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MATCH REPORT: Arsenal 5 – 0 Nottingham Forest

Arsenal (1) 5 Nottingham Forest (0) 0

Premier League

Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU

Sunday, 30th October 2022. Kick-off time: 2.00pm

(4-3-3) Aaron Ramsdale; Ben White, William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhães, Takehiro Tomiyasu; Martin Ødegaard (c), Thomas Partey, Granit Xhaka; Bukayo Saka, Gabriel Jesus, Gabriel Martinelli.

Substitutes: Kieran Tierney, Eddie Nketiah, Rob Holding, Cédric Soares, Fabio Vieira, Albert Sambi Lokonga, Reiss Nelson, (Marcus Vinicius Oliveira Alencar) Marquinhos, Karl Hein.

Scorers: Gabriel Martinelli (4 mins), Reiss Nelson (49, 52 mins), Thomas Partey (57 mins), Martin Ødegaard (78 mins)

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 69%

Referee: Simon Hooper

Assistant Referees: Adrian Holmes, James Mainwaring

Fourth Official: Thomas Bramall

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR: Andre Marriner; AVAR Darren Cann

Attendance: 60,263

However, it should be noted that today’s game against the East Midlanders is our ninth first-class match this month; of the previous eight, victories were chalked up in six, and of the remaining two games, one was a draw, and the other a defeat. Playing nine matches in thirty days (which works out one every 3.33 days) is an incredible strain for everyone associated with the club, and at the time of writing, we are in second place in the Premiership, just a mere point behind Manchester City and top of Group A in the Europa League, both of which are incredible achievements for Arsenal Football Club. Who would have thought such an amazing thing to be possible for Mikel Arteta and the boys this time last year . . .

Before this afternoon’s match, our medical team will assess Marquinhos (who has been ill), and fellow defender Gabriel, who limped off the pitch at the end of last Thursday’s defeat by PSV Eindhoven in the Europa League. Meanwhile, at the time of writing, Oleksandr Zinchenko may well be fit enough to make an appearance, whilst Emile Smith-Rowe and Mohamed Elneny are still not recovered enough to be considered for the team at the Emirates today, sadly. Finally, our best wishes for a speedy recovery go to our on-loan defender Pablo Marí, who faces two months out of the game following surgery after an appalling stabbing incident in a shopping centre in Milan last Thursday evening. 

We completely showed our intent right from the kick-off, with the visitors being pushed back into their half and not looking too organised at this point in the game. After just four minutes, we opened the scoring when Bukayo Saka was found on the right hand side of the penalty area by Gabriel Martinelli. The England forward cut inside and curled a superb cross into the centre of the penalty area for Gabriel Martinelli to head the ball into the back of the net. A couple of minutes later, we carelessly gave the ball away on the edge of our own penalty area and it fell easily to Remo Freuler to fire a shot straight at Aaron Ramsdale, who gathered the ball easily. Almost immediately, we came back at the visitors, and both Bukayo Saka and Martin Ødegaard were unlucky not to score, and the resulting corner also saw Takehiro Tomiyasu attempting to get on the scoresheet, but his volley flew over the bar. After just a quarter of an hour, the match was looking to be completely one-sided, with the Forest defence having trouble containing our forwards, particularly Bukayo Saka, who was simply doing what he liked with their defence; unfortunately he was the victim of a bad foul by Renan Lodi a little earlier, and went off for some treatment which was a concern. Gabriel Martinelli had a great shot, which steered goalwards and was cleared literally off the goal-line by Renan Lodi. The mood in the stadium is that it is felt that it is merely a matter of time before we get our second goal, and just before the half hour mark, taking no chances, Mikel Arteta substituted Bukayo Saka for Reiss Nelson as a precautionary measure, which is a very good thing, especially with the World Cup on the horizon. Morgan Gibbs-White fouled Reiss Nelson on the edge of the penalty area, and although Martin Ødegaard’s subsequent free-kick bounced off the Forest wall, we are constantly knocking on the door looking for that elusive second goal. After a poor Jesse Lingard shot that went wide of Aaron Ramsdale’s post, we continued our pressure on the visitor’s goal with Gabriel Martinelli and Martin Ødegaard causing havoc in the Forest penalty area constantly. A hopeful Gabriel Jesus shot went over the bar, and although the visitors came back at us with a couple of half decent efforts, our defenders were not too unduly worried by them. After a Forest free-kick, Granit Xhaka received treatment after a sliding tackle by Morgan Gibbs-White that went wrong, and almost immediately afterwards, referee Simon Hooper blew the whistle for half-time.

