Tag Archives: She Wore A Yellow Ribbon

Match Report: Arsenal 1 – 3 Manchester United

Arsenal (1) 1 Manchester United (2) 3
FA Cup Fourth Round
Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU
Friday, 25th January 2019. Kick-off time: 7.55pm
(4-2-3-1) Čech; Maitland-Niles, Sokratis, Koscielny, Kolašinac; Xhaka, Torreira; Ramsey, Iwobi; Aubameyang, Lacazette.
Substitutes: Elneny, Özil, Lichtsteiner, Monreal, Leno, Mustafi, Guendouzi
Scorers: Aubameyang, 
Yellow Cards: Koscielny, Kolašinac, Guendouzi
Referee: Craig Pawson
Attendance: 59,571
This is the kind of match that everyone needs to start the series of games which make up the fourth round of the oldest club competition in the world. Quite naturally, reputations and memories of previous meetings between these two clubs come to mind, but tonight the only thing on everyone’s mind is a place in the next round of the cup; apart from the return of the controversial Alexis Sánchez in a Manchester United shirt, of course.
Right from the start, you could feel the nervous tension in the stadium; as early as the seventh minute, Petr Čech was called into action when he spread himself at the feet of Paul Pogba to neutralise what, at best, could be described as a half chance, but at this level you really cannot take the gamble. Unfortunately, after ten minutes on the clock, Sokratis landed awkwardly and twisted his ankle. Although he tried to continue, it became obvious that it would be foolish to do so under the circumstances. And so our first substitution of the night came afater just seventeen minutes played with Shkodran Mustafi replacing him in the defence. A few minutes later, Alex Iwobi was desperately unlucky not to open the scoring with some clever passing in the opposition penalty area; ironically, if he had squared the ball to Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang we may have had our noses in front. After half an hour on the clock the unthinkable happened. In a clever movement, Romelu Lukaku slotted the ball through to enfant terrible Alexis Sánchez who coolly rounded Petr Čech to open the scoring for the visitors; just as if that was not bad enough, little more than two minutes later, Romelu Lukaku found space on our left hand side and advancing towards our penalty area, looked across and a quick ball found an unmarked Jesse Lingard who wasted no time in increasing the Manchester United score. Three minutes before half-time, our clever play finally paid off with the soon-to-be departing Aaron Ramsey collecting a ball from the excellent Alex Iwobi, and jinking his way through the United defence, crossed the ball for Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang to get one back for us. Now we started to put some serious moves together, and Alexandre Lacazette was desperately unlucky not to equalise the scores in injury time.Just a minute into the second half we were desperately unlucky not to score with a clever Aaron Ramsey header that Sergio Romero somehow tipped over the bar. This incident spurred both sides to play exciting, end-to-end football with little margin for error. The pace was electric, with Aaron Ramsey showing everyone what a first-class player he really is. A tragic accident that saw Laurent Koscielny walk off the pitch with a nasty head injury which took the heat out of the proceedings, albeit briefly; this also added a further ten minutes on the clock whilst he was being attended to by the Arsenal staff on the pitch. He was replaced by Mattéo Guendouzi, who wasted little time in getting into the swing of things, as did Mesut Özil, who entered the fray in place of Alex Iwobi with 25 minutes left on the clock. With just five minutes left of normal time, and despite pressure on the United goal, Paul Pogba broke away and ran through the middle of Arsenal’s defence; his subsequent shot was parried by Petr Čech, but sadly Anthony Martial was on hand to merely tap the ball into the open Arsenal net. The match now got scrappy with an unsavoury incident between the two sets of players that saw Sead Kolašinac booked, and a poor mis-timed tackle during injury time by Mattéo Guendouzi also saw him enter the referee’s book. And despite one or two attempts on goal by both sides, that was that. 

