Arsenal 1-3 Bayern Munich
Although a defeat always hurts,
especially when your side has been completely outplayed and outthought by the
opposition, there was an air of inevitability about proceedings at the Emirates
stadium on Tuesday night. At the final whistle, many Arsenal supporters simply
shrugged their shoulders in an act of acknowledgement that their side had
simply not been good enough and in truth they had arrived at the stadium
expecting nothing less.
The Gunners have not played well
all season and have clearly struggled to believe in their ability to overcome
superior opposition. In the pre match press conference, Mikel Arteta
highlighted the fact his side would need to start the game well and could not
afford to allow their opponents to race into a two goal lead as had happened
previously against Manchester City, Chelsea and Liverpool. Having informed the
press of the importance to avoid such a recurrence, Arteta seemed to have
forgotten to provide the same advice to his teammates and with only 22 minutes
gone, the game and indeed the tie were effectively over as Bayern raced into a
two goal lead.
Calamitous mistakes at the back
had once again cost Arsenal dear and although Jack Wilshere refused to lay the
blame at the feet of his manager and instead put the spotlight on the players
who had ultimately let the Frenchman down, Wenger must also take
responsibility. This is a man who is notorious for not setting up his teams
with the opposition at the forefront of his thinking and while such an approach
has been successful in the past, it is now proving to be his downfall. In his
trophy laden years with the club, Wenger could afford to largely focus on his
own team as the side was full of players who possessed the quality and ability
to impose their game on the opposition. Without the likes of Vieria, Pires,
Henry and Bergkamp, Arsenal can no longer afford to walk into games without a
detailed plan on how to stop their opponents. However in an act of sheer
stubbornness, Wenger refuses to accede to this view.
With Thomas Vermaelen having to
fill in at left back against Bayern it was clear that the Gunners would be
vulnerable from attacks down this flank. Yet in front of Vermaelen, Wenger
decided to deploy Podolski, who is notorious for his lack of desire to track
back. Consequently, Bayern tore Arsenal apart down the Gunners left hand side
as the home side were unable to deal with the excellent Philip Lahm’s
overlapping runs. It was no real surprise therefore that two of the three goals
scored by the Germans originated from this position.
Only seven minutes in and with
Vermaelen caught on the ball up field, Thomas Muller broke free on the right
wing. As he approached the by-line, the German international cut the ball back
towards the edge of the area for the completely unmarked Toni Kroos to fire
past Szczesny, to give the away side the lead. From an Arsenal perspective it
was a completely avoidable goal and highlighted once again, Wenger’s foolish
decision not to sign a defensive midfielder in either the summer or winter
transfer window. Such a player would have provided a shield for the back four
and as Muller broke free on the left, an out and out defensive midfielder would
not have been sucked into the box, as happened to Aaron Ramsey, but rather
would have been stood on the edge of the Arsenal penalty area, ready to either
intercept Muller’s cut back or at the very least be in a position to close down
Kroos, preventing the shot on goal.
Arsenal’s defence is not strong
enough to deal with such superior opposition and are often all at sea. They
therefore simply cannot afford to play against the top sides in Europe and the
Premier League without the protective shield an out and out defensive
midfielder would provide. Arteta has tried his best in this position all
season, but against the very best teams, the Spaniard has been found wanting.
It is not necessarily his fault, he is just not equipped to perform such a
role. Wenger maybe attempted to address this issue by deploying Aaron Ramsey
alongside Arteta on Tuesday, but as the Welshman’s inclusion was accommodated
by switching Santi Cazorla to the right flank, it actually only served to
undermine Arsenal’s attack. Bayern completely dominated the midfield battle and
with Cazorla nullified out wide the Gunners had also lost the influence of one
of their most creative players.
While Arsenal toiled and
struggled, Bayern were the epitome of German efficiency, taking every
opportunity to exploit the Gunners weaknesses. Arsenal never stood a chance. Having
already taken an early lead, the Germans took full advantage of Arsenal’s poor
defending from set pieces to double their lead in the 22nd minute
from a corner. Per Mertesacker completely lost Daniel Van Buyten at the near
post, allowing the Dutchman a free header on goal. Szczesny’s attempt at saving
the goal bound effort was laughable as he merely patted the ball straight to
Thomas Muller, who was practically stood on the goal line, for the German to
fire into the roof of the net.
The Gunners just weren’t in the
game and should have been three down on the stroke of half time as Mario Mandzukic
was allowed plenty of time and space as he stood in between Koscielny and
Mertesacker, without being challenged, but could only divert his free header
just wide of goal.
As in previous games in which
Arsenal have allowed the opposition to race into a two goal lead, the Gunners
did produce a much improved performance in the second half, but it was merely a
case of too little too late. They didn’t really threaten Manuel Neuer’s goal
but managed to half the deficit from a corner which was mistakenly awarded to
the home side. Neuer hesitated and Jack Wilshere’s delivery was allowed to
drift across goal for the unmarked Podolski to head home. Having been so
outplayed in the first half, Arsenal were suddenly back in the game and
remarkably could have equalised through Olivier Giroud’s volley, following a
fantastic pass by Rosicky to Walcott, who crossed the ball to the French
striker. Unfortunately Giroud could only direct his shot straight at Neuer and
Bayern duly made the Gunners pay for squandering this opportunity.
As had happened so often
throughout the match, Vermaelen wasn’t given enough support to quell Philip
Lahm’s overlapping run and the German international was allowed to deliver a
low ball into the box for Mandzukic, who had easily escaped the attention of
Sagna, to apply the finish, albeit a somewhat clumsy one.
With the quest to finish in the
top four becoming more and more fraught with each passing week, Tuesday’s game against
Bayern may well be the last home Champions League game for quite some time.
What a shame it will always be remembered for highlighting just how far Arsenal have
fallen as a European force.
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