Arsenal 1-1 New York Red Bulls Match Report
1-0 van Persie 42
1-1 Bartley (og) 84
As on Saturday, Arsenal again did all the right things for 60 minutes against the Red Bulls. Facing a well organised defence that dropped deep, they created chances, got a goal, and by pressing, prevented the Red Bulls from creating any sort of attack. Indeed, Theirry Henry was well marshaled by Laurent Koscielny and Thomas Vermaelen, and it was only when Arsenal made changes and other players tired that the Red Bulls got back into the game.
Arsenal started brightly, but lost Jack Wilshere early on to an ankle problem, that will likely see him out of action for 10 days. Young striker Benik Afobe came on, and Tomas Rosicky moved into the midfield. Arsenal would dominate possession in the first half, with 66%, and completed 92% of their passes. Rosicky, in particular, was very impressive, displaying his usual quick turn and spreading the ball around excellently. With more pressure on him, he may have not been as good, as he might have not had the space, but today he was excellent, and some of that quality that we saw before his long term injury seems to have returned. Aaron Ramsey was also encouraging. He is, of course, not as good as Cesc Fabregas, but if Arsenal are to lose their talismanic skipper, Aaron Ramsey seems a better replacement than Samir Nasri (there'll be more on that later this week).
Also encouraging was Arsenal's pressing. New York were rarely able to string moves together before an Arsenal player would close them down, and it created a few chances for Arsenal; Gervinho, having nicked in ahead of a New York defender was taken down, but inexplicably Kevin Friend did not give Arsenal a penalty (in our own bloody tournament, the referees rob us). Kieran Gibbs and Robin van Persie combined down the left hand side, before van Persie nutmugged Chris Albright, but Aaron Ramsey blazed over. Arsenal, though, finally got the goal they deserved. Rosicky's free kick was lofted in, and van Persie, completely unmarked, beat the goalkeeper to head home. Soon after, it should've been two. Rosicky played a Cesc-esque ball for Gervinho in the middle, but the Ivorian, instead of chipping the keeper, kept it low, and savable.
Arsenal started the second half brightly as well, and for a time, kept New York penned in their own half. Thomas Vermaelen and Laurent Koscielny were superb at the back, and Alex Song had an excellent display in breaking play up. Unfortunately, Arsenal could not add to their lead, and thus were always likely to be vulnerable. Once van Persie and Gervinho came off, Arsenal lost their spark, and Emmaneul Eboue's swansong is unlikely to convince any that he should be kept as a defensive option. Eboue was beaten easily by John Rooney, leading to a corner that Arsenal failed to convincingly clear. Theirry Henry played an excellent ball before Roy Miller cut back for Kyle Bartley to unfortunately turn into his own net. If Bartley hadn't put it in, a Red Bull attacker was waiting in the wings to do so, and hopefully it doesn't lead to Bartley losing confidence, because he impressed in his short cameo. A good reader of the game, he made some good interceptions and showed his physicality afterwards with a thumping, but fair, tackle on Juan Agudelo. With good pace, he looks a better option to be the 4th choice centre back than Sebastien Squillaci, who was left out of the squad. With Johan Djourou's concerning loss of form, however, a centre back to deputise for the very good first choice pairing of Kosicleny and Vermaelen is needed. It must be remembered that this was a pre-season friendly, and more important than the result was the performance. Against a decent, and very much in shape team, Arsenal had a pretty good performance, and with more luck, would've had a larger lead. The first choice defence looked unlikely to concede, and while the fans at the Emirates were displeased at the final whistle (unfairly), it was a good exercise in preparation for the season.
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Ramsey's finishing set the bar pretty low
He had that chance (incorrectly flagged offsides, BTW) that he flung over the bar as well. Hopefully he irons it out in two weeks time
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That was annoying
but really, mostly only because of how people reacted to it. I mean it certainly could have gone better, but it could also have been much, much worse.
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those boos at the end of the game were rather confusing
Especially given Henry being present. Why boo?
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It was a meaningless preseason friendly that featured quite possibly the most popular player in Arsenal's modern history (sorry Ian Wright!)
people who booed should be banned from the ground for life, because they’re idiots.
by pdb on Aug 1, 2011 12:27 PM EDT up reply actions 1 recs
Aside from that, it was fun
If NYRB had to tie it, it was cool seeing Henry make it happen. Great to see him play in front of Arsenal fans but in a no-stakes environment — so much less painful than the Barca UCL tie.
And his solo run up from his own half somewhere in the second half: well I knew it wouldn’t go all the way, but for a second there I had that heart-stopping feeling again. Damn time and its relentless march onward…
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Nasri has flopped big time. Mid way through last season he went off tracks and with all this transfer BS surrounding him I doubt he’ll bring his A-game this season. Too many distractions, not happy = poor season.
Why not sell him now for 25m and replace him? Better still just let Ramsey take his place. The last thing Arsenal need to do is rely on
Nasri, expectations are too high. Right now i don’t see Arsenal challenging for the title with all the other clubs strengthening and improving Arsenal haven’t done much. Let’s be real now, Arshavin, Nasri, Walcott have flop written all over them this year. Shame to as RVP is looking great.
If RVP gets injured though Arsenal are struggling to stay in the league for sure.
by danago on Aug 1, 2011 8:16 PM EDT via mobile reply actions
You were doing so well until
“Arsenal are struggling to stay in the league for sure”. Champions League, maybe, but do you really think Arsenal will get relegated any time soon?
by pdb on Aug 1, 2011 8:23 PM EDT up reply actions
I agree about Nasri
At this point, I’d rather have Mata
Squeezed to Song and Bendtner and Song and Nasri oh lovely lovely lovely!
-Peter Drury, the one time his commentating has ever been acceptable.
In Goonerholic's post today
He says that Henry wanted to play for Arsenal in the second half but the ref wouldn’t allow it, then again with 5 min left Wenger and Henry pleaded to be allowed to play for Arsenal but the ref wouldn’t relent. That would have been an awesome moment.
The integrity of the Emirates Cup must be protected!
It’s vital that these games be taken seriously!
by pdb on Aug 1, 2011 10:56 PM EDT up reply actions 1 recs
It's our bloody tournament
But we have 2 pens not given and Henry doesn’t get to play for us.
Squeezed to Song and Bendtner and Song and Nasri oh lovely lovely lovely!
-Peter Drury, the one time his commentating has ever been acceptable.
Sorry, but this is funny.
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by Ben Schneider on Aug 2, 2011 2:09 AM EDT up reply actions
it's funniest if you read it aloud in a Gunnersaurus voice
whatever that voice sounds like in your head, anyway.
Yeah I saw that. It was just a quick runout and it would have meant a lot to the fans and the player.
Honestly that is one of the things I dislike about the refereeing in this sport. I don’t know if anyone follows cricket but that incident with Ian Bell a few days ago really contrasts with this to show how much better other systems are.
by Roa on Aug 2, 2011 3:25 AM EDT up reply actions
But that wasn't a matter of the referees
They gave him out because he was out. Lots of credit to Dhoni for withdrawing the appeal (particularly because he knew that he could get lots of criticism in the Indian media for not being ruthless and losing as a result).
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by Ben Schneider on Aug 2, 2011 11:34 AM EDT up reply actions
Yeah he was out, and Henry shouldn't be allowed to switch teams in the middle of a game.
One side bent the rules the others didn’t even though one game meant a whole lot (#1 test ranking at stake) and one meant nothing.

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