20 min More of the same. Arsenal have been excellent, not just with the ball but also by stopping any significant West Ham counter-attacks.
16 min A stinging long-range shot from Eze is well blocked by Bowen.
This is looking ominous for West Ham, and Manchester City. Arsenal are completely dominating the game.
13 min West Ham are really struggling to get out. A superb, mostly one-touch move from Arsenal ends with Calafiori shooting fractionally wide from the edge of the D. That was an excellent effort, and Arsenal’s seventh attempt at goal already.
11 min Saka’s corner is headed over by Gabriel.
The resulting corner is swung deep by Rice and headed powerfully towards goal by Trossard. Hermansen reacts superbly to claw the ball onto the bar, but it loops up in front of goal and Trossard slams another header off the outside of the post!
Trossard, on the left touchline, waves a gorgeous pass with the outside of the foot to put Calafiori through on goal. He takes a fraction too long, intent on taking the chance with his left foot, before flicking a shot that is deflected behind for a corner. Not sure whether Calafiori’s shot would have been on target or not.
8 min The game is starting to settle into the expected pattern: patient Arsenal possession interwoven with urgent West Ham counter-attacking.
5 min After a patient move from Arsenal, Saka thrashes a cross-shot that is comfortably held by Hermansen.
4 min Declan Rice is being booed every time he touches the ball. Is that news?
3 min Some good early possession for West Ham, who have started with Bowen and Summerville as two No10s rather than orthodox wingers.
1 min Arsenal, in their cream change strip, kick off from right to left as we watch.
There’s a cracking atmosphere at the London Stadium. Alas, no sign of Danny Dyer yet. The players look ready for action; they jolly well need to be. This is huge.
A quick reminder of the teams
West Ham (5-2-2-1) Hermansen; Wan-Bissaka, Disasi, Todibo, Mavropanos, Diouf; Soucek, Fernandes; Bowen, Summerville; Castellanos.
Subs: Areola, Walker-Peters, Kilman, Wilson, Pablo, Magassa, Scarles, Potts, Kante.
Arsenal (4-3-3) Raya; White, Saliba, Gabriel, Calafiori; Eze, Rice, Lewis-Skelly; Saka, Gyokeres, Trossard.
Subs: Arrizabalaga, Mosquera, Hincapie, Odegaard, Martinelli, Madueke, Havertz, Zubimendi, Dowman.
Referee Chris Kavanagh.
Nuno Espirito Santo’s pre-match thoughts
It’s a hugely important game for us. We are at home – the London Stadium has been good for us – and we need to compete with a very good opponent.
The fans have been huge for us. They know that we need their energy and their noise.
[On switching to a back five] Arsenal have a lot of threats so we have to be focussed. Also, the players on the bench are gonna be very important for us. Let’s go.
Mikel Arteta’s pre-match thoughts
[On his 500th game at Arsenal: 150 as a player, 350 as a manager] It’s been a long time now! Very proud of that, and we know what is at stake. We know the magnitude of the game – and how much we want it.
[Is today a day for fire or ice?] Warm hearts, cool heads. We need to be emotionally stable and we want to dominate, as we’ve been doing.
[On naming an unchanged side for the first game in a row] We’ve found a lot of fluidity and a lot of threat. We also have the option to change the approach if we need to.
We knew they might [switch to a back five]. Nuno has played so many years with that formation so it’s not a surprise.
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Burnley 2-2 Aston Villa
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Crystal Palace 2-2 Everton
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Nottm Forest 1-1 Newcastle
| Pos | Team | P | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Arsenal | 35 | 41 | 76 |
| 2 | Man City | 35 | 40 | 74 |
| 3 | Man Utd | 36 | 15 | 65 |
| 4 | Liverpool | 36 | 12 | 59 |
| 5 | Aston Villa | 36 | 4 | 59 |
| 6 | AFC Bournemouth | 36 | 4 | 55 |
| 7 | Brighton | 36 | 10 | 53 |
| 8 | Brentford | 36 | 3 | 51 |
| 9 | Chelsea | 36 | 6 | 49 |
| 10 | Everton | 36 | 0 | 49 |
| 11 | Fulham | 36 | -6 | 48 |
| 12 | Sunderland | 36 | -9 | 48 |
| 13 | Newcastle | 36 | -2 | 46 |
| 14 | Crystal Palace | 35 | -6 | 44 |
| 15 | Nottm Forest | 36 | -2 | 43 |
| 16 | Leeds | 35 | -5 | 43 |
| 17 | Tottenham Hotspur | 35 | -9 | 37 |
| 18 | West Ham | 35 | -19 | 36 |
| 19 | Burnley | 36 | -36 | 21 |
| 20 | Wolverhampton | 36 | -41 | 18 |
A long row of team photos line the corridor that leads from the players’ entrance at the Emirates Stadium to the media area, each taken at the beginning of a new season and featuring any trophies won in the previous campaign. Updated every year, it currently dates back to 2002 when Arsène Wenger masterminded the Premier League and FA Cup double that saw Arsenal come from behind to see off Manchester United in the title race, with the photo of the famous Invincibles proudly on display the next but one along.
