Liverpool were forced to settle for a point at Premier League title rivals Arsenal as Arne Slot’s side struggled to break down their stubborn hosts at the Emirates Stadium
Liverpool were forced to settle for a point at Premier League title rivals Arsenal as Arne Slot’s side struggled to break down their stubborn hosts at the Emirates Stadium Liverpool were forced to settle for a point at Premier League title rivals Arsenal as Arne Slot’s side struggled to break down their stubborn hosts at the Emirates Stadium
On a thunderous afternoon in north London, for once the penny was stuck in the Slot machine.
Arsenal are still in the title race – not that they were ever really out of it – despite finishing with a makeshift back four who were there for the taking. And Liverpool manager Arne Slot’s first dropped points on the road since he acquired the Liver bird’s torch need not be destructive, but some of the flaws were alarming in their simplicity.
The Gunners’ opening goal was straight from the route one manual, Ben White’s long ball picking out Bukayo Saka to leave Andy Robertson on his backside like a Just Stop Oil protester in the middle of the road. And the second, from a wicked Declan Rice set piece, was too easy: Free-kick, header, VAR, goal.
Neither of Slot’s full-backs, Robertson and Trent Alexander-Arnold, had an enjoyable shift. Two of his midfielders, Ryan Gravenberch and Alexis Mac Allister, were so anonymous they should have been reported to Merseyside Constabulary’s missing persons bureau.
And to Gooners it will remain a mystery how Virgil van Dijk stayed on the pitch long enough to nod Liverpool’s equaliser. Three minutes earlier, VVD had kicked out at Kai Havertz in an off-the-ball squabble for which there are obvious red card precedents.
Van Dijk is a magnificent footballer, but there were echoes of David Beckham’s infamous sending-off in England’s World Cup watershed against Argentina in St Etienne 26 years ago.
Like a dog cocking its hind leg against a favoured lamp-post, it was Beckham and Diego Simeone all over again – except a very different outcome.
HAVE YOUR SAY! Who was man of the match as Liverpool drew with Arsenal? Comment below.
Alexis Mac Allister struggled to make an impact against the Gunners
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Image:
Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC via Getty Images)
Arsenal fans who spout conspiracy theories on social media about an alleged plot to deal the Gunners an unfair hand in disciplinary matters are entitled to ask why VAR Michael Salisbury did not intervene.
Let’s not entertain a pile-on against PGMOL, but whoever you support, there is still maddening inconsistency.
Three red cards in their six previous Premier League games cost Arsenal valuable traction at the top end. In this instance, they copped the thin end of the wedge.
But, hey, this is a terrific point for Arsenal when they were falling like flies. And for Slot, the end of Licverpool’s eight-match winning streak probably goes down as a missed opportunity.
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