Saturday, 14 March 2026

Leverkusen 1–1 Arsenal: Late Penalty Saves Gunners Blushes in Germany || Everton #EPL Preview

Bayern 1–1 Arsenal: Penalty Escape 

Arsenal left Germany with a 1–1 draw after a night that was very far from convincing but ultimately keeps the tie alive heading back to the Emirates. The Gunners struggled to find rhythm for large spells at the BayArena and needed a late  soft penalty to escape with something to take back to North London. With the return leg still to come and Everton next up in the league, the result sits somewhere between relief and frustration.

First....the tweet.

RT @bayer04_en: WE SCORED FROM A CORNER!!!!!!! - X

I had to laugh at the irony of the satire from the Leverkusen social media team. Fair play to them. Good banter all around and it’s nice to see the football world can still dish out light-hearted jokes without everyone going to war over it. 

Unto the game proper.

That wasn’t the best of performances at all. Arsenal went to the BayArena knowing we had a job to do and we almost left there empty handed. In the end the Gunners were bailed out by what many would call a soft penalty on Madueke. Arsenal started reasonably well, taking the game to Leverkusen from the off. We had a couple of early sniffs, Martinelli smashing one against the upright and another promising moment around the nineteenth and twenty-fourth minutes. But beyond that early spell the performance became very slow and ponderous in fits.

I want to believe Mikel will rip into a couple of players after that showing. Bukayo Saka in particular was not at the races at all. His form this season has quite a few of us raising eyebrows even allowing for the injuries he has had to manage. Eze wasn’t incisive enough either, while Martinelli simply didn’t run at his defender nearly enough. Too much hugging of the ball and not enough direct running at defenders.

This was the type of game that needed Martin Ødegaard’s probing dictation. Our captain can be annoyingly slow at times but he knits things together in a way Eze cannot quite replicate. That said they are different types of creators. Eze is the one who cuts you where it hurts without you even seeing it coming, while Martin is the one who does you in by a thousand cuts.

Now all that said Leverkusen deserve credit as well. They kept Arsenal at bay by refusing to come flying out all guns blazing. Christian Fofanii of Cameroon gave our defenders something to think about all night, particularly in his duels with Saliba. They sat in a disciplined shape and did not give us the spaces between the lines that Arsenal normally exploit through those little triangles of passing.

Our midfield dynamism also looked blunted. Rice is not looking his sharpest right now and Zubimendi looks far from it as well. Mikel may need to give those two a breather somehow and that probably means more playing time for Nørgaard. Mikel rightly substituted Saka for Noni Madueke, who had been in my predicted starting line-up. He immediately showed why. He tried to take on the left-back and eventually won the foul that led to the penalty. I call it a soft penalty because in another game with another referee it might easily have been waved away. I understand the arguments from those who thought it shouldn’t have been given because the angles weren’t crystal clear. But there was contact and the referee pointed to the spot.

The referee had a strange game overall. He didn’t show a second yellow for the shoulder barge on Gyökeres which many felt deserved it. At the same time I can understand the discretion given how early in the match it happened, . Referees often hesitate to reduce a game to ten men inside five minutes. That said, I really dont understand his cards for Havertz and Zubi though and as much as I didn’t like the irony of that same player later scoring instead of being off the pitch, I also prefer the eleven versus eleven contest he allowed. On the whole though, when you step back and look at the bigger picture, Arsenal fans can still take a little comfort from the result. A draw at the BayArena isn’t ideal but it’s far from the end of the world either. We take the tie back to the Emirates where you would expect Arsenal to finish the job. We’re entering squeaky bum time now and Mikel needs to make sure the players stay switched on.


#EPL In The Mud?

Looking at the broader landscape, the performances of English clubs in Europe this week didn’t exactly help the narrative that the Premier League is the best league in the world. Across the first round of knockout matches most of them struggled badly. Aston Villa were the only English side to win, taking their match away at Lille. Arsenal, Newcastle and Palace managed draws while others lost, most notably Manchester City and Chelsea who both lost by three goal margins.

City’s defeat to Real Madrid was the most surprising result. Many people expected Manchester City to tear Madrid apart, especially with the Spanish side missing players like Mbappé, Rodrygo and Bellingham. Real Madrid haven’t been particularly impressive this season even by their own sometimes relaxed standards but they turned up with a workmanlike attitude and the result showed it. Trent once said the Champions League is simply different and teams raise their levels for it. That might explain what we saw. Don’t be surprised if Madrid turn around and drop points in La Liga against Elche this weekend. As for Manchester City, it’s hard to see Pep Guardiola’s side turning that tie around in the return leg. But this competition has produced some unbelievable comebacks over the years so I won’t completely rule it out yet.

