The Gunners dropped valuable points from a winning position at Anfield, leaving the reigning champions smelling blood.
Arsenal have been fantastic this season; there is certainly no doubt about that. They have exceeded all expectations under Mikel Arteta, who has built one of the most exciting squads in Europe while sticking to his core principles in admirable fashion.
But they are not quite ready to win the Premier League. Sunday’s 2-2 draw with Liverpool was the latest reminder of that, as they let a two-goal lead slip in front of a raucous Anfield crowd and ended up being lucky to escape with a point.
The Gunners are now just six points clear of Manchester City, having played one more game, and still have a blockbuster trip to the Etihad Stadium on the horizon.
Mental fragility held the Gunners back throughout the second half of Arsene Wenger’s reign at the club, and Arteta deserves huge credit for bucking that trend. However, his side is now in uncharted waters.
City are used to the pressure of getting results when it matters most; they thrive on it and will not relent in their pursuit of a fifth title in six years.
Arsenal will ultimately be unable to hold off Pep Guardiola’s side, and GOAL has examined the main reasons why.
Lack of experience
Everywhere you look in City’s squad, there are serial winners. The likes of Kevin De Bruyne, Ilkay Gundogan, Bernardo Silva, Riyad Mahrez, and John Stones have all been here before.
Guardiola’s men know how to raise their game when the stakes are highest, and they are driven by a desire to break records while maintaining their dominance of the English football landscape.
Arsenal have two former City stars in their ranks with the same mindset, with Gabriel Jesus and Oleksandr Zinchenko both having played key roles in their charge for the top-flight crown.
But the rest of the Gunners’ squad lacks experience at this level. Their three standout performers—Bukayo Saka, Gabriel Martinelli, and Martin Odegaard—are running on pure adrenaline at this point.
“Because not a lot of us have been here before, we don’t really know how to handle it,” Arsenal No. 1 Aaron Ramsdale admitted after their 4-0 victory over Everton last month.
“So we’re just going in and playing the games as if we were 10th, 12th, or whatever.” “We’re just going out to play with our group of teammates and try and win as many games as possible.”
That naive streak was painfully evident at Anfield as the Gunners failed to close out a victory after a sublime first-half display that saw them play Liverpool off the park. It’s safe to say that we can expect more of the same in the coming weeks.
The Haaland factor
Martinelli is currently Arsenal’s top scorer for the season in the Premier League with 14 goals, a highly respectable career-best tally for the Brazilian winger.
Saka has 13 to his name, while Odegaard is on 10, while Jesus would almost certainly have been in double digits too were it not for the knee injury that kept him out of action for three months after the World Cup.
But they don’t have anyone who comes close to Erling Haaland.
City’s terminator scored his 29th and 30th Premier League goals in the 4-1 rout of Southampton on Saturday, bringing his overall total for the season across all competitions to 44 — the joint-most for an English club in a single campaign alongside Ruud van Nistelrooy and Mohamed Salah.
Haaland will inevitably break Salah’s record for the most goals in a Premier League season (34) and could go well past the 50 mark by the time his debut year at the Etihad Stadium is over.
He is quite simply the most lethal striker in world football, and his presence gives City an advantage in any game.
Guardiola gave Haaland the highest possible praise after his latest brace, telling BBC Sport: “We have lived two incredible decades with Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, but he is on that level.”
It is unthinkable that City could end up missing out on the title with a player like Haaland firing on all cylinders, and the smart money says that they won’t.
Hot-headed Xhaka
Manchester United legend Roy Keane aptly summed up in the Sky Sports studio why Granit Xhaka’s angry outburst at Anfield ultimately cost Arsenal all three points against Liverpool.
The Gunners were 2-0 up and in complete control before the Switzerland international decided to square up to Trent Alexander-Arnold after failing to win a foul. He thrust his elbow and butted heads with the Reds fullback before both sets of players rushed in to separate the pair, who were subsequently shown yellow cards.
The incident sparked the Anfield crowd into life, Salah halved the deficit moments later, and Liverpool eventually secured a hard-earned point.
Xhaka’s contribution to Arsenal’s cause has been immense this term, but he is still prone to moments of madness like this.
“I’m not an Arsenal fan, but if I were an Arsenal fan, what are you doing?!” “It’s absolutely daft,” former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher added on Sky Sports. “The game is in your hands, and you get involved.
“Even the challenge, the arm, why do it? And now coming back, head-to-head with Trent, riles the crowd up. absolutely idiotic of Xhaka to do that. That was going back to the old Xhaka.
The 30-year-old let his team-mates down with his loss of composure, and it’s unlikely that he will learn his lesson.
Xhaka has always played on the edge, which is partly why he is so good at his job in the middle of the park, but he has not yet learned how to control his temper.
Guardiola is still the master
Arteta spent three years learning his trade as a coach alongside the best in the business at the Etihad Stadium.
The Spaniard absorbed as much as he could from Guardiola while serving as his assistant before going out on his own at Arsenal in 2019.
He was unable to deliver instant success at Emirates Stadium, in the same way that Guardiola did at Barcelona back in 2008-09, but the Gunners are now reaping the rewards for their patience.
In October, City’s head coach played down his influence on Arteta’s career, telling reporters: “I’d like to say a lot (of City influence at the Emirates), but I’d lie to you.” “Maybe I learned more from him than he did from me when we worked together.”
The truth is that Guardiola was just being modest. He remains the master, and his apprentice has a long way to go before he can be mentioned in the same breath.
City’s 3-1 win away at Arsenal on February 13 provided solid evidence of that, as Arteta cut a frantic figure on the touchline throughout.
He was regularly seen barking instructions at his players and even called an impromptu team talk at one stage, while Guardiola was a model of calm.
Arsenal edged the first half, which prompted Guardiola to ditch his experiment with a 3-2-2-3 formation and revert to a flat back four, with Manuel Akanji brought on for Riyad Mahrez.
The tactical tweak allowed City to move through the gears and gain full control of proceedings as Arsenal were overwhelmed by their attacking power in the second 45.
Guardiola’s incredible record at the domestic level is built on victories like that. He very rarely gets it wrong in the biggest games, and his in-game management is as shrewd as ever.
Arteta will have the opportunity to try and exact revenge on his former mentor in Manchester on April 26, but Guardiola will be ready for whatever he throws at him, which is why City will be clear favorites once again.
Tougher run-in
City have some challenging fixtures still to come aside from their clash with Arsenal, including away games against Fulham, Brentford and Brighton, but no one would be surprised if they picked up maximum points through to the end of the season.
They’ve done it before and have the squad depth to juggle Champions League and FA Cup commitments alongside their title challenge without a hitch.
Arsenal has only the league to focus on, which adds more pressure. They travel to relegation-threatened West Ham for a London derby clash next before welcoming bottom-of-the-table Southampton to the Emirates.
Arteta’s side must win both of those games before facing City, and they need a positive result at the Etihad to set them up for the three fixtures that could define their season.
The Gunners will host Chelsea at the end of April before taking on Champions League-chasing Newcastle at St James’ Park and facing Brighton at the Emirates, with Roberto De Zerbi’s side also in with an outside chance of a top-four finish.
A subsequent trip to Nottingham Forest could also be a banana skin, and Arsenal are due to wrap up their campaign at home to Wolves, who are looking like a well-drilled outfit again under Julen Lopetegui.
If Arsenal can stay on top after that run of games, they will certainly be deserving champions, but it feels inevitable that they will be pipped to the post by a City side that is just all-around better equipped to finish the job.
Goal