The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Spurs shown up by set-piece gem Jover

- By Sam Dean

Mikel Arteta acted on behalf of Arsenal as a whole, from the players to the supporters, when he produced his final touchline act in this breathless north London derby.

The match was deep into stoppage time and the pressure was mounting when the Arsenal manager stepped forward, in his dugout, and forcefully slapped the backside of Nicolas Jover.

The message to Arsenal’s setpiece coach, a key figure in their title charge, was clear. “Go on, Nico. Get the job done.” And so Jover hurried forward, squatting up and down with frenzied energy, as he successful­ly orchestrat­ed Arsenal’s defensive strategy in those last few minutes. Corner after corner was repelled, cross after cross was cleared – and Arsenal kept hold of the three points.

That defensive solidity was not Jover’s first triumph of the day. Earlier in the game, Arsenal struck twice from inswinging corners. First through Pierre-emile Hojbjerg’s own goal, and then through Kai Havertz’s close-range finish. Arsenal’s prowess from dead-ball situations earned them the lead, and then ensured that their lead was preserved.

Set-pieces, then, provided the defining moments of this thrilling derby. Jover, as the specialist for Arsenal, was on the touchline for all of them. By contrast, a few yards away, Ange Postecoglo­u largely stood alone. There is no specialist at Tottenham Hotspur and, on the pitch, there was no sense that the players knew how to answer the questions that Arsenal were asking.

When the first set-piece coaches began to appear in profession­al football, the reaction from many was to sneer. Now they are often among the most important people on the coaching staff. It increasing­ly feels like the non-believers are in the minority, and that they are failing to keep up with the evolution of the game.

Postecolgo­u’s view, as he explained in March, is that he does not want to “separate set-pieces from everything else we do”. He has instead split the role between two coaches, Mile Jedinak and Ryan Mason.

Has it worked? The facts do not paint a pretty picture. In the Premier League this season, they have scored 11 goals from set-pieces and conceded 14. Arsenal, on the other hand, have scored 22 goals from setpieces and conceded six. Between the two teams, that is a swing of 19 goals over the course of a season.

Postecoglo­u was asked again, after this loss, about his team’s difficulti­es at defensive set-pieces. “If I thought fixing defensive set-pieces was the answer to us bridging the gap then I would put all of my time and effort into that,” he said. “But that is not where we’re at.”

 ?? ?? All rise: Kai Havertz leaps highest to meet a Declan Rice corner and head Arsenal into a 3-0 lead after 38 minutes; the away team (far right) show how to defend a set-piece
All rise: Kai Havertz leaps highest to meet a Declan Rice corner and head Arsenal into a 3-0 lead after 38 minutes; the away team (far right) show how to defend a set-piece

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