Arsenal continue to mount title challenge with win over Burnley

Arsenal continue to mount title challenge with win over Burnley

LONDON — After the draw with Tottenham at the end of September, Arsenal head coach Mikel Arteta suggested his team conceded too many goals at home and were getting swept along with the emotion of the Emirates crowd.

His words were clearly heeded by his young team and despite conceding their first goal on home soil since Sept. 24, Arsenal proved their growing maturity to bounce back quickly from Josh Brownhill’s equaliser on Saturday and maintain their title challenge.

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Heading into this game, Arsenal were unbeaten in 37 home league matches against newly promoted opposition — a run that stretches back to 2010 — so it was perhaps unlikely that Vincent Kompany’s struggling Burnley team would pose too many problems for Arteta’s side here. And it eventually proved as goals from Leandro Trossard, William Saliba and Oleksandr Zinchenko gave Arsenal a commanding 3-1 win.

The issue for Arteta this season remains the same though, with Kai Havertz’s indecisiveness in possession continuing to look out of place alongside the razor-sharp movement of his teammates. It was no coincidence that he was absent from the build-up that led to Trossard’s opener. It also seemed significant that Arteta took the opportunity to quietly remove Havertz from proceedings as the home fans celebrated Saliba’s goal in the 57th minute.

However, Havertz’s replacement didn’t fare too much better with Fabio Vieira being shown a straight red card for scarping his studs across Brownhill’s knee as both players contested a loose ball in the game’s closing stages. Bukayo Saka, who was fit enough to play despite hobbling off in midweek, was exceptional as he stretched and probed the Burnley back line. Arteta never misses an opportunity to pick Saka but he was back to his best after experiencing the first difficult spell of his nascent career during the past few weeks.

Arsenal are a slightly different beast so far this season, with Arteta opting to exert more control over matches instead of unleashing his team on the opposition in the thrilling style that proved so successful last season. Declan Rice’s arrival has been pivotal to that tweak in style and he showed his value when Arsenal went down to 10 men as he marshalled the Arsenal midfield alongside the experienced Jorginho for the remaining minutes after Vieira’s red card.

“Really happy with the result but especially the performance after playing in 72 hours with the last three games,” Arteta said.

“How we played against Newcastle, how we play against Sevilla, how we played today, how dominant we were against teams. That is very difficult to dominate the amount of situations that we generated. I think we fully decided to win the game.”

Goalkeeping loyalties are a hot topic in this corner of north London but it’s not just Arteta whose preference for a certain shot-stopper has been questioned of late. James Trafford‘s performances since arriving at Burnley in a £19 million deal last summer have led to calls for the previous No. 1, Aro Muric to be reinstated between the posts for Kompany’s team.

Trafford, though, made his case with an outstanding reflex save midway through the first half to deny Saka after the Arsenal winger found a yard of space in the penalty area. Kompany’s tactics and devotion to playing football his way in Burnley’s first season back in the Premier League have been described as naïve by outsiders but they were far more compact at the Emirates with two defenders doubling up on Saka and Gabriel Martinelli whenever they had the ball in wide positions.

Arsenal’s problems were exacerbated by the fact that Burnley’s tactics continually left Havertz as the spare man whenever they went forward. The Germany international consistently found a way to blunt Arsenal’s surges upfield, most glaringly when he wasted a three-on-two counterattack in his team’s favour with a weak pass to Trossard that halted all momentum. Judging by the howls of derision from the home crowd, it’s fair to say that the Arsenal fans’ patience with their new forward is wearing thin.

But Burnley’s resistance was finally broken on the cusp of half-time when Trossard bravely bundled the ball over the line to score Arsenal’s 1000th goal at the Emirates since its opening in 2006. His commitment to the cause was underlined by him colliding nastily with the post in the process of scoring after Saka headed Zinchenko’s cross invitingly back across goal.