Swansea 2-2 Arsenal: Podolski shows the value of having quality in reserve
330 comments January 6th, 2013
Swansea 2 – 2 Arsenal
Match Report | Highlights | Arsene’s reaction
I think arseblog called it right when he said this was a game we could have lost and yet should have won. Â For a long time, it looked as if this was going to be one of those games for Arsenal: we had plenty of possession without doing very much with it. Â Swansea, however, were typically efficient, and looked a threat every time their passing game developed in to a full-blown attack.
The first half was a tepid, turgid affair. Â This Arsenal team seem to have an ‘all or nothing’ approach to fluidity; when they fail to click, it’s like milking a rottweiler: painful for everyone involved and ugly on the eye. Â The game only exploded in to life with the introduction of Michu.
The Spaniard came on as a 56th minute substitute. Â By the 58th minute, he’d scored. Â He looped the ball over Per Mertesacker, sprinted past the off-form German, and held off Laurent Koscielny to score his fifteenth goal of the campaign. Â Just as at the Emirates a month or so ago, I was hugely impressed by his movement, strength, and technical ability. Â Come the start of next season, he ought to be playing for a Champions League club.
The goal came against the run of play. Â Arsenal had begun the second half with considerably more purpose, with the tireless forward momentum of Kieran Gibbs a key feature. Â It was a substitute of our own who would help bring just reward: Lukas Podolski. Â He himself had been on for less than ten minutes when he turned to volley home after Swansea failed to clear a Theo Walcott corner.
It was a stunning finish: for all the talk about Theo Walcott, the German is the most clinical man in front of goal at the club. Â Some supporters seem frustrated by his habit of disappearing in certain games, but I’d suggest that pattern is typical of a forward in a side struggling for fluency. Â When we’re off our game, his movement goes unnoticed and he can be very quiet. Â When we’re in the groove, however, there is no player I trust more to make the most of opportunities to score or create. Â His goal yesterday takes his tally for the season to 10; impressive for a player at the halfway point of his first season in English football.
Having grabbed the equaliser, Arsenal had all the momentum, and there was a touch of Podolski about their second goal too. Â Kieran Gibbs played a one-two with Olivier Giroud to meet his clipped pass with a sumptuous volley that had more than a hint of Poldi’s against Montpellier about it. Â It was just reward for a storming performance from Gibbs. Â Whilst I appreciate he is prone to the occasional defensive lapse, his energy, stamina and positive running from left-back make up for it on balance, and I was delighted for him to get a deserved goal.
Having taken the lead with just seven minutes to play, most teams would expect to hold on for the victory. Â N.B. : ‘most teams’. Â Arsenal had other ideas, and their static zonal marking came a-cropper again when Danny Graham was left free at the far post to thump in a late equaliser from a corner. Â Mikel Arteta will be particularly disappointed with his failure to close the striker down.
All in all, I’m content with the draw. Â It meant Arsenal went in to the hat for the fourth round, when for 83 minutes that looked dubious at best. Â The impact of Podolski from the bench was a lesson in the value of having quality in reserve. Â The problem Arsenal have going forward is that Podolski was only on the bench to save his tired legs. Â Ordinarily, they wouldn’t be able to turn to someone of that calibre to bail them out.
You can see where I’m going with this: with loan departures for Marouane Chamakh and Johan Djourou now confirmed, it’s time for Arsenal to take advantage of that space in the squad and bring in some new players. Â Arsene repeated his post-match mantra of being on the lookout for “one or two” additions; I hope he’s bluffing and that those targets were identified long ago. Â A month is not as long as he seems to think.
Arsenal now face a replay with Swansea on the 16th of January. Â The winner of that game will travel to Brighton in the FA Cup fourth round. Â Along with the rescheduled game with West Ham, it means Arsenal have a pretty hectic month ahead, and any reinforcements will thus be all the more welcome.
Arsene might be worried about 8 games in four weeks, but for supporters it means a veritable feast of football. Â Bring it on.