David Hytner was at the Emirates tonight. Here’s his verdict. Thanks for reading this MBM. Nighty night.
Kieran McKenna speaks to Amazon. “It was a difficult first 20 minutes … we got pinned in by a good side … but after that we grew into the game well … in the second half we made it a much more even game … we got in good positions but didn’t have the quality to turn positions into chances … we weren’t quite able to turn it into a big chance … it’s not mentality … we could have shown a little bit more belief … we were just a little bit hesitant … where we had the game on 89 minutes, we can take credit and confidence from that … it was important to have a night where we were solid … the last game was the first for a while where we were opened up … so we take confidence from that … given where Arsenal are and we are, we can take confidence from that.”
Mikel Arteta talks to Amazon. “Frustration when you win? No … Things to improve? Yes … we gave some simple balls away … the first half the stats are very significant … we need to get used to that … credit to Ipswich, they are a very well-coached team … we restricted them to nothing … we have to do it differently [without Saka] … it takes time … hopefully we will not have any more injuries.”
Declan Rice has a chat with Amazon. “It’s been a constant theme for us recently … we’ve been dominating games … teams have been coming here with a low block … it’s really difficult to break down a 4-5-1 … teams are trying to stop us from set pieces … we are trying different variations … we are really good at them … it was different without [Bukayo Saka] out there … we will have to adapt … I do whatever the manager wants me to do … I feel really free in the No8 role … for the last couple of weeks I’ve been finding my feet again … we’ve been so close to winning the Premier League twice … hopefully the New Year brings trophies … to make the next step to be among the elite … massive respect to Liverpool … they’re full throttle … they don’t let anyone breathe … we need someone to help us out so they drop some points … Chelsea have been outstanding … they’ve been amazing … Man City, the quality is there still … Villa are really good … anyone can beat anyone … it’s a tough game every single game … it’s going to be a long end to the season … we need to keep pushing … keep going and see what happens.”
Kai Havertz speaks to Amazon Prime. “Three points at home is nice … a tough opponent … tough to break down … they didn’t have a proper chance … we should have scored one or two more goals … the Premier League is so tough … they are a strong side … they fight for each other … we are very proud for the win … [Bukayo Saka] is a massive player for us … everyone has to step up … we have to adapt … the fans are massive for us … we feel the energy from our supporters.”
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That wasn’t a banner display by Arsenal. They dominated, but didn’t create too much in the way of big chances. Taken in the round, it’s a deserved win, and they’ll grab their precious three points to move into second spot. But it wasn’t one of their better performances, and Ipswich will take succour from a decent second-half showing that didn’t ever suggest that a shock equaliser was on, but at least kept their hosts honest right up until the end. They’ll go into Monday’s visit of Chelsea with renewed hope, while Arsenal can prepare for their match at Brentford on New Year’s Day knowing that their title challenge remains very much on.
Speaking of Brentford, they drew 0-0 at Brighton this evening, and so after the Boxing Day round of fixtures, the Premier League table looks like this …
Pos | Team | P | GD | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Liverpool | 17 | 23 | 42 |
2 | Arsenal | 18 | 19 | 36 |
3 | Chelsea | 18 | 17 | 35 |
4 | Nottm Forest | 18 | 5 | 34 |
5 | Newcastle | 18 | 9 | 29 |
6 | AFC Bournemouth | 18 | 6 | 29 |
7 | Man City | 18 | 4 | 28 |
8 | Fulham | 18 | 3 | 28 |
9 | Aston Villa | 18 | -3 | 28 |
10 | Brighton | 18 | 1 | 26 |
11 | Brentford | 18 | 0 | 24 |
12 | Tottenham Hotspur | 18 | 13 | 23 |
13 | West Ham | 18 | -7 | 23 |
14 | Man Utd | 18 | -3 | 22 |
15 | Everton | 17 | -7 | 17 |
16 | Crystal Palace | 18 | -8 | 17 |
17 | Wolverhampton | 18 | -11 | 15 |
18 | Leicester | 18 | -18 | 14 |
19 | Ipswich | 18 | -17 | 12 |
20 | Southampton | 18 | -26 | 6 |
FULL TIME: Arsenal 1-0 Ipswich Town
Arsenal do enough. Not a classic performance, but it’s a crucial three points in the title race.
