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Robbie Savage: Improving Arsenal show resilient side

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  • Robbie Savage: Improving Arsenal show resilient side

    Robbie Savage: Improving Arsenal show resilient side
    In his regular BBC Sport column, Robbie Savage looks at Arsenal's victory over Aston Villa.

    I was at Villa Park for BBC Radio 5 live and saw for myself why the Gunners are back on top of the table, and serious title contenders this season.

    Arsenal were completely dominant for 75 minutes, until Christian Benteke pulled a goal back. Then we saw the other side of Arsene Wenger's side, when they had to battle to protect their lead - which they did.

    Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger Arsene Wenger's side had to fight to win a game they had dominated

    They have been brilliant this season but will they win the title? I still say no. Manchester City remain my choice, and I think Chelsea will run them closest.

    But, with four months of the season remaining and 17 games left, these are the reasons why Arsenal are leading the way at the moment, and why they will push City and Chelsea all the way.

    Their work-rate to win the ball back

    I already knew before the Villa game that Arsenal are excellent when they are in possession.

    But, at Villa Park, they were just as good when they did not have the ball.

    There were plenty of examples of how this helped them defensively on Monday night, such as in stoppage time at the end of the first half when Olivier Giroud gave the ball away near the Villa box, then ran back 60 yards to make a tackle where you would expect his left-back to be.

    Giroud was not the only one. Arsenal kept the ball superbly before the break, but they also tried to get it back as quickly as possible when they lost it.

    That intensity also helped them going forward, especially with their second goal - which came straight after their first.

    They went straight at Villa from the restart, with Jack Wilshere forcing Fabian Delph into a mistake and, from Wilshere's ball, Giroud made it 2-0.

    The Gunners lost some of their intensity in the second half, when they were happier to let Villa have more possession.

    Before half-time, Arsenal had 70.6% of possession, which dropped to 54.8% in the second half.

    They took their foot off the gas, but they were still in total control of the game until Andreas Weimann came on in the 73rd minute, and Benteke's goal set up a far more frantic finish than was expected.

    They are surprisingly solid at the back

    Arsenal with Mertesacker and Koscielny since 22 Jan 2012
    Arsenal defeders Laurent Koscielny and Per Mertesacker
    Games
    Played
    27

    Won
    19

    Drawn
    8

    Lost
    0

    Clean sheets
    16
    In the past few years, if you put the pressure that Villa did on the Arsenal defence, then it usually cracked.

    But Wenger's side had already showed over Christmas that they are more resilient now, with a determined defensive display helping them beat Newcastle, and it was a similar story in the last 15 minutes on Monday.

    Along with Chelsea and Everton, Arsenal have got the joint-best defensive record in the Premier League after conceding only 19 goals in 21 games.

    That is not something I expected at the start of the season when Villa beat Arsenal at The Emirates on the opening day.

    But Per Metesacker and Laurent Koscielny have formed a very effective partnership and it is coming up to two years since Arsenal lost a game where both of them played 90 minutes, a 2-1 home defeat by Manchester United on 22 January 2012.

    Mertesacker is not the quickest but he reads the game so well and he is also not afraid to put his head in where it hurts.

    Against Villa, he covered the near post so well and was completely dominant in the air. The only time he was beaten was for Villa's goal, when Santi Cazorla gave the ball away and Matt Lowton put in the best ball I have seen this season.

    Plenty of class acts in the middle

    Villa ended up playing three different formations on Monday - they started in a 5-3-2 shape, switched to 4-4-2 when Nathan Baker was injured and then turned that into a 4-3-1-2 in the second half.

    But, whatever shape Villa chose, Arsenal adapted and found gaps for their passing triangles when they had the ball and stopped Villa from playing when they did not.

    Even though Theo Walcott is out for the rest of the season, midfield remains Arsenal's strongest department in terms of quality, versatility and depth.

    After 21 games, Wenger has only started the same set of five players in consecutive Premier League games twice - Mathieu Flamini, Wilshere, Serge Gnabry, Mesut Ozil and Aaron Ramsey against Stoke and Swansea in September, and Wilshere, Cazorla, Arteta, Ozil and Ramsey against Southampton and Cardiff in November.

