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Postecoglou sack talk ramps up after predictably naive NLD for Spurs against Arsenal

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Silly Spurs stumbled directly into a very obvious if immaculately-constructed Arsenal trap. Plenty of thoughts here on Arteta, Ange, Vicario, Romero and woke kit nonsense…

That lack of creativity in the middle of the park goes a long way to explaining Arsenal’s failure to create much from open play here, but that Spurs themselves struggled just as much is a huge win for an Arsenal back four who did their jobs almost immaculately.

Scoring the only goal secured man-of-the-match honours for Gabriel, but it could just as easily have been William Saliba or Jurrien Timber. Those three in particular plus David Raya – Ben White had a slightly sketchier time at right-back – were the main reasons Arsenal left their local rivals with the result they wanted and needed.

And we absolutely know Nicolas Jover – lauded by Arteta after the game – will have loved it because if ever there were a set-piece coach who loves to see a plan come together, it’s that man.

Leicester and Newcastle were happy enough to let Spurs have the ball. We admittedly can’t truthfully say Everton, bless them, had any real say in it. But Arsenal here seemed to positively crave not having the ball. To the extent on some occasions that they seemed really quite alarmingly keen to hand it back in wildly unnecessary fashion. We think those were mainly errors, because it was generally Jorginho responsible and he was one Arsenal player who really didn’t appear to be enjoying himself all that much.

M’colleague Will Ford called it the most obvious of all the goals and it’s impossible to argue. The country’s best team at scoring from set-pieces against one of the very worst at defending them always felt like a case of when not if. Two of Arsenal’s goals in the 3-2 win here back in the spring came from set-pieces and the perfect way this one came together for Arsenal was an unimprovable microcosm for the game itself.

Guglielmo Vicario is now very literally a marked man. He has to find a solution to his set-piece disappearing act, or he is cooked. That would be a real shame because he is in almost every other way a superb goalkeeper.

But this inability to make his presence felt at set-pieces is going to wreck his career in Our League if he can’t find an answer soon. He had already flapped at one corner here, the ball grazing his knuckle on the way through before Arsenal uncharacteristically muffed the chance to put him under more pressure from the follow-up.

That reprieve only ever felt temporary, and so it proved. As two Arsenal and two Tottenham players tussled right in front of him, Vicario was simply unwilling or unable to get involved despite the set-piece thundering off the head of Gabriel only three yards in front of his starting position.

Cristian Romero was all too easily shoved off it by Gabriel and wasn’t even able to compete for the ball as the Arsenal defender powered it beyond the hapless Spurs keeper.

It was yet another moment to encapsulate far wider moods and vibes around these teams and their players.

We’re all familiar with the long-standing trope of YouTube highlight reels that can make the most humdrum attacking player look deceptively brilliant but even before this error we found ourselves wondering if Romero isn’t a rare and also unimprovable example of the defensive equivalent.

There are, for better and worse, very few more obvious or more visible defenders than Romero. His often violent mistakes are legion, but his very best work is absolutely captivating. Even here, just moments before it all went wrong for him, he’d completed some trademark, eye-catchingly heroic work in the right-back position.

It would be so easy to put together a 15-minute compilation that makes Romero look like the finest defender who ever lived. But it also feels like he’s costing his team a goal a week.

They didn’t have much of the ball because they didn’t want much of the ball. It is absolutely the way to play against this Spurs team, and while Arteta would presumably have liked to see rather more attacking verve from open play, the point is he’d set his team up in such a way that it wasn’t actively necessary. Not here.

There’s an enduring although now finally faltering myth that this Spurs team is a good attacking one. It isn’t. Sure, they will have days where everything clicks and anyone might get picked off, as Aston Villa found out six months ago. But that’s kind of the point: it was six months ago. It’s only happened against terrible teams since, and even then only sporadically.

Spurs have scored 21 goals in their last 15 Premier League games. They play like they are Man City, planning to dominate the ball and backing their ability to unlock any defence. But they can’t: they can only unlock really sh*t defences. If you don’t have one of those – and Arsenal demonstrably do not have a sh*t defence – you should be mainly fine.

Indeed, it’s now compellingly easy to make a case that the extent of Tottenham’s control of possession in almost all their matches, and the sheer number of bodies Angeballed into the attacking third to assist it, is now actively hurting them at both ends of the pitch.

They are a team who live constantly on edge with regards to the threat of teams counter-attacking them, but with the greater irony being that Spurs themselves actually look far more compelling an attacking side in swift counters of their own in which wide players are released and midfield support arrives late, rather than their now staid stock-in-trade of passing it around for three or four minutes before Brennan Johnson makes a disappointing decision or Dejan Kulusevski shoots narrowly over the bar from 20 yards.

But it’s still an idea that had a fair amount of appeal before today’s game and even more so after it. Arsenal are a side that can win when they don’t play well; Tottenham a team that can and frequently do lose when they play well.

