Irish Sunday Mirror

Granit-led Gunners looking solid as a rock

- ANDY DUNN @andydunnmi­rror

AFTER Thomas Partey had planted his early right-footer into the top corner of Tottenham’s net, Granit Xhaka tried to calm the celebratio­ns.

He called all bar Aaron Ramsdale into a huddle, the type normally reserved for pre-kick-off rituals. All for one – and all that.

There is always a bond within teams that are winning matches, that much is obvious.

Everyone gets on great when points are being clocked up at the rate table-topping Arsenal are clocking them up.

And there is a lot of phoney stuff spoken about the ‘group’, about the ‘project’, about ‘spirit’, much of it by managers trying to mystify their simple jobs. On that front, Mikel Arteta is a guilty party but there is no doubt he has instilled a new unity at the Emirates – among the players, the backroom staff, the rank-and-file supporters and himself.

There is belief, make no mistake. This is not a squad that look like taking a dip any time soon. And most importantl­y, there is, right now, a selflessne­ss about the place, epitomised, for example, by Gabriel Jesus.

It might be early days but there can have been few better signings made in the summer transfer window (his ‘replacemen­t’ at Manchester City isn’t too bad, to be fair). So much of Arsenal’s early dominance in this hugely enjoyable contest was based on Jesus’s work-rate and heat-map.

He was a constant source of threat and his dynamism and his persistent harassment of defenders freed up space for team-mates to exploit – the sort of space enjoyed by Partey on the edge of the area when he clipped home the first.

And Jesus’s reaction to Harry Kane levelling matters from the penalty spot just after the halfhour mark – after Gabriel’s silly challenge on Richarliso­n – was symbolic of the Arsenal approach.

He simply redoubled his efforts, poured more energy into his performanc­e, a performanc­e that was rewarded with a scruffy but hugely-deserved goal after Hugo Lloris had coughed up a Bukayo Saka cross-shot.

The Spurs keeper’s contributi­on to proceeding­s was also typical of his side’s display – sloppy and unconvinci­ng.

If you are going to operate almost exclusivel­y on the counter-attack, your defending needs to be foot-perfect and Tottenham’s efforts were far from it.

Emerson Royal was certainly not foot-perfect, his studding of Gabriel Martinelli’s ankle (right) earning him a slightly harsh red card.

In the kerfuffle that followed,

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