Erling Haaland was right - Arsenal should forget the petty squabbles and win the battles that matter, writes IAN LADYMAN
Erling Haaland was right - Arsenal should forget the petty squabbles and win the battles that matter, writes IAN LADYMAN
Share:
The thing that maybe should niggle in the back of Arsenal minds today is that Erling Haaland actually had a point. As the Manchester City forward exited the stage at the end of Arsenal’s evisceration of his team at the Emirates on Sunday, he pointed to the badge on his arm that marks him out as a Premier League title winner. Twice. Petty? Yes. Desperate? After such a mauling, maybe a little. But it was pertinent just the same because as much as we admire Arsenal for their ambition, their energy, their growing belief and their unarguably deep well of talent, they are not a team of winners.
Not now, not yet. They win big matches but – more than five years into Mikel Arteta’s reign – they are not a team that wins big trophies. And this is the challenge that stands before them now. We know the direction that Pep Guardiola and his City team are travelling. Arsenal can take joy from that as they have suffered at the champions’ hands in recent years. Erling Haaland reminded Arsenal of a simple fact even after he was on the end of a hammering.
Haaland had a running battle with Gabriel and reminded him who the champions are. Myles Lewis-Skelly is a fantastic talent - but should he be taking the mickey out of Haaland?. Twice they have run them close for the Premier League title, twice they have wound up shredded by the wheels of Abu Dhabi’s threshing machine. But there must be more than this for Arsenal now. There must be trophies. They have three left to play for over the next four months and it feels as though they simply must find a way to win one of them.
Individual victories mean something. They build confidence and belief and unity. They strengthen bonds within and serve to build an aura. You beat a team like City 5-1 and people certainly look at you differently. Ultimately, however, the challenges for all top teams are greater than that, they are more rounded. Arsenal, for example, are in Newcastle on Wednesday night seeking to overturn a 2-0 deficit from the first leg of a Carabao Cup semi-final against Eddie Howe’s team.
Newcastle have just lost at home to Fulham in the Premier League, having shipped four to Bournemouth in their previous match on Tyneside. So there is a vulnerability to pick at there. There is an opportunity to make good on Sunday’s big win and kick on. Statement wins tend to lose their authority when you don’t manage to back them up. Arteta’s Arsenal team are an emotional group and he is an emotional coach. It is very much part of what they are and it can work. Teams can run hot off the back of the energy it brings.
Arsenal made a huge statement in the victory against Manchester City. Haaland had just nine touches at the Emirates but one of them was the equaliser for City. Equally, there always has to be a middle ground between that and a steadiness of heart and mind. Have Arsenal fallen the wrong side of that line in the past? Possibly so. Finding that balance remains a challenge for them. Sunday at the Emirates was awash with ill-feeling and City had whipped much of it up previously. Haaland encouraged Arteta – once a City coach of course – to ‘stay humble’ after the teams drew 2-2 in Manchester last September.
On seeing young Myles Lewis-Skelly on the periphery of that argument, he asked him: ‘Who the f*** are you?’ It was unnecessary and it was patronising. So the weekend’s victory was undoubtedly seen as payback for all of that. Arsenal had waited a while for their moment and they had their say. City have grown used to coming to the Emirates and having things their own way. No longer. Arsenal had lanced a boil and they enjoyed it thoroughly. Quite right.
Lewis-Skelly’s part in it was interesting and fundamental. The goal he scored in the second half was pivotal to the victory and the first for a teenager who – along with fellow goalscorer Ethan Nwaneri - has come through the ranks at the club. Arsenal are rightly proud of both of them. Lewis-Skelly – already involved in a red card controversy at Wolves a week earlier – chose to mark his strike by mimicking one of Haaland’s goal celebrations.
The Emirates loved it and so did his team-mates. Choosing to celebrate your first senior goal by taking the mickey out of a chap who has scored 250 of them and has a Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup Treble to his name was a bold move. Arsenal are not out of it in the Carabao Cup despite losing the first leg 2-0 to Newcastle. The 2020 FA Cup remains Arsenal's only major trophy under Mikel Arteta.
Whether it was the right one will perhaps come clear over time but Arteta did hint after the game that it may be preferable for his players to concentrate on the challenges ahead, rather than involve themselves in playground mocking of a powerful and storied rival. ‘It’s down to the players but they know my view on it,’ said Arteta. ‘We have to focus on us and leave anything else that happens. We’ve been in football a long time. Just leave it. There’s nothing there to do.’.