The key element there, though, is that Spurs ‘play well’ only on their own terms. They clearly aren’t that bothered about not being able to defend set-pieces, or they’d have tried to do literally anything about it over the summer. They clearly aren’t that bothered that all their possession and territory and touches in the opposition box and other signs of supposed dominance leads to vanishingly few actual goals or even chances, or they’d have tried doing something about that as well.

On commentary, Peter Drury – in between his usual absurd nonsense, which today featured a line about airing dirty linen and some baffling old sh*te about the Postcode Lottery – frequently put forward the idea that both these sides might feel like they could and should have won all three of their previous games this season.

Arsenal had won two and drawn the other, a game in which they’d led 1-0 before having a player controversially sent off. They have also developed a method that wins matches an awful lot of the time. So yeah, they probably did feel that way.

Spurs, on the other hand, have battered an Everton side still on zero points in between drawing at Leicester and losing at Newcastle.

Sure, Spurs might feel like they should have won all those games, and indeed this one. But they would be wrong. At some point you have to acknowledge that it’s not really feasible to just be that damn unlucky that damn frequently.

In all three games Spurs bossed all those metrics like they usually do, and did again today. And now in three of those four games they have actually created very little while conceding catastrophically avoidable slapstick goals. Which again is not a new feature they’ve only just introduced this season.

Which does all make you wonder, doesn’t it? At what point does this stop being a bit of bad luck and start being evidence that actually this just isn’t really working any more? And an impish yet perfectly fair response to that question might be ‘several months ago, mate’.

Since that wild 4-0 win at top-four rivals Villa in March, Spurs have now played 15 Premier League games and won just five of them. Three of those wins have come against teams who are no longer in the division, one against an Everton side that might not be after this season the way it’s shaping up and the other a home win over Nottingham Forest in April that, fair’s fair, looks slightly better now than it might have a couple of days ago.

In that same run Spurs have now played seven games against other members of the ‘big eight’ – teams they might consider their natural rivals. They’ve lost all seven of those games, very often convincingly.

It’s increasingly hard to escape the idea that good teams have now completely worked them out, while a thumping defeat at Fulham and draws against West Ham and Leicester suggest pretty much anyone who isn’t in a truly terrible place can have a decent crack at them more often than not. It’s an awfully long time to go without a single win against anyone who isn’t a relegation candidate.

Arsenal’s midfield troubles were significant, but also only one part of the reason this was such a starkly difficult day for Arteta and his team. We already know they’re trying to do what not even Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool at their very best could do and stand toe-to-toe with Man City for a third consecutive season. The near flawless standard it requires must be utterly exhausting, and the fixture list following that Brighton setback was not kind.

With City making their way merrily and flawlessly to 12 points, Arsenal came into this game at their local rivals already five points adrift and facing a trip to City next weekend. An entirely plausible worst-case scenario, therefore, of being eight points adrift and already out of the title race. Impossible not to think about that. Even a draw here wouldn’t really have done any good if it was followed by defeat at City and a seven-point gap.

It takes some mental fortitude to go into a game under those conditions and emerge victorious with a gameplan that leaned so heavily upon inviting an at least theoretically dangerous opponent on and winning a third game in a row at their stadium.

And yet Arsenal never wavered or deviated from that plan. They sensed what was coming. They trusted the process. It’s been so long since the last goalless North London Derby that Emmanuel Adebayor played in it – for Arsenal. But just as it seemed like another might somehow materialise, the mistake Arsenal had counted on arrived as they knew it always would. And with equal certainty, they pounced upon it.

Bukayo Saka ended the day with the matchwinning assist but would be the first to acknowledge he had one of the quietest days he will have ever had as an attacking threat from open play. That was in large part down to the way he sacrificed his own game to the team’s overall plan.

A lot of great teams are characterised by the speed in which they can turn defence into unstoppable attack, but Arsenal’s finest quality may be the opposite and the speed with which they can turn attack into perfectly organised, impeccably drilled defence. Not once was Son Heung-min given one-on-one freedom to go past Ben White and having open ground in which to run.

There was one moment in the first half where he sent the Arsenal right-back for a hot dog only to find Saka still in his way. Saka sacrificed his own attacking potential to ensure Spurs’ was kept as limited as it could be, just as the plan dictated.

Not even Spurs’ shiny new stadium or Arsenal’s unnecessary (for multiple reasons) Lynx Africa away kit could stop this feeling like NLD heritage, so hats off to both teams for that.

And we’re not remotely convinced that all black against a Spurs kit that has just about as much navy blue as a Spurs kit can have is in any way a better solution to a problem we’re not at all sure even existed.

