Premier League managers can’t escape the spotlight when their team is struggling to live up to expectations. Just ask Chelsea‘s Mauricio Pochettino or Manchester United‘s Erik ten Hag. Yet when it comes to falling short this season, Arsenal‘s Mikel Arteta is flying under the radar in comparison to his rivals at Stamford Bridge and Old Trafford.
When Arsenal face Crystal Palace at the Emirates on Saturday, they will do so with their title hopes resting on a win against Roy Hodgson’s team. It may only be mid-January, but the Gunners are already five points adrift of leaders Liverpool while champions Manchester City are three points clear of them in second spot. Having left themselves playing catch-up after taking just four points from their last five league games, anything but a win against Palace and Arsenal can forget about winning the title.
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But it is not just a recent slump in form that has left Arsenal battling to stay in the title race. After 20 games this season, they are 10 points worse off than at the corresponding stage of last year’s campaign. It’s a slump shared by Manchester United, who have suffered far more criticism for their results. Only Newcastle United, who are 11 points behind their tally at this stage last season, have a worse record than Arsenal. Chelsea, despite their difficulties under Pochettino, are a point better off, while Tottenham Hotspur have banked an extra four points at this stage under Ange Postecoglou. City are two points worse off, while Liverpool are a remarkable 16 points ahead of where they were after the same number of games last term.
Arsenal have also scored fewer and conceded more goals (never a good combination.) A year ago, they had scored 45 and conceded 17, but they go into the Palace game this weekend with 37 scored and 20 conceded, so there are few positives for Arteta.
It is clear that Arteta has made Arsenal relevant again since replacing Unai Emery as manager in December 2019. He has returned the club to the Champions League after a six-year absence and last season had the team in pole position to win a first title in two decades, until a loss of form in the final two months enabled Pep Guardiola’s City to overtake them en route to achieving a Premier League/FA Cup/Champions League treble.
There is a good argument to suggest Arsenal over-achieved last season, having finished 24 points behind the champions in fifth a year earlier. But, while that may be the case, they are now failing to live up to expectations this time around and the blame for that lies with Arteta.
He is the one who decided to replace goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale, an impressive performer last season, by signing David Raya on loan from Brentford. It was a stylistic decision, with Arteta wanting a goalkeeper more capable of playing out from the back, but Raya has made a series of mistakes that have injected uncertainty into the defence.
Arteta’s claim that neither would be No. 1 and that he would rotate the two keepers — he even said he would consider substituting them during games — has proven to be baseless; Ramsdale has made one Premier League appearance since being dropped in September (against Brentford, due to Raya being ineligible against his parent club.) Arteta made that key switch in goal without giving his defenders time to adjust to a significant change in philosophy and approach, and there has been little evidence to suggest the decision has made the team better.