Monday, 5 October 2015

Arsenal 3-0 Manchester United: Three goals in first 20 minutes leave Louis van Gaal shell-shocked as Alexis Sanchez and Mesut Ozil blitz hapless visitors to move up to second


Arsene Wenger

What a statement this was from Arsenal. What a comeback. What a riposte.
Arsene Wenger does not need to get tetchy with his critics. He just needs to inspire more performances like this. Arsenal have it in them, as was proved on Sunday. They have a title in them, too, as antagonists such as Jose Mourinho have long suggested. These are fine players, largely. Yes, there are stronger contenders defensively, but few that can elevate the beauty in the game to the heights Arsenal reached in their earliest exchanges with Manchester United. 
A goal up after six minutes, two clear a minute later, by the time Alexis Sanchez hit the third with three-quarters of the game remaining, the locals were in rapture. How could this be the same team that lost to Olympiacos at home just five days previously? Up to second place, how could this be the club supposedly teetering on the brink of crisis? 
Arsenal were outstanding, laying down a marker to rival Manchester City’s win over Chelsea by the same margin in August. Yet Chelsea, as has subsequently been revealed, are a team that have lost their way. A few have taken lumps out of them this season. United, by contrast, were league leaders going into this weekend, Louis van Gaal credited with adding defensive steel, even if it has been at the expense of excitement. Arsenal dismantled that theory inside 20 minutes. 
This serves as a blueprint, too. The cavalier football Van Gaal has sacrificed makes them less able to chase a game down like they did in the old days. They had 84 minutes to get back at Arsenal here and failed to score. It is hard to imagine that would have happened when Sir Alex Ferguson was in charge. 
So go at United hard and early and test that famous back four. United fight-backs no longer strike fear in the heart. Petr Cech had his moments, but nothing that will be long remembered. He made very good saves because he is a very good goalkeeper – the best at this club by some distance – but there was nothing here that the first choice at any elite club would not be expected to stop.
This has been a season that defies logic – from Chelsea’s implosion, to the rise of Leicester City and West Ham’s habit of winning every game they are expected to lose, and vice versa – and this match was no exception. At the end of a week that has seen Wenger mislay his famous cool following criticism of the display and selection against Olympiacos, Arsenal took United apart.  
In the first half, at least, one would have estimated 15 places between the teams in Arsenal’s favour. United could not get the ball and, when they did, could do nothing with it. There has been a trade-off this season. United may be dull, it is said, but at least they are tight at the back. In a league of sub-standard defences, that might be enough, as it was for Chelsea in the second half of last season. 
Yet Arsenal stunned them with their pace and attacking energy, Mesut Ozil the craftsman, Sanchez and Theo Walcott a front-line as formidable as any seen in this campaign. They settled for three, but could have been five clear by the break. United, with Ashley Young at left back, clearly had some counter-attacking plans of their own. They never got to execute them. 
When Arsenal are in this mood, containing them is a full-time job. There were 45 minutes gone when United finally got a chance at goal, Anthony Martial shrugging off Per Mertesacker far too easily before turning to shoot and being thwarted by Cech. But there is no correlation – and you’d be a fool and a madman to make one – between selecting a world-class goalkeeper and being rewarded with world-class saves, and picking his inferior and having the ball dropped over your goal-line.  
Cech was flawless again after half-time, too, keeping out Young, then Wayne Rooney and bravely diving at the feet of Bastian Schweinsteiger. Starting him in every big game should be the easiest decision Wenger ever has to make.
Anyway, enough of that unpleasantness. This was a happy, happy day for Wenger and Arsenal, a performance of such wit and ferocity that it had Van Gaal frantically reorganising at half-time, Memphis Depay sacrificed for the physical presence of Marouane Fellaini and Matteo Darmian getting the treatment his display at right-back deserved, replaced by Antonio Valencia. 
It gave United a very offensive appearance – three midfielders in the back four, if one includes Daley Blind, but it made scant difference. This was all about Arsenal.
It wasn’t just the quantity of goals, but the quality, too. Every one a belter, starting in the sixth minute with a beautifully-weighted ball inside the line from Aaron Ramsey to Ozil, cutting out Blind entirely. Ozil remains the most infuriating player in the Premier League in many ways, anonymous in some games, a virtuoso the next. This was football’s equivalent of a finely tuned Stradivarius. Reaching the by-line Ozil cut the ball back for Sanchez at the near post, the Chilean adding a theatrical flourish of his own, converting with a wonderful back-heel flick. It was a move that brought Wenger to his feet. He is never happier then when his team turn the physical into art, and they could have performed that goal at the Royal Albert Hall. 
The next was no less memorable, beginning instead of ending with a Sanchez back-heel that on this occasion put the excellent Walcott away down the left. He saw Ozil in support and played him in, the German with the time and the calm to side-foot the ball into the left corner of David De Gea’s goal. There were seven minutes gone and, already, the game was slipping from United’s grasp.
Just 13 minutes later, Sanchez took it away from them completely. He collected a pass from Walcott on the left edge of the area and cut inside. Darmian’s challenge was weak, Juan Mata was the wrong side and too concerned with giving a penalty away and Chris Smalling was simply outwitted, before Sanchez struck a quite superb shot, for one of the best goals that will be seen here all season. And the competition, as always, will be fierce.
Indeed, with a little more accuracy, Arsenal’s goal of the season contest could have been held last night. In the 26th minute, Santi Cazorla teed the ball up by dinking a header over his marker, met it on the other side but shot wide – and ten minutes before half-time a lovely Sanchez chip put Ramsey in, but he volleyed over.
Understandably, the second-half saw Arsenal settling, United probing and the numbers – shots at goal, possession – gave a false sense of how close this match was. Whenever United threatened, though, Cech was equal to it and the best chance still fell to Arsenal when Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain hit the bar. Even had United scored, it would have been too late; the game was long gone. If Arsenal could find a way of bottling this elixir, Wenger would never have to answer impertinent questions again. 

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