Tag Archives: She Wore A Yellow Ribbon

Losing is never a positive result – although there might be positives

One thing I hate is when I see fans say “at least it was only 1-0” as if losing by a single goal was a positive.

This mentality shows just how far we have fallen behind the rest.

Gone are the days we would go to Anfield, Stamford Bridge, Old Trafford or Maine Road expecting a win. Now we are satisfied with “not being thrashed”.

I understand that the hammerings we took on the road in those later years have left some fans scared. I was at many of those games. It was horrendous.

However if we are to return to the big time, we need to act like a big club. Get the mentality right.

Being happy that you did not get smashed on the road is a small club mentality. Leave that to the likes of West Ham, Burnley and Newcastle. We are The Arsenal. We should not be happy losing 1-0.

I felt Mikel Arteta got his line-up and game plan spot on.

A few questioned why he changed the centre backs from David Luiz and Gabriel to Rob Holding and Pablo Mari; and why Nicholas Pepe came in for Emile Smite Rowe.

The reasoning was a change in game plan.

When we are looking to dominate a game, to play in the opponents half, we need athletic centre backs who can play in a high line – Luiz and Gabriel.

Against Manchester City, Arteta’s game plan was to defend deep and hit them quick on the break.

It is a tactic which has since us beat Man City, Liverpool, Chelsea and Man U under Arteta.

Holding and Mari are better options when defending deep than Luiz and Gabriel.

Likewise in the middle, if we were going for compact and deep, Mohamed Elneny was a better choice than Dani Ceballos. Extra defensive steel in the middle.

And if we are playing on the break, we want the pace of Pepe rather than the guile of Smith Rowe.

Arteta also got the substitutes spot on.

As we began to dominate the play half way through the second half, he bought on the players who operate better in tight spaces – Smith Rowe & Lacazette; sacrificing Pepe who needs space to run in to.

What Arteta could not legislate for was City scoring in the opening 90 seconds; and the manner of the goal.

A few pundits went over the top, going as far as saying “Sterling outjumped 2 centre backs”. He did not. He outjumped no one.

He found space between Hector Bellerin and Rob Holding.

Bellerin dropped back to follow the run of Bernardo Silva, but clearly did not communicate to Holding that Sterling was behind him and now unmarked.

The ball was floated over, Holding was unaware of the man behind him and that Bellerin was not on him, and Sterling rose unchallenged to score.

It is the run of Bernardo Silva that was clever – had he not made that move outside of Bellerin, Hector would have been tight to Sterling; challenging him in the air.

It is becoming clear what Arteta’s game plan is in these bigger games – defend deep and hit them on the break.

This can lead us to look untidy at the back whilst we play quick, risky passes to go from front to back as fast as possible to avoid City’s high press.

It worked in the FA Cup semi final and it nearly worked Sunday when Bukayo Saka and Kieran Tierney both finding space down the left hand side. The final ball was lacking however.

Manchester City will now run away with the league title.

18 wins in a row in all competitions, and just 6 goals conceded in that time. It is a truly incredible run.

We are moving forward under Arteta, but the mentality of fans needs to move forward with him.

Losing 1-0 should not be a positive. We need to begin going into these games expecting to win.

Up next we are back to the Europa League with a home game in Athens.

Keenos

Why Willian, Why?

Willian is becoming the newest figure of hate for some Arsenal fans. Why they always need to have a player to hurl abuse at is mystifying, but it has something that has happened for decades.

I have always thought that at least when they are getting angry at Willian online or I the stands, at least it stops the blokes taking out their anger on their misses.

The Willian saga is one which the narrative on the season will look back on.

Why did we sign him? Why did we offer him so much money? And such a long contract? And why does Mikel Arteta play him so much?

Well all of those questions are for another blog, another day. I am only going to talk about his appearance versus Leeds United on Sunday and the logic behind Arteta bringing him on.

Firstly let’s bust a myth.

Myth: Arsenal were 4-0 up and cruising before bringing Willian on. We then conceded 2 goals

Truth: Willian actually  came on between Leeds United’s first and 2nd goal; and he certainly could not be blamed for the Yorkshire sides second which came down our right hand side. Willian was playing on the left.

So why did Arteta opt for Willian ahead of Nicolas Pepe and Gabriel Martinelli?

The answer is simple: control.

