New Straits Times

Gunners on the right road under Emery

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LONDON: Arsenal are still waiting for a first statement win of the Unai Emery era, but the progress made by the Spaniard in his first three months in charge was clear to see as Liverpool left the Emirates content with a point from Saturday’s thrilling 1-1 draw.

Despite a 14-game unbeaten run in all competitio­ns, the Gunners remain four points off Liverpool at the top of the Premier League table and will end the weekend outside the top four courtesy of North London rivals’ Tottenham’s 3-2 win at Wolves.

But much has changed since the opening day of the season when reigning champions Manchester City outclassed Arsenal on Emery’s first chance to make an impression as the man to succeed Arsene Wenger’s 22year reign in charge.

That sunny August afternoon the home fans bristled at the sight of veteran goalkeeper Petr Cech struggle to come to terms with the former Paris Saint-Germain coach’s instructio­ns to play out from the back.

On a brisk November evening, Emery lauded the part played by the supporters to roar Arsenal on to level eight minutes from time through Alexandre Lacazette after James Milner put Liverpool in front on the hour mark.

“The spirit is like we want and also the atmosphere today was a very big atmosphere with the supporters pushing for 90 minutes,” said Emery.

Summer signing Bernd Leno has since replaced Cech as number one and shown he is far more adept with the ball at his feet as Arsenal moved the ball smoothly upfield despite facing the famed ‘gegenpress­ing’ that characteri­ses Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool.

“The manager has a new philosophy. Many things changed, because Arsène Wenger was here for a long time,” said Leno.

“It was clear we needed time but like you saw today, the movement and the confidence of the players is always getting better.

“Today we controlled the game against a big club, against big players.”

Lacazette said: “We felt we had the quality to play (against) the top of the league tonight,”

Even Emery admitted Arsenal are far from the finished article, even citing Liverpool’s gradual improvemen­t in three years under Klopp as an example to follow.

Emery’s rapid progress suggests Arsenal are well-placed to challenge for a return to the Champions League next season after finishing 12 points off the top four in Wenger’s final campaign.

“We are giving extra intensity and you can see the manager demands a lot not just in games but on the training pitch and it is paying off,” said midfielder Alex Iwobi.

While Wenger got the grand farewell he deserved for winning three Premier League titles in his first decade in charge, Iwobi’s words are an indictment of how standards had slipped towards the end of the Frenchman’s tenure.

Emery finally has the Gunners firing again.

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