90 min +4: A pocket of space for Broadhead on the edge of the Arsenal box. He shoots. Havertz blocks. The ball hits his arm, but it was tucked behind his back. No penalty. The Emirates collectively sighs with relief.
90 min +3: Play stops as Greaves takes an accidental whack in the mush from Havertz.
90 min +2: Arsenal are doing a good job of keeping Ipswich pinned back in their own half, and the clock ticks on.
90 min +1: Woolfenden is replaced by Harry Clarke.
90 min: Hutchinson has a look down the right wing, cutting back and making time and space to cross. The ball he delivers isn’t any good, though, and it’s easy pickings for Raya. There will be four additional minutes.
89 min: Kai Havertz is named as Alan Shearer’s player of the match on Amazon Prime. Fair enough: there haven’t been too many performances to sing about this evening, and he looks like being the match-winner.
88 min: Ipswich snaffle the ball in midfield, and Broadhead barges his way down the inside right. He slips infield for Taylor, who should have a crack from 25 yards, but hesitates, feeding Davis to his left instead. Davis runs down a cul-de-sac, and the chance to execute a smash-and-grab is gone.
86 min: Arsenal make a straight swap in midfield, removing Rice and replacing him with Partey.
84 min: A prolonged period of possession for Ipswich just inside Arsenal’s half. All good and well, and the Emirates goes quiet as a result, but Ipswich seem disinclined to advance any further. No cross, no attempt at a killer pass, and eventually the ball’s calmly taken off them on the edge of the Arsenal box.
82 min: Martinelli dances down the left and draws a ridiculous foul from O’Shea. It’s right by the corner flag, so Rice comes over to do his usual thing. Muric plucks his delivery from the sky without fuss.
80 min: Ipswich roll the dice with a triple sub: Delap, Johnson and Cajuste make way for Al-Hamadi, Taylor and Broadhead.
79 min: Ipswich are on the attack but the referee stops play because Clarke had waved an arm in Odegaard’s startled face. Nobody particularly happy.
77 min: Merino rolls in from the right, opens his body, and creams a curler towards the bottom left. Muric parries and the loose ball doesn’t fall to the nearby Trossard. Ipswich suddenly hanging on a bit here. “Warming to the mathematical theme of this evening, I’d like to mischievously suggest that Gabriel miss from Rice’s perfect corner had an xG of 0.9 recurring,” suggests Brian Withington. “And yes, that is identically equal to one.”
75 min: Odegaard forces another corner in short order. It’s half cleared, but the ball drops to Havertz, who has an opportunity to shoot from six yards. He takes a fresh-air swipe, and the chance to double Arsenal’s lead is spurned.
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73 min: Odegaard nearly scores a sublime goal. He embarks on a baroque dribble down the inside-right channel, sashaying past four opponents before launching a rising shot from the right-hand corner of the six-yard box. Muric tips over. Then from the resulting corner, it’s another close shave for Ipswich, as Odegaard pulls back from the right for Rice on the penalty spot. Rice sweeps an instant shot through a crowded box, low and hard. It’s a fine connection, but one destined to be blocked. That would have been a belter as well!
71 min: Both teams make a change. Ipswich send on Clarke for Szmodics, while Arsenal replace Jesus with Merino.
70 min: Ipswich have another go at passing and probing. Now it’s Arsenal’s turn to hold their shape. No way through. Ipswich have been much improved as an attacking force since the restart, though the bar is low and Raya hasn’t had a shot to save yet.