At 4-0 (when Willian would have been sent to warm up), the game was over, Leeds beaten, demoralised.

Usually in these situations the team leading would end up coasting to the final whistle with about 70% possession, just knocking it about, controlling the game.

The opposition, knowing they will not win, batten down the hatches, do not send men forward like they would at 1 or 2-nil. Defend deep, do not get embarrassed.

The likes of Pepe and Martinelli need space to play in. To run in behind. Both would have been perfect substitutes if the margin was not a 4 (and then 3) goal one.

At a 2 goal margin Leeds would still be motivated to attack, so Arsenal would look to sit deep and hit them on the counter.

But a 3 or 4 goal margin, we are in the previous scenario of Arsenal controlling the game.

And like Willian or not, he is a better passer than both Pepe and Martinelli.

Do not believe me? Let’s look at the statistics:

The fact is, ball retention is Martinelli and Pepe’s weakest asset.

Not only are they the worst of the midfielders for keeping hold of the ball, but when it comes to pass completion ratio, they rank 25th and 27th out of 29. Only keeper Runar Alex Runarsson is worse than the pair, with Cedric Soares splitting them.

So if you want to see a game out, to control the game, to not give away the ball, you do not bring on Martinelli or Pepe.

Of those players who are better at retaining the ball than Willian, 3 were already on the pitch – Granit Xhaka, Dani Cabellos and Martin Odergaard. And with only 60 minutes on, brining Mo Elneny on for Emile Smith Rowe would have been too defensive.

With Thomas Partey injured, Willian for Smith Rowe was the clear and obvious substitution if we wanted to retain control, shape and attacking intent.

At 4-2 up, the Willian substitution looked poor. But as established he was not at fault for either of the goals.

The poor decision was made by Arteta.

He failed to take into account the side he was playing, and who manages them.

Marcelo Bielsa sides do not stop coming at you.

They could be 2-0 up or 4-0 down and they will keep playing one way – throwing men forward.

Arteta should have recognised the man in the other dug out and realised that even at 4-0 or 4-1, Arsenal would get chances on the break. That in this game, pace on the counter would probably have been better than looking for control.

But in 99% of other games, at 4-0 up, you bring on the man that will retain the ball. Pass and move. Move and pass. You do not bring on players with poor ball retention.

Willian was the right substitution but against the wrong opponents.

Keenos

Match Report: Arsenal 4 – 2 Leeds United

Arsenal (3) 4 Leeds United (0) 2

Premier League

Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU

Sunday, 14th February 2021. Kick-off time: 4.30pm

(4-2-3-1) Bernd Leno; Hector Bellerin, David Luiz, Gabriel Magalhães, Cédric Soares; Dani Ceballos, Granit Xhaka; Emile Smith-Rowe, Martin Ødegaard, Bukayo Saka; Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.

Substitutes: Alexandre Lacazette, Willian Borges da Silva, Rob Holding, Nicolas Pépé, Calum Chambers, Pablo Marí, Mohamed Elneny, Mat Ryan, Gabriel Martinelli.

Scorers: Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (13 mins, 41 mins, 46 mins), Hector Bellerin (44 mins)

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 47%

Referee: Stuart Attwell

Assistant Referees: Dan Cook, Simon Long

Fourth Official: Simon Hooper

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Andre Marriner; AVAR Sian Massey-Ellis

Attendance: A maximum of 300 attendees due to UK government coronavirus restrictions

For this rather nervous Valentine’s Day meeting, we are without influential players Kieran Tierney and Thomas Partey due to injury, but Bernd Leno and David Luiz are back after having served their suspensions due to the red cards that they received whilst playing against Wolverhampton Wanderers at Molineux on 2nd February; also good to see Martin Ødegaard and club captain Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang getting a start in our line-up today too. With only one victory in our last five matches, Arsenal desperately need to show serious intent today. Let’s go!

