Arab Times

Curious case of Arsenal new coach under Arteta

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LONDON, Feb 18, (AP): After nearly two months under his stewardshi­p, Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal remains a tough read.

Should fans be alarmed the team languishes in 10th place in the Premier League, or excited they are back in the fight for Champions League qualificat­ion?

Should they be concerned at a record of two wins in eight Premier League games under Arteta, or impressed at just one loss in that run?

How about the fact that this newlook Arsenal can often seem lifeless in attack, but now come with more sturdiness at the back?

The game against Newcastle on Sunday showed just how difficult it is to judge Arsenal at the moment.

Predictabl­e and exasperati­ng in a first half that ended 0-0, Arsenal finished as a 4-0 winner and was cutting apart Newcastle with almost every attack. There were even goals for Mesut Ozil and Nicolas Pepe, attacking midfielder­s who have struggled to deliver on their promise this season – and, in Ozil’s case, much longer.

Any praise should be cautioned by the fact that this was Newcastle, a mid-table team known for being poor away from home and one that could yet slip into the fight to avoid relegation.

Arteta

And it is clear Arsenal are a work in progress with obvious weak points, particular­ly in central midfield.

But Arteta clearly has a plan, something his predecesso­r, Unai Emery, was often accused of failing to have.

He is trying to make Arsenal harder to beat, and he is succeeding. It’s only one loss in 11 games in all competitio­ns since Arteta arrived in mid-December, and Arsenal have just kept back-to-back clean sheets in the league for the first time in 10 months.

Like with Pep Guardiola at Manchester City, the club Arteta left to join Arsenal, he is placing more of an onus on his fullbacks to both help with the attacks and to come inside to protect the team if there is an opposition counteratt­ack.

Arsenal are also trying to keep the ball more under Arteta, again something straight out of the Man City playbook. And when it works, it is a joy to watch.

Ozil’s goal, his first in 10 months, came at the end of a 35-pass move and involved every member of the team, including goalkeeper Bernd Leno, at least once.

A recent goal against Bournemout­h in the FA Cup was also a sweeping team move containing 22 passes. That was finished off by 18-year-old Bukayo Saka, one of the many talented youngsters given a chance by Arteta so far.

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