Saturday, September 21, 2024
HomeNewsLatestArsenal win north London derby

Arsenal win north London derby

- Advertisement -


SHOWDOWN:
The second-placed Gunners are two points behind Manchester City before traveling to face Pep Guardiola’s champions next weekend

Mikel Arteta on Sunday saluted Arsenal’s hunger as the gritty Gunners ignored the absence of Declan Rice and Martin Odegaard to clinch an “ugly” 1-0 win at bitter rivals Tottenham Hotspur.

Arteta’s side were without skipper Odegaard due to an ankle injury suffered on Norway duty, while fellow midfielder Rice served a suspension for his red card against Brighton & Hove Albion, but the Premier League title contenders dug deep with a combative display, benefiting from Tottenham’s latest display of wasteful finishing before Gabriel Magalhaes bagged the winner in the second half.

The Brazilian defender’s first goal since February made it three wins from four league games for unbeaten Arsenal as they chase a first title since 2003-2004 after two successive runners-up finishes.

Photo: Reuters

“Super happy, obviously. We know what it means for our club and our people to win a north London derby,” Arteta said. “We had moments in the game where we had to suffer. We had to adapt a little bit because of some of the players we lost.”

“I prepared for Tottenham for five days, then in one moment I lost one player and in another I lost another. I didn’t sleep much,” he said. “There were no excuses, no crying. The players have thick skin. They love the game. Sometimes to win you have to do the ugly things and they love to do that. I loved it, because day after day the players are hungrier and hungrier.”

Arsenal have now won on their past three visits to Tottenham, losing just once, in May 2022, in their past eight meetings with their hated neighbors.

The second-placed Gunners are two points behind Manchester City as they turn their attention to their UEFA Champions League opener at Atalanta BC on Thursday before traveling to face Pep Guardiola’s champions next weekend.

Arteta believes Arsenal’s latest success behind enemy lines will stand them in good stead for a daunting week.

“We won three years in a row here. That is a big thing in the history of the club,” he said. “It is a tough week coming up. The players believe already. We have a won a lot of big games, but this will give us a lot of energy and belief.”

Since the start of last season, Arsenal have scored more goals (23) from dead-ball positions than any other team in the English Premier League.

No wonder Arteta turned to embrace Nicolas Jover, the German assistant coach poached from Manchester City as Arsenal’s set-piece guru, immediately after Gabriel’s goal.

“I made the decision to bring him to City when I was there and to Arsenal,” Arteta said. “Together with the rest of the staff, they have injected the belief that there are many ways to win games and this is one of them, so big credit to them.”

It was another dispiriting north London derby for Spurs manager Ange Postecoglou.

The Australian has come under fire for Tottenham’s sloppy start to the season, which now includes successive defeats and only one win.

Having conceded more dead-ball goals than any top-flight team except Nottingham Forest over the past two seasons, Tottenham’s weak defending at set-pieces was ruthlessly exposed by Arsenal, but Postecoglou said that was not the reason for the loss, instead pointing at his side’s lack of cutting edge and composure in the final third.

Son Heung-min was unusually quiet, while former AFC Bournemouth striker Dominic Solanke struggled on his home debut after returning from injury.

“We had some good opportunities, but we could have had so many more. We wasted our good play, similar to other games when we haven’t had the conviction in the front third. You keep opponents in the game when you do that,” Postecoglou said.

On Tottenham’s set-pieces woes, Postecoglou added: “We handled them well for the most part. We switched off for one and paid the price. It wasn’t just [Cristian] Romero that switched off, it was a couple of others. There’s a narrative for some reason that people think I don’t care about set-pieces. We work on them all the time.”

In Sunday’s only other game, Harvey Barnes completed a turnaround for Newcastle United with a long-range strike into the top corner in the 80th minute to seal a 2-1 away win at Wolverhampton Wanderers.

The hosts took the lead through Mario Lemina’s first-half goal and Wolves were still ahead until the 75th minute, when Fabian Schar equalized with a slice of luck as his long-range strike was deflected off the head of Craig Dawson and into the net.

However, there was no luck involved in Barnes’ goal. He exchanged passes with Joe Willock before cutting inside and unleashing a shot well outside the penalty area that sailed into the far corner.

Newcastle extended their unbeaten start to the season, while Wolves have just one point from four games.

“Massive win for us,” Newcastle manager Eddie Howe said. “Away from home we have questions to answer and that is a big step forward for us.”

Additional reporting by AP

Comments will be moderated. Keep comments relevant to the article. Remarks containing abusive and obscene language, personal attacks of any kind or promotion will be removed and the user banned. Final decision will be at the discretion of the Taipei Times.



Arsenal win north London derby

RELATED ARTICLES
- Advertisment -
Google search engine

Most Popular

Recent Comments