68 min: Mikel Arteta races out of his technical area to give his players the what-for. He wants more urgency. He certainly gets more urgency from the fourth official, who tells him to pipe down and get back in his box. But both men then smile, laugh and hug. Hey, it’s the festive period after all.
66 min: That’s not a particularly good challenge by Davis. He caught Odegaard on the back of his right leg, then landed on his left ankle, which was planted at an awkward angle. It was clumsy more than malicious, and thankfully Arsenal’s captain is up again quickly enough and good to continue.
65 min: Hutchinson bombs down the middle. He’s got Davis free in acres on the left, but tries to find Delap on the edge of the Arsenal box instead. Not the correct decision. Davis is then further frustrated as he’s booked for clattering into Odegaard from behind.
63 min: Lewis-Skelly gets back to the day job and works his way down the left, feeding Havertz who wins a corner. Rice comes across to take. He delivers a peach. Gabriel meets it at the far stick, four yards out. Nobody challenging him. He has to score, but slams a downward header wide right. A huge chance to put this game beyond Ipswich.
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61 min: Hutchinson nicks the ball in the centre circle and plays long down the right for Phillips, who wrestles with Gabriel as the defender ushers the ball out for a goal kick. Then Lewis-Skelly comes across to get involved, tussling with Phillips. The referee comes across to tell everyone to stop playing silly buggers. This disruptive behaviour benefits Ipswich more than Arsenal, you’d assume.
60 min: Jesus skittles O’Shea out on the right wing, and it’s a free kick which Phillips swings into the mixer. Martinelli is forced to head behind for a corner. Nothing comes of the set piece, but this is much better from Ipswich, who are beginning to show signs of flickering into life.
58 min: Ipswich enjoy their first extended period in Arsenal’s final third. Crosses flung in from both flanks. Arsenal deal with them, albeit not in particularly authoritative style. For the first time this evening, there’s a bit of tension in the Emirates air.
56 min: Lewis-Skelly and Delap get involved in some pushing and shoving. Neither player looks particularly happy with their opponent as they slap and tug at each other’s shirt. A tussle to keep an eye on.
55 min: Raya launches long down the right. Martinelli thinks he’s seen off Davis as he romps off with the ball, but the whistle goes for a nudge on the defender. Martinelli is livid, though he looked offside anyway, so it’s all moot.
54 min: Havertz gives the ball away and tugs at the shoulder of Hutchinson, who was in the process of making off with it upfield. He goes into the book.
53 min: Odegaard’s eyes light up. A huddle involving Trossard, Timber and Rice, but there’s no question who’s taking the free kick. It’s Odegaard … who slaps a dismal effort straight into the wall.
52 min: The referee whistles this time, as Phillips upends his Euro 2020 pal Rice just to the right of the Ipswich D. A free kick in a very dangerous position here.
51 min: Hutchinson falls over in the Arsenal box and wants a penalty. But for what? The referee is not impressed, and waves play on.
49 min: Martinelli crosses from the right. The ball sails over Havertz but lands at the feet of Trossard, who attempts to steer a shot through a crowded six-yard box. His effort is blocked. “Huge +++ points to Julian Borrill for taking the maths pun to the next level and to Paul Bowyer’s decoder ring powers,” begins Peter Oh. “Don’t ever ∆, Guardian readers! Fingers crossed the second half will offer up an opportunity for you to pull out the trusty old phrase ‘√ of diddly squat’.” See, I just about understand that one.
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48 min: Odegaard drives in from the right flank, an elegant run that ends in a shot from the edge of the box. Greaves throws himself in the road to block.
47 min: Somewhere in the multiverse, Szmodics has scored in the first 20 seconds of both halves. But here we are.
46 min: Arsenal immediately ship possession, Raya giving Saliba a hospital pass out from the back. Szmodics snaffles the ball and tears off down the inside-left channel, but doesn’t buy a ticket to the lottery with Raya miles out of his goal. Instead he tries to get closer before taking a shot, and is shepherded away from the danger zone by the recovering Saliba.