Chelsea against PSG looks finished though. PSG took things personally and Chelsea unfortunately played right into their hands. At 2–2 they should have shut the game down. Even when their goalkeeper gifted PSG a 3–2 lead they still kept pushing forward in a naive way and PSG punished them through Kvaratskhelia, who by the way is some player.  

Looking at it all together it seems likely that only two or three English teams might progress to the quarter-finals. Sure, Arsenal, Liverpool and Newcastle still have work to do because nothing is ever won on paper.


Everton Preview

Back to the league now and Arsenal have an opportunity to create a little more daylight between themselves and Manchester City this weekend when David Moyes brings Everton to the Emirates. A win puts the gunners 10 points clear of ManCity, albeit with two games less played. The Gunners haven’t exactly been tearing down trees recently but they have been grinding out victories. Everton’s away form is surprisingly strong as well, fourth best in the league, so Arsenal could easily find themselves in another scrap for the three points. I’m not expecting a scintillating game but football has a funny way of surprising you. Everton under Moyes are a difficult team to break down. They sit deep, stay organised and rely on a hardworking midfield. Arsenal cannot afford to approach this match casually. This might actually be the type of game for players like Eze, Noni and Dowman. Players capable of creating a little chaos in structured defensive setups. Martinelli may find it tougher against a side that will likely sit deep and try to counter through players like Dewsbury-Hall and Ndiaye. Winning the midfield battle will be key. Rice and Zubimendi must stay disciplined and squeeze Everton into mistakes while Eze demands the ball and looks for those gaps for our runners on the wings.

Gyökeres could also be useful as a physical presence against defenders like Keane and Tarkowski. Arsenal may need someone willing to be a battering ram when the game gets scrappy. Set pieces may not be the best route either. Everton actually defend corners very well according to the numbers. But if one drops our way we’ll take it. And if certain pundits or podcasters Like Mikel Obi or Schmeichel decide they still don’t recognise Arsenal goals then that’s their business. As long as the scoreboard says Arsenal won and the Premier League table confirms it, they can keep their opinions. On the podcasting note, watchout for our 'youtube shortcast'. 

Thierry Henry said it best. 'You don’t have to like how Arsenal play. But you will have to respect it.'

Nuff said.

At this stage of the season with eight games remaining all fans really care about is one thing. Find the will to win. Its become more and more mentally psychological than physical now. The players must understand this and tune out all the noise, however difficult it may be. My team sheet would wring in a couple changes to be more attacking as shown below.

#ARSEVE

Like I alluded to, Mikel needs to give Zubi a rest, his passing range has also dipped and he is looking less energetic, Rice too, but he has a more robust engine to keep going, even while running on fumes. That isn't to say he is not in danger of injury, he definitely is. Arteta still needs to learn how to trust his squad depth. I'd be tempted to do something like playing Max and Noni only. give Saka a day off. He was totally off it in midweek, Arsenal need him back in beast mode vs Man City in the Carabao Cup final next weekend but knowing Mikel, he wont try something that unpredictable. The main thing is,  next couple of games require smart rotation. It would be interesting to see how Mikel is able to balance the one game at a time approach while also having eyes on the fixture list. Squeaky bum time!! That's it from us here at #Anaijagunner hQ, like, sub, comment and enjoy the game wherever you are....#COYG




Wednesday, 11 March 2026

Arsenal Grind Out 1–0 Win: Brighton Fallout || FA Cup Rotation Win || Leverkusen Champions League Preview

 Arsenal's 'Pretty' Grind To 3 Points

That was so much fun, the pressing to win the ball back, the crisp passing, the dribbles, the spectacular goals. That’s what we came here for… to be entertained, init?? Except the game itself was far from entertaining. Arsenal walked away from Brighton with three points, but the manner of win sparked plenty of noise across the league. A gritty 1–0 win had pundits crying anti-football while Arsenal fans simply saw a team doing what title contenders do: finding a way to win. With the FA Cup rotation game out of the way and a Champions League trip to Germany looming, there’s a lot to unpack.

George Graham would be proud to see how Arsenal rolled back the years, ripping something straight out of his old playbook to grind out a 0–1 win. From the moment Saka put the Gunners ahead, the remaining 90+ minutes became one of those days where the team simply had to stink the place out with some of the grittiest, most attritional football you’ll ever see. Even Arsenal fans were holding their hands up like, “yeah… we took grinding out a result to a whole new level today.” Rival fans were in tears and, to be fair, I get it. It wasn’t pretty. But you know what? If that type of performance brings major trophies to Arsenal over the season, I’ll take that all day long.

