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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

Arsenal finish league campaign with rotated XI and 2-1 win at Selhurst Park

Arsenal ended the season with a rotated XI, a 2-1 win at Selhurst Park that preserved energy. Ahead.

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Arsenal closed the Premier League season with a 2-1 victory over Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park in a match that felt like a deliberate exercise in squad management. Gabriel Jesus opened the scoring in the 42nd minute after Gabriel Martinelli toe-poked the ball to him; Jesus broke past Jefferson Lerma and placed his near-post drive just beyond Dean Henderson.

Three minutes into the second half Noni Madueke added a second when he side-footed a volley from Martinelli’s corner to make it 2-0. Madueke was the most consistent attacking threat on the night and produced the game’s busiest offensive performance. Jean-Philippe Mateta pulled one back with a late header flick in the 89th minute, and Palace thought they had an equaliser in stoppage time only for it to be ruled offside.

Both clubs clearly prioritised upcoming fixtures. Arsenal had already secured the Premier League title and rested several regulars. Bukayo Saka, William Saliba, David Raya, Declan Rice and Gabriel were omitted from the starting lineup. The former three did not train on Thursday and each had individual programmes; Saliba and Raya were not called up. Gabriel entered as a second-half substitute.

Crystal Palace are also focused on the near future, preparing for the Europa Conference League final against Rayo Vallecano on Wednesday. The two sides used heavily rotated squads and a subdued tempo, with an emphasis on protecting fitness ahead of their cup finals.

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Substitutions had impact: Kai Havertz, introduced at half-time, set up the Madueke goal shortly after coming on. Eberechi Eze received a standing ovation from the home fans when he entered. Madueke later suffered an apparent left leg issue and was replaced by Victor Gyökeres.

Match metrics underline Arsenal’s control: 61% possession to Palace’s 39%, expected goals 2.56 to 1.11, 17 total shots to 8, seven shots on target to three, and a pass accuracy of 89% versus 79%. The result completed a low-risk finish to the league campaign as both clubs now turn attention to major cup finals.

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Arsenal

Arsenal survive nervy evening to beat Burnley as Havertz header decides it

Arsenal edged Burnley 1-0 as Kai Havertz headed from a Bukayo Saka corner and held top spot. tonight

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Arsenal edged a tense 1-0 victory over Burnley at the Emirates, a result that felt familiar in scoreline and closing-stage anxiety but carried fresh significance on the title run-in. Victory moved Arsenal five points clear of Manchester City, who must beat Bournemouth on Tuesday to take the title race to the final day.

“They will be relaxed,” Martin Ødegaard warned in his prematch program notes. “But tonight, it’s all about us.” The comment set the tone for a crowd that spent hours building intensity outside the ground and then maintained a wide-eyed mania throughout the match.

An unremarkable opening half gained momentum from a set piece. After two short corners from the same side, Bukayo Saka delivered an in-swinging cross in the 37th minute and Kai Havertz rose highest to head home. It was a straightforward finish and another example of Arsenal’s set-piece potency: it was the 19th different Premier League game in which Arsenal have scored from a set piece, matching the competition record, per Opta.

Mikel Arteta and set-piece coach Nicolas Jover again swapped positions at the edge of the technical area before dead balls, a small ritual that prefaced the decisive moment.

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Player ratings (selected):
GK: David Raya—7.0: As much of a spectator as the 60,000 stuffed into the stands.
RB: Cristhian Mosquera—6.7: Spent precious little time defending.
CB: William Saliba—7.1: Breezed around the pitch with a sense of lofty authority.
LB: Riccardo Calafiori—7.0: Roamed widely.
DM: Declan Rice—7.9: The only source of ballast in Arsenal’s airy midfield.
CM: Martin Ødegaard—6.8: Flitted around the final third.
RW: Bukayo Saka—8.0: Tormented Lucas Pires.
ST: Kai Havertz—7.9: Brilliant leap to break the deadlock.
LW: Leandro Trossard—7.4: Found a way beyond Kyle Walker.

Subs included Piero Hincapié (72’ for Calafiori) 6.3, Myles Lewis-Skelly (73’ for Eze) 6.2 and Viktor Gyökeres (73’ for Havertz) 6.3. Zubimendi and Gabriel Martinelli appeared late.

Key statistics: possession 61% to 39%, xG 1.03 to 0.21, total shots 13 to 5, shots on target 3 to 0, pass accuracy 86% to 78%, fouls 7 to 16.

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Arsenal Match Reports

VAR Overturn Erases West Ham’s Stoppage-Time Equaliser at London Stadium

Late VAR overturn at London Stadium erased West Ham’s stoppage-time equaliser and sparked debate….

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Arsenal held on for a 1–0 win after a dramatic stoppage-time incident at London Stadium. Early in stoppage time referee Chris Kavanagh signalled that Callum Wilson’s 95th-minute effort had crossed the line, but a lengthy VAR review followed and the original decision was overturned.

The review centred on contact between West Ham striker Pablo and Arsenal goalkeeper David Raya. Arteta was quick to gesture that Raya had been impeded. Replays showed Pablo with his arm across Raya’s chest just before the goalkeeper went to ground. The VAR process examined whether that contact affected Raya’s ability to claim the ball, which he had failed to hold initially.

A pitchside review was recommended and the referee judged that Pablo had unfairly impacted Raya’s ability to claim the ball. The match report from the scene read: “After review, West Ham number 19 commits a foul on the goalkeeper. Final decision is direct free kick.” The decisive ruling removed what would have been a late equaliser for West Ham and left Arsenal in control as the final whistle followed.

The outcome carried wider consequences for both clubs. Awarding the goal would have reopened the Premier League title race by inviting Manchester City back into contention, while striking it out left Arsenal in a stronger position and further eroded West Ham’s survival prospects. Arsenal were subsequently awarded a free kick from which they closed out the game.

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Fans on social media were quick to reference a similar early-season incident. In the first gameweek Arsenal beat Manchester United 1–0 at Old Trafford with a header from Riccardo Calafiori 13 minutes into the game. Altay Bayındır immediately protested the goal and argued he had been impeded by William Saliba.

The late VAR intervention at London Stadium will be debated for days, both for its immediate effect on the table and for its echoes of incidents earlier in the season.

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