Just after the restart, a long throw from Thomas Partey which dropped nicely and was turned on by Granit Xhaka which looked good, but he was too close to Serge Aurier, who cleared the ball messily. A minute later, our substitute Reiss Nelson, was found in the box by Gabriel Jesus, but although his first shot was saved, the ball fell straight back at the midfielder’s feet and he made no mistake in hitting the back of the net a second time; and three minutes later, Reiss Nelson grabbed his second of the game (and Arsenal’s third) when he poked the ball into the far corner from an excellent Gabriel Jesus slotted ball into the Forest penalty area from the right. The game slowed down a bit when the visitors made a substitution, but normal service was resumed when Reiss Nelson passed the ball to Thomas Partey, who hit an absolute screamer which bent superbly into the top corner of the net for our fourth goal of the afternoon. Shortly afterwards, Gabriel Martinelli and Takehiro Tomiyasu were substituted for Fabio Vieira and Cédric Soares, and almost immediately, Fabio Vieira was found at the back post by a deep cross, but he lost concentration and mis-hit his shot, which was a shame. We kept on coming forward, with Gabriel Jesus constantly shooting on goal; one of his best efforts wa a close range shot that was somehow saved by Dean Henderson, and it has to be said that the visitors are looking somewhat jaded now, which is not a surprise, given the second half that they have had at the Emirates. With fourteen minutes of the match remaining, Mikel Arteta took the chance to rest more players when Kieran Tierney and Eddie Nketiah came on for Granit Xhaka and William Saliba, and four minutes later, our captain Martin Ødegaard scored our fifth goal of the afternoon when he received a pass from Gabriel Jesus, and sinply slotted the ball into the top corner of the net. A superb goal. As we entered the final minutes of the match, game management appears to be the order of the day as far as we are concerned, and we almost scored a sixth goal when Ben White glanced a header, from a corner over to Gabriel Jesus who was a yard out and ready to stroke it into the net, but however, Forest defender Steve Cook did enough to put him off and they both watched the ball go off for a goal-kick. An excellent Gabriel Jesus shot was blocked before Thomas Partey fired it way over the bar and into the crowd. A minute into injury time, it was looking like Reiss Nelson was going to bag a hat-trick today, but after carrying the ball into a congested penalty area, he was unable to get a shot away and the visitors easily cleared the ball; literally seconds later, referee Simon Hooper blew the whistle signifying the end of the match, much to our happiness, and the relief of the visitors. 

Today’s performance by the boys was exceptional, as we bounced back from Thursday’s defeat to PSV Eindhoven with the correct attitude. Reiss Nelson, who came on as an early substitute, scored a brace of goals along with an assist, which was fabulous for him, whilst Thomas Partey conducted everything in the midfield area. It was a shame that Gabriel Jesus did not get on the scoresheet, but the goals must come soon, as he is getting himself into the correct postions to score, it is just one of those things, that’s all. Everything clicked today, everything went well, and most importantly, we returned to the top of the Premiership tonight. Our next Premiership match is an away fixture next Sunday against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge, which should be a cracker!

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: FC Zürich at the Emirates on Thursday, 3rd November at 8.00pm (Europa 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

Arsenal make it 5 wins from 5 as impressive pre-season comes to an end

We have been in scintillating form during pre-season, so it was no surprise we beat Sevilla.

The manner of how we brushed aside the Spanish side was however unpredictable.

Yes, it was just pre-season. And yes, we are a week ahead of Sevilla in terms of preparation – La Liga starts a week after the Premier League. But we should celebrate our impressive performance.

Sevilla finished 4th last season in La Liga, and had the best defensive record conceding just 30 goals in 38 games.