Brighton manager Fabian Hurzeler had already turned the dial up a notch with his pre-match comments on Arsenal and time-wasting. He doubled down on those comments post-match with statements like “only one team came to play,” pointing fingers at Raya and even saying he wouldn’t want to win a league title like that. Have a day off Mister!!

First of all, yes, Arsenal ground their way to three points and it wasn’t the most entertaining watch. But those side comments from Hurzeler were well below the belt that was gloves off. I actually like the new breed of managers coming through. The Mikels, De Zerbis, Roseniors, Howes, Carricks, Slots  recently retired players taking up the mantle from the Peps, Klopps and Emerys. But I have no sympathy for managers who run their mouth in an incendiary way, and right now Hurzeler has turned himself into exactly that. He’s gone down more than a couple of notches for me. Not that his opinion really matters though. If Arsenal go on to win major honours in May, who’s honestly going to care about the Brighton grind? Really… who does? 

2025/26 Arsenal Dominance 

Now, with that said, I wanted us to look into the facts so, looked up Opta to do some digging and it turns out most of the media narrative about Arsenal playing “anti-football” is simply false. The data clearly shows Arsenal play far more attacking football than they’re given credit for. The dominance maps show the Gunners pinning teams back for long spells, and that attacking intent is backed up by the numbers: Arsenal have two players in the top five for expected assists, with Rice ranked 3rd and Saka ranked 5th. I hear the argument already — Corners. Fair enough. Here’s the clap-back question: Do teams concede corners because they’re attacking, or because they’re defending? If your answer is the latter, then it confirms Arsenal are forcing teams back consistently by going for it, NOT defending. Even Manchester City have done it against us this season.

We dig a little deeper and the numbers get even more interesting. In terms of expected goal difference (xG for vs xG against), Arsenal rank 1st in the league with a +28 xGD, with Manchester City second on +20. That tells you City are slightly outperforming their xG efficiency — and why not, they have Haaland for footballing gods’ sake.

Let’s continue. Every team wastes time in football, but the stats tell a different story. Raya ranks 17th among the league’s 20 goalkeepers for time-wasting incidents. When you think about it, that makes sense. Raya is key to Arsenal’s play and often looks to release the ball quickly to our wingers to start counters.

Arsenal have also only been involved in four of the 20 longest games this season .Villa, Spurs, Wolves and Brighton and in three of those matches the opposition were responsible for the delays. That means the Gunners were only the main culprits once, against Brighton. Just one game — yet Mr Hurzeler is out here spouting fiction. Honestly, he might need glasses.

Finally, the attacking numbers speak for themselves. Arsenal are tied with Manchester City for the most goals scored by an English team across all competitions this season — 101 goals. Across Europe, only Kane powered Bayern (134) and Yamal's  Barcelona (112) have scored more. Out of those 101 Arsenal goals, the Gunners have the most from open play, with City second and that’s a Haaland-powered City we’re talking about.

I took the time to do this research for our readers because of the constant “noise” around Arsenal. There’s a media narrative some pundits love to push, and it’s becoming ridiculous. Some of these legends , who, I give all due respect, do sound like they’re jumping on a bandwagon  of lazy analysis that lacks the most basic research or even thinking. Quit the crap sounding agenda, the data don't lie. That’s unfortunately the downside of shoehorning ex-players straight into punditry and podcasting. When you look at their coaching credentials, many of them leave a lot to be desired. 

That we lean into our strength if and when need be is suddenly a crime or anti football, something City has been lauded for in times past. Meanwhile the same Arsenal’s free-flowing form in Europe tells the real story open football, fluid attacking patterns, goals scored with ease. That’s no coincidence people so ask yourself why that is...... Nuff said.


FA Cup Win & Draw

Moving away from the league, Arsenal travelled to the Midlands to face Mansfield in the FA Cup and booked their place in the quarter-finals with goals from Noni and Eze. Arteta, as expected, fielded a heavily rotated side with nine changes from the starting lineup against Brighton. Rice, Zubimendi and Big Gabby didn’t even travel with the squad, which makes perfect sense considering how fatigued the midfield duo in particular have looked recently.

A bit of rest at this stage of the season is absolutely necessary.