Above all, though, there’s this. A Spurs home shirt should not have all-navy sleeves. Yet the one game a season where that might actually be a legitimate benefit, to contrast with the white sleeves of Arsenal, has now been wasted. And also that this is the second time that’s happened, because when Spurs last had navy sleeves in 2005/6, Arsenal had their all-redcurrant Highbury farewell kit. Not the most important element of the day, sure, but still a silly one.

A harsh yellow card for Rodrigo Bentancur started a flurry of cautions that could easily have sent the game spiralling out of control, especially as the game’s one significant flashpoint came soon after.

For what it’s worth, Gillett got that one right and deserves plenty of credit for regaining full control of proceedings in the second half.

The big decision was, of course, yellow or red for Jurrien Timber after his studs found their way into Pedro Porro’s shins via the top of the ball.

We’re a bit on the fence with these tackles. We can see why players attempt them; done right it’s a way to win or retain possession while keeping control of the ball and placing a physical barrier between it and your opponent.

But while the benefits are clear, it equally clearly comes with risk because if it goes wrong it can be very dangerous and at the very least produce alarming-looking freeze-frames of studs hitting shin as the ball slides off the top of the ball.

For us, it all comes down to control. Players attempting this kind of tackle do so knowing that getting it wrong will be at least a yellow and gives both referee and VAR the chance to go bigger, so it’s always high risk. Think about where you see these kind of tackles happen, and it’s very often in the offending player’s attacking third – that is, in a spot where retaining possession is a sufficiently tempting reward to justify the inherent risk.

Sometimes it’s also because it’s an attacking player and they can’t tackle very well, but that’s not the case here as Timber showed in the rest of a brilliant display.

He took a risk, and it didn’t pay off. But what he didn’t do was lose control of the challenge as, say Curtis Jones did in a very similar part of this pitch last year or Cristian Romero does with every tackle he’s ever attempted. Timber’s foot does not continue with the same force after sliding over the top of the ball. It’s clearly not a good tackle in the end, but there’s nothing wild about it.

We don’t think VAR would’ve been in any rush to overturn it had Gillett opted for a red card, but yellow felt right on this occasion. The difference between this and Jones is undeniably subjective, but it’s a difference we would contend absolutely exists.

This is no short-term blip, this is an increasingly significant body of evidence. It’s a longer and worse run of form than the one that did for Mauricio Pochettino five years ago, a manager who had far more credit in the bank. It’s now 42 points from their last 32 games, and the trend is downwards. Since the win at Villa in March, it’s 17 points from 15 games. It’s 10 from the last 11. Since March, only Everton and Wolves have lost more Premier League games than Spurs.

They sit 13th in the league and appear wedded to an approach that requires doing all of the same things but expecting different outcomes. The general mood may not (yet) be so bleak as in the dog days of Antonio Conte’s joyless final season, but the sense of a club and team drifting along unable to escape its own self-fulfilling solipsism is undoubtedly back.

Spurs’ current run of results is one that means Postecoglou, less than a year after being anointed as Spurs’ latest messiah, must come under pressure.

And the scariest thing for Spurs fans may not be whether or not Postecoglou can or should survive it, but whether it makes a blind bit of difference either way.

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Arsenal goal ‘a foul’ as Tottenham star ‘good at kicking people’ slammed for role in Gabriel winner

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Paul Merson is adamant the Arsenal goal shouldn’t have stood but Cristian Romero has been slammed for his role in Gabriel’s winner on Sunday.

The Gunners were far from their best at the Tottenham Hotspur stadium but preyed on Spurs’ weakness from set pieces to claim all three points, with Gabriel rising unchallenged to nod the ball past Guglielmo Vicario on the hour mark.

Spurs huffed and puffed in response but rarely troubled David Raya at the other end and limped to defeat.

Merson claimed Romero had to do better as Gabriel got the better of him from Bukayo Saka’s corner, but also reckons the Argentinian was fouled by his fellow South American.

“I would be disappointed if I didn’t get a foul,” Merson said on Sky Sports. “(Romero) is in the wrong position, everything is wrong about his defending. He’s an international centre-half.

“Even I know, and I don’t play at the back, that you’ve got to be side-on, seeing the ball and your player. To start off with you’ve got to be a hand-length away (from him), and he was standing with him. I do think… I’d expect a foul. I would expect a foul.”

Gary Neville was similarly critical of Romero but pinned the majority of the blame on Vicario, who ended up moving back towards his line rather than coming to claim the ball.

“The goalkeeper’s rooted,” Neville said on co-commentary.

“He heads it three yards out, he’s free, and Romero, the centre-back, is picking up Gabriel.

“It’s really poor from the Argentinian, but I’d want my goalkeeper to come for it. He gets blocked and then he ends up rooted.”

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Jamie Redknapp, on punditry duty on Sky Sports, agreed with the assessment and suggested Romero would be well served to spend less time “kicking people” and more time improving his ability to defend set pieces.

