Key events
45+2 min Ball over the top, Muani under it, and Gabriel introduces him to grass. There are shouts for a foul, and it didn’t look entirely innocent, but I’d need to see it again.
45 min Dragusin crosses and Raya floats out to claim; we’ll have eight additional minutes, primarily because of that broken headphone or whatevz.
44 min Spurs win a corner down the left and Arsenal have Timber marking Van de Ven. That’s what I’d aim for were I Simons … who instead curls on to Raya’s knuckles.
42 min “Declan Rice dribbling out of his own box happens when he can’t think because his whole body is shutting down because of all those Carabao Cup games he played,” thunders Drew Lundgreen. “Arteta should be fired. He has no idea how to guide a team through a season. But hey, love that performance against Inter when we played our strongest possible side in a dead rubber.”
I don’t think we can say one is a consequence of the other, but I agree he’s not used his squad well enough this season: I was also surprised by the team he sent out against Inter and also think he’s extracted as little as possible from Eze.
41 min Saka’s cross is blocked so Timber collects the loose ball, squaring for Trossard who helps it towards the far post … and Gyokeres is on his heels when, had he hurled himself at it, he might’ve been able to slide home.
39 min Gray, who must have a nose bleed given the cotton wool chilling in his nostril, concedes a corner, Spurs clearing the immediate danger before Bissouma is in quickly to put the ball into touch.
37 min Lovely ball over the top from Hincapie, and Saka’s in! But Vicario is out smartly to block his shot, then the flag goes up … but a replay shows that he was on, which means that if he’d scored, the goal would’ve stood.
36 min Gray was, apparently, booked for chucking the ball away. Thanks for coming, old mate.
GOAL! Tottenham Hotspur 1-1 Arsenal (Kolo Muani 35)
Oh Arsenal! An error from the most unlikely source as Rice, just outside his own box, right-hand side, looks to dribble between Muani and Xavi; Muani robs him, breezes away from Saliba’s wimpish challenge, and whacks low just past Raya’s hand
GOAL! Tottenham Hotspur 0-1 Arsenal (Eze 32)
Saka draws in Sarr and skips at him bundling by on outside, hits the line, pulls back, and though Eze’s first touch is poor, it sends the ball into the air, allowing him to wallop into the net from close range. That’s his fourth goal against Spurs this season, with his first shot on target in the league since then.
30 min The home crowd are getting into it now. Arsenal need to find a way of getting players around the edge of the box able to combine with one and two-touch play – we don’t see much from them in the way of feints, dummies and tricks, but that’s one way low, narrow blocks are beaten.
28 min Timber gives it away to Sarr, so pulls him down and is booked.
27 min “About to take to the stage in a production of Candide in Germany,” writes Paul Curievici “and won’t be able to check this again til just after half-time, so if you, Saka, Eze and co could please somehow manufacture something positive to come back to the dressing room to, I’d be very grateful.”
Funny you say thar, I could use a £7 tub of Losely ice cream.Break a leg!
26 min Spurs will be fairly happy with how this has gone. They’ve shown no attacking threat, but they’ve not conceded many clear-cut chances and are turning the game into the kind of mess that serves the XI Tudor has sent out.
24 min Declan Rice, then. A fantastic player, no doubt about it, but I have a but: he’s not good enough on the half-turn or passing through the lines to be a six, and doesn’t have the quality on the ball you’d want from an eight. So any team he’s in needs to build around those missing bits – he’s not someone you can simply put in any team without having to think about it.
22 min Saka burrows towards the heart of the Tottenham defence so Spence buffets him and is unfortunate to be penalised. Free-kick Arsenal, on the right, 30 yards from goal; Rice swings out, and the ball is headed clear easily enough.
21 min Arsenal were in charge early on but Spurs have improved a little, Sarr getting, er, in and around Zubimendi, robbing him and looking to work a shooting lane, quickly filled and his effort blocked. I’m certain Tudor thinks this is a route to joy for his team.