Arsenal get the second half underway. No changes. “‘Flat’ isn’t the half of it,” opines Brigitte Sutherland. “How much time are Arsenal spending stroking the ball around in their own half? Get a move on fellows!”
Half-time entertainment.
HALF TIME: Arsenal 1-0 Ipswich Town
Arsenal deserve their lead, having utterly dominated and done enough, without ever threatening to rattle up a cricket score. Ipswich will be pleased to still be in the game.
45 min: There will be one additional first-half minute.
44 min: A stat flashed up on Amazon Prime. Arsenal have taken 23 touches in Ipswich’s box; Ipswich not a single one in Arsenal’s.
42 min: Martinelli dribbles hard down the right but runs the ball out for a goal kick. This is suddenly all a bit flat, a state of affairs which will please Ipswich more than Arsenal.
40 min: Delap challenges Gabriel on the halfway line and flips backwards over his opponent’s head, landing on his back. Ooyah, oof. Winded. Thankfully he’s back up quickly enough.
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38 min: Hutchinson probes down the left. Jesus nudges him from behind. Hutchinson falls on the ball, and expects the free kick to be awarded to Ipswich. But the referee pulls him up for handball. Now it’s Ipswich’s turn to fume in the impotent style.
36 min: Trossard contests an uncontested drop ball in midfield, then races away down the Arsenal left. Johnson is fuming, and the whistle goes to put a stop to Trossard’s grift. Now it’s Mikel Arteta’s turn to be furious. WHY? he asks. WHY? Because, says the referee. The restart is taken properly this time, and Johnson can knock the ball safely back to O’Shea.
34 min: Trossard plays a cute diagonal pass in from the left to release Jesus into the box. Jesus reaches the byline, almost, yet somehow manages to squeeze the ball through Muric at his near post and into the net! That’s an outrageous finish – outrageous goalkeeping as well, in another sense – but the flag pops up for offside.
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32 min: Ipswich ping it around the back and beat the Arsenal press. Hutchinson barrels down the inside-right channel before releasing Johnson into space on the overlap. Johnson loops a cross into the mixer. Raya claims, under intense pressure from Delap and Szmodics. That was a fine Ipswich move, their best of the match, even if the sample size isn’t huge.
30 min: Rice takes a shot this time. It’s not a bad one, either, aimed towards the top-left corner from 25 yards and only just flying over the bar. Muric had it covered, just about, but it was a decent effort nonetheless.
29 min: Arsenal continue to hog the ball; Ipswich continue to chase shadows. “I’m going to have a stab at what was intended by Σx ∫ earlier,” writes Paul Bowyer. “If the x was meant to represent ‘times’ then we have ‘Sum’ (represented by uppercase Sigma) ‘times’ ‘integration’ (represented by the old fashioned ∫ symbol). Hence: ‘Sometimes integration can be a problem’.” Help. I’m in too deep. Way over my head.
27 min: As things stand, Arsenal are going into second place tonight.
Pos | Team | P | GD | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Liverpool | 17 | 23 | 42 |
2 | Arsenal | 18 | 19 | 36 |
3 | Chelsea | 18 | 17 | 35 |
4 | Nottm Forest | 18 | 5 | 34 |
5 | Newcastle | 18 | 9 | 29 |
25 min: So much for Ipswich’s early stand. On the touchline, Kieran McKenna looks slightly dispirited. He’s not yet wearing a thousand-yard stare, though. Five hundred metres maybe.
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GOAL! Arsenal 1-0 Ipswich (Havertz 23)
Finally the dam is breached. Trossard turns on the jets and zips past Johnson on the left. He reaches the byline and fires a low cross into the centre. There are four blue shirts in the six-yard box, plus the keeper, but Havertz is the liveliest player in there. He arrives at the far stick, opens his body, and sidefoots into the net. Couldn’t miss. Can’t say it hadn’t been coming.