He told Sky Sports: “Teams pray on Vicario’s weakness from set-pieces – because people have seen Vicario’s weakness, they stick loads of players in front of him.

“Tottenham, they have gone for man-to-man so they are all obsessed with their players and it is a little bit selfish.

“Yes, Romero is good at kicking people, but when it comes to stuff like that he has got to do better”.

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Arteta lauds key Arsenal man in ‘ugly’ win as Postecoglou hits out at Spurs ‘narrative’

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Mikel Arteta paid tribute to his Arsenal players and one man in particular after they brushed off a string of high-profile absentees to claim an “ugly” 1-0 win at rivals Tottenham.

This north London derby had been billed as potentially make-or-break for Arsenal despite being the middle of September after the Gunners dropped points at home to Brighton before the international break.

Manchester City’s fourth consecutive Premier League win on Saturday coupled with the unavailability of captain Martin Odegaard, Declan Rice and Mikel Merino cast doubt over Arsenal’s title credentials, but they answered them superbly in N17.

After a dogged defensive display, centre-back Gabriel headed in the only goal after 64 minutes to keep the visitors within touching distance of City before next weekend’s trip to the Etihad.

“Super happy obviously. We know what it means to our club and our people to win a north London derby,” said Arteta, who this week saw Odegaard join the suspended Rice and injured Merino on the sidelines after suffering an ankle issue on Norway duty.

“We had good moments and others where we had to suffer. We suffered because we had to adapt the plan because of the players that we had available.

“I loved it. The second we started to get that news (Odegaard injury), the team got hungrier and hungrier to play that game. It’s a big compliment to everybody at the club to behave in a certain way.

“It’s a tough week coming and instead of finding any excuses we did the opposite. We faced the challenge, played with courage and acknowledged the qualities we had to win the game.

“We have people that are hard and have thick skin. They love the game and we love winning.

“In order to love the game and win you have to do things that people call ugly. Enjoying those ugly things is a big compliment to this team right now. When you’re able to do that, normally you get a good gift.”

Spurs had started strongly with Dejan Kulusevski denied by David Raya before Dominic Solanke sent a header wide.

Arsenal also had moments on the break with Gabriel Martinelli squandering a good opening not long after Kai Havertz had a header saved by Guglielmo Vicario.

The second period followed a similar pattern initially with a Solanke header deflected wide and Micky van de Ven able to test Raya, but Tottenham’s set-piece kryptonite hurt them just after the hour.

After Saka saw a shot blocked by Pedro Porro, his in-swinging delivery from a corner found Gabriel, who brushed past Cristian Romero to power home what proved the winner.

Arteta lauded set-piece coach Nicolas Jover after Arsenal clinched a third straight win at the home of their rivals.

He added: “In his field, in other fields, as a person, the relationship that we have, that’s why I made the decision to bring him to City when I was there and then to Arsenal.

“Him and the staff have injected a belief to the players that there are many ways to win football matches. This is a really powerful one. It’s given us a lot so big compliment to all of them.”

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Like in last season’s derby defeat at home, Spurs were undone by a set-piece, but Ange Postecoglou played down the growing narrative around his team.

“I know for some reason people think I don’t care about set-pieces and it’s a narrative that you can keep going on for ages and ages,” Postecoglou said.

“We work on them all the time, like we do for every other team.

“You know that they’re a threat. As I said, for the most part, we handled them really well today, but we switched off for one and we paid a price and you learn from that and you move on.

“It’s my burden to carry, mate and I’m happy to do that. For me, there’s a bigger picture that’s at play here that’s much more important than the finer details of us getting to where we want to.

“For us, the way forward is to try to turn the football we’re playing now into something meaningful.”

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Tottenham 0-1 Arsenal: No Rice or Odegaard? No problem as Arteta’s men grind out vital NLD victory

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Arsenal defended superbly and Gabriel Magalhaes headed home a vital winning goal as Mikel Arteta’s side beat Tottenham Hotspur in the North London derby.

With an away tie against Manchester City coming up next weekend, Arsenal’s trip to their rivals was already being described as a make-or-break game in their mission to be champions following a home stalemate against Brighton before the international break.

But without key duo Martin Odegaard and Declan Rice, Mikel Arteta‘s side secured all three points following Gabriel’s 64th-minute goal to stake their title credentials and leave Spurs with just one win in four matches this term.

Odegaard and Rice were absent from Arsenal’s midfield, with the former sidelined by an ankle injury and the latter banned following his red card against Brighton. Jorginho took over from Rice as Leandro Trossard was tasked with filling Odegaard’s role as the team’s conductor.

For Tottenham, Micky van de Ven was back from injury, with summer signing Dominic Solanke leading the attack after missing two games with an ankle problem.

And the former Bournemouth man was involved instantly when he wriggled free in the Arsenal penalty area before finding Son Heung-min, whose pull-back to Dejan Kulusevski produced a fine save from David Raya.