They have sold their senior defender Douglas Carlos to Aston Villa and their talented young centre back Jules Kounde didn’t play due to his impending more to Barcelona.

But we scored 6 goals. And they were impressive goals.

The type of goals where you could see the types of attacking situations that we were attempting to manufacture. The attacking patterns that came straight off the training ground.

A hat trick for Gabriel Jesus. Brace for Bukayo Saka and another pre-season goal for Eddie Nketiah.

The front 3 of Jesus, Saka and Martinelli looked versatile and electric. Whilst Martin Odergaard ran the game behind.

Thomas Partey dominated the midfield and Granit Xhaka kept the game ticking.

William Saliba and Gabriel looked solid in defence whilst Ben White and Alex Zinchenko were untroubled as “inverted” full backs.

At one point in the second half, Zinchenko pushed into midfield and we went into a back 3.

All in all a very good performance.

The XI that played was also the XI that faced Chelsea in our last pre-season game. It is also the XI I expect to start against Crystal Palace on Friday.

10-goals in our last 2 preseason games against sides in the Champions League.

That makes it 5 wins from 5 pre-season games – the behind closed door games against Ipswich and Brentford were no more than training matches.

20 goals scored in those 5 games for Arteta’s new attacking Arsenal. 3 clean sheets.

A pre-season that will all get us excited.

We now need to back it up against Palace on the opening game of the season.

Bring on the Premier League.

Keenos

Former targets back on the radar after step away from Martinez & Raphinha deals

Weekend news is that we have pulled out of the deal for Ajax defender Lisandro Martinez.

This is being promoted as a “huge snub” for Arsenal, compounded by the Raphinha “rejection”.

Like Raphinha, the truth is very different to the narrative taken by the media.

Arsenal have not been rejected by Martinez. We have decided he is not worth spending £45million on him.

To those that demand we “pay the asking price”, let’s break it down for you.

Leeds United we’re demanding £65m for Raphinha. Martinez looks to be off to Manchester United for £45m. That is £110m combined.

Should we really be spending £110m on players that are not guaranteed a start?

Martinez was always going to come in as dual competition and cover for Kieran Tierney and Gabriel. Raphinha would have to compete with Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Martinelli on the wings.

Arsenal were looking to get the deals done for a combined £70m (£40m for Raphinha, £30m for Martinez).

£70m for the pair feels good – especially after the investment in Gabriel Jesus and Fabio Vieira. £100m+ feels steep.

Stepping away from the deal does not mean we need to go “back to the drawing board”.

We will be interested in many players at the same time. Martinez would not be the only left back we were keeping an eye on, talking to representatives.

Remember Aaron Hickey?

We were linked heavily with him at the beginning of the transfer window before seemingly switching to Martinez as our priority.

He looks set to join Brentford but it might not be too late to sweep in.

Likewise Olexsandr Zinchenko was linked to us prior to the Martinez “interest”.

This was of course press speculation and they never know everything.

We were getting linked with Zinchenko at around £25m. That is £20m less than Martinez’s impending move to Man U.

He might not cover centre back but he does cover central midfield. Arteta loves versatility.

Another forgotten man is Youri Tielemans.

The Belgium midfielder seemed to be our number one target back in June. Then we signed Vieira and began to target Raphinha.

The fee for Tielemans was rumoured to be around £30m.

Could Arsenal go back in for him and then utilise Vieira’s versatility as another option on the wing?

Edu and Mikel Arteta would likely have preferred Martinez and Raphinha for £70m ahead of Hickey and Tielemans for £55.

But Hickey and Tielemans for £55m feels much better business than Martinez and Raphinha for £110m.

So we move on to our next targets. Potentially going back to the two lads we were heavily linked with earlier in the summer.

And at £55m for them, it could leave us with some money left on the pot to improve elsewhere. Has we spent £110m that would have been our transfer budget blown.

I would not be surprised if we see links to Zinchenko and Tielemans intensify this week.

Final thought: We could potentially sign Zinchenko, Tielemans and Cody Gakpo for the price of Raphinha and Martinez. That is sort of business we should be doing.

Keenos