Arsenal 1-3 Aston Villa
Following Ivan Gazidis’ now
infamous statement at the end of last season, in which he proclaimed an
escalation in Arsenal’s financial strength, the 2013/14 season was seen as the
point at which the Gunners would once again begin to challenge for the biggest
trophies in football. Yet with no money spent so far, the first match of the
new campaign not only ended in disappointing defeat yesterday, but also with
the home crowd taking out their frustrations on the Arsenal dugout. As soon as
Aston Villa scored their third goal of the afternoon, to secure all three
points, the Emirates crowd turned on Arsene Wenger, imploring the Frenchman to
spend the money he has at his disposal, with some even calling for the manager’s
head.
Strangely enough these were the
same supporters who had been cheering their side on as early as the fifth
minute, having seen their team take the lead through an excellently well worked
goal. Jack Wilshere picked up possession deep inside his own half and strode
forward, before laying the ball off to Rosicky, who released Oxlade-Chamberlain
on the left wing. The young Englishman surged into the box, squaring the ball
across goal for Giroud to fire home, following excellent movement from the
Frenchman. It was a goal reminiscent of Arsenal of old, as quick movement and
passing had opened up the Villa defence. Unfortunately this was as good as it
got for the home side.
Having taken such an early lead,
the Gunners were in control, with the visitors intent on sitting deep and
playing long balls up to Christian Benteke. Although the home side did at times
display neat interplay in midfield, Arsenal weren’t able to create significant
chances and the visitors hadn’t really offered anything in return, until
referee Anthony Taylor brought Paul Lambert’s team right back into the game
with a series of ludicrous decisions. Arsenal supporters are accustomed to
seeing poor refereeing displays at the Emirates, but Taylor set the bar at an
all time low yesterday. Time and time again the referee awarded free kicks to
the opposition for seemingly innocuous challenges, leading to great frustration
amongst the players and fans.
In the 22nd minute,
Taylor made the first of three unfathomable decisions which changed the game.
Gabriel Agbonlahor was allowed the freedom of the Emirates as he raced through
on goal, from the halfway line, unchallenged. As he entered the penalty area, Szczesny
came off his line to challenge the Englishman but Agbonlahor got there first, prodding
the ball away and the Polish goalkeeper inevitably collided with him. It was a
clear penalty; however with the ball rolling into the path of Andi Weimann,
Taylor allowed play to go on. Yet when the Austrian saw his shot hit the side
netting, Taylor awarded the penalty. Surely, as Villa still had a shot on goal,
they had made use of the advantage awarded to them by the referee. The fact
Weimann did not score should have no bearing on whether the official then pulls
play back.
With the Emirates crowd seething,
Benteke stepped up to take the spot kick, which Szczesny managed to save.
Unfortunately, the ball looped up perfectly for the Belgian powerhouse to make amends
and nod home to restore parity.
In the 62nd minute
Taylor compounded his earlier error, by awarding Villa another penalty. This
time Cazorla, who was clearly off the pace, lost possession following poor
control and Agbonlahor subsequently charged into the box. Laurent Koscielny
produced an excellent last ditch tackle to clear the ball, the linesman, who
had a clear view of the incident flagged for a corner, but the referee overruled
his assistant to award the away side a penalty. Benteke this time sent Szczesny
the wrong way to give Villa the lead.
Five minutes later and Arsenal
were reduced to ten men, as Koscielny, who had been booked for conceding the
penalty, was cautioned for a second time following a non-foul on Weimann.
Even with only ten men, Arsenal
were the only side pushing forward and should have equalised following
excellent play by Rosicky. The Czech international skipping past two
challenges, exchanging passes with Giroud, before seeing his shot blocked by
Guzan and the American goalkeeper was at it again minutes later, tipping
Cazorla’s shot onto the crossbar. Arsenal were made to pay for missing these
guilt edged chances, as with four minutes left, Luna was sent through from the
half way line and the Spaniard buried his shot past Szczesny to seal all three
points.
Following a summer of
inexplicable inactivity, the fans inside the Emirates were rightly frustrated,
but the way in which they turned on the manager did not help the team at all. Highbury
was a fortress because the fans stood as one with the team. At the Emirates
however, there has recently been a distinct sense that the atmosphere can turn
sour at the drop of a hat. Away teams are very much aware of this and play on
it. With the score 1-1, booing the team off at halftime yesterday was unnecessary.
Arsenal certainly weren’t at their best but they weren’t terrible either. In fact
the midfield trio of Ramsey, Wilshere and Rosicky displayed moments of great interplay
and had the referee not intervened in the way he did, Arsenal may well have
secured the win. Each game must be viewed in its own context. Had Villa
completely dominated the match and outplayed the Gunners then the catcalls
would have been justified, but this was simply a case of everything going against
the home side. The injury to Gibbs forced a reshuffle in defence with Sagna
switching to left back and Arsenal never regained their composure at the back,
with the sending off compounding matters further. Of course Wenger is not
completely blameless. The fact he has still not addressed the weaknesses in
defence and the lack of an out and out defensive midfielder is beyond belief.
Waiting for the last day of the transfer window to secure the services of a
truly world class player is understandable, but once again performing a 2011 style
last minute mad trolley dash to beef up a squad desperately short of numbers is
ludicrous.
To put this defeat down to bad decisions from the referee is immature and incorrect. Arsenal lost this game because they do not have dominant players in the team anymore. Indeed - this Arsenal team lacks real power in every department.
ReplyDeleteThe goalkeeper is a chump. The defence can go walkabout at any time. The midfield is wonderfully silky and full of guile but it is also fundamentally lightweight and too easily knocked off the ball. The attack is pedestrian by any measure - the most toothless I can recall for a generation.
Arsenal lost because a young Villa team - with a handful of strong promising players - fought harder to win it. Villa have got stronger - Arsenal have stood still.
Where are the Adam's? The Bergkamp's? The Viera's? The Henry's? The Van Persies? Arsenal have a long and proud tradition of world class leaders - but in this team I don't see them. Talent yes - but that dominance that turns defeats into victories no matter what? No.
So you blame the referee all you want - but the Villa of last season would still have found a way to lose this game - while the Arsenal of old would have found a way to win it. That neither team did what it used to is a sign of the change that is happening - and change comes to all - just you ask a red scouser what it's like to watch a once great club slide away into the obscurity of the Europa League.