nottingham Forest gained more less points from the last 13 games of the season.

I think this season they will struggle (although will stay up).

Losing Aleksandar Mitrovic is a huge blow after he finally learned how to score goals in the Premier League. Recruiting the past-his-best Raul Jimenez is a huge step down – the Mexican has not been the same since suffering a head injury against Arsenal.

Teams will not time them as lightly as last season, which will see midfield pairing Andreas Pereira and João Palhinha get less time on the ball.

They started this season with a ropey 1-nil win over Everton (who I think will go down), and that was followed up by a 3-nil defeat at home to Brentford.

That Brentford game was an interesting watch as it felt like Fulham were in control for much of the game. They were hampered by going down to 10-men after 64 minutes, and Brentfod’s second goal was from the penalty spot. Their 3rd was in injury time.

We have only dropped points once since 2012 against Fulham – a 1-1 draw during Covid in April 2021.

That team consisted of Matt Ryan in goal, with Hector Bellerin, Rob Holding and Granit Xhaka in defence alongside Gabriel. The midfield 5 was Bukayo Saka, Dani Ceballos, Mo Elneny, Emile Smith Rowe and Gabriel Martinelli. Alex Lacazette was upfront.

It shows how far we have come in a little more than 2 years that you would expect just 3 of those to start.

Win the game, then it is onto Manchester United at home (3 home games in the first 4 of the season?), then we are into the international break.

If we can get into that break with 4 wins from 4, fears that last season might have been a fluke should be diminished.

Enjoy the game today.

UTA

Keenos

Two stars set for Arsenal exit – could both depart today

So o wrote this mornings blog last night.

The synopsis was around a left back merry1go-round that is delaying exits for Nuno Tavares, Kieran Tierney and West Ham’s Aaron Cresswell.

Nottingham Forest, Wolves and Aston Villa are both chasing Cresswell, whilst his exit could open the day for Tierney to move to West Ham.

Then overnight, David Ornstein killed my blog with his breaking news:

A loan deal to Spain is a move that no one saw coming.

In the blog that will now never see the light of day, I wrote about KTs issue in finding a new club.

Out of the other top 6 Premier League clubs , Newcastle were the only ones in the market for a new left back. They have bought in Chelsea youngster Lewis Hall on loan with an obligation to buy.

Chelsea, Man U, Man City or Liverpool were never really interested in recruiting the Scotsman.

As you went down the league, more clubs would close their door on him.

Aston Villa have Lucas Digne, a move to Tottenham is a non-starter, and he is just not a Brighton sort of player.

That left him with the likes of West Ham, Fulham, Crystal Palace and other mid-lower league teams. Moved that KT clearly did not want to make.

Whilst Sociedad are not one of Spain’s big names, they have established themselves in the top 6 in La Liga over the last few years seasons.

They have now finished top 6 four seasons on the bounce. Last year they finished 4th which saw them qualify for the Champions League.

Reports are Sociedad will pay his full wages, as well as a long fee that could be as high as £5m.

KT will get to play regular first team football again, including in the Champions League, and remind potential buyers in 2024 just how good a left back he is.

Good luck to him.

The other one with one foot out the door is Folarin Balogun.

Whilst it is good luck to Tierney, it is more good riddance to Flo.

Balogun should have returned from his season on loan with France, got his head down in pre-season training and worked hard. That would have led him to get chances to show what he can do in the friendlies and force his way up the pecking order at Arsenal.

Instead, he returned from his loan move and made it very clear that he wanted first team football or was going to leave.

It showed a player who was not willing to work for it. That thought he deserved to be given it. And it is no wonder Arteta basically showed him the door.

He is clearly a young man that thinks he deserves an opportunity without firstly working for it. His decision to change allegiances highlights this.

For England, he had Harry Kane, Ivan Toney, Ollie Watkins and Tammy Abraham ahead. Instead of backing up a good 6 months, he moaned to the press that he was not getting a chance and then switched his allegiances.

But he did not opt for the nation of his parents, like so many players with African heritage do. He opted for America.

With Victor Osimhen, Kelechi Iheanacho, Taiwo Awonyi and Emmanuel Dennis, Nigeria are not short of a decent striker. Balogun was not guaranteed getting into their squad.

So he chose the easy option of playing for America, a team whom he would walk straight in for. And suddenly on social media he began promoting himself as “Mr America“, despite having never even previously mentioned Independence Day or Thanksgiving.

Back at Arsenal, I was always concerned about his snide posts on social media.

There was a time last season (I think, my memory is a little fuzzy), when Eddie Nketiah missed a good chance. That evening Balogun posted up a compilation of goals he had scored.

Then over the summer, whilst training on his own prior to returning to Arsenal, he released a video of him working out in an Inter Milan shirt. It was a clear “come and get me” plea.

So Balogun, who thought he was good enough to start for Arsenal, is on the verge of joining Monaco for £40m.

Last season, Monaco finished 6th in Ligue 1 and are not even in Europe for this campaign.

Why did no better team come in for Balogun? Were they concerned with his attitude? Were they unable to offer him the guarantees of first team football that he demanded after 1 senior season?

I am sure he will do well in France. Score 20 league goals again. But as we know scoring in France is much easier than the Premier League.

It will be interesting to follow his career. Where he goes next after Monaco.

Will a big European club come on for him? Or will he end up at the West Ham or Crystal Palace’s of this world? Clubs he probably looked down his nose at and scoffed when he was told of their interest.

Big talent, but big ego as well. Goodbye.

Have a great Friday!

Keenos