Liverpool are where Arsenal strive to be

Wednesday went how I kind of expected then.

We competed for nearly an hour, but then Liverpool’s quality showed.

It was a bit of a sliding doors moment. Alisson made a world class save to deny Martin Odergaard, then minutes later Aaron Ramsdale let in a soft attempt from Diego Jota.

On Ramsdale, I have seen a few fans get on his back in recent weeks. This is just crazy and I put it down to these fans searching for an outlandish opinion to appear edgy, to appear different.

Ramsdale is a class keeper and we should be delighted to have him.

Wednesday showed why Liverpool are chasing the title and we are chasing top 4.

Despite our clear and obvious improvements this season, they are still better than us in every department.

Take Alisson and Ramsdale.

Ramsdale is a fantastic young keeper, but Alisson is just that level above. He is a world class performer.

And across the pitch it is very much the same.

Gabriel is fantastic, but Virgil van Dijk is better. Bukayo Saka is fantastic, but Mo Salah is better. Gabriel Martinelli is fantastic. But Sadio Mane is better.

The exciting thing though is that everyone in the Arsenal team is young and will improve.

Ramsdale, Gabriel, Saka, Martinelli, etc should be looking at their elder Liverpool counterparts and believing that they can reach that level. And if they do (and remain at Arsenal), we will be title contenders sooner rather than later.

Even at management level, Jurgen Klopp is a better manager than Mikel Arteta. But Klopp is 54 and has managed close to 1,000 games. Arteta is 39 and managed 120.

Like in the playing department, as long as Arteta keeps working on himself he will become one of the best managers in world football.

The strength of the benches also showed the gulf between the teams.

Liverpool were able to bring on the likes of Mo Salah and Firmino. They also had the likes of Konata, Kieta and Gomes on the bench.

Meanwhile Arsenal had a bench of mainly youngsters.

Yes, some might say we only have ourselves to blame having let go so many senior players over the last 8 to 10 months. But this was needed.

Arteta and Edu needed to rebuild what was an underperforming, overpaid squad.

To do that they first needed to get rid of those senior players that were costing us too much on and off the pitch.

Now that many of these have been shipped out, we can continue the rebuild that started last summer. Focusing on signing those young, hungry players.

Liverpool again show us the way in how to do this.

Look at the transfer activity from when Klopp took over in 2015.

Out went older, underperforming players, and in came younger, more talented ones.

This continued for a couple of years. Every player that left was replaced by someone younger and better.

They spent a year out of Europe as they finished as low as 8th, and then rebuilt to finish 4th a couple of times in a row.

In his 3rd full season Klopp lead his side to Champions League victory and his 4th full season they won the Premier League.

Now next year will be Arteta’s 3rd full season. I am not expecting him to win us the Champions League.

But Liverpool show that when you have a good manager, good coaching and a good transfer policy, you can compete with those mega-rich clubs.

As long as Arteta continues to improve those young players (and himself) and Edu continues to buy better players than what we are selling, the gap to Liverpool and Manchester City will continue to close.

The race for top 4 will be tight. But we are still leading the way.

On to Aston Villa.

Keenos

MATCH REPORT: Arsenal 0-0 Liverpool

Arsenal (0) 0 Liverpool (0) 2

Premier League

Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU

Wednesday, 16th March 2022. Kick-off time: 8.15pm

(4-2-3-1) Aaron Ramsdale; Cédric Soares, Ben White, Gabriel Magalhães, Kieran Tierney; Thomas Partey, Granit Xhaka; Bukayo Saka, Martin Ødegaard, Gabriel Martinelli; Alexandre Lacazette.

Substitutes: Bernd Leno, Emile Smith-Rowe, Rob Holding, Nicolas Pépé, Nuno Tavares, Albert Sambi Lokonga, Mohamed Elneny, Eddie Nketiah, Zak Swanson.

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 49%

Referee: Andre Marriner

Assistant Referees: Simon Long, Scott Ledger

Fourth Official: Andy Madley

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR John Brooks; AVAR Marc Perry

Attendance: 59,968

There’s no doubt about it, an Arsenal versus Liverpool match certainly raises the hairs on the back of your neck. Anything that involves these two leviathans of the English game demands the interest of supporters and football pundits from around the world, and tonight’s match is no exception. Both clubs insist on victory; we need it to propel ourselves to within five points of third place Chelsea, and our visitors need a win to take them to within a point of leaders Manchester City. All to play for.

The match started at a frenetic pace, and the very early stages were played out in our penalty area with the visitors winning two or three corner kicks within no time at all, which thankfully came to nothing. We then managed to breakout and although Bukayo Saka did well, Andy Robertson slid in to gain the ball back. There were lots of strong tackling from both teams as an end-to-end match was being played out by two very committed sets of players. Trent Alexander-Arnold slotted a ball down the line but Kieran Tierney was there ahead of Sadio Mane, thankfully, with the Liverpool forward pressed our full-back but it deflected straight out for a goal kick. A couple of minutes later, Gabriel passed the ball firmly to Gabriel Martinelli, who flicked it on and he made chase down the left-hand side of the pitch, and passed it over into the middle of the visitors’ penalty area; Joel Matip left it and Andy Robertson hooked it away a few yards out from his own goal. Gabriel Martinelli then managed to sprint back to beat Trent Alexander-Arnold to Jordan Henderson’s pass to neutralise any possible danger, which was good and quick thinking by our man from Brazil. After twenty minutes, the ball came to Cédric Soares in the middle of the pitch and he took a snap shot at the Liverpool goal, but it went wide of the mark by a couple of metres. A large percentage of the match was being played in the midfield area, with very few shots on goal taken by either side. Just after the half hour mark, Alexandre Lacazette held up the ball well on the left hand side, slotted it back to Granit Xhaka, whose left-footed shot went narrowly wide of Alisson’s left-hand post. We were playing well with and without the ball, and our level of desire and commitment tonight is utterly superb. Luis Diaz ran down the wing, and Kieran Tierney outran him and robbed him of the ball, whilst up front, Gabriel Martinelli was turning Trent Alexander-Arnold inside out, and the standard of his play tonight is wonderful to see. When the visitors come forward, our defenders, particularly Ben White, is on hand to clear the danger, making sure that nothing is left to chance. Five minutes before the break, Liverpool won a corner on the left, and Gabriel cleared it, but it fell to Thiago. He did well to send it back in but Aaron Ramsdale easily plucked it out of the air. A minute or so later, referee Andre Marriner blew the whistle for the half-time break, honours even at this point in the match.