On the other side of the pitch, Kulusevski’s cross then split the Arsenal defence with Raya again called into action.

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Spurs were in the ascendancy, and Ben White – who along with his Arsenal team-mates were dressed in black as the Gunners contested a north London derby for the first time in almost four decades not in their traditional red due to a kit clash – saw his blushes spared with 15 minutes gone.

White was pounced on by Son who found Solanke in the area, but the England international was not quick enough on the uptake. William Saliba did not need a second invitation to dispossess him when Solanke really should have done better.

Moments later, Saliba then found his name in referee Jarred Gillett’s book for failing to return the ball after a foul on Solanke. It was the first of seven bookings of a fiercely contested first period.

The hosts were the quickest out of their marks, but as the half wore on Arsenal came into the game. Kai Havertz’s header from Gabriel Martinelli’s cross was well-saved by Guglielmo Vicario before the Brazilian should have put the Gunners ahead.

Trossard’s exquisite through-ball put Martinelli one-on-one with Vicario, but the winger’s effort was tame and his weak effort was comfortably gobbled up by the Spurs keeper. Cue a furious Mikel Arteta on the touchline.

Jurrien Timber’s challenge on Pedro Porro then sparked a brawl on the touchline with both the Arsenal defender and Vicario front and centre. Both men were booked but Timber escaped a red card for going over the top of the ball following a VAR check. Honours even at the break.

The hour mark arrived with Van de Ven’s header – straight down Raya’s throat from a James Maddison cross – the only real chance of the second period up to that point.

Arsenal looked threatening on the counter-attack with Martinelli and Havertz linking up to put Bukayo Saka through. His shot was deflected behind off Porro, and from the ensuing corner came the breakthrough.

Gabriel ghosted off Cristian Romero, and with Vicario blocked off, the Brazilian headed home unmarked from a handful of yards out. It was Arsenal’s 23rd goal from set-pieces since the start of last season – more than any club in the league.

Spurs, for all their encouraging work, appeared stunned by Gabriel’s goal and the frustration among the majority of the home fans started to show.

But Spurs have been the masters of late goals in front of their own supporters during the Ange Postecoglou era, and they wanted a penalty with eight minutes remaining when Gabriel took the ball off Solanke, but Gillett waved away their appeals.

Pape Sarr then miscued his shot wide and Arteta’s side, with Raheem Sterling handed his debut from the bench, were content to soak up the pressure.

Kulusevski came closest to finding an equaliser but his long-range effort fizzed agonisingly over the bar as Arsenal saw out five minutes of injury time to claim three successive derby wins at Tottenham for the first time since 1988.

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Arsenal: Redknapp drops ‘red card’ verdict as ‘lucky’ Gunner used ‘excessive force’ in ‘unusual action’

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Pundit Jamie Redknapp believes Arsenal defender Jurrien Timber was “very lucky” to avoid being sent off for a challenge on Tottenham Hotspur’s Pedro Porro.

Arsenal travelled to arch-rivals Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday afternoon for the first North London derby of the 2024/25 campaign.

The North London derby is renowned for delivering goals, but the was a lack of goalmouth action in the first half on Sunday. Instead, there were plenty of yellow cards as seven were handed out by referee Jarred Gillett before the interval.

There was a flashpoint before the break as Timber’s rash challenge on right-back Porro sparked an angry response from Tottenham‘s players.

Manchester United legend Gary Neville was on commentary for the match and his immediate reaction was that it should not have been sent off.

“Porro is still down, writhing in agony. That’s not going to be a red card I don’t think,” Neville said.

READ: Arsenal dominate but Rice, Odegaard blows see Spurs trio make North London derby combined XI

After Timber was given a yellow card, Neville added: “Just listening to what is being said in Stockley Park. Timber touches the ball but he doesn’t follow through over it which is what saved him from it being a red card.

“The foot goes on top of the ball but he hasn’t followed through.

“There was one here last season – the Curtis Jones where he tried to put his foot on top of the ball but went over it – and that ended up being a red card.”

During the half-time break, Redknapp explained why he thought Timber was “very lucky” to escape being sent off.

“It’s an unusual action because he definitely goes over the top of the ball, with his studs on it. His foot then bounces on the ball,” Redknapp said.

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“There was a tackle here last year with Curtis Jones getting sent off for tackling Yves Bissouma. It’s very similar.

“Timber is very, very lucky. Has he gone in with excessive force to do him like in the olden day? No, But he’s given the referee a decision to make.

“Other referees would have sent him off. He doesn’t need to go in like that. It’s excessive force he has gone in with, it’s an unusual action. I think he’s lucky.”

Paul Merson added: “He’s fortunate, especially away from home, especially with the way the referee is handing out yellow cards like ice cream!”

