The key question ahead of Wednesday’s North London Derby is whether the timing is worse for Arsenal or whether it’s worse for Spurs.
By Ian King
Hangovers from a troublesome weekend?
The Third Round of the FA Cup turned out to be a difficult weekend for both clubs. Arsenal had plenty of opportunities to kill Manchester United off at The Emirates but failed to take them and were eventually beaten on penalties. Spurs got through, but were held for more than 100 minutes by non-league Tamworth. But in the League, there is a distinct contrast. Arsenal are unbeaten in their last ten Premier League games, while Spurs have only won one of their last eight.
History
There is, of course, a lot of history to be had here and recently it has been in Arsenal’s favour. They’ve won six and drawn one of the last eight meetings between the two, and they’ve already won 1-0 at The Tottenham Hotspur Stadium this season. But Spurs supporters looking for a little encouragement don’t need to look back too much further than this. Arsenal won only two out of twelve meetings between the two clubs between November 2015 and December 2020.
Key players
Arsenal need goals, and with Gabriel Jesus now injured, attention will fall upon Raheem Sterling, Kai Havertz, and Leandro Trossard to provide them. Sterling and Trossard were both anonymous against Manchester United. Havertz may well wish that he had been.
That Angeball high press may mean chances for the hosts, and as such the question may well be whether new Spurs goalkeeper Antonín Kinský can maintain his record of having kept clean sheets in his first two appearances for the club.
Team News
The latest player to appear on the Arsenal treatment table is the aforementioned Gabriel Jesus, who could be out for the rest of the season after suffering an ACL injury against Manchester United. He’ll join Ethan Nwaneri, Bukayo Saka, Ben White and Takehiro Tomiyasu on the wounded list, while Riccardo Calafiori missed the Manchester United match with injury and is likely to be absent again.
There isn’t much that Arsenal can teach Spurs about injuries, of course, though at least they came through their trip to Tamworth without any new ones. Destiny Udogie, Ben Davies, Richarlison, Micky van de Ven, Guglielmo Vicario, Wilson Odobert , Cristian Romero and Rodrigo Bentancur will all likely be missing, and although Fraser Forster may be available, whether he can dislodge Kinský is a different matter.
Prediction
Sunday might have highlighted a recent issue over Arsenal and goalscoring, but how much of this is hyperbole? After all, they’ve only failed to score in three of their Premier League matches this season, so far. And while Spurs have occasionally impressed against the bigger clubs this season, they’ve pointedly failed to do so when it’s been a local derby, with both Arsenal and Chelsea having already returned from N17 this season with all three points. Local derbies can be unpredictable, but Arsenal need the points and a 2-1 home win feels about right.
(Cover image from IMAGO)
You can follow every game from the Premier League with FotMob this season — featuring deep stats coverage, xG, and player ratings. Download the free app here.