Match report: Arsenal 1-2 Brighton

Arsenal (0) 1 Brighton and Hove Albion (1) 2

Premier League

Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU

Saturday, 9th April 2022. Kick-off time: 3.00pm

(4-3-3) Aaron Ramsdale; Cédric Soares, Ben White, Gabriel Magalhães, Granit Xhaka; Martin Ødegaard, Albert Sambi Lokonga, Emile Smith-Rowe; Bukayo Saka, Alexandre Lacazette, Gabriel Martinelli.

Substitutes: Bernd Leno, Rob Holding, Nicolas Pépé, Nuno Tavares, Mohamed Elneny, Eddie Nketiah, Miguel Azeez, Zak Swanson, Omari Hutchinson.

Scorers: Martin Ødegaard (89 mins)

Yellow Cards: Bukayo Saka

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 65%

Referee: David Coote

Assistant Referees: Ian Hussin, Nick Hopton

Fourth Official: Robert Jones

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Chris Kavanagh; AVAR Sian Massey-Ellis

Attendance: 60,112

For this afternoon’s match with Brighton, we will be without Thomas Partey after he sustained a thigh injury in last Monday’s defeat to Crystal Palace. Sadly, both full-backs Takehiro Tomiyasu and Kieran Tierney remain out of contention for this match, with the latter undergoing surgery on his injured left knee this week. Today’s game is yet another crucial must-win match (they all are at this stage of the season, of course) as we need to keep up the pressure if we are to finish in the top four Premiership places in a couple of months’ time.

Immediately from the kick-off, we took the match to the visitors when Lewis Dunk was put under pressure by Alexandre Lacazette, but somehow managed to pass it back to Robert Sanchez safely. The match appeared to have a strange atmosphere about it quite early on, almost an end-of-season feel, when players won and lost the ball quite casually, which is quite alarming, to be fair. Our supporters also feel this, as they tried to lift the spirits of the players by chanting and singing, but they do look rather sluggish in the early stages. On the twenty-fourth minute, there was a great chance for Bukayo Saka as the ball was pulled back from Gabriel Martinelli, but sadly Emile Smith-Rowe did not get a shout until it was too late and ended up getting in his way, which was unfortunate. A couple of minutes later, Bukayo Saka curled in a superb ball from a free-kick and it landed right on the head of Gabriel at the back post; it looked like a certain goal, as he was so close, but somehow it went into the side-netting. Just before the half hour mark, we went one down when a loose ball found Enock Mwepu, who quickly slotted it back to Leandro Trossard; he merely controlled the ball and whacked it into the top right corner from an unmarked position in our own penalty area. The goal appeared to wake the match up a bit, and after a period of huffing and puffing, a good chance came to us eight minutes before half-time when a Granit Xhaka pass bounced off Enock Mwepu and quite naturally came to Emile Smith-Rowe, who attempted to take a shot, but Yves Bissouma ran across the penalty area to get a crucial block on it at the last minute. Although the visitors put us under pressure, it was us that provided the talking point just before the break. A corner from Bukayo Saka was headed back across the goal by Gabriel, and out of nowhere, Gabriel Martinelli was on the goal-line to help it over but there were strong appeals from Brighton for offside. The Stockley Park VAR team appeared to take an age to make a decision, but when they did (after an outragous four minutes), they decreed that the goal should be cancelled out for offide, which was a rather flat way of going into the break.

Literally just minutes after the restart, Albert Sambi Lokonga was brought down by Enock Mwepu just outside the penalty area and as such, we were awarded a free-kick in a very good position indeed; however, disappointingly Cédric Soares’ free-kick went straight into the Brighton wall and bounced off one of our players for a goal kick, and then Bukayo Saka received a yellow card for simulation from referee David Coote. We dominated possesion for a while, and after a corner, Ben White almost got on the end of a dipping ball from the right but he could only flick it past over and beyond his team-mates. We retained possession well and switched it across the back and shortly afterwards Cédric Soares cut the ball back to Martin Ødegaard and his shot was deflected behind for a corner. A very frustrating period for the boys. In order to zip things up at the front, Emile Smith-Rowe was replaced by Eddie Nketiah with nearly thirty minutes of the match remaining, and a couple of minutes later, Bukayo Saka wasted a great chance to score when his shot flew way over the visitors’ crossbar, which was very frustrating to say the least. Twenty-four mintues before the end of the match, the unthinkable happened. Again. After some good link-up play out on the left wing by Brighton players, Moises Caicedo cut the ball back to Enock Mwepu and he fired a strong shot past Aaron Ramsdale and into the bottom left corner of the net. Disastrous. The crowd at the Emirates started to show their dissent, as the match descended into a bit of a kicking match from both sides. As the match started to move towards its obvious conclusion, we appeared to wake up. Bukayo Saka moved in towards the Brighton goal out on the left wing, and then cut it back towards Nicolas Pépé (who replaced Gabriel Martinelli a few minutes earlier), but Robert Sanchez got just enough on it and Tariq Lamptey clears it with the help of Lewis Dunk, and then Albert Sambi Lokonga absolutely smashed one from around twenty-five yards and it whizzed just past the top right corner and into the crowd. Unblievable drama when Martin Ødegaard’s free-kick was tipped onto the crossbar by the goalie. It somehow rebounded to Eddie Nketiah and he volleyed it onto the crossbar and into the crowd. How unlucky were we? Two minutes from the end of the match, Martin Ødegaard, who hit the bar just seconds earlier, absolutely belted the ball from long range and it deflected off former Gunner Danny Welbeck and into the top left corner of the net. An excellent goal in anybody’s book, no doubt about it. In the six minutes injury time, despite some pressure and some great efforts from both Bukayo Saka and Albert Sambi Lokonga, the match ended in our tenth Premiership defeat of the season. Woe.