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Arsenal: Arteta reveals reason for not starting Sterling v Spurs despite being 'tempted' by bold decision

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Arsenal head coach Mikel Arteta has revealed why he opted against starting summer signing Raheem Sterling against Tottenham Hotspur.

England international Sterling joined Arsenal on loan from Premier League rivals Chelsea on deadline day. This move came about after he fell down the pecking order under Enzo Maresca at Stamford Bridge.

Sterling has a good relationship with Arteta as they previously worked together while they were at Manchester City.

The experienced forward’s £47.5m move from Man City to Chelsea didn’t go to plan and failed to live up to his price tag.

In the summer, Arsenal were in the market for a forward as they required competition for Bukayo Saka on the right flank.

The Premier League giants were heavily linked with Athletic Bilbao star Nico Williams after he shone for Spain at Euro 2024, but they eventually signed Sterling as a cheaper alternative.

Earlier this week, Arteta revealed Sterling’s “first words” after discovering Arsenal were interested in signing him.

“His first words were: ‘I was dreaming about this call’,” said Arteta. “That’s it. That tells you that he really wants it and was already thinking about the possibility and he could see himself here, delivering and enjoying his profession.”

READ: Arsenal dominate but Rice, Odegaard blows see Spurs trio make North London derby combined XI

“After 10 seconds I knew we had to bring him (to Arsenal) because he really wanted it, and that was my only question mark, what stage is he at in his career? But after 10 seconds I knew.

“He looks great. He has got a big smile on his face, a lot of energy and he wants to prove a point. When someone has got that in their belly you sense it straight away. I don’t need to discuss his quality and what he can bring to the team.”

Sterling was not part of England’s squad during the international break, so Arteta and his coaching staff had time to work with the 29-year-old to get him up to speed.

Despite this, Sterling was not named in Arsenal’s starting XI for Sunday’s North London derby against Tottenham Hotspur. Instead, Arteta selected Saka, Kai Havertz, Leandro Trossard and Gabriel Martinelli as his attacking options.

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Explaining his decision, Arteta said: “Well, the good opportunity came, and we were really happy with it. We took it, and now we have to make it work.

“When you have a player like this, you are always tempted [to throw them straight in].

“But obviously he’s missed quite a lot of football in recent weeks, but he’s in a good place.”

Speaking before kick-off, Paul Merson explained why he expected Spurs to win the midfield battle against Arsenal.

“Arsenal haven’t got any legs in there. The only consolation is you look at Tottenham’s midfield and it isn’t great,” Merson

“The two midfields are not top drawer. I look at them and they’re not the standard today of top of the league midfields.

“I wouldn’t bring the Spurs full-backs in. I would want to make in a three v three in there. If it becomes spacey in there, and Maddison and Kulusevski start squaring up Party and Jorginho, they could run riot.

“But if Udogie comes in and it becomes congested, then Partey and Jorginho don’t have to go anywhere, then Arsenal will be alright. Spurs have to open it up.

“Advantage Tottenham if they play three versus three in midfield.”

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North London derby team news: Richarlison hints at major boost for Tottenham for Arsenal clash

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Richarlison has dropped a hint ahead of the North London derby over who may be starting for Tottenham in a major boost for Ange Postecoglou’s side.

Spurs take on Arsenal on Sunday afternoon at the Tottenham Hotspur stadium and much has been made of the Gunners’ selection concerns.

Declan Rice’s suspension and injuries to Martin Odegaard and new signing Mikel Merino have left them light in midfield, though Tottenham have injury problems of their own, with doubts over the fitness of Yves Bissouma, Richarlison and Dominic Solanke.

Solanke – signed for £65m from Bournemouth in the summer – has missed the last two games with an ankle injury that also meant he wasn’t considered for Lee Carsley’s first England squad.

Postecoglou was hopeful their marquee signing may feature in the North London Derby in his pre-match press conference, saying: “It’s fairly positive [news]. Micky [van de Ven]’s good, he’s trained all the way through the international break and it was good for him to stay with us to build him back up so he’s ready to go.

“[Dominic Solanke] improved as well and trained the back half of this week. We still have two days to go with those guys so hopefully they get through training ok and are available.

“We had the last of the boys in late yesterday so we’ll have a look at them today and everyone’s reporting all well except for [Yves Bissouma]. He’s got a bit of an issue, but we’ll have a look at him over the next couple of days and see how it settles.

“[Richarlison]’s still got a bit of work to do, alongside Will Lankshear who is still in rehab.”

Solanke took to Instagram on Saturday, his birthday, to post a thank you message to well-wishers: ‘Thank you Lord for another year. Thank you all for the love and messages.’

Richarlison commented on the post, indicating that Solanke had come through that training session and is in line to play his part on Sunday. The Brazilian wrote: ‘Sonny [Son Heung-min) will give you a gift tomorrow bro.’