MLS could have started at left-back but had accumulated two yellow cards and missed the match through suspension. That meant Hincapié and Calafiori had to step in, which I wouldn’t have liked for the former, while the latter unfortunately ended up back on the injury table again. Timber also had to feature because Benny Blanco is still out injured. Mikel experimented with a back three of Mosquera, Marley Simons and Calafiori, but the balance never quite looked right. Mansfield, to their credit, really put up a fight. Arsenal dominated possession but never quite put them to the sword. Max had a very good game, that boy keeps his head down, works with the right attitude... then he may become a truly truly world class player...fingers crossed. Jesus was largely anonymous. Havertz did okay considering his injury management, and Madueke was lively on and off. The breakthrough eventually came when Madueke finished a sweeping move to put Arsenal ahead. However, Mansfield pulled level in the second half after a defensive mistake allowed them a clear look at goal, which they took. Mosquera could probably have done better with the cover and has looked quite shaky of late, but he’s also just coming back from injury.

Eventually the cavalry came on and Eze delivered the decisive moment, a thunderbolt to restore the gunners lead. The match finished 1–2 to the Gunners, a tricky tie navigated and Arsenal safely through to the quarter-finals. Arsenal have now been drawn away to Southampton at St Mary’s in the quarter-finals. On paper that’s a favourable draw. Chelsea hosting Port Vale might look easier, but honestly we can’t complain. Across the FA Cup, Champions League and EFL Cup this season, Arsenal have had a fair bit of luck with the draws, the rub of the green, as they say.


UCL Round Of 16  Preview

Away from the FA Cup, attention now shifts back to the UEFA Champions League, with Arsenal travelling to Germany to face Bayer Leverkusen in the first leg of their Round of 16 clash. 

Although Leverkusen are one of Germany’s traditional clubs, they are a long way from the invincible side that Xabi Alonso built in the 2023/24 season. That team went unbeaten domestically and almost completed the fairy-tale run in Europe until Ademola Lookman ended it in the Europa League final for them with Atalanta's triumph. Since then, they have lost many of the players who made them such a formidable unit. Wirtz, Frimpong, Hincapié, Xhaka, and of course Alonso himself have all departed. What remains is largely a rebuilt squad with players like Patrik, Poku, Tillman and Quansah joining Grimaldo and Garcia from the old guard. They currently sit 6th in the Bundesliga, 22 points behind Bayern Munich who are running away with the league as expected. That said, Leverkusen still have a dangerous squad and their home form has been very solid, conceding very few goals. Arsenal will need to be sharp from the first whistle.

Most fans naturally see Arsenal as favourites to go through, but football can be unpredictable. It would be foolhardy for the lads to think this is an easy game.  If I were Mikel, I’d remind the players that to win the Champions League you have to overcome hurdles like this. Leverkusen have already beaten Manchester City at the Etihad earlier in the competition, so Arsenal cannot afford to take a day off. Remind themabout Liverpool's imperious form in last seasons's group stage, only to fall to at the PSG hurdle. This is the knockout phase now there are no second chances.

Arsenal must go to Germany with the intention of winning the match,  worst case, securing a draw. If the Gunners perform like they did against Bayern and Inter earlier in the competition, they should have more than enough quality to handle the Germans. But if they approach the game with the wrong  mentality like Liverpool once did in Turkey they could easily leave themselves with a mountain to climb. You can also see the toll the long season is starting to take with Arsenal competing on multiple fronts with player playing like they are running on fumes. That’s the downside of going for everything. 

But it’s also exactly what we’re here for, init? Two more months remain, and if things go to plan Arsenal fans could soon be counting trophies.

Arteta said:

“The only thing you can take it is game by game and try to, tomorrow, be better than the opposition and then the right to win. We always talk about that. Obviously, we play so many games in different competitions.

“In the next three games, you're going to play in three different competitions, competing against different opponents. You have to adapt to that. You have to, very early in the match, understand what the game is going to require, adapt to it and be better than them.”

“We start to play games where you are in or you are out, but there is no margin for manoeuvre, so we're going to face a very difficult contest tomorrow against a really good team.”

That sums up the attitude I expect nicely, stay focused, be at it right from the get go without taking any team for granted, and you will likely be lifting trophies come the end of the season. My team sheet would look like this below.

#UCL Team Selection
As much as I would have liked to still rest Rice & Timber for the visit of Everton at the weekend, I don't think Ben white is ready to start even though he traveled and between Rice or Zubi, I think Rice looks more elastic in recovery terms. Kai Havertz would have been on the bench but we are a bit light in the middle of the park with Odegard & Merino injured. We would still have to manage his load, to ensure he remains available fitnesswise for the business end of the season as we get things over the line. All in all, I believe thats still a very strong team to do a proper job at Bayer, time will tell. That's it from us here at #Anaijagunner hQ, lets hope the gunners win in Germany with a clean sheet too. Do enjoy enjoy the game wherever you are....#COYG







For more Arsenal match analysis, Champions League previews and tactical breakdowns, stay tuned