Overall, it was the final act of a terrible week for Arsenal Football Club at the wrong end of the season. Two defeats (both in London), two of our key players out of action for the foreseeable future, and a massive doubt hanging over our Champions League credentials, which, this time last week, was seemingly flying high and bolted on. A week is certainly is a long time in football. We may well had sixty-five per cent possession, but the stark fact that out of twenty shots on the visitors’ goal only four were on target, speaks volumes for our forwards today. At times we were extremely lacklustre, to say the least, and the last thing we need at this time is to start a bad run of results, because at this point in the season, we may not recover in time to grab a European place at the end of the campaign. We need to beat Southampton convincingly at St. Mary’s next Saturday (as Chelsea did today) in order to put this brace of bad results behind us. Or else.

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: Southampton at St. Mary’s Stadium on Saturday, 16th April 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.

Why Saturday 3pm is so important

It feels odd writing a quick blog before heading out to a Saturday 3pm game.

Today’s game against Brighton is our 3rd home one of the season.

Those that do not go games often wonder why we bang on so much about Saturday 3pm kick offs.

We love Saturday 3pm’s because they are great for our football / life balance.

3pm means we are not having to get up early doors to head to a lunchtime kick off. Head still fuzzy from the Friday post-office drinks.

It means we can get up in a leisurely manner, do a few chores, have a full English before heading out around lunch time. Usually for a 1pm meet in a pub.

2 or 3 pints before the game is enough to keep the cold off, but not too much that you do not remember the game.

Post game, 3pm kick offs what it is all about too.

Head straight to the pub after the game, 4 or 5 pints takes you to around 7pm. Home by 8pm which is still early enough to take the misses out for diner (or in my case order a takeaway).

A 5:30pm kick off means that you either have to sacrifice those post match beers or, more likely, you still have that 4 or 5 pints, stroll in at 10.30pm and get sent to the spare room!

With the game on Saturday it also leaves you for family time on Sunday. Bit of gardening and a Sunday roast. It keeps everyone happy.

When we play on a Sunday you lose that family time, and then wake up on Monday morning for work still fuzzy.

Saturday 3pm is just perfect.

You can have a good pre and post game drink up and still go out for dinner after the game.

Those who sit at home watching the game on a dodgy laptop stream will never understand the importance of a 3pm Saturday kick off.

I am off to the café. Have a great game.

Keenos

What is rarer than a Tottenham trophy win?

Arsenal playing at home at Saturday 3pm!

I jest, this is our 3rd Saturday 3pm game in Islington this season. Tottenham have not won a trophy in 14 years. We have played at home on a Saturday 3pm at least 40 times in that period!

It is another big weekend of football and I am already buzzing – mainly because WE HAVE A SATURDAY 3PM HOME GAME!

Tottenham are away to Aston Villa.

Villa are in awful form so I do not expect Spurs to drop anything in Birmingham. But in what has been a crazy season anything could happen!

Likewise Arsenal should wipe the floor with Brighton. But it feels like they have been a bit of a bogey team for us in recent seasons.

The race for top 4 will continually to swing widely as the season comes to a close there will be ups and downs for all involved.

West Ham’s European journey could help us out.

They are still on the coat tails of us and that lot up the road. Having drawn last night and with the second leg next week, surely they will test and rotate for their weekend game? They do not test have the squad depth to do that with success.

We should all be backing West Ham to get through.

The semi-final tie’s are the Thursday before and after when we are due to play them. If they are still in the competition surely they will be sacrificing Premier League position for a shot at their first ever European trophy?

If West Ham rest and rotate against us, what is a tricky away day could become a formality.

Top 4 is in our hands. Ultimately we need 72 points to finish 4th.

Ignore the negative talk from Sky and others after our defeat to Crystal Palace. It was literally our first away in 6 games.

One game does not dictate form. I would rather look at our 15 points from 18 away games to fully understand where we are.

Back the team tomorrow. Let’s get another 3 point win the big. And have a good drink up after.

Up The Arsenal.

Keenos