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Postecoglou warned his players ahead of the game of falling into the “trap” of thinking the absences of Rice and Odegaard have handed Spurs a significant advantage.

“God, that’s a hell of a trap to fall into, if you think they [Arsenal] are reliant on two players,” Postecoglou said.

“Two important players, but we were missing key players last year as well and we still managed to give significant performances.

“A team like Arsenal have been very, very consistent over the last two years and can fill whatever gaps they have. They have quality in their squad. The key for us is to focus on our performance.

“When we’ve played well, and we certainly have played well in the first three games, if we are] a little more clear-headed in both boxes, we’re a match for any team. That’s what we’ve got to think about at the weekend.

“If we go in there thinking they’re somehow weakened, we’re going to get punished.

“If we go into it thinking they’re going to be very strong, which I think they will be, then we’ve got to be at our best. We know, at our best and playing the football that we can, we can match them.”

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Forget Arsenal, Spurs really, really need to prove they are not fall guys

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Arsenal, Arsenal, Arsenal. That’s been the build-up to Sunday’s North London Derby which, last we checked, involved two sides. Yet all we’ve heard about is the pressure on Arsenal not to drop any points, knowing that any slips are costly in any title race against Manchester City.

Spurs have barely got a mention. As much as their fans would beg to differ, the popular perception is that this game is a free hit for them. Despite Tottenham Hotspur playing host this weekend, the bookies are universally favouring Arsenal.

But the reality is that this is the exactly the kind of game that Tottenham need to start winning if they are serious about breaking back into the top four.

Over the past two seasons, Tottenham have taken just 12 points from 18 games (0.67 per game) against sides who finished the respective campaigns in the top five: three wins, three draws and 12 defeats. Go outside the top five and it’s 114 from 58 (1.97 per game).

Getting just two more points from those encounters last season would have qualified Spurs for the Champions League. Their record of just 10 points from 14 games against the sides above them in 2022/23 was exactly why they finished as low as eighth.

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Naturally, you’d expect those games to be tougher for all concerned, but that’s a poor record. And it’s not just that Tottenham lost a lot of those games against their top five rivals: they’ve been characteristically defensively feeble, keeping just two clean sheets in those 18 games and conceding 42 in the others. There have been seven occasions on which Spurs have scored at least twice in those high-pressure games and still not won.

Just to add a little bit of extra oomph, Tottenham’s worst record of all in the Premier League over the past two seasons has been against Arsenal. Their closest rivals are the only Big Eight side Spurs have not beaten at all since 2021/22.

City and Arsenal’s title challenges have been built on avoiding defeat against the top sides and consistently winning against the rest; Spurs are far closer to achieving the second than the first.

Tottenham have shown the same traits already in this nascent campaign, dominating as they did for so much of the game against Newcastle just before the international break, only to end up on the losing side.

There’s a reason we picked out Ange Postecoglou as one Premier League manager happy to see Erik ten Hag under so much pressure. Their only five wins in the last 14 Premier League games have been against Luton, Burnley, Nottingham Forest, Sheffield United and Everton.

That means that even setting the local rivalry to one side, getting these points is just as important for Tottenham as it is for Arsenal – even if just to prove they can.

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Arsenal dominate but Rice, Odegaard blows see Tottenham trio make North London Derby combined XI

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Declan Rice and Martin Odegaard won’t be involved against Tottenham Hotspur, but Arsenal still dominate this North London Derby combined XI…

Goalkeeper: David Raya (Arsenal)

Arsenal’s decision to replace Aaron Ramsdale with Raya was heavily scrutinised at the start of last season, but Mikel Arteta and Edu – as with most of their recent transfer business – were quickly proven right with the Spain international, who is in our Premier League team of the season so far.

Right-back: Ben White (Arsenal)

A huge ‘change’ would reportedly make an England return possible for White. But for now, Lee Carsley’s loss is Arsenal’s gain as the Premier League title contenders benefit from the 26-year-old focusing on matters at club level.

Centre-back: William Saliba (Arsenal)

Arguably the best centre-back in the Premier League? Saliba is f***ing brilliant, so there’s no wonder Arteta wants ‘crazy money’ with three elite European clubs trying to sign him.

READ: Big Weekend: North London Derby takes centre stage but all eyes on a Man Utd debutant

Centre-back: Gabriel Magalhaes (Arsenal)

Saliba is naturally joined in this XI by his centre-back partner, Gabriel. We boldly encouraged Arsenal to sell the Brazil international in the summer and this would have been harsh, but the north London club could do with tying him down to a new contract.

Left-back: Jurrien Timber (Arsenal)

You’re joking – not another Arsenal defender!

Timber was sorely missed last season and his return to fitness boosts what’s already a really strong defence. His selection was made easier by Destiny Udogie’s struggles before the international break as Tottenham’s disappointment needs to step up.