19 min “Dani Alves before either Puyol or (you gotta be kidding) Pique,” admonishes G Salorio, and he’s right. Alves is one of, if not the best right-back I’ve ever seen.
18 min Deep inside his own half, Simons looks to spread from left to centre and picks out Trossard, who was there all along. He intercepts, advances, eschews the first shooting opportunity, then leathers miles over the top.
17 min Saka swings in and, at the back post Gyokeres peels away to nod down and back, Saliba is there … and heads wide.
15 min The game hasn’t got going again following the pause. But Eze looks to inject pace, sliding another ball into the channel for Gyokeres; again, Dragusin is there to intercede then, shortly afterwards, Arsenal win a corner. Here we go…
14 min A long ball down the left, and Dragusin easily out-physicals Gyokeres, who’s finding Premier League centre-backs less easy to knock about than those he victimised in Primeira Liga.
13 min OK, we are now allowed to enjoy some association football. The lino is once again able to whisper sweet nothings to the ref.
12 min And still we have no football. What a complete and utter idiocy.
11 min “A message to those Gooners suffering the depths of existential angst today,” begins Justin Kavanagh, “(we defend, therefore we are; hell is other people scoring late equalisers; time is a concept by which we measure strikers missing sitters): Take heart in the wise words of probably the finest fitba philosopher ever produced by the British Isles in times such as these: ‘Lads, it’s Spurs!’”
I
10 min For how many years did football thrive without this nonsense? Why doesn’t the ref just take control of the situation and tell everyone, himself included, to grow up?
9 min Gyokeres, by the way, has zero shots on target in 15 out of 25 league games, a stat I could dig out because there’s some kind of technical issue preventing the ref from communicating with a lino. Maybe they could just cope?
7 min Gyokeres, whose parting is slicker than his finishing, runs that channel, nips inside Dragusin, and whacks a low shot just past the far post. He hoped it’d curl back in and it didn’t, but Vicario had it covered, I think.
5 min Spurs have started in something of a panic, Vicario haring out of his area to diving-head a goalkick away from Saka before doing well not to be lobbed.
4 min Saka waits for Timber to go outside him, Spence doesn’t follow, and when the ball’s fed down the line, the eventuating cross picks out Gyokeres. You can guess roughly what happens next: he heads straight at Dragusin.
3 min “The fourth of that best Barcelona four has to be Puyol,” reckons Owen Linderholm. “Just because he was a centre back doesn’t mean he should be ignored.”
That’s not why I ignored him – I don’t think he was that good, and the next on my list would actually be a different one, Gerard Pique.
1 min Do we think Spurs are in a relegation battle? Is that even a question at this point? If they lose today, they’ll be four points above the bottom three, with Forest and West Ham, their rivals for that third slot, both playing pretty well.
1 min Off we go!
Archie Gray is showing his Leeds roots with freshly shaved rugby league sideboards.
Oh, now Sky think Palhinha is on the right of the back three.
…and here they come. Time for some staccato sentences from Peter Drury; I’m choking up.
Our players are tunnelled…
“Quite right, Daniel,” begins Charles Antaki, who knows how to get published. “Reality is not easily inhabited. Like probably more than a few Arsenal fans, I’m close to immunising myself against it; nearly there but not quite, though things arer atcheting up to the clicking–over point. Not hard to name the contributing factors: each will have their own, but inadequacy in the goals department and, more systematically, everyone’s patches of inexplicable duffness. But, as I say, not quite there yet. Nevertheless, failure to win today and I suspect that my mental health immune system will kick in. Arsenal will be out of it, and my football sentiments will slide into neutral, not caring whether the Premier League is one by Man City, Mamelody Sundowns or Neptune United. Of course it might yet be Arsenal, and the universe will be righted.”
I understand how and why it happened, but I wonder if Arteta regrets the money spent building one of the deepest squads ever, when he might’ve put together the various funds and spent them on fewer but better attackers.
“Four of the best players ever”, begins Chris Amirault. “Messi, Xavi, Iniesta, and … who’s your fourth? Inquiring minds want to know.”
