The Sun (Malaysia)

Arteta needs positive start to season

... after Arsenal’s big spending and slow progress

- KARL MATCHETT

AS FAR as starts to the Premier League season go, Arsenal’s is a mix of the tough and the intriguing. Just six games in, they’ll have faced two newly promoted teams, the champions of both England and Europe and had to navigate the north London derby.

By the end of October, they’ll have played four of the teams who finished above them last season, but also three of the clubs who only escaped relegation late in the campaign.

It’s the kind of run of fixtures which might give a very good early indication of whether Mikel Arteta’s latest teambuildi­ng attempts are likely to end in relative success, or more disappoint­ment.

Only the biased or the brave would suggest last year’s campaign ended in anything other than mid-table mediocrity; a five-match winning streak to end the season is all well and good, but when it results in eighth place, it’s largely worthless.

The brutal truth is that four of those victories came against teams whose campaigns were already done, for all intents and purposes – only the win over Chelsea really mattered to either club.

Even so, winning breeds confidence in all sorts of ways, giving players and management the belief that their planned route back to the top is working, albeit after several sideways detours. That goes not only for Arteta in the dugout, but also technical director Edu.

What matters now is whether Arsenal can maintain that type of form on a more consistent basis; not necessaril­y right off the bat from midAugust, but certainly putting together the 68 to 72 points they’ll need to challenge for a top-four spot –which is where the club feel they belong.

Arteta isn’t under any pressure from outside of the club, but he surely has to make a positive start – say, the opening three months – to 2021/22 if the reasonable doubts and questions aren’t going to quickly resurface.

The Gunners’ squad isn’t at top-four level right now, compared with the depth and quality available to a Chelsea, for example, and there are still question marks over their mentality and consistenc­y.

In the opening games, Arteta must carve out a solid foundation for the season ahead.

They begin against Brentford, and given the pitfalls associated with playing a newly promoted side on their first game in the top flight, it isn’t unreasonab­le to imagine Arsenal could slip up. In fact, it’s possible to see them getting a point or fewer from the opening nine.

Summer optimism can quickly dissipate into winter irrelevanc­e, as Arsenal found out last term, when they had sunk to 15th by Christmas.

The flip side of the argument is that an early surprise win, a big performanc­e from a new signing and a display of attacking intent that another slow-starter fails to live with, can all suddenly turn up the dials for the months ahead.

Arteta might not immediatel­y need that second version of events, but if he guides the team to the first one again, questions will justifiabl­y be asked of exactly where this roadmap of his and Edu’s is taking Arsenal. – The Independen­t

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