The early chances in the match fell to us, with Emile Smith-Rowe and Hector Bellerin taking a stab at opening the scoring, only to see their efforts go wastefully over the bar and into the blue. However, our midfield players started to show their infuence on the match, winning balls and spraying good, accurate passes to the forwards. Bernd Leno made a great save from Patrick Bamford, when his powerful header looked dangerous, and a minute or so later, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scored the opening goal of the day, when he cut in from the left-hand side after receiving a pass from Granit Xhaka, and drilled the ball firmly past Illan Meslier into the Leeds United net with his trusty right foot after turning former Gunner Luke Ayling inside out. Our captain is back, and with a vengeance, too! The goal completely energised us, and we started to get first into tackles, first to distribute the ball, which was a pleasure to see. The visitors picked up the odd loose ball here and there, and Jack Harrison took a snap shot on the twenty-fifth minute as a result of this, but Bernd Leno had it well covered, thankfully. On the half-hour, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang was unlucky not to score when he collected a David Luiz pass just outside the visitors’ six-yard box when he ran to the byline, but his subsequent shot was blocked by Luke Ayling, who could only watch whilst the ball spun just over the crossbar for an Arsenal corner. A couple of minutes later, Bukayo Saka ran with the ball into the visitors’ penalty area and was bundled off the ball by Liam Cooper; VAR was consulted, as is the way, and Stuart Attwell’s initial judgement was overruled. This unfortunate incident merely spurred us on to domiate play in order to grab that oh-so-elusive second goal. Again, a few minutes later, a penalty was given to us when Illan Meslier dillied and dallied in his own penalty area, body-checked and pushed Bukayo Saka over and onto the ground. Anyway, no problems with VAR this time, and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang made no mistake with the subsequent penalty, scoring four minutes before the break. Two minutes later, some superb play by Bukayo Saka running and dribbling across the top of the visitors’ penalty area, saw some clever passing movements and running off the ball by our forwards; in the interim, Hector Bellerin collected the ball and blasted it past Illan Meslier inside the near post to make the score three-nil to Arsenal going into the half-time hiatus.

And so, we started the second half off in a good spirit, and it is certainly reflected in the team’s general play. After a bit of tangle out on the left, young Emile Smith-Rowe proceeded into the visitors’ penalty area, flicked the ball over to Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, who deftly headed it into the net for our fourth of the day, and his first Premier League hat-trick. Bravo! Our dominance in the match assured, we continued hunting for more goals. Unbelievably, on the hour, completely against the run of play, after a Leeds United corner, Pascal Struijk rose above the Arsenal defence to head the ball past Bernd Leno and into our net to get a goal on the scoresheet. Emile Smith-Rowe was replaced by Willian shortly afterwards, and our march for more goals continued, with Martin Ødegaard and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang being unlucky not to score when their respective shots went merely inches wide of the mark. Leeds United also had their chances, when we sloppily gave the ball away, only for a shot from Raphinha to go inches past Bernd Leno’s far left-hand post. And so we went to sleep. Hélder Costa got the visitors’ second from close range after sixty-nine minutes, and with two goals conceded within eleven minutes, suddenly things are not looking so rosy for us anymore, as Leeds United have the wind in their sails at this point in the match. The two goals had us rattled, but still we were able to create goalscoring chances; Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang was unlucky not to get our fifth of the day when his seventy-fifth minute shot hit the post and bunced out into general play. Mohamed Elneny replaced a fatigued Martin Ødegaard with twelve minutes to go before the end, and his appearance on the pitch zipped the lads up a wee bit in the dying embers of the match. On the eighty-fourth minute, a lovely Arsenal move finished with Bukayo Saka hitting the post from a tight angle, which may not have counted, as the offside flag went up just seconds later. In our next attack, Illan Meslier pushed away a strong shot by Cédric Soares, and in an attempt to shore things up at the back, Dani Ceballos made way for Rob Holding in the eighty-eighth minute, and with Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang hobbling off the pitch after a poor tackle in injury time, the visitors tried to take advantage of our captain’s absence by pressuring us looking for another goal, but it was not to be, and Arsenal finished deserved winners here tonight.

Obviously, the headlines will gravitate towards Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, but Bukayo Saka was magnificent in this match. He caused Leeds United constant issues in and around the penalty area, and was aware of his team-mates at all times. A class act. This win pushed us above today’s opponents into tenth place, two points behind Tottenham Hotpsur, and this much-needed victory shows everyone that on our day, we can be a force to be reckoned with. It was a bit touch-and-go at times in the second half, but overall, we did enough to earn the three points, and the confidence this will install into the chaps for the Benfica match in Rome on Thursday evening could be priceless.

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: Benfica at Stadio Olimpico, Rome on Thursday, 18th February at 8.00pm(Europa League). 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.