Aston Villa vs Arsenal: 3 ways to beat Gerrard’s side
Arsenal travel to Villa Park on Saturday and there is no playing down the importance of the fixture. Despite the defeat to Liverpool being majorly expected, it can’t be allowed to evolve into anything other than a minor blip.
Losing that match is, more than other games, acceptable. What can’t be lost is momentum. Not now.
From the highs of winning eight out 11 Premier League matches – losing two out of 12 is still a fine record considering the teams those defeats came against – everything can so easily be swung the other way if Saturday ends in disappointment.
Villa have won three of their last four, including thumping wins over Southampton and Leeds, and Steven Gerrard has unearthed a system that caters to the individual talents at his disposal.
Aston Villa vs Arsenal: 3 ways to beat Steven Gerrard’s side in Saturday’s Premier League meeting at Villa Park
Two consecutive 1-0 losses at this ground come after a run of 17 matches without defeat in this particular part of Birmingham, and with the Gunners facing their third match in just six days, including just the solitary training session in between Liverpool and Villa, they find themselves up against it.
Their own form has been excellent, though, even with the Liverpool game in mind. It’s easier said than done but if they can replicate the level of performance shown on Wednesday they will beat far more teams than they don’t in this division.
Improvements across the team have to contend with improvements in the opposition. Villa find themselves in ninth position and a ten-point swing is needed for them to overtake Wolves, leaving them with not much to play for.
That will release the pressure on the team and they can play with the same freedom that Gerrard – within the confines of his tactical system – has instilled since his arrival. How do Arsenal tackle that? Well, there are three areas to target that will help them secure three huge points.
1. Keep Matty Cash Pinned Back
Having originally utilised his favoured 4-3-3 shape, Gerrard has tweaked his system slightly with the introduction of a midfield diamond.
Now lining up in a 4-1-2-1-2 shape, one that allows them to have both Ollie Watkins and Danny Ings in attack, it places a lot of emphasis on the full-backs to provide the width.
Matty Cash is in a fine run of form with two goals and two assists in his last four games, much of which has stemmed from the use of overloads on the left open spaces for him to charge down on the opposite flank.
With the magic of Gabriel Martinelli to choose from, Arsenal keeping Martinelli high and wide, a position he naturally picks up, will force the Villans’ right-