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21 min: Arsenal continue to probe, but there’s no way through. Ipswich are holding their defensive shape. A blue wall across the front of their box. Arsenal’s possession stat has gone up to 92 percent.
19 min: A chance for Rice to shoot from 25 yards. His fans encourage him to do so. He declines, and passes to Gabriel, who miscontrols. It’s been like that for Arsenal so far. The home heroes come again, Timber having a go from distance this time. Straight at Muric, an easy snaffle. Perhaps Rice had a point.
17 min: Ipswich have cleared their first hurdle: they’ve quietened the home fans a bit.
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15 min: Rice hits the corner long and Ipswich deal with it easily enough.
14 min: Saliba’s long pass sends Jesus scampering down the right. The ball’s shuttled towards Trossard on the other flank. Trossard comes inside and takes a whack. The shot pings out for a corner. Rice to send it in from the left.
12 min: Arsenal have enjoyed 85 percent possession so far. Ipswich have come the closest, though. Funny old game.
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10 min: Arsenal are dominating possession, yet Ipswich will be happy enough with their start. Muric hasn’t had much to do yet, and the visitors are holding their hosts at arm’s length. Meanwhile Julian Borrill replies to Peter Oh: “Both teams might consider January signings, though Σx ∫ can be an issue.” (Guardian simple-folk disclaimer: I have no idea what Σx ∫ means. I hope that’s as clever as it looks.)
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8 min: A free kick out on the Arsenal left. The hosts load the Ipswich box. Then Odegaard slaps it straight into first-man Szmodics. That’s uncharacteristically awful from Arsenal’s magic-wand-legged captain. His central defenders, who had made it all the way up the pitch in anticipation of causing bother, will be cursing him.
6 min: … nothing occurs. Rice’s delivery is punched clear by Muric, then Odegaard takes a wild swipe on the edge of the box. He doesn’t connect properly and Ipswich – who have only conceded from corners on two previous occasions this season – clear their lines.
5 min: Martinelli again down the right. His cross is much better this time. He dinks to the far post, where Woolfenden is forced to head behind for a corner, with Jesus lurking. And from the set piece …
3 min: That early Davis cross took a wicked deflection off Timber, and Szmodics wasn’t too far away from converting at the near post with a fresh-air high-kick. That would have put the cat among the pigeons all right, Leicester-at-Anfield style.
1 min: Martinelli counters the Ipswich chance by striding down the right but his cross is too deep. More of this and we’re in for a treat.
22 sec: Ipswich are on the front foot immediately. Phillips wins the ball on the edge of the Arsenal box and feeds Davis down the left. Davis whistles a cross through the six-yard box. Any touch from Szmodics would have resulted in a stunning early goal, but he can’t connect. Arsenal breathe again.
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Ipswich get the ball rolling. A good few-evening-pints-in atmosphere at the Emirates!
The teams are out! Arsenal in red, Ipswich blue, and we’ve no idea why Arsenal played in yellow at Wembley in ‘78. It’s a misty evening round Ashburton Grove way. We’ll be off in a couple of minutes. In the meantime, here’s Charles Antaki: “This time last year the Arsenal subs’ bench included Matt Turner, Rob Holding, Cedric Soares, Fabio Vieira, Albert Sambi Lokonga, Amario Cozier-Duberry and Marquinhos. All gone, mostly unlamented. Bench-wise, at least, this team looks different: leave aside the goalkeeping sub Neto, all seem capable of stepping up (indeed most have started games) and all have some air of authority. So … Arsenal have been good (and ruthless) at hiring and firing. So far so good. Results have come, mostly. Trophies, not so much. But, as you say, no need for the drama. Plenty of time.”
