Arsenal: The unsung hero vs Spurs who is only getting started
There were a host of superb individual performances for Arsenal in the win over Tottenham, all of which combined to forge the collective unit that deservedly went on to secure three points in what was one of, if not the best, displays since Mikel Arteta took charge.
It all came about in a whirlwind first half were the hosts blew away an abysmal Spurs side with incredible energy, aggression, pace and precision. Clinical and chaotic in a controlled sense, it was the happiest any supporter will likely have been since watching Arsenal lift the FA Cup.
Goals from Emile Smith Rowe, Bukayo Saka and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang stole the headlines with Hale End making its timely mark (again), only this time in the biggest home fixture on the calendar.
Everything about Arsenal was fluid and ferocious. From back to front there were excellent displays. And what holds the top and bottom together? The midfield. But for Granit Xhaka and Thomas Partey‘s solid progressive role and screening job in that double pivot, everything positive from Arsenal had a sprinkling of Norwegian on it.
Martin Odegaard was the unsung hero for Arsenal in the win over Tottenham – and he is only getting started in the Premier League at the age of just 22
Martin Odegaard was the glue.
A second half in which Arsenal took their foot off the gas and simply had to match Spurs’ intensity to see the game out didn’t produce many memorable moments, all because those opening 35 minutes put the game to bed. A period in which the No. 8 was instrumental.
Without getting on the scoreboard with an assist or a goal, he played a direct part in two of the goals and brought a connectivity to the way Arsenal attacked that let others flourish. For Emile Smith Rowe’s opener he plays the pre-assist for Bukayo Saka, while his exceptional intelligence and clarity of thought was the brains of the third.
Receiving the ball in midfield as Arsenal work in transition, he has two men running beyond him two Tottenham players closing in. Drawing those two towards him, and then a third in Tanguy Ndombele, all while fully aware of his teammates’ positioning, he slips a delicate ball through to Smith Rowe that cuts out three opposition players in one swift move.
It’s pure footballing intelligence at its finest. Odegaard can see the next phases, where his teammates are and will be and uses this knowledge to pick his next pass. Averaging 4.76 shot-creating actions per 90 minutes, he’s not only the highest ranked in the Arsenal squad, but tenth overall in the Premier League. Worth remembering that Arsenal had one shot against Man City.
Best of all, he’s only going to get better.
Continued…