Newcastle draw highlights Arteta’s room for improvement

We are potentially going to be accused of being over critical with this blog. We are top of the league. Flying. Mikel Arteta is paying back the support the likes of ourselves gave him during those dark days of 2020.

But just because you are top of the league, does not mean you can not improve. Likewise, you can be the best manager in the world, the best footballer, best cricketer, best boxer, and so on and there is always room for improvement.

Those that think they have “made it” in any walk of life and stop looking for ways to improve will quickly find their career stall and others overtake them. You can quickly go from Sales Goldenboy to Mr Average by resting on your laurels.

We failed to breakdown Newcastle over 90 minutes, and whilst these results will always happen no matter how good you are (Man City got 99 points last season, but failed to score against Crystal Palace and Southampton. Failed to beat either over the 4 matches too), you can always learn more from poor results than victorious.

The result pointed out a few flaws that Arteta will know he needs to work on.

Trusting the bench

Mikel Arteta works hard with his starting XI, and has the belief that they will breakdown any opponent playing his way. You need to have that confidence (or arrogance) as a top manager.

But you also need to recognise when the team you put out does not have the key to unlock an opponent and make the relevant changes.

Too often during his reign, Arteta fails to make the changes in attacking positions when we are struggling to break down an opponent.

Now I know against Newcastle we were without Emile Smith Rowe and Gabriel Jesus, and our attacking options off the bench were limited, but this did not mean we could not have changed it up.

Fabio Vieira for Granit Xhaka would have been the obvious attacking option.

We would have sacrificed a little of Xhaka’s steel and determination in defence for Vieira’s creativity.

The Portuguese magician would have given us another creative outlet. He is also a fantastic striker of the ball. Vieira would have been able to pick up pockets of space to create or shoot that Xhaka would not have found.

This is not a slant on Xhaka. He has been fantastic this season. But Vieira is just more naturally attacking.

Now I get that Arteta keeping Xhaka on gave us that extra bit of defensivness – especially at corner which were Newcastle’s only real threat. But I have always been of the view that a draw is not much better than a defeat.

Better to lose going for a win, than draw due to trying not to lose.

We also had Marquinhos on the bench.

It would have been a big call to take off either Martinelli or Saka, but that is what a manger will have to do.

Arsene Wenger’s most substituted player was Dennis Bergkamp.

The Iceman was always the striker sacrficed when we were winning; and also the man taking off when we wanted to change up the forward line. Wenger would also take off Robert Pires and / or Freddie Ljungberg if it was not quite working out for them.

Could Marquinhos have added some fresh energy in the closing 10-minutes? Provided a different attacking option? Taken advantage of a tiring Newcastle defence?

These sort of games are so often won by a substitute, fresh off the bench, a 10-minute cameo against a side that has been backs to the wall for 80-minutes.

Arteta has regularly played with almost the same starting XI this season. He very rarely rotates. And it was the same last season.

In 2021/22, he continually played Alex Lacazette, despite the Frenchman clearly not being up to speed.

It was only a injury that saw Eddie Nketiah come in for him. Eddie would score 5 goals in the last 7 games of the season.

I think Arteta becomes a little obsessed with his first XI”. He works so hard with them, so close with them, that he almost does not trust those other players who are part of the first team squad. That leads him to subconsciously think that they can not do a job.

If we are to become regular title challengers, Arteta needs to not be afraid of taking off Saka, Martinelli, Jesus or anyone else.

Arteta made a single sub against Newcastle – Ben White going off for Takehiro Tomiyasu.

There is no point spending £40million on Fabio Vieira to add extra creativity, to then not use him.

Changing tactics

As the Newcastle game went on, Arsenal continued to use the same key to try and open the lock. Arteta did not change the game plan up.

This goes hand in hand with the substitutions. It is really hard to change what the team on the pitch are doing if you are not using what is on your bench.

Oleksandr Zinchenko playing as an inverted full back has been a success this season.

