2 November 28, 2021The Sunday Times 2GS
Football Premier League
Dubravka
7
Schär
6
Krafth
5
Ritchie
5
Fraser
5
Saint-Maximin
6
Lascelles
6
Wilson
6
Willock
6
Shelvey
7
Joelinton
5
4-2-3-1
Ramsdale
8
White
8
Tavar e s
8
Tomiyasu
7
Odegaard
6
Smith Rowe
7
Saka
8
Aubameyang
5
Gabriel
6
Partey
6
Lokonga
7
4-2-3-1
A
t least, in the first flush of
Venky’s ownership, Black-
burn Rovers entertained us.
They inquired about Ronal-
dinho, appointed a TV pun-
dit as global adviser, and
lost games 7-1. Newcastle
United, on the other hand,
are not so much living the dream as
sending the Premier League to sleep.
Last weekend’s 3-3 home draw with
Brentford was clearly an aberration:
here was another grey, embattled,
unambitious and low-yield display
from an outfit that has contrived to
take three points from 18 since becom-
ing the richest club in the world.
Eddie Howe, on the touchline for
the first time since being appointed
head coach, having missed the Brent-
ford game with Covid, faces an enor-
mous challenge to breathe some life —
and joy — into a dour collection of
players who have been unable to win a
single match all season. Since Saudi
Arabia, with its horrible human rights
record, bought Newcastle, their sup-
porters’ consciences have been tested
far more than the opposition. The
spectacle of Allan Saint-Maximin, one
of football’s most effervescent talents,
defending deep for almost the entire
90 minutes encapsulated the team’s
lack of self-expression.
Arsenal were good — very good, in
passages — after getting through an
opening 40 minutes during which
their passing and movement were not
smart or sharp enough to pierce the
ten men the opposition usually had
behind the ball. They went level on
points with fourth-placed West Ham
United and this was good therapy
after last weekend’s trauma of being
dismantled at Anfield.
Both of their goals were lovely, the
product of good coaching, budding
talent and old-school Arsenal virtues
of passing triangles and clever “out-
side-to-in” movement around the
box. The combined age of Mikel
Arteta’s scorers was the same as
Zlatan Ibrahimovic: 40.
Bukayo Saka claimed the first, 11
minutes after half-time. Part of Arse-
nal’s improvement, in terms of break-
ing Newcastle down, came from
Arteta encouraging his defenders to
step into midfield or attacking posi-
tions to create overloads. The out-
standing, buccaneering Nuno Tavares
moved from the flank to a dangerous
space just inside Newcastle’s box and
outside him Saka found Emile Smith
Rowe. Arsenal’s No 10 fed the ball to
Tavares, who turned sharply and
rolled it into the path of Saka, who had
HOWE REALISES
SIZE OF HIS TASK
Martinelli
watches his
effort beat
Dubravka to
clinch the
victory for
Arsenal
20
ARSENAL
NEWCASTLE
UNITED
Saka 56
Martinelli 66
Star man Nuno Tavares (Arsenal).
Substitutes: Arsenal G Martinelli (for Saka
64min, 7), A Lacazette (for Aubameyang 76),
M Elneny (for Partey 85)
Newcastle United M Almirón (for Ritchie 67, 5),
J Murphy (for Joelinton 67, 5), I Hayden (for
Shelvey 88).
Referee S Attwell.
Attendance 59,886.
JONATHAN
NORTHCROFT
Football Correspondent
At Emirates Stadium
made a typically intelligent burst from
wide in behind a leaden Emil Krafth.
With a gorgeous early shot into the
far corner, with his left foot, Saka beat
Martin Dubravka. He went off eight
minutes later, walking gingerly, after
feeling discomfort in a quad muscle
but Arteta did not give the impression
that the injury is serious.
The replacement was Gabriel
Martinelli and the Brazilian scored,
with an even better finish than Saka’s,
after only 93 seconds on the pitch and
with only his second touch. Ben White
brought the ball out from defence and
played to Takehiro Tomiyasu, who
was charging beyond Matt Ritchie on
the left flank. Tomiyasu’s ball inside
was a beauty and Martinelli, having
made a brilliant run from wide into
the box, lobbed Dubravka on the vol-
ley for his first goal at the Emirates
since January last year.
“The word was we had to be
patient,” Arteta, the Arsenal manager,
said. “We had to play with urgency
and rhythm. That’s what we did in the
second half. We found spaces and
that’s how we scored the goals.”
Howe was so eager to affect things
that he spent the game beyond the
edge of his technical area, feet right on
the touchline, using breaks in play to
call players over for individual
instruction and doing a lot of usher-
ing, pointing and windmill-armed
geeing up.
He felt Newcastle played well,
which was probably a reflection of
how organised and effortful they
were, and maybe until the January
transfer window comes there is not a
lot more he can do with this squad.
But watching them was grim: until