    I have said before that, when they do not have their fast, naturally wide players like Walcott, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Lukas Podolski available, Arsenal lack pace and width.

    Will they miss Walcott? Of course. But they have coped pretty well without him or Oxlade-Chamberlain for a long time this season already, and now they have Oxlade-Chamberlain back in action and Gnabry as an emerging talent too.

    As for his other attacking midfielders, well Wenger has been interchanging them for the last few months and I am sure they will continue to do the same.

    Ozil, Cazorla, Tomas Rosicky, Ramsey, Arteta and Wilshere are all dynamic players, who are comfortable in possession and have got a bit of pace too.

    A forward line to be reckoned with

    Giroud leads the Arsenal attack but, when they go forward, there is far more to the Gunners than just the Frenchman.

    They are a front four, and any of the attacking players I mention above can fit into that front four.

    Giroud was not always the furthest man forward against Villa because he rotated out to the right and Ozil came into the centre-forward position.

    Even when the ball was played up to Giroud, the likes of Ozil, Cazorla and Gnabry were always looking to run past him, and Wilshere did that more and more as the game went on too.

    I have been saying all season that they need a new centre-forward, somebody who is better than Giroud, or even somebody who is good enough to fill in when he is injured.

    At the moment that is a hypothetical situation. Giroud keeps scoring and he has pretty much kept fit too.

    Yes, he has missed three games after Christmas with an injury but the Gunners kept on winning without him.

    Even so, with the transfer window open, I think Wenger has to act. Signing another top-class centre-forward, in case Giroud gets injured, could make the difference between finishing first and third.

    They are top without beating the big boys, but do they have to?

    When they have faced the other teams in the top seven, Arsenal have lost to both Manchester teams and been held by Chelsea and Everton. They have beaten Liverpool and Tottenham.

    Compared to how they have got on against lesser teams in the top flight, they have struggled, but the thing to remember is that they have beaten everybody else, and that is why they are top of the table.

    After 21 games, they are also still in the Champions League and still in the FA Cup but, because they have not won a trophy for so long, people are not convinced they will go the distance.

    For people to take them deadly seriously, what they need is a defining result against one of the other teams in the top four or five.

    If they do that, it might mean their players start to believe they can win the title too.

    http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/25687213
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

  • #2
    Arsene Wenger says Arsenal have fight to win Premier League

    Arsene Wenger says Arsenal have fight to win Premier League
    By Phil McNulty

    Chief football writer at Villa Park Arsene Wenger warned Arsenal's title rivals that his side have the fight to win the Premier League after the Gunners went back to the top of the table with victory at Aston Villa.

    Jack Wilshere and Olivier Giroud gave Arsenal a two-goal lead at half-time but they had to dig in after Christian Benteke pulled a goal back.

    "It is a big win for us," said Wenger. "The first half was about playing our game with passing and control, the second was more about fighting."

    He added: "Our defenders kept us in the game. It was an anxious finish and we had to fight right to the end and we were committed to every ball."

    Villa were booed off at half-time after a limp display as Arsenal looked certain to take all three points up until the final 25 minutes.

    But Villa then rallied after the introduction of forward Andreas Weimann, with the visitors having to withstand heavy pressure after Benteke headed home, the Belgian's first goal since September.

    Wenger, whose side sit one point above Manchester City and two in front of Chelsea, said: "We had to have a strong response because everyone was looking at us to see if we would drop points after everyone else had won over the weekend.

    "You are under a bit more pressure when you play last because you know you are not allowed to drop any points.

    "The only way you can give an answer to that is to win the games and we have here."

    Wenger added that he believes Wilshere is now getting back to his best after playing a key role in the victory.

    The England midfielder has seen his career interrupted by injuries, but he scored Arsenal's opener on 34 minutes and set up Giroud for a second at Villa Park less than a minute later.

    Wenger said: "He has got his change of pace back. He is not only a passer but he gives us an incision with the ball and for that you need to be at the top of your game physically.

