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Arsenal Match Reports

Arsenal 1-1 Brentford — Creativity Shortfall and Player Ratings

Arsenal held 1-1 by Brentford; creativity concerns persist despite Madueke’s crucial header. Ratings

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Arsenal were held to a 1–1 draw by Brentford on Thursday as a worrying lack of creativity hampered the leaders despite moments of control. The Gunners took the lead early in the second half, but Brentford responded well. Ten minutes after falling behind, the Bees equalised when Keane Lewis-Potter converted a header following a flick-on from one of Brentford’s long throws.

The draw left Arsenal feeling under pressure rather than in command; Brentford’s late spell of pressure will make them view this as two points dropped. The lead atop the Premier League table has been cut from six points to four since the weekend.

Squad availability further complicated Arsenal’s display. Bukayo Saka and Martin Ødegaard both began the game on the bench after late fitness assessments. Kai Havertz was ruled out altogether and Mikel Merino remains out long-term. The absence of sharp creativity was particularly striking given the club’s investment: the Gunners committed around £120 million to sign Eberechi Eze and Noni Madueke last summer. Until Madueke’s unlikely breakthrough header, neither player supplied the attacking spark expected for that level of investment.

Neither Eze nor Madueke created a single chance in the first half and they combined for 0.05 in expected assists (xA) before half-time, with no shots on or off target. Viktor Gyökeres was starved of service in open play and finished the game without registering a single shot. Eze was substituted at half-time as Arteta brought on Ødegaard; the club captain briefly knitted play together and Arsenal’s improved start to the second half produced the lead. Still, Madueke’s goal may mask an otherwise limited overall impact.

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Player ratings
GK: David Raya — 7.9: Needed to be sharp to keep out Igor Thiago’s first-half header.
RB: Jurriën Timber — 6.6: Saw plenty of the ball but Hincapié on the other side did more with it.
CB: Cristhian Mosquera — 7.2: Made several clearances when Brentford started the aerial bombardment in the second half. A brilliant recovery in stoppage time prevented Thiago winning it.
CB: Gabriel (c) — 7.6: Made a shaky start to the game with a wayward back pass, then got booked just 20 minutes in for a late tackle. He settled down and led the defence well.
LB: Piero Hincapié — 8.1: Strong performance up and down the left flank. Always ready to get forward and had his reward by setting up the breakthrough goal, but defensively strong as well.
CM: Martín Zubimendi — 6.6: Didn’t have as much control as might be expected. Saw considerably less of the ball than his midfield partner.
CM: Declan Rice — 7.8: Found himself locked in a battle with Brentford’s Yehor Yarmolyuk that was fun to watch. As usual, strong on both sides of the ball.
RM: Noni Madueke — 7.9: Very hit and miss in his first season as an Arsenal player. It looked like it was going to be the latter until coming out for the second half with a little more about him. Deserves credit for working hard out of possession.
AM: Eberechi Eze — 6.0: Fans will be scratching their heads as to how his impact was so limited. Didn’t return for the second half and needs to be doing much more.
LM: Leandro Trossard — 7.2: Felt like a more natural threat than any of Arsenal’s other front four.
ST: Viktor Gyökeres — 6.4: Didn’t have a lot to feed off. Finished the game without a single shot.
SUB: Martin Ødegaard (46’ for Eze) — 6.4: On at half time for his first appearance since January. His presence briefly seemed to spark something Arsenal had been missing. Lacking match sharpness?
SUB: Bukayo Saka (70’ for Madueke) — 6.0: Hardly involved, which may be a question of fitness.
SUB: Riccardo Calafiori (81’ for Hincapié) — N/A: Like for like swap at left back.
SUB: Gabriel Martinelli (81’ for Trossard) — N/A: Squandered a late chance with a poor touch
Subs not used: Kepa Arrizabalaga (GK), Ben White, Myles Lewis-Skelly, Christian Nørgaard, Gabriel Jesus.

Match statistics
Possession: Brentford 40% — Arsenal 60%
Expected Goals (xG): Brentford 1.34 — Arsenal 0.60
Total Shots: Brentford 12 — Arsenal 7
Shots on Target: Brentford 3 — Arsenal 2
Big Chances: Brentford 3 — Arsenal 1
Passing Accuracy: Brentford 75% — Arsenal 85%
Fouls Committed: Brentford 12 — Arsenal 11

Arsenal Match Reports

Saka Strike and Gabriel Resolve: Arsenal Edge Brighton as City Drop Points

Gabriel cleared off the line and Saka’s goal secured a 1-0 win as City dropped points in title race.

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Arsenal delivered a pragmatic 1-0 victory at the Amex Stadium as Bukayo Saka’s lone strike and a resolute defensive display preserved three points. The win was timely: Manchester City drew 2-2 with Nottingham Forest, leaving Arsenal seven points clear at the top, albeit having played a game more.

The match was far from a spectacle. Arsenal rode a conservative, defensive plan through a muted second half, frustrating a Brighton side that enjoyed more possession and better chances. Concerns over William Saliba’s absence were answered by Gabriel, whose early clearance off the line erased the consequences of an uncharacteristic David Raya pass and set the tone for a stern defensive evening.

Declan Rice, despite earlier injury worries, was deployed and produced another energetic display, covering large areas of the pitch. Viktor Gyökeres, whose brace in the north London derby offered hope, struggled again and was replaced on the hour by Kai Havertz. Gabriel Martinelli was ineffective on the left, registering just 16 touches, an expected assists value of 0.06 and no shots or successful dribbles.