The only one of them I can say, for sure, I believe to be the best ever in his position: the unreal Sergio Busquets.
Fitba latest: Hearts, five points clear at the top of the SPL having beaten Falkirk yesterday, are now sitting back – and so far, it’s been a pleasant Sunday. Second-placed Rangers trail Livingston 2-0, while Celtic are 1-1 with Hibs; there’s just over an hour gone in both games.
So where it the game? I imagine Spurs will defend narrow and deep, then look to release Kolo Muani in the channels with long passes, or have Xavi slip balls for him in behind. I’d not be at all surprised if Gallagher is deputed to sit on Zubimendi, so he can’t build the play, with the space around him and behind Rice targeted.
As for Arsenal, they’ll want Gyokeres to pull defenders out of position, opening up space for Eze, Rice and Trossard, while Saka, coming inside on Spence’s stronger foot, might look to run by him off the ball and attack the back post.
“I think any XI that Tudor put out today would look very strange and disjointed,” says Alexandra Ashton. “With 13 fit players, it’s really just a game of putting them in the least bad position, not their natural ones. I figure it’ll be Sarr at wingback. Solanke was on antibiotics for some illness, Richarlison is just back from injury, so 19-year-old unproven Souza is our only real option off the bench except for Tel, who has been mostly frozen out by Frank and is likely unfit. This is probably as good as it gets, although I personally would have started Souza.”
I know what you mean, but it is quite weird to look at an XI and have no idea what it is.
And it’s also all over at Kingsmeadow:
You do have to wonder why on earth any manager would work for Evangelos Marinakis, but here we are.
It was quite the finish at the City Ground:
“Vitor Pereira’s just been sacked…” chortles Dave Estherby.
The other big choice Arteta had to make was whether to start Eze or Martin Odegaard, plumping for the former. He’s struggled to get much out of Eze so far this season, not quite certain what to do with a maverick improvisor – it’s a bit like when Tony Pulis signed Tuncay and Eidur Gudjohnsen, but perhaps he’s now decided it’s time to make it work. It’s a significant risk – Odegaard hasn’t been great this season, but Arsenal still play their best stuff when he’s on the pitch, which is one reason I’d have stuck Eze on the flank – but with so many games still to play, it makes sense not to rush him back.
As for Arsenal, following the collapse at Wolves, Arteta makes one change, bringing in Leandro Trossard for Noni Madueke. That means Bukayo Saka’s sojourn in the middle, behind the striker, is over for now – a shame, in mine, as they need him involved in the play as often as possible, and have decent options out wide. Now that you ask, I’d have gone with Eze left and Madueke right – Arsenal need to let opponents, especially such poor ones, worry about them. But as we discussed earlier, change is right there for us, but isn’t easy to effect.
So that’s two attackers, Kolo Muani and Simons, with 58 games for Spurs this season between them … and five goals. The Tottenham WayTM or what?
Sky reckon Spurs are going 4-1-2-3, with Sarr on the wing; that sounds odd, but then so does Palhinha at centre-back. Otherwise, Dominic Solanke, who had some kind of throat situation, is left out in favour of Randal Kolo Muani, who Tudor had at Juve, and who’s managed three goals in 27 appearances so far this season, all of them in Europe.
Back to Tudor’s first Tottenham team, loads of players are missing, injured – Destiny Udogie, Kevin Danso, Lucas Bergvall, Ben Davies, Rodrigo Bentancur, Mohammed Kudus, James Maddison, Dejan Kulusevski and Pedro Porro – in that context, Thomas Frank can consider himself extremely unlucky. Even with everyone available, it’s a poor side, but without all those mentioned, how is he supposed to do anything?
And yet it’s also fair to say that his way of playing did not look like one that could be upscaled for a team wanting to dominate, and when you lose the crowd as he did, justifiably so, there’s no coming back. I’ve not a clue who Spurs go to next, though: where on earth do you find a manager players will join for, who plays attractive football that enabled them to compete against better funded, more enticing rivals? Mauricio Pochettino is the only person to do it post-David Pleat in 1986-87, so perhaps they’ll get him after the World Cup, but does he have the same in him again, the English game having progressed without him and Harry Kane now in Munich?