    "When you know the players well you can see that, and in his last games he is coming back to his best."

    Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain returned as a late Arsenal substitute for the first time since the opening day defeat by Villa.

    He replaced Tomas Rosicky, who sustained a nose injury in an aerial challenge with Gabriel Agbonlahor, and Arsenal will check on defender Nacho Monreal on Tuesday to see if he has a broken metatarsal.

    http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/25723404
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

    Comment


    • #3
      My cause for concern...

      1. Tremendously happy with their positives but...

      - a) Wilshere's, Cazorla's and Giroud's tendency to lose the ball often causes me to tear my hair out as I watch games!

      ...and...

      - b) Wilshire's and Cazorla's tendency to slow a good attacking move by introducing unnecessary pirouettes...that naturally at inopportune moments.

      - c) Cazorla's reluctance to take the open shot. ...and he has tremendous accuracy and power in either foot

      2. The mentally that causes a taking of "the foot off the gas" when we have not yet taken a 4 - 0 lead.

      *have always thought you have to be at least 4 goals up before relaxing...and even then I hate relaxing in a game.

      Switch to conscious effort at upping the 'cerebral plays'...but "switching off"?

      No sah!

      Aside: Not unlike Asafa's ability to destroy the World's best over 100M and continually "switching off" at 75M - 80M before finish line.

      Led to his gradually being overhauled by first lesser runners...until he became a 'lesser runner'! You just cannot 'teach' your sub-conscious being and your muscles to 'learn' to react in a particular way and then expect them to perform in manner different to what you have consciously taught.

      Does not happen!!! Does not work!!!


      3. The infrequent use of my GUNNERS best pure striker, Lukas Podolski. Just cannot sit him and then expect him to, in times of desperation, suddenly step into the TEAM and be Lukas Podolski! Consumate professional that he is...but it just does not work that way!!!

      Aside: -

      Lukas Podolski

      Squad No: 9
      Position: Forward
      Age: 28
      Birth Date: Jun 4, 1985
      Birth Place: Gliwice
      Height: 5' 11'' (1.80m)
      Weight: 83 kg

      2013/14 English Premier League

      GAMES - 4

      GOALS - 3

      ASSISTS - 0

      SHOTS - 8


      Complete GUNNERS stats for LUKAS PODOLSKI:

      German forward Lukas Podolski enjoyed a highly productive first season in north London.

      Generally playing on the left of an attacking three, with occasional appearances through the middle, the attacker was a consistent presence on the goalscoring charts, finding the net 16 times. He got off to a flyer with a fine opening goal at Anfield on September 2, bettering it a few weeks later when he thundered home a free kick against Southampton.

      Several more spectacular strikes followed, notably a stunning volley against Montpellier – later named Arsenal’s Goal of the Season – and a long-range thunderbolt against West Ham in a match that also saw him claim three assists. Other highlights included a goal in the 5-2 win over Tottenham Hotspur and a fine strike in the 3-1 comeback victory against Norwich.

      Full of hard running and enthusiasm to complement his venomous left foot, Lukas quickly became a favourite on and off the pitch after joining from Cologne in the summer of 2012. He had spent two spells there, emerging from the youth system to score 51 goals in 85 games before leaving for Bayern Munich. After three years at the Allianz Arena, he returned to Cologne in 2009 and finished his second stint with 35 goals from 95 games.

      A mainstay of Germany’s national team, he has appeared in three European Championships and two World Cups, and passed the 100-cap mark during Euro 2012, aged 27 – the youngest-ever European to do so.

      - See:

      Lukas Podolski's Arsenal Career


      Season: 2012/13

      GAMES - 33 + 9
      GOALS - 16

      Season: 2013/2014

      GAMES - 3 + 3
      GOALS - 3

      - http://www.arsenal.com/first-team/pl...lukas-podolski

      Total EPL - http://www.thescore.com/epl/player_s...d=42&team_id=0
      "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

      Comment


      • #4
        yuh need a side of pre-programmed robots. one of the reasons people enjoy sports is because of the human element, it causes grief and brings joy to many, myself included.

        Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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