That represents the last time they were crowned champions – 22 years ago, the longest Arsenal have gone without winning a league title since they claimed their first of 13 in 1931, when Herbert Chapman was at the helm. Walk a bit further and you will see several more FA Cups, including the victory in Mikel Arteta’s first season after he took over from Unai Emery in December 2019, before the silverware on show abruptly ends. But after three successive runners-up finishes, Arsenal suddenly find themselves within touching distance of winning back the trophy they covet more than any other.
When David Sullivan was pressed on why West Ham bothered to move to the London Stadium, the lack of substance to his argument offered a window into the club’s dysfunction. “I just think we feel like a big club,” Sullivan said in an interview with the Guardian in December 2017. “Not a tinpot club. When players come to look at West Ham, they look at where you play.”
Look deeper, though. Analysing the club chair’s answer nine years on, the conclusion is that this is an owner whose desire to win is cancelled out by his listlessness. Feeling like a big club, after all, is not the same as being a big club.
West Ham manager Nuno Espirito Santo has switched to a back five, with Jean-Clair Todibo coming into the side in place of Pablo. Aaron Wan-Bissaka is preferred to Kyle Walker-Peters at right-back; those are the only changes from last weekend’s defeat at Brentford.
Arsenal are unchanged from the Champions League semi-final win over Atletico Madrid. That means a third consecutive start in midfield for Myles Lewis-Skelly, who along with the returning Bukayo Saka has breathed new life into Arsenal’s season.
West Ham (5-2-2-1) Hermansen; Wan-Bissaka, Todibo, Mavropanos, Disasi, Diouf; Soucek, Fernandes; Bowen, Summerville; Castellanos.
Subs: Areola, Walker-Peters, Kilman, Wilson, Pablo, Magassa, Scarles, Potts, Kante.
Arsenal (4-3-3) Raya; White, Saliba, Gabriel, Calafiori; Eze, Rice, Lewis-Skelly; Saka, Gyokeres, Trossard.
Subs: Arrizabalaga, Mosquera, Hincapie, Odegaard, Martinelli, Madueke, Havertz, Zubimendi, Dowman.
Referee Chris Kavanagh.
It was a soundbite designed to go viral, the kind the ex-pros in the TV studios are always looking to confect; snappy, heavy on hyperbole, bang in the moment. Thierry Henry made it pop on Tuesday night as he interviewed Bukayo Saka on CBS Sports after Arsenal had beaten Atlético Madrid to advance to the Champions League final. “We were the Invincibles. You will be the Unforgettables,” Henry said.
There it was, as laid out by one of the greats, the goalscoring hero of Arsenal’s unbeaten bolt to the 2004 Premier League title, the last one they won.
Saka, who scored the winner in the second leg at a delirious Emirates Stadium, and his teammates can see the path to glory. Actually, it is more than that. It would be immortality. Because if they can hold off Manchester City to win the league and add the Champions League in Budapest on 30 May, it would top anything any group of Arsenal players has achieved.
Hello. If you’re going to win your first title in 22 years, you might as well slay a few demons en route. Arsenal’s traumatic collapse in the 2022-23 season, their first title challenge under Mikel Arteta, gathered pace during a 2-2 draw at West Ham in which they lost a two-goal lead and Bukayo Saka missed a penalty.
Arsenal have scored 11 goals on their two subsequent visits to the London Stadium – but a scruffy 1-0 win today would be far more meaningful. Many people, including Sky Sports’ Jamie Carragher, think the title race will be over if Arsenal get the job done today.
On paper they have a tougher fixture on the final day, away to 15th-placed Crystal Palace. But while Palace are almost certainly safe – and play their first European final three days after the Arsenal game – West Ham are fighting for their Premier League lives.
They’re a point behind Spurs, who play Leeds tomorrow, and have an inferior goal difference. The atmosphere at the London Stadium hasn’t always been the best, but it will surely be ferocious come kick-off time.
It’s close to a must-win game for both teams, which means something has to give. A helluva lot has to give.
Kick-off 4.30pm BST.
The Guardian wp:paragraph
هلدینگ کاسپین استانبول | خرید ملک در ترکیه | صرافی معتبر ایرانی در ترکیه | خرید و فروش طلا در ترکیه | مهاجرت به ترکیه | واردات و صادرات در ترکیه | نیازمندیهای ترکیه | اخبار ترکیه | اخبار جهانی | توریست ایران | خدمات توریستی در ایران | تورهای گردشگری ایران | هلدینگ اول | خدمات کاریابی و فریلنسری و شغل | مرجع اطلاعات ایران (همه چیز در ایران) | کیف پول و خدمات مالی و پرداخت یار | اخبار ایران | تابلو زنده قیمت ارز در ترکیه و استانبول | صرافی آنلاین ترکیه | قیمت طلا و نقره در ترکیه | سرمایه گذاری در ترکیه | جواهرات در ترکیه | نرخ لحظه ای ارزها در استانبول | قیمت دلار امروز در ترکیه | قیمت دلار استانبول امروز | قیمت لحظه ای دلار | اخبار روز ترکیه استانبول | اپلیکیشن ISTEX | اپلیکیشن قیمت لحظه ای دلار و یورو و لیر و ارزها در ترکیه
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