ARSENAL RULE LONDON: EZE AND GYöKERES SHINE AS GUNNERS DISMANTLE SPURS AT THE LANE
Arsenal dominate the derby! Discover how Eze and Gyökeres fueled a 4-1 win while Spurs sank further into a relegation battle.
For a little while before today’s North London Derby at home between Tottenham and Arsenal, there was some hope. Igor Tudor stepped in for his first match as interim head coach, Dele Alli showed up as a halftime guest, and you could almost believe Spurs might turn their whole season around and spoil Arsenal’s, all in one afternoon.
But that didn’t happen. Arsenal walked away with the win, thanks to two goals each from Eberechi Eze, who, remember, rejected Spurs to join Arsenal, and Victor Gyokeres, their misfiring Swedish striker. Randal Kolo Muani managed to tie things up in the first half just two minutes after Eze’s opener, and he even put the ball in the net again, only for the ref to rule it out after Gabriel Magalhaes hit the turf a bit too dramatically. Richarlison came off the bench in the second half and nearly scored with a clever flick, but David Raya somehow kept it out. Then, in extra time, Gyokeres slammed in another, and Arsenal left with a 4-1 win.
Honestly, Arsenal controlled the match from the start. They had the ball, the stats – everything. Spurs fans can’t help but feel gutted. The team’s stuck in a real relegation fight now, and they need every single point they can scrape together. Losing to Arsenal always stings, but this one? It hurts even more than usual.
That finality you get from moments like Didier Drogba’s penalty after extra time in the 2012 Champions League Final – it’s almost too much. If you really want to understand the pressure and weight of that moment, you’ve got to dig into all the tangled histories leading up to it.
Back to today: Tudor set Spurs up with his usual back three, but he had to improvise. Joao Palhinha and Radu Dragusin lined up next to Micky van de Ven, since Cristian Romero was suspended and Kevin Danso was out hurt. Honestly, Spurs didn’t look that different from how they played under Thomas Frank for most of this season, but there was a bit more energy, a little more purpose, at least at the start. That edge, the one they’ve been missing for months, showed up for a bit, but it just wasn’t enough.
ARTETA HITS BACK: ARSENAL BOSS UNAPOLOGETIC ABOUT "RUTHLESS" CORNER TACTICS BEFORE BRIGHTON CLASH
Mikel Arteta isn't backing down! Read about Arsenal's record-tying corner goals and the "time-wasting" row with Brighton's Hurzeler.
Mikel Arteta isn’t losing sleep over the criticism of Arsenal’s set-piece tactics, even after Brighton boss Fabian Hurzeler stirred things up before their Wednesday clash by taking a few shots at Arsenal’s style. Set pieces have become a big deal in the Premier League this season, and honestly, Arsenal are running the show. That kind of dominance is bound to ruffle some feathers.
Sunday’s win over Chelsea made it pretty clear that both Arsenal goals came from corners. That puts them at 19 set-piece goals in 29 league games, five more than Newcastle and a whopping 12 ahead of Brighton. Brighton might not score as many from set pieces, but they’re tough to break down, having conceded just five set-piece goals, the best defensive record in the league.
This whole debate blew up again after Liverpool’s Arne Slot complained that set pieces are ruining the flow of matches, making games less fun to watch. Stats back it up: nearly 28% of Premier League goals this season have come from non-penalty set pieces, the highest since 2009-10.
Hurzeler didn’t hold back when asked for his take on Tuesday. He pointed fingers at Arsenal, saying set pieces mess with the game’s rhythm and that there aren’t clear rules about how long teams can take for corners or throw-ins. “Some of the blocking or the way teams are blocking, there’s no clear rule; sometimes it’s a foul, sometimes it’s not,” he said. His main gripe? He wants clear rules on how much time teams can waste. “When Arsenal are leading and have a corner, sometimes they take over a minute just to kick the ball. We end up with 50 minutes of actual game time instead of 65. The difference is huge.”
