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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

Eze winner returns Arsenal to summit but double injury scare mars victory

Eze’s wonder goal won 1–0 over Newcastle, but Havertz and Eze left before the hour injured. Arsenal.

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Eberechi Eze’s spectacular finish secured a 1–0 victory for Arsenal over Newcastle United, but the result came with two significant fitness concerns. The goal, fashioned from a corner routine, arrived after a sequence of short passes from Noni Madueke to Martin Ødegaard that failed to yield. Madueke instead fed Kai Havertz inside the box; his deft prod allowed Eze to run onto the ball and whip it into the top corner.

The win restores Arsenal to the top of the Premier League table, yet attention will now be split between Manchester and the club’s treatment room with only four days to prepare for the first leg of the Champions League semifinals against Atlético Madrid. Mikel Arteta appeared to have found a first-choice frontline in the technical trio of Eze, Havertz and Martin Ødegaard, supported by a direct right-sided outlet. That combination will be assessed carefully after both Havertz and Eze failed to reach the hour mark.

There was a lifted atmosphere around north London before kick-off. Pep Guardiola put Manchester City’s strong spring form down to the reappearance of the sun and Arteta claimed that his side have benefited from a bit of vitamin D. ”The energy has been so good,” he beamed ahead of kickoff, “the weather has helped as well. So much has been beautiful.” The goal fell into that category and gave the hosts control of the match, even if the remainder of the performance was conservative once the lead arrived.

Individual contributions included a composed outing from David Raya (7.9) and a standout defensive display from Piero Hincapié (8.0). Eze earned a 7.7 for a lively attacking display. Kai Havertz was given 7.1 before his early exit and was replaced by Viktor Gyökeres (34’). Eze was withdrawn on 53’ for Gabriel Martinelli. Subs later included Myles Lewis-Skelly (80’) and Bukayo Saka (81’). Unused substitutes were Kepa Arrizabalaga, Cristhian Mosquera, Max Dowman, Gabriel Jesus and Leandro Trossard.

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Match figures showed Arsenal with 45% possession to Newcastle’s 55%, expected goals of 0.64 to 0.91, total shots 11 to 13 and shots on target 4 to 3. The victory is valuable, but the medical reports will dominate the coming days.

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Arsenal Match Reports

Havertz’s Workrate Rewarded but Arsenal Fall Short in Manchester

Arteta’s choice to start Kai Havertz paid off with a swift equaliser, but Arsenal lost in Manchester

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Arsenal arrived at Manchester City with the chance to strengthen their position at the top, only to leave with a 2–1 defeat that trims their lead to three points. Rayan Cherki produced a wonderful opening goal for City, and Arsenal responded almost immediately when Kai Havertz charged down Gianluigi Donnarumma’s clearance to restore parity.

Mikel Arteta’s selection decision in attack drew focus before kick-off. Havertz was preferred to Viktor Gyökeres for the start, a choice rooted in the German’s recent effectiveness during the run-in two seasons ago and his work without the ball. The substitution pattern underlined the same dilemma: Gyökeres has struggled through much of his debut campaign and was introduced only late, while Havertz carried the attacking reference point for the majority of the match.

Havertz’s pressing led directly to the equaliser and he offered a useful focal point, but he also missed Arsenal’s best chance of the second half and had a late miss to dwell on. The team generated moments after half-time and could have taken control, yet City ultimately held on for a significant victory.

The defeat means Arsenal did not capitalise on last Saturday’s opportunity to move 12 points clear, and the run-in remains finely balanced heading into midweek fixtures.

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Player ratings

GK: David Raya — 5.9: Early nervy moment in possession that set a tentative tone.
RB: Cristhian Mosquera — 6.5: Handled dangerous one-on-ones reasonably well, picked up a first-half booking.
CB: William Saliba — 6.7: Strong in Arsenal’s bright opening but had occasional lapses in possession.
CB: Gabriel — 5.8: Uncomfortable against Rayan Cherki and ultimately beaten by Erling Haaland.
LB: Piero Hincapié — 6.2: Important block to deny Antoine Semenyo and steady defensively.
CM: Martín Zubimendi — 6.5: Struggled with forward surges that exposed Arsenal’s midfield.
CM: Declan Rice — 6.8: Tasked with limiting Rodri but did not fully control the central battles.
CM: Martin Ødegaard — 6.7: First Premier League start since January and took time to find the game.
RW: Noni Madueke — 6.3: Substituted at half-time after an underwhelming first period.
ST: Kai Havertz — 7.2: Pressing earned the equaliser and he served as an effective reference point despite a late miss.
LW: Eberechi Eze — 6.3: High work rate but gave away possession in dangerous areas.

Subs: Gabriel Martinelli (46’) — 6.1; Ben White (63’) — 6.1; Leandro Trossard (74’) — 6.7; Viktor Gyökeres (85’) — N/A.

Match statistics

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Possession: Man City 59% — Arsenal 41%
Expected Goals (xG): Man City 1.41 — Arsenal 1.53
Total Shots: Man City 15 — Arsenal 9
Shots on Target: Man City 5 — Arsenal 3
Big Chances: Man City 5 — Arsenal 5
Passing Accuracy: Man City 84% — Arsenal 76%
Fouls Committed: Man City 5 — Arsenal 12

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Arsenal

Arsenal Exposed in 2-1 Home Defeat to Bournemouth After Late Set-Piece Failings

Arsenal lose 2-1 at home to Bournemouth; Gyökeres penalty canceled by Alex Scott’s 74th-minute strike

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Arsenal suffered a 2-1 home defeat to Bournemouth on Saturday, a result that handed a blunt reminder of the vulnerabilities still undermining their title bid. Junior Kroupi opened the scoring early, Viktor Gyökeres levelled from the penalty spot, but Alex Scott restored Bournemouth’s advantage in the 74th minute from a cheap Arsenal turnover.

Despite edging possession and expected goals, Arsenal struggled to fashion clear openings from open play. The side regularly moved the ball out of their defensive third under pressure only to be stifled in the final third. The report noted that the five players with the highest open-play expected assists this season were either injured or began the game on the bench, a factor that shaped the lack of creativity.

Arteta made wholesale changes just after the hour, removing the attacking three behind Gyökeres after Gabriel Martinelli, Kai Havertz and Noni Madueke produced no shots from open play. The crowd’s impatience, born of recent near-misses and cup exits, became audible and the stadium atmosphere appeared to influence player decisions on the ball.

Raya could not do much about either close-range Bournemouth strike and Gabriel’s misplaced long ball contributed to the second goal, which David Brooks and Scott finished. The manager’s post-match reference to crowd influence was unchanged in tone from a previous comment: “We noticed immediately the moment the crowd got more relaxed, more positive, the atmosphere changed and the players started to make better decisions and we managed to win the game,” the Arsenal boss mused after a stodgy 2–0 win over Everton last month.

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Player ratings reflected a mixed display: David Raya 6.0; Ben White 7.0; William Saliba 6.6; Gabriel 6.3; Myles Lewis-Skelly 6.7; Martín Zubimendi 6.1; Declan Rice 6.9; Kai Havertz 6.0; Noni Madueke 6.1; Viktor Gyökeres 7.0; Gabriel Martinelli 5.8. Notable substitutes included Eberechi Eze 7.0 and Max Dowman 5.9.

Key match statistics underlined the gap between chance creation and finishing: possession 53% to 47%, xG 2.41 to 1.20, total shots 15 to 8 and shots on target 3 each.

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