Welcome back to the blog - which seems to be reflecting the sporadic nature of Arsenal’s fixture list recently. The Gunners were back in action after a two week break in which they managed to score five past a toothless Crystal Palace side. Some fans might have forgotten what it felt like to score so many and win in such an easy manner and, after a ten day gap between games, they may have already forgotten the feeling by the time the team play Nottingham Forrest away this coming Tuesday.
I’ll start with the win against Palace last weekend. Despite the poor run in results I was looking forward to seeing the team back in action. Admittedly Arsenal were far from their best, but it says a lot about how bad Palace were that we managed to score five and dispatch them so easily. The first five to ten minutes of the game we looked a bit rusty with a lot of passes going astray. Luckily we seemed to have worked on our set-pieces over the winter break, with the first two goals (and technically the third) coming from corners.
Leoandro Trossard is a great footballer but it’s no coincidence we didn’t see him take our opening corner from the left hand-side in this game, his delivery from corners so far has been far from convincing. Declan Rice stepped up for this one, curling a dangerous ball into the box on his weaker foot for big Gabriel Magalhães to leap up and head into the back of the net to put Arsenal ahead. Amazing what you can do when you actually manage beat the first-man from a corner.
Again we threatened from corners, Palace almost scoring an own goal if not for the cross bar to save them. Arsenal’s second goal then came from another corner, Gabriel rising again to head the ball into the net via the back of Dean Henderson (and yes we can officially say this was a Gabriel goal now.)
The third goal, just after the break, also came from a corner. This time, however, it was Crystal Palace taking it. Raya, who fair play was instrumental in this one, gathered the cross and immediately threw out an impressive ball into the path of Gabriel Jesus breaking into space, the Brazilian quickly found Trossard running through on goal who finished the chance really well - sending the covering defender onto his back-side and calmly converting past a helpless Dean Henderson in the Crystal Palace goal.
After this it was smooth sailing. The three points were never in doubt. A number of substitutes on both sides saw the game fall flat a bit until the last few minutes of injury time when Gabriel Martinelli - on as replacement for Trossard - twice ran in behind a sleeping Palace defence to score a brace (doubling his goal tally for the season in the space of two minutes) to add some gloss to the scoreline. 5-0 to the Arsenal, and no wonder Palace fans in the away section of The Emirates were protesting with banners at the end. Admittedly, I did feel slightly sorry for Roy Hodgson at the end there when the cameras panned to him. Palace seem to be a bit directionless at the moment both in terms of playing-style and off the pitch, but I do feel that his now inevitable sacking will be a sad way to see a manager with such an impressive footballing CV go out of the game, especially after he came back out of retirement to help keep them up last season as well.
It also reminded me of how far we’ve come in the last few seasons, the sight of seeing fans very disgruntled at The Emirates holding up banners stirred a feeling of familiarity and made me feel somewhat grateful (for a lack of a better word) that we’re no longer in that position. A reminder to the fans very aggravated going into the winter break that we’re in a far prettier situation now than we were even three or four season ago.
Anyway, Nottingham Forrest at The City Ground next up will be a much tougher task. They’re a team scrapping at the bottom, and with some sort of punishment looming (potentially a points deduction for breaking Premier League Profit Sustainability rules) will have a siege mentality - if not within the team - certainly within the fans in the stadium.
It was a difficult game their last season and all Arsenal fans will have painful memories of that one - the loss that all but sealed our fate in losing out on the title for the first time since 2003/2004. No doubt the players will have the same pain in remembering that one, hopefully they can use it as motivation - alongside some confidence and freshness - to bring three points back to north London.
Both Gabriel and Rice came off towards the end of the Palace game with knocks, I haven't seen any updates on either player so hopefully it’s nothing too serious and we’ll see them back in the starting line-up for this one.
In other news around the Premier League, Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp has announced he’s stepping down to take a break from football at the end of this season. I won’t get into that too much right now as we do play them at home next Sunday, in which there will be a podcast and blog pre-viewing that (and this is an Arsenal blog). But, I do think it could have a factor in their performances towards the end of the season, providing huge motivation for that group of players to win something for him. Considering they are currently top of the league, it makes that game at home on Sunday massive. Any points we can take off them and gain ourselves directly will be very important if what I’ve mentioned does happen and that Liverpool side hit a big run of form caused by an injection of motivation.
In terms of Jürgen Klopp as a character, I do think it will be a loss for the Premier League in a general sense, and obviously a huge one football-wise for Liverpool fans. But whilst we still have an outside chance of the title, and knowing we’re right up against it now, there's no room for rival sentiment at this moment in time.
There should be a pod up post-Forrest game, so will have more then.
Thanks again for reading.
Cheers,
Oli
Are We Gunner Do It ?