Things we did well; move forward quickly, good first touch, good spirit and overall a fairly good desire to win. Things we did badly; defend. We also did not having enough awareness of the dangers that the quick Manchester United forwards posed to our defensive shape (if there was one). Mr. Emery is on the right track but needs some top class defenders fairly quickly otherwise we will just continue to be found wanting at the back. Time after time this season, our defence has been in absentia whilst the midfield and attack are doing their very best to win matches with class and style. This situation will be resolved in time, but what damage will be done to the team by then? We simply cannot carry on in this manner, score one, let in two. Or more to the point, win one, lose one. And now we have injuries on top of all this mayhem. Five days and counting until the end of the transfer window for loan deals. Remember everyone, keep the faith, get behind the team and the manager, as these early days are going to be crucial for our future success in all competitions. Stick with the winners. 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.

Manchester United “killed” the FA Cup, Pochettino fails again, Arsenal transfer news and Henry disappoints

FA Cup 4th round tonight as Arsenal face Manchester United.

There is a bed sheet going round on Twitter which states “Friday night TV, 4000 stolen tickets, The FA + Arsenal killing the FA Cup”.

Whilst I understand the sentiment and frustration of the fan, it is extremely misguided.

The FA have not done much to help the FA Cup. They have sold their soul to TV companies at home and abroad meaning that we now have Friday night and Monday night games. In the 3rd round, games were moved from 3pm to lunchtime despite not being on UK TV. This was to give foreign broadcasters a wider choice on who to show.

The rest of the banner is laughable.

Let’s take the tickets firstly.

Manchester United have not given 15% allocation for years. They have hidden behind health and safety and supported by the FA, so to talk about “stolen tickets” is a joke. Maybe they should petition their own club first to give away fans the right and proper ticket allocation?

Once Man U begins doing so, they might find other clubs doing the same to them.

Also he needs to question his fellow fans.

One of the problems at the Emirates is club level and executive boxes between upper and lower tier. This means that on FA Cup games, you could have away fans above and below Arsenal fans in the middle. This would be OK if fans could behave themselves, but they can not.

There have been numerous stories over the years of fans in club level being spat on, coins being thrown and, disgustingly, cups of urine dropped from the upper tier. If you can not behave yourself, do not expect to get a full ticket allocation.

As for killing the FA Cup, let me take your mind back to 1999.

Manchester United had just won the Champions League, completing a historic treble. They were due to take part in the inaugural World Team Championship. It take place between the 4th and 15th of January, meaning that they would miss FA Cup 3rd Round day.

Mancheaster United accepted an offer from the FA to not play in the cup.

The FA wanted United to play in the new tournament in Brazil – because they believe it could aid England’s 2006 World Cup bid. England lost their bid and Man U did not even make it out of their group.

It was that day the cup died.

Both Man U and the FA decided that the competition was low priority. That teams could just “skip” it to play elsewhere. So if United fans want someone to blame for “killing the FA Cup”, by all means blame the FA, but also blame your own club.

Manchester United are more to blame for the dying FA Cup than any other side.

In other news Tottenham confirmed it would be 11 years without a trophy last night as they crashed out of the League Cup to Chelsea.

I had to laugh during the game as the caption came up on the screen when Sky showed Maurico Pochettino and Maurizio Sarri.

Pochettino’s said “252nd game in charge of Spurs” whilst Sarri’s said “Still yet to win his first major honour”. It was the same captions in the first league.

This highlights the pro-Tottenham agenda within the media.

Yes, Sarri is still looking for his first major honour, but so is Pochettino. Why is it relevant to mention it about the Chelsea manager, but not the Tottenham? It is almost like the media are trying to hide the fact the Pochettino is in his 10th season as a manager, his 5th at Spurs, and has nothing to show for it.

As for those saying “he is only 46”. Well before Unai Emery is only 47-years-old. At 46 he had already won 3 Europa League’s with Sevilla and 7 trophies with PSG in France.

It is clear who the serial winner is…

Arsenal have been lined with PSG central midfielder Christopher Nkunku.

