Arsenal 1 – 0 Swansea: Substance over style – for now

242 comments September 11th, 2011

Mikel Arteta congratulates Andrey Arshavin

Match Report |  Highlights |  Arsene’s reaction

One senses it could all have been rather different.  An early goal would have settled Arsenal nerves and shattered Swansea resolved.  We should have had one, too: inside the first minute, an eager and energetic Mikel Arteta hassled his man off the ball and played in Aaron Ramsey, who slipped when put through on goal.  Had he kept his feet and his composure, Arsenal might have gone on to record a resounding victory.

Doubtless some would still have complained.  There has been much whining about how we failed to put a newly-promoted team to the sword, but I think that shows a lack of respect both for Swansea and our current predicament.  Yesterday, all we needed was a win.  After shifting eight goals in our last game, a clean sheet would have been nice too.  We finsihed with both.  To complain would be churlish and naive.

Arsenal started with two debutants.  Per Mertesacker partnered Laurent Koscielny in front of Wojciech Szczesny, whilst Mikel Arteta formed a midfield trio with Aaron Ramsey and Emmanuel Frimpong.  Gibbs and Sagna supported Arshavin and Walcott on the wings, and Robin van Persie led the line.  The substitutes bench contained remaining new boys Park, Santos and Benayoun – Alex Chamberlain was unlucky to miss out after showing some fine form for the England U-21s.

Aside from Ramsey’s early chance, there were other opportunities – Arsenal were generally better in the first half than the second, and on-loan Spurs defender Caulker had to produce a brilliant goal-line clearance to deny Theo Walcott after he had been played in by Arshavin.

It was the Russian who got the goal, in bizarre circumstances.  Michel Vorm, who had started his career in English football in fine form, collected a loose ball and went to throw it out to his midfielder.  Just as he did so, the improbably named Angel Rangel wandered in to his path.  The ball bounced off the defender, leaving the retreating Arshavin to pass the ball in to an abandoned goal.  The goal was comical in circumstance but brilliant in execution: a left-footed opportunity from such a narrow angle left Andrey with plenty to do.

It was Arshavin’s first goal at the Emirates since the victory over Barcelona – and his best performance in a long-time.  Although nominally playing from the left, he drifted inside to combine with Arteta and Van Persie and looked, for the hour he was on the field, our most dangerous attacker.  The aftermath of the Barca game saw us embark on a dreadful run that has stretched across the summer – perhaps this strike can book-end that spell and start us off on a good foot once again.

The second half was tense – Swansea struck the bar with a free-kick, whilst RVP thrashed a fight-footed effort against the post.  The Welsh side were playing with nothing to lose, whilst Arsenal’s psychological handbrake was firmly on.  In the game’s dying moments, Danny Graham ought to have done better with a volley on the turn from six yards out.  The full-time whistle was greeted a sigh of relief rather than a roar of approval.

But we got there.  We have our first league win of the season, and the smallest of blocks on which to build.  There’s a big week ahead with trips to Dortmund and Blackburn.  Positive results then could change the complexion of our season for the better.  Like Luke Chadwick after a dose of isotretinoin.

This was an unfamiliar-looking Arsenal team – one still learning to appreciate and take advantage of each other’s patterns of play.  I thought Mikel Arteta made a seamless transition in to red-and-white, particularly in the first half, when we was certainly the general of an otherwise inexperienced midfield.  How he’ll relish returning to the grand stage of the Champions League on Tuesday.

Per Mertesacker was steady if not spectacular.  In the first-half Szczesny had to produce a fantastic stop after Graham beat the big German to a cross, but after that he seemed to settle.  His distribution was intelligent, and some of his tackling immaculate.  He’s not the quickest, but seems to have the positional awareness to prevent that being a problem.

Yossi Benayoun made it a hatrick of debuts with a thirty minute cameo as a replacement for Andrey Arshavin, and I thought he did really well (video highlights).  He’s a dynamic, creative player who isn’t afraid to put in a defensive shift too.

There were aspects of our performance which concerned me, certainly.  Emmanuel Frimpong showed that whilst he is undoubtedly promising, he has much to learn in when it comes to his use of the ball.  Kieran Gibbs, too, looked unconvincing.  Perhaps he was bemused by the comically small but effective Nathan Dyer, or suffering from a lack of support from Arshavin, but Swansea certainly had most joy down his flank.