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It’s an Ipswich game, so here’s the obligatory reference to their most famous fan. “Ed Sheeran is on a well-deserved break from his global Mathematics tour,” begins Peter Oh, “but he must be fretting about how many + points Ipswich will need, to ensure that the end of the season doesn’t = relegation. Their opponent today will always ÷ opinion. Arsenal’s biggest – sign at the moment is the loss of Saka to injury. It’s the bleak midwinter, when such injuries seem to x. I hope this match adds up to something interesting.”
For those desirous of cleansing the aural palate:
This is a rematch of the 1978 FA Cup final, in which Ipswich thrashed Arsenal 1-0. Bobby Robson’s side spent the majority of the match rattling the Arsenal woodwork – Paul Mariner hit the crossbar, while John Wark creamed two long-range efforts off the post – before Roger Osborne finally found the net late on. Osborne was so overcome with excitement and emotion that he fainted and had to be substituted. One of the great FA Cup final performances, underrated outside of Suffolk. Apologies to Arsenal fans, but hey, you’ve enjoyed a fair few others.
Mikel Arteta speaks to Amazon. “We have had an extra day off and good preparation … we have a really difficult match ahead … Bukayo Saka is going to be out for many, many weeks … it is a good opportunity for the rest of the squad to step up … who wants to take more responsibility.”
Kieran McKenna talks to Amazon Prime. “Ben Johnson is a versatile player … there will be phases when we defend as a back five … sometimes a back four … it will be a tough night but hopefully a good night … the reaction [to the 4-0 defeat against Newcastle] has been really good at the training ground … the game got away from us … the first in a while … it’s a new game and a new challenge … we want to take it head on … we have to maintain our culture … we have to adapt and be competitive … it’s been a big journey for our players … last time we fell short, tonight we can go again … we’ve analysed Arsenal as well as we can … we’ll have to see off a lot of set plays.”
Arsenal make two changes to their starting XI after the 5-1 win at Palace. Declan Rice and Leandro Trossard are in; Thomas Partey drops to the bench while Bukayo Saka is hamstrung.
Ipswich make five changes after their 4-0 home loss to Newcastle. Liam Delap, Kalvin Phillips, Ben Johnson, Luke Woolfenden and Jacob Greaves take the places of Harry Clarke, Wes Burns and Conor Chaplin, who are benched, and Cameron Burgess and captain Sam Morsy, who miss out altogether.
The teams
Arsenal: Raya, Timber, Saliba, Gabriel, Lewis-Skelly, Odegaard, Rice, Havertz, Trossard, Gabriel Jesus, Martinelli.
Subs: Neto, Tierney, Partey, Kiwior, Zinchenko, Jorginho, Merino, Calafiori, Nwaneri.
Ipswich Town: Muric, O’Shea, Woolfenden, Greaves, Davis, Phillips, Cajuste, Johnson, Hutchinson, Szmodics, Delap.
Subs: Walton, Harrison Clarke, Burns, Chaplin, Taylor, Al Hamadi, Townsend, Broadhead, Jack Clarke.
Referee: Darren England (South Yorkshire).
VAR: Alex Chilowicz
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Preamble
There’s no need to be overly dramatic. Title-chasing Arsenal may be nine points behind current leaders Liverpool, but both teams still have 21 matches to play, so nobody is in must-win territory yet. Having said that, Mikel Arteta’s side won’t feel too chipper about themselves if they don’t claim all three points this evening, coming off the back of a 5-1 win at Crystal Palace, and playing a team who have just been thumped 4-0 at home by Newcastle. Arsenal – who are unbeaten at home this season – are 7-1 on tonight, while you can get Ipswich – who haven’t won this fixture since 1979, the days of Arnold Muhren, Mick Mills and Bobby Robson – at 20s. So this looks a shoo-in. Then again, you never know in the Premier League, and Ipswich may be in fast-and-loose mode, viewing this game as a free hit in their quest to extricate themselves from relegation danger. We’ll find out soon enough. Kick-off is at 8.15pm GMT. It’s on!