Robin van Persie’s two strikes in three minutes in the second half certainly will have boosted the young Arsenal side’s morale.
But the reality is, a team’s winning mentality should not just be seen against the top sides in the Premiership but in every single game they face.
Wins against ‘la crème de la crème’ of the league – Manchester United and Chelsea, are impressive, but the North London side have lost to more predictably easier opposition, like Premiership newcomers Hull and Stoke.
Why has Arsenal lost those games?
- Wrong mentality.
"It’s part of the learning process…that you need to understand that in every
game you need to be in that kind of state of mind”.
Whether they always perform to the best of their ability is another matter but Chelsea, Manchester United and Liverpool will always play to win and be the best irrespective of how lowly the opposition maybe.
And that’s what it takes to win consecutive matches in the Premiership, something Arsenal have struggled to do this season.
Any team will always want to beat a top four side, claim that victory and slice of history. It seems West Ham’s goalkeeper Robert Green consistently plays the ‘game of his life’ against Arsenal every season because he wants to beat them, but it is also down to Arsenal’s attack to make life difficult for him.
- Arsenal lost a winner in Mathieu Flamini – who sadly departed on a free transfer to AC Milan over the summer.
The way Flamini prepared himself on the pitch before a game was quite telling of his committed approach. He would jump up and down on the spot and do windmills with his arms, revving himself up to be ‘the running man’ in the side.
Flamini would run at players, not allowing them any time on the ball, and would put in a challenge and break up play.
No other Arsenal player can really do that, and subsequently opposing midfielders float around and run through the midfield unchecked and expose Arsenal’s already vulnerable defence.
Flamini’s replacements - Denilson and Alexandre Song rarely put in an effective challenge.
- The loss of Belarusian midfielder Alexander Hleb to Barcelona has also affected the Gunners’s ability to retain the ball and start attacks.
Granted Hleb never scored goals like his replacement – Samir Nasri – but he got stuck in, could keep the ball for hours through his skill and trickery, and was far more consistent in his performances compared to the one-hit wonder Nasri is proving to be.
Arsene Wenger is unlikely to bolster his team’s title credentials with any purchases in January, believing to the end, in his youthful side.
But by then, the title is likely to be all but out of sight.
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