He drops inside alongside Thomas Partey, and then is also given the freedom to push on. But playing like this, he rarely gets chalk on his boots and makes a run outside his winger.

At times against Newcastle, we were too congested on the left-hand side.

Martinelli would cut inside on his right, Xhaka would be in a more advanced position, joined by Zinchenko. There was no one making a run round the outside.

Could Arteta have bought on Kieran Tierney and played him as an orthodox wing back? The Scotsman is fantastic at hitting the byline and cutting the ball back.

Bringing Tierney on would have represented a small tactical change.

Xhaka would have gone a little deeper, providing Tierney the cover when he bombs forward. Martinelli would have then tucked a little more inside which would create the space for KT to run around the outside.

Tierney, having hit the touchline, would then have Martinelli, Nketiah, Odegaard and Saka in the box as options to pick out.

I felt whilst watching the game that this was an obvious change to make which would have slightly changed up our tactics.

“Plan B” should never just be about “stick a big man on and pump balls in to the box”. It should just be a subtle change. One that does not do too much to change the shape of the team, but does change the point of attack.

So much went through Saka on the right and Martinelli on the left. Putting Tierney on could have made the difference.


Against Newcastle, Arteta had two obvious options to try and change up our attack.

Maintain the formation and swap Xhaka for Vieira.
Change the tactics and swap Zinchenko for Tierney.

He did neither and we drew 0-0.

I am not being overly critical. We are top of the league. But as mentioned at the top of the blog, you continue improving by moving forward. And in game tactical changes and using his substitutes is certainly something Arteta can work on.

Arteta is still just 40. He has managed just 155 games. He has the drive and determination to improve. But he will make mistakes.

Having Arteta as manager is a bit like having an 18-year-old Bukayo Saka. You know how good he is, but have to accept he is still young and learning. And that as long as he keeps learning, he will become a superstar.

Top of the league and here I am lecturing the table topping manager on how to use his substitutes and change tactics. The arrogance of me!

Have a good Sunday.

Keenos

Another day, another referee…

English referees being awful is not exactly breaking news.

VAR was supposed to make on-field decisions more consistent, but all they have done is add further decision makers which leads to even more inconsistencies.

Now we did not fail to score against Newcastle United due to the referee. The 0-0 was because they defended gallantly with 11 men behind the ball, and we could not break them down.

But on another day, we would have had a penalty. And this is my issue with inconsistent decision making.

Throughout the game Andrew Madley penalised players that pulled back opponents – both Eddie Nketiah and Martin Odegaard were booked for pull an opponents shirt in and around the half-way line.

Once the referee sets a precedent during a game that any pull on an opponent is a foul, he needs to stick to it. And this is also where VAR needs to become more advanced.

The VAR should mimick the style of the ref in the middle of the pitch. Whilst the man in the van might not give a foul (or yellow card) for a minor shirt pull, he should follow the lead of the on pitch ref. If the on pitch ref is penalising those things, VAR should.

Likewise, if the on-field ref is letting things go,the VAR should adjust accordingly.

Once Madley has begun penalising players (with yellow cards) for a shirt pull, then he has to give a penalty. And if he misses the pull, VAR should award it to keep officiating of the game consistent.

Time wasting in the game is also one of my biggest bugbares. And the inconsistent punishment of time wasting is even more annoying.

Apparantly the ball was reportedly in play for a total of 43:17 seconds in Arsenal vs Newcastle. Yet no one was booked (on the field at least) for time wasting.

Against Brighton, Gabriel Magalhães was booked in first half injury time for time wasting.

Also during that game, Aaron Ramsdale was being given the “hurry up” by the referee at goalkicks from the first minute.

Meanwhile at Newcastle, Madley did not speak to Nick Pope despite him taking over a minute at times to take a goalkick. Nor did any player get a booking for time wasting.

Referees are inconsistent when it comes to punishing time wasting. And it always seems that those “backs against the walls defensive teams” are allowed to time waste more. Almost as if refs “accept” that it is part of their game and allow them to do it.

