Daily Star

BEAUTY AND THE BEES

Arteta hopes Gunners are prettier against Porto

- By ALAN SMITH

MIKEL ARTETA wants Arsenal to create something beautiful against Porto tomorrow night.

Yet this tense, ugly win may have been the best preparatio­n possible for a first Champions League knockout triumph in 14 years.

The Portuguese side will arrive in London with a onegoal lead and a mission to spoil.

Brentford provided what centre-back William Saliba said was “a different game” to what the Gunners have been used to in the Premier League this year. And the experience should serve them well.

Thomas Frank’s Bees set up in a compact style that will mirror Porto – and they almost pulled off a shock draw in a fractious, stop-start encounter.

It is all well and good sticking six past pliable opposition but the composure and nous required for a late victory against a dogged, streetsmar­t side is another vital component of an elite outfit. This eighth straight league win not only kept the momentum building but offered up firm evidence that Arsenal have the mental strength required to overcome a Porto team featuring some experts of the dark arts.

“We know we have the capacity to score at any moment,” said Saliba. “But sometimes it’s good to win like this, at the end.

“We can’t win every game fivenil or six-nil but it was good mentality from the team. We came with good intentions and scored at the end.

“This wasn’t an easy game but we knew we could score in the second half. We didn’t give up.”

The key to stopping Arsenal is by denying them an opportunit­y to get into a rhythm and Porto will disrupt whenever possible.

Brentford often do a fine job of staying just on the right side of the line when it comes to causing a nuisance. And in a position where a single point can be vital for survival, they worked diligently to frustrate Arsenal at 1-1 while still threatenin­g on two notable occasions.

Saturday evening’s encounter lasted 105 minutes but the ball was in play for only 49min 26secs – some way lower than the league average of just under an hour.

Saliba is expecting similar delaying tactics to be employed tomorrow, with manager Arteta already putting in the work to whip the home fans into a frenzy.

“Bring your noise, bring your energy, bring your passion,” he said. “Something beautiful is going to happen.”

Among the players selected, however, calmness and patience will be required alongside determinat­ion not to let whatever antics Porto conjure up to get inside their head. “We know they are smart,” said Saliba. “We have to compete with that but we will be ready.”

Arsenal’s Premier League credential­s are in no doubt but tomorrow is their first chance to prove they can be Champions League contenders.

“Of course,” said Saliba. “We have to win, we can’t wait.”

There remains a question mark over whether Arsenal can get a bit nasty too when required and this may be an ideal moment to prove it.

That said, Saliba thinks their recent Premier League dominance has been a nightmare for opponents.

“I think we were horrible (to play against) in the last seven or eight games,” he added.

“Now we have to keep going like this.”

ARSENAL (4-3-3): Ramsdale 5; White 8, Saliba 7, Gabriel 6, Kiwior 6 (Zinchenko 79); Odegaard 6 (Partey 90), Jorginho 7 (Jesus 70), Rice 7; Saka 6, Havertz 7, Trossard 6 (Nelson 79)

BRENTFORD (3-5-2): Flekken 5; Jorgensen 6 (Damsgaard 90), Ajer 6, Collins 5; Roerslev 5, Onyeka 6 (Yarmolyuk 78), Norgaard 5 (Jensen 34, 6), Janelt 6 (Ghoddos 90), Lewis-Potter 6; Toney 5, Wissa 7 (Maupay 78)

 ?? ?? SILLY HUGGERS Saliba celebrates after Kai Havertz (top) and Declan Rice (below left) saw Arsenal through while Mikel Arteta consoles Brentford’s Ivan Toney
SILLY HUGGERS Saliba celebrates after Kai Havertz (top) and Declan Rice (below left) saw Arsenal through while Mikel Arteta consoles Brentford’s Ivan Toney

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