Player ratings

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GK: David Raya — 8.2: Recovered after a sloppy pass and otherwise steady.
RB: Jurriën Timber — 8.2: Driven back by Brighton intensity but contributed an assist.
CB: Cristhian Mosquera — 7.2: Cautious after an early booking and limited in possession.
CB: Gabriel — 8.2: Dominant at the back and decisive in critical moments.
LB: Piero Hincapié — 7.6: Consistently won individual duels.
DM: Martín Zubimendi — 6.9: Still composed in possession despite a quieter outing.
DM: Declan Rice — 7.9: Overcame an injury scare to cover huge ground.
RW: Bukayo Saka — 7.4: Scored and worked tirelessly without creating much from wide areas.
AM: Eberechi Eze — 6.8: Showed one excellent pass but otherwise offered little.
LW: Gabriel Martinelli — 6.2: Largely anonymous and involved in a contentious challenge.
ST: Viktor Gyökeres — 6.0: Struggled for service and possession; substituted at 59′.

Subs: Kai Havertz (59’ for Gyökeres) — 6.4; Leandro Trossard (59’ for Martinelli) — 6.1; Riccardo Calafiori (64’ for Mosquera) — 6.0; Christian Nørgaard (80’ for Zubimendi) — 5.9.

Match statistics

Possession: Brighton 60% | Arsenal 40%
Expected Goals (xG): Brighton 0.80 | Arsenal 0.43
Total Shots: Brighton 11 | Arsenal 7
Shots on Target: Brighton 3 | Arsenal 2
Big Chances: Brighton 2 | Arsenal 0
Passing Accuracy: Brighton 82% | Arsenal 71%
Fouls Committed: Brighton 14 | Arsenal 12

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Set pieces and a red card keep Arsenal five points clear after Chelsea win

Arsenal beat Chelsea at the Emirates through set pieces, Neto sent off, and Arsenal kept five clear.

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Arsenal responded to Manchester City’s gritty victory at Leeds United by edging a set-piece-heavy derby with Chelsea at the Emirates. The match was dominated by dead-ball incidents and defensive interventions rather than fluent attacking play.

William Saliba opened the scoring with a header from a corner before Piero Hincapié’s flick from a James corner resulted in an own goal just before half-time to level matters. The second half swung back in Arsenal’s favour when Jurriën Timber met Declan Rice’s in-swinging delivery to restore the lead. Pedro Neto’s subsequent red card reduced Chelsea to ten men, but the visitors still threatened late on as Arsenal held on to reclaim a five-point advantage at the summit.

This was not a game of technical excellence. Summer signings Eberechi Eze and Viktor Gyökeres failed to build on previous displays; Eze was largely anonymous while Gyökeres looked clumsy at times. Bukayo Saka was unable to make the most of his matchup on paper against Jorrel Hato, who deputised in defence and contained the winger effectively.

Nicolas Jover’s set-piece planning proved decisive once more. Arsenal made the most of their dead-ball situations: Gabriel’s work at the back post helped create the opener and Saliba’s header was followed by Timber’s decisive header from a Rice delivery. The team have now scored a record-equalling 16 goals from corners this Premier League season.

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Individual contributions were reflected in the post-match ratings. Jurriën Timber (8.3) and David Raya (8.1) were among the top-rated performers, while Gabriel (8.2) and William Saliba (7.8) also received positive marks for their roles in set-piece goals. Declan Rice’s delivery and recovery work earned him a 7.8. Substitutes had mixed impacts: Gabriel Martinelli (55’) was credited with prompting Neto’s dismissal, Kai Havertz (76’) offered hold-up play, and Christian Nørgaard’s lengthy cameo produced little of note.

The statistics underlined a tight contest: Arsenal posted 41% possession and an xG of 1.13 to Chelsea’s 59% possession and 1.05 xG, with both sides creating two big chances each. In a match decided by set pieces and a sending off, Arsenal preserved their lead at the top.

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Arsenal’s Dominant Derby Display and the Questions It Leaves

Arsenal’s emphatic north London derby win exposed recurring defensive lapses despite strong response

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Arsenal arrived in north London under pressure after a run of two wins from seven in the league, yet they produced a performance that delivered their biggest ever north London derby victory away from home in the Premier League era. The result will ease some of the scrutiny around their title credentials but left fresh questions about recurring defensive fragility.

Gyökeres, who had gone almost three hours of Premier League football without taking a shot heading into Sunday’s trip across north London, produced a sharp showing and scored a clinical brace. Eze, whose last top-flight effort on target had been three months earlier, also finished with composure and found the net twice. The visitors benefited from space in front of an understaffed and injury-riddled Tottenham midfield; Yves Bissouma was beaten and the former Crystal Palace forward capitalised on an open net for his second.

Tottenham’s interim boss began the week bluntly: “I’m not here to enjoy,” and insisted in training that his side would bind together. “My goal in the first sessions we made is that we became a team”, “A team with a right way of going to war, a team who want to suffer.” The hosts did unsettle Arsenal early, committing a season-high 17 fouls, but fatigue told on a thin squad and the bench included five teenagers. Randal Kolo Muani, omitted from the substitutes list, took advantage of a costly moment from Declan Rice — Rice’s dribble into Kolo Muani inside Arsenal’s penalty box led to Kolo Muani’s first Premier League goal.

After the match Tudor conceded: “Arsenal was much better.” He was sharper in criticism later: “We need to run more, we need to play better, we need to defend better, we need to win duels, second duels, second balls.” He added that Arsenal were “faster,” “stronger” and more motivated.

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Concerns for Arsenal remain clear: this was the ninth goal they have conceded within 10 minutes of scoring this season, eight of those coming since the turn of the year. As Sir Matt Busby warned, “It’s very dangerous to shout,” he would say, “because in my profession every 24 hours can make you a fool.” On form and belief, Arsenal can be convincing. On concentration and structure, there is work to do.

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