We’ve so much other sport for you it’s an absolute joke:
I’ll level with you: it’s taken me the last 15 minutes to try and work out what on earth Igor Tudor is doing. I’m guessing it’s Palhinha in the middle of a back three, because managers trying to force a 3-4-2-1 on players unsuited to it has such a strong recent history of Premier-League success. I can’t say I’m entirely sure how you can win a football match with two attackers on the pitch but, on the plus side, he and his XI will have to go some to deliver a performance as pointless and as cowardly as Thomas Frank’s lot did when these sides convened at Arsenal earlier in the season. I’m not sure I’ve seen a side asked to do less to record a 4-1 derby win.
Teams
Tottenham Hotspur (a possible 3-4-2-1 that could ba anything): Vicario; Dragusin, Palhinha, Van de Ven; Gray, Bissouma, Sarr, Spence; Gallagher, Xavi; Kolo Muani. Subs: Austin, Richarlison, Tel, Solanke, Souza, Olusesi, Williams-Barnett, Rowswell, Wilson.
Arsenal (4-3-3): Raya; Timber, Saliba, Gabriel, Hincapie; Zubimendi, Rice, Eze; Saka, Gyokeres, Trossard. Subs: Arrizabalaga, Mosquera, Calafiori, Lewis-Skelly, Norgaard, Madueke, Martinelli, Odegaard, Jesus.
Referee: Peter Bankes (Lancashire)
Preamble
There’s a therapeutic idea that we create ourselves afresh every day, in full control of the person we are – or, to answer the Stone Roses’ question, we’re not etched in stone but sketched in the sand. It’s a liberating, comforting, affirming – and daunting – reality.
A liberating, comforting, affirming, daunting reality and not one easily inhabited, because changing ourselves is difficult – consider Mikel Arteta, to pick a name at random. His excellent work – albeit with serious boardroom backing – turned Arsenal from a rabble into title challengers but in each of the last three seasons, his desperate, flapping intensity and scalding sense of injustice surely transmitted to team and crowd, wins bringing respite more than joy and anything else disaster multiplied by travesty. We can’t say it’s been the difference; we can say it isn’t helpful.
This season, his air is calmer, but convincing players who’ve experienced him that previously, things were one way but now they’re another, isn’t easily done – especially when you look like you’ve not slept in several decades. More than that, though, demeanour only covers part of our impact – attitude is equally important and until that is altered, Arsenal will remain locked in the image of old Artetz, heavy on organisation and meticulousness but rizz and swag deficient. Seldom is there a sense that anyone is having any fun.
Consequently, a lack of freedom we might also characterise as a lack of confidence threatens to cost them a title they’ve spurned several opportunities to near-enough secure, failing every time they’ve had a chance to increase their lead to insurmountable proportions. And now, with the gap down to just two points, they face an away derby against a Tottenham side fighting relegation and eager to impress a new manager equally eager to impress the world, having had nine days to focus solely on this game.
Ultimately, Arteta has built a team guided by principles of certainty and control, problem being football is an inherently chaotic and improvisational activity. It’s true that, for a while, Pep Guardiola upended this truism, but it was only possible, for the foremost football genius of the generation, first with four of the greatest players ever, then on a budget far in excess of any competitor – and since then, even he has had to change.
It’s true that Arsenal might still set-piece, blanket defence and own-goal their way to the title; if they do, they’ll be champions as deserving as any. But restart prowess and general solidity are not the opposite of expressive attacking and exuberant confidence – rather they underpin it.
So, can Arteta liberate, comfort and affirm himself to give his team the same? He still has time, but also, time is not on his side – and that is what should really daunt him.
Kick-off: 4.30pm GMT
#Tottenham #Arsenal #Premier #League #live #Premier #League