We started the proceedings for the second half, in a very important forty-five minutes for both clubs. Within a minute of the restart, Sadio Mane got the ball into our net, but thankfully it was cancelled out for offside. Gabriel Martinelli was truly magical out on the left, beating several Liverpool players, and slotting it across, but sadly no-one was there to knock it into the net. Five minutes after the restart, Thiago gave the ball to Alexandre Lacazette, who teed up Martin Ødegaard and Alisson recovered well to deflect it over the crossbar. A few minutes later, Diego Jota ran onto a through ball from Thiago and shot the ball past Aaron Ramsdale to open the scoring for the visitors, which was totally against the run of play overall. Liverpool came forward again after their goal and grabbed a corner on the left which was cleared to Mohamed Salah on the edge of the box; he rushed the shot as he brought it down then thankfully hit it into Row Z. Just after the hour, Roberto Firmino was in the right place at the right time (for Liverpool) to score the second goal of the evening, sadly. Also, with a two goal cushion, the visitors applied more pressure on our goal, and with twenty-five minutes remaining, Martin Ødegaard was replaced by Emile Smith-Rowe in order for us to try and get something back from this game. A couple of minutes later, Alexandre Lacazette won the ball just inside the Liverpool half. He found Gabriel Martinelli, who tried to cut inside Joel Matip but the Liverpool defender stood firm and won the ball. Bukayo Saka was replaced by Nicolas Pépé after seventy-two minutes, and his substitution appeared to rejuvenate the boys somewhat, and eight minutes later, Eddie Nketiah replaced Alexandre Lacazette to give the team a different shape. The visitors now did what they always do best, which is pure game management. However, Nicolas Pépé wanted a free-kick out on the right which he didn’t get. Thomas Partey went down too, but they had the advantage until Nicolas Pépé won a throw-in. With two minutes remaining of the match, a beautiful Gabriel Martinelli shot brushed by the left hand side of the post, and although the chaps kept coming back at Liverpool, the sands of time were running out for us. In the three minutes injury time, nothing much of any note happened, and we finished the evening with no points for all of our wonderful efforts from our superb young team.

In essence, it was a game of two halves, with our boys being the best side by a mile in the first half, but unfortunately we were unable to capitalise on all of our great efforts. For the second match in a row, Gabriel Martinelli was our man of the match, turning the Liverpool defenders every which way but loose, showing huge amounts of class every time he touched the ball, performing his magic as the game wore on. Of course, we can always say, what would have happened if Martin Ødegaard had scored so early on in the second half, or if Gabriel Martinelli’s shot hadn’t shaved the post but had gone in? Still, these things happen, but overall we showed that we can organise ourselves to threaten a top side, and give them a few scares along the way as well. We were confident, strong and hungry to win, and you cannot ask for more than that against a side such as Liverpool. Undoubtedly we certainly deserved more out of this match than we actually got, and at times it certainly looked like we would. Such a shame, really. Interesting times ahead for us all.

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: Aston Villa at Villa Park on Saturday, 19th March at 12.30pm (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.

3 points needs to be the aim of tonight

Morning.

I have seen some say tonight is a “free hit”.

We are sitting in 4th place and the game against Liverpool is one of our 3 games in hand.

Due to our recent fantastic form – 8 wins in 10 games – Liverpool is no longer a “must win”.

We are in 4th place with 3 games in hand over Manchester United. Even if we lost all 3 games, we would still be ahead of them.

The same goes for West Ham and Wolves.

Tottenham can only draw level on points with us if we fail to get a single point from the 3 games.

That tonight is our second of three games in six days; and comfortably the toughest of the trio.

I have seen some say we should make wholesale changes to keep the important players fresh for Aston Villa on Saturday.

Villa is more winnable than Liverpool. So we sacrifice Wednesday’s game. Resting the likes of Bukayo Saka, Alex Lacazette, Martin Odergaard and Thomas Partey; Leaving them fresh for Saturday?

It is all a load of rubbish really.

We should be looking to win every game we play. We are The Arsenal.

The team showed against Manchester City that we can compete against the top 2. There is no reason we can not get something out of tonight’s game.

Likewise, resting does not guarantee a victory against Aston Villa.

We could sacrifice tonight and end up dropping points at the weekend as well.

Arsenal are the most inform team in the league. 8 wins from the last 10 games. We need to keep this run going. Keep building the momentum.

We have some tricky games coming away – away to Crystal Palace, Southampton, Villa and Newcastle.

These are not games we should be going into expecting a win. That will be naïve of us. Therefore we need to still try to win against Liverpool. And against Tottenham and Chelsea.

Any point we can take in those 3 games in hand is one less point we would need in another tricky game.

So lets go into it positive. Backing the team to win. And get rid of any thought that tonight is a free hit or a game we could throw away.

UTA

Keenos