He added, “Fans pay a lot to watch us play. They want to see football, not 40 minutes of standing around while the ball isn’t in play.”
Arteta faced the criticism in his press conference. When asked if he thinks other teams would love to be as ruthless on set pieces as Arsenal, he didn’t hesitate. “I want us to be the best. I get frustrated that we don’t score more and that we still concede, too,” he said. “We want to dominate every part of the game. That’s our goal as a team and as a club. So let’s keep pushing.”
And as for the critics? Arteta just shrugged: “Part of the job.”
"SET-PIECE AGAIN": WHY ARSENAL FANS ARE TAUNTING RIVALS WITH THEIR NEW CHANT.
William Saliba and Jurrien Timber headers secured a vital win for Arsenal as Chelsea finished with ten men at the Emirates.
Arsenal found the net twice from corners and let one in the same way, a clear sign of just how much set pieces matter in the Premier League these days.
William Saliba got Arsenal going with his first goal since December, putting them ahead at the Emirates. But Arsenal didn’t hold the lead for long. Just before halftime, Piero Hincapie scored an own goal from one of Reece James’ wicked corners, pulling Chelsea level.
After the break, Timber popped up with a crucial header, sealing three points for Arsenal. Things got worse for Chelsea when Pedro Neto saw red for a second yellow.
With this win, Arsenal’s second in a row, they stretched their lead over Manchester City back to five points. City still has a game in hand after edging Leeds 1-0 on Saturday, but Arsenal keeps the pressure on.
People were starting to question Arsenal’s nerve after a rough patch that reopened the title race. But they’ve bounced back at just the right time. Last weekend, they smashed Tottenham 4-1. This time, they ground out a much tighter victory.
Now, Arsenal heads to Brighton on Wednesday, with just nine games left as they chase their first league title since 2004.
They’re still fighting on all fronts, too: League Cup final, Champions League last 16, and FA Cup fifth round. And here’s a break for Arteta: they only have one more league game against a top-six side, and it’s a big one: a trip to Manchester City on April 18.
For Chelsea, things are going the other way. That’s three games without a win, and their Champions League hopes just took another hit. They’re down to sixth, and they’ve now lost to Arsenal three times since Liam Rosenior took charge.
Chelsea almost handed Arsenal an early present when Robert Sanchez, under pressure from Viktor Gyokeres, nearly fumbled the ball away. Somehow, he recovered just in time.
But Sanchez looked shaky again soon after, and Rosenior could only watch in disbelief. Arsenal sensed blood and struck first, using one of the set-piece coach Nicolas Jover’s clever routines. Gabriel Magalhaes rose above everyone to head Bukayo Saka’s corner across the six-yard box, where Saliba finished it off, though it needed a deflection off Mamadou Sarr to find the net.
Set pieces are haunting Rosenior’s Chelsea. That’s eight goals conceded from dead balls in his first 13 matches; four of those were against Arsenal alone.
Chelsea did hit back, though. Right before the break, Reece James’ corner bounced off Declan Rice’s shoulder, forcing a sharp save from David Raya. Arsenal didn’t heed the warning. From the next corner, James whipped it in again, and Hincapie headed it into his own net.
The danger didn’t stop there. James kept swinging corners in, and Joao Pedro missed two decent chances, one straight at Raya and another wide of the mark.
Those missed chances cost Chelsea. In the 66th minute, Arsenal struck again from a corner. Timber timed his run perfectly and headed home from Rice’s delivery. Chelsea shouted for a foul on Sanchez, but the goal stood.
That’s 16 goals from corners for Arsenal this season. Their fans loved it, singing, “Set-piece again, ole, ole.”
Not long after, Neto lost his cool, clattering Gabriel Martinelli and picking up a second yellow. That left Chelsea with ten men for the final stretch.
Arsenal still needed one more big save from Raya in stoppage time to deny Alejandro Garnacho, but once that danger passed, the celebration really began.