Centre midfield: James Maddison (Tottenham Hotspur)

Phew, it’s finally time for a representative of Spurs in this team and we start with Maddison, who has fit Tottenham like a glove following last year’s move from Leicester City.

He’s struggled to hit the heights he reached before last season’s injury, but he’s the Christian Eriksen-type player they had craved for years.

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Centre midfield: Jorginho (Arsenal)

At £12m, Jorginho has been a massive bargain for Arsenal after they missed out on Moises Caicedo as the Italy international’s experience has been priceless since signing in January 2023. The best Italian signing from Serie A in Premier League history is likely to have a significant role to play against Spurs with Declan Rice and Martin Odegaard unavailable.

Centre midfield: Pape Matar Sarr (Tottenham Hotspur)

Speaking of bargains, 21-year-old Sarr – who joined Spurs for around £14m – was a great find by Ange Postecoglou’s side and has limitless potential.

Right winger: Bukayo Saka (Arsenal)

It’s pretty impossible not to adore Arsenal’s beloved star boy and he’s shown remarkable levels of consistency as Arteta’s side have emerged as proven Premier League title contenders. This could be the 23-year-old’s best season to date as he already has four goal involvements in three matches.

Centre-forward: Kai Havertz (Arsenal)

Arsenal’s critics had their pitchforks out when they spent £65m on Havertz rather than signing a proper striker.

But just like with the Raya deal, the Germany international has made the Gunners hierarchy look very smart (and Chelsea equally foolish) as he’s found his position as a No.9. and made a superb start to this season with two goals and an assist in the Premier League.

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James Maddison says North London derby is a rivalry on another level and everyone knows what it means to fans

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Tottenham Hotspur star James Maddison says that the fans make the North London derby one of the most intense experiences in English football.

Maddison claims that each derby has its own local feel that is different as he experienced while at Leicester City and now at Spurs.

He noted that the build-up to a North London derby gets everyone in the mood for the clash.

Maddison believes that the North London derby is the biggest match he has been involved in across his career.

He adds that every Spurs fan lets the players know how much this fixture means to them.

“When you join a new club, rivalries are always a new thing to you,” Maddison told Showmax.

“So, for example, the last club I played for, Leicester, when I joined, I didn’t realise how big of a derby Leicester and Nottingham Forest was. And then you grow to learn about it, and get a feel for it amongst the city, and it’s the same with joining Spurs. Obviously, the North London derby is a big one, which I think everyone knows about.

“When the games come around, you feel the build up around the city and among the people and the media. You get more of a feel once you’re involved in the fixture. Like I said, the North London derby is the one that sticks right out in my mind. That’s the one.

“I think the one thing that you must grasp between derbies and rivalries, is how your supporters feel.

“Since I joined the club, it’s been made very clear by fans you bump into locally on the streets or in the stadium or anywhere else, that this derby means a lot to them. A lot of people who live around here in North London are divided in their families.

“They are split by this rivalry, and that’s what football does to people. So, firstly, we know what it means to them, and how big it is to them. How literally one game can affect bragging rights within families. And it starts with the build-up to the game, media interviews, talking about the game ahead.

“My first experience of it last year was at the Emirates. It was on a Super Sunday, and it was just huge. I never did as many interviews as I did before a game. And on game day, it just had that different feel. Arriving at the stadium, feeling the tension. It was the same in the other one as well. Really looking forward to the one coming up. It’s just a big, big, historic rivalry.”

Maddison revealed that he wasn’t sat down by anyone for a chat about the match before his first derby. The England international added that he was dialled in already ahead of his first brush with Arsenal in a Spurs shirt.

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“I don’t think I needed it, to be honest. I love football. I’ve watched football my whole life. I knew exactly what the North London derby meant to the people,” Maddison adds.

“The other rivalries, like the ones against West Ham and Chelsea, I didn’t know much about it and how much these games meant to our fans, but I don’t think the North London derby needed any explaining.

“Watching it on TV and watching all these historic games in the past, you understand what it means. Even in the build-up, there’s always a different feel. No player sat down with me and had a chat with me about a specific game. You can feel the magnitude of the game already when you are preparing for the game.”

Maddison has backed Tottenham manager Ange Postecoglou to get the team up for the big clash on Sunday.

He feels that the Australian is one of the great motivators in the sport.

“Ange is very good at motivating and is good at giving speeches.

“He is good at that anyway, for any game. So, it’s about getting the balance right of building up the derby and understanding what this game means to our fans is very important. But also, not taking it too far, and trying to treat it like a normal game and to focus on just doing our job.

“The gaffer came from Celtic, and the Celtic and Rangers derby is one of the biggest in the world in terms of rivalries, so he knows exactly what it means to manage a rivalry and a derby game. So he is very good in those situations, very calm and gets his message across well.”

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