I would normally have written this off as his agent linking his client with Arsenal to get him in the British press – with the hope of a move to a Premier League club. However the move has been confirmed by David Ornstein.

A few have said “but what abut Ainsley Maitland-Niles”., and they do have a point.

On paper Nkunku and Maitland-Niles do seem similar. Central midfielders who are versatile, and the same age. But we should not see it as Nkunku replacing Maitland-Niles, but repalcing Ramsey.

Emery clearly likes playing 3 central midfielders. As it stands we have Lucas Torreira, Granit Xhaka, Matteo Guendouzi, Mohamed Elneny and Maitland-Niles. We ideally need 6 if we are going to play 3, so we need to buy.

Rather than go for an ageing talent in Ever Banega, we are targeting a youngster with talent. This is the type of recruitment we need to get back to. Players under 25 who can develop, rather than on established players who command a high wage and have no sell on value.

And Nkunku would also be a replacement for Elneny.

We get Nkunku, we then have 4 central midfielders who are 22 or under – with Xhaka the elder statesman at just 26. It would then be an area of the park that we would not have to invest in for a couple of years.

Finally sad news from France.

Thierry Henry has been sacked by Monaco.

It does not come as much of a surprise. Monaco was a sinking ship having got into bed again with Jorge Mendes. They moved away from what had won them the league – signing and developing bright young talent – and returned to signing ageing has-beens.

It was a tough job for Henry to take. One that he was always likely to struggle at. He has not helped himself with some of his comments, however you can see his frustration with some of the overpaid senior players.

Some people are saying “thank god we didn’t employ Henry” but to judge him on his first job would not make sense.

Henry clearly loves the game, and has a lot to give. Monaco was just the wrong job.

He could do with going to a club filled with young talent, where he can develop that talent – both the bodies and mind. A bit like what Frank Lampard is doing at Derby. I hope he gets another chance.

Keenos

FA Cup more important than finishing 4th

For a long time now I have not really cared about the top 4.

Yes, I understand the money involved in making (or not making) it, and that some of our financial restrictions at the moment are due to a £30million black hole where the Champions League television money used to be, but I really do not care.

Finishing 4th and trophyless is a nothing season. We did it for it for 8 years between 2006 and 2013. Not winning a trophy each year hurt. It was boring. Top 4 is not a trophy.

It is interesting how things have changed since that barren run for Arsenal.

We were rightly criticised for treating top 4 like a trophy. For celebrating it as one, whilst not actually winning any real trophies. Role forward 5 years from the end of that trophy drought and we see the media treating top 4 very differently.

The likes of Tottenham and Liverpool are now heavily praised for finishing top 4, without a trophy. It has become a barometer of success. Something to strive for.

Since Arsenal’s trophy drought began (2006), the pair have won 2 League Cups between them. Yet that is ignored in the press and their top 4 places are celebrated.

Give me a trophy, whether it is the League Cup, FA Cup or Europa League, over finishing top 4 any day of the week.

And tomorrow we have a chance to progress in the FA Cup against Manchester United.

With the race for top 4 hotting up – 7 points separate 3rd and 6th, it would be easy for Unai Emery to rotate the squad tomorrow and play a B team. He has refrain from doing so an put out the strongest team possible. Progression is key.

We do not play another game until Tuesday, that is a 3 day rest. We play Cardiff at home.

Whilst no games in the Premier League are a “gimmy”, a game at home to Cardiff who have won just once away in the league all season is a much easier fixture than Manchester United in the FA Cup.

If needs be, against Cardiff, rest a couple of players. But do not do it in the FA Cup.

In other news, the “will he won’t he” transfer saga of Denis Suarez rumbles on. Will he sign? Won’t he sign? Do I care?

We also had some glorious clickbait journalism yesterday:

https://twitter.com/KeenosAFC/status/1088007091384733696

Both articles were about Emiliano Martinez joining Reading on loan for the rest of the season…

Enjoy your Thursday and Up The Arsenal.

Keenos