Meanwhile it is your top teams who often get penalised for it. Refs punishing them for not continuing to play their free flowing game and just doing what their opponents have probably done for 70 minutes.

The amount of times I have seen a keeper at a lower team time waste for 80 minutes, does not get booked, concede a late goal, and then the keeper of the leading team time wastes once and gets booked.

All fans ask for is consistent refereering – whether that be fans of Arsenal or elsewhere.

Between now and the end of the season, Gabriel or William Saliba will make similar to contact as to Dan Burn on Gabriel and the ref will point to the penalty spot. Likewise Aaron Ramsdale will be booked for time wasting, despite taking less than half the time over a goal kick than Pope did on Tuesday.

We somehow managed to keep 11-men on the field Tuesday, despite Madley giving out cards like he had realised the ones he sent before Christmas were still stuck in Royal Mail’s back log.

He lost control of the game for both teams. And you always know when the ref is bad when players of both teams are continually surrounding him.

We can take the influence of the ref out of the equation by creating more chances – and scoring those that we create. But this does not make inconsistent decision making by the man in black any less frustrating.

Even if we won Tuesday, I would still be unhappy with the refs performance.

Keenos

So Toon pegged us back. It’s no nail in the coffin.

In the aftermath of our admittedly disappointing draw to Newcastle, some have wondered whether our apparently fragile and temporary table position has started to slip. Having missed a chance at going ten points clear, we now sit just eight above City pending their match at Stamford Bridge after which our lead may have shrunk to as little as five. Clearly, we should consider looking to the heavens to see if the sky is falling or, alternately, if pigs are flying. 

It’s easier to suspect the former idiom after we’ve dropped points for the first time since 23 October and just third time all season. Is this then the first wobble that portends a deeper fall? From our point of view, it’s easy to let those old feelings of doubt creep in. After all, for as high as we’re flying, we’ve spent the last decade or dreading what felt like inevitable collapse, be it an unfortunate early goal conceded, a horror tackle, or an epic, disastrous defeat. We’d watch as players on the pitch let their shoulders slump and chins drop. We’ve only had a few precious months to exorcise years of existential dread; it’s normal to feel murmurs of that same dread.

How to dispel them? Let’s drag out that latter idiom. Ever since we rose to the top of the table, various pundits (especially of the Mancunian variety) have held that Arsenal will win the Prem when pigs fly. However, they’re trying to have their cake and eat it while talking out of two orifices at once. On one hand, they’re touting Newcastle as a serious contender for a top-three finish at a mininum. On the other, they’re crowing about how this draw strikes a fatal wound to our own campaign. It can’t really be both. Sharing a point with a top-three rival is…normal if not preferable. If it had been, say, relegation fodder like Everton that came in and snatched a draw, that would be a different story—but that’s such a laughably unimaginable scenario that one wonders why I’d even mention it. 

The reality then is that  this result does offer some legitimacy to Newcastle’s status  but does not much away from ours. Only one club have beaten Newcastle, and that was away to Liverpool. This draw marks the sixth straight clean sheet Newcastle have kept, and they barely did so on Tuesday. Had we been just a bit sharper, especially in those first 15 minutes, or if Madley had remembered that he liked punishing shirt tugs (which he booked Nketiah and Ødegaard for in the first half), we might have come away with a comfy win.

Newcastle played like they were Pulis-era Stoke with a bigger budget. Those are the kinds of tactics that used to intimidate and unsettle us. This squad, however, is made of sterner stuff, greater conviction, and deeper desire. For as young as they are, these players rise to challenges. Conceding a goal seems to anger them. I suspect that dropping points at home with inspire them that much more. It’s almost a pity that we have to wait almost ten days to properly show how we react to setback.

Jon

Jon Shay manages his own blog, Woolwich 1886, and you can find him on Twitter at @LeftLegOLiam