Arteta is gambling with his Arsenal future as manager

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 06: Mikel Arteta, Manager of Arsenal applauds the fans as he walks off the pitch following the Premier League match between Everton and Arsenal at Goodison Park on December 06, 2021 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Naomi Baker/Getty Images)
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 06: Mikel Arteta, Manager of Arsenal applauds the fans as he walks off the pitch following the Premier League match between Everton and Arsenal at Goodison Park on December 06, 2021 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Naomi Baker/Getty Images) /
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LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND – DECEMBER 06: Mikel Arteta, Manager of Arsenal looks dejected during the Premier League match between Everton and Arsenal at Goodison Park on December 06, 2021 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images) /

Arteta’s Longing to Impress is Impacting Arsenal

His Manchester masterplan, far reaching from what had been worked on over the season so far, fell flat. Elneny was far from the problem on the night, he just was nowhere near being the solution. Keeping him on all game despite chasing a goal felt like forcing the issue: this plan had to work and making the change mid-game would emit weakness on his part.

Fast forward to Goodison Park and to account for his failed bet there had to be another even more elaborate move: Alexandre Lacazette and Martin Odegaard dovetailing as duel No. 10’s with barely fit Granit Xhaka in for the full 90 minutes.

There were no great qualms about his selections. Lacazette at No. 9 can work depending on his usage, and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang had been in such awful form in front of goal that his non-involvement was majorly endorsed. Even Xhaka returning to inject some control into midfield in a bid to shore up that area felt valid.

How the team set up, played, moved and positioned themselves was so far flung from the matches where three points had been secured. That entire performance succeeded in distancing itself further away from the norm than at Old Trafford. In order to atone for the mistakes last time out there had to be an ever grander response; one that would overshadow previous failings and reassert the manager as a master tactician.

There was no need to delve into the complex. Everton are a dreadful team in abysmal form. They’re ****. Don’t take that mantle off them.

Across his time at Arsenal he’s shown glimpses of his talent. Unsurprisingly, all of the more defensive-minded performances were most impressive ones from a tactical standpoint.

The Xhaka playing left-back ploy worked until it didn’t, and his refusal to accept its brief success had finished meant he plugged it until it was too late. Whereas everything about the Villarreal tie was an utter shambles. That still hurts. Deep.

If you are going to experiment as he has, especially for a young coach so inexperienced in this environment compared to his fellow professionals, they have to work. Wholesale facelifts of the team and style have no room for error.

It’s as if he’s waiting for his big break. His almighty vindication.

Then across this season you see the Arsenal teams that tore Tottenham, Aston Villa and Leicester apart in the opening half hour of Premier League matches and wonder why that ploy was abandoned. The bones of an effective attacking structure and transition-accommodating team was there. There were tweaks to make in game states but the foundations had been laid.

These mistakes are not costing Arteta his job yet, as there is nothing to suggest he won’t see out the season. But they are costing him supporters. He’s gambling with his future and even if the backing is there and appears to remain firm, further dicing with the odds will cost him eventually.

Next. Where Arsenal are mentally weak. dark

Football is a simple game. Arteta disagrees.