All that said, come the final whistle, we had what we needed.  Dortmund will be a far sterner test, but we’ll be far better prepared with a victory under our belts.  Bring on the big boys.

Premier League Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope

110 comments September 10th, 2011

A short time ago in a stadium far, far away, Arsenal were on the receiving end of a defeat so humiliating that it prompted one of the greatest periods of introspection in the club’s recent history.  Since then, a great deal has passed.  Five new players have joined the club, and another five have left.  The club have taken the opportunity provided by the international break to regroup, recoil, and reinforce.

We’re undoubtedly in a stronger position that we were ten days ago.  The addition of established players like Mertesacker, Arteta and Benayoun has provided the squad with a depth it was sorely lacking.  Arsene Wenger has even suggested the squad may be better than it was twelve months ago:

“The squad is stronger. If you look at the squad now and imagine Wilshere and Diaby coming back, plus the players like Vermaelen who will come back soon and I think we have a more mature squad.”

Only time will tell if he’s right.  The loss of Fabregas and Nasri has been a tremendous blow, but if the likes of Mertesacker, Santos and Arteta can make the team more robust, we may see the emergence of an Arsenal side with a different personality.  One with less flair, but more fight.  Mertesacker and Vermaelen should have the ability to bind in to a formidable defensive unit.  Arteta, meanwhile, has “amazed” Arsene with his strength in the tackle – a toughness forged on the battlegrounds of the SPL and the Old Firm Derby.

The new boys in training

We may be lighter on big names.  We may be lighter on creativity.  But we won’t be lighter in the challenge.  It’s important to remember that whilst we’ve lost two lynch-pins of the side, they didn’t lead us to any great success, especially in terms of silverware.  Arsene’s additions this summer have been unusual for him, but isn’t that just what people wanted?  Fans cry out for a departure from the philosophy of signing unheard of youngsters, and then when he does just that, they ask why we didn’t sign players like Hazard and M’Vila – both less than 21 and without any experience of the English game.  I believe Arsenal tried for both – the latter in particular – but right now the likes of Arteta could prove more useful.

It’s our fourth league fixture, our sixth game of the season, and yet Arsenal fans and players alike seem united in the belief that the season starts now.  Winger Theo Walcott says:

“We need to start our season against Swansea. We need to forget about the games against Liverpool and Manchester United.

We need to react in a positive way. We need players to stand up and be counted because, if we’re honest, it wasn’t good enough against Manchester United.”

He’s right.  We need to be positive.  In order to do that, we’ll have to be realistic.  We’re currently in 17th place, already 8 points behind the Manchester clubs.  With that start and the disruption we’ve suffered, winning the league seems improbable at best.  At the moment, our priority has to be overhauling Liverpool and retaining that valuable Champions League spot.  If we can do that this season, as well as have a decent stab at the cups, we’ll all be mightily relieved.

That battle starts today against Swansea.  I suspect a couple of our new signings will be on show: Per Mertesacker is likely to start alongside Laurent Koscielny with Bacary Sagna and the fit-again Kieran Gibbs at full-back.  Andre Santos is not yet fully fit, and will begin on the bench, and Wojciech Szczesny – our player of the month for August – will continue in goal.  In midfield, Emmanuel Frimpong and Aaron Ramsey will be joined by Arteta, whilst captain Van Persie is likely to be flanked by Walcott and Arshavin.  There is the possibility that Yossi Benayoun could be thrown in ahead of the out-of-sorts Russian, but J. Y. Park is unlikely to be involved: as of last night he was still in Paris awaiting clearance on his visa.

I’d love to see Arsenal come back in style and make a real statement, putting four or five behind a newly promoted side.  I don’t anticipate that, however.  Swansea are a decent side and won’t roll over.  We may need to be patient today: the fans as much as the players.

After Swansea, we face Blackburn and Bolton in the league, and have the chance to build some momentum before the North London Derby.  If we can embark upon a winning run, then the Old Trafford debacle will soon seem light years and galaxies away.

It’s time to look ahead.  Or as the marketing folk at Nike would have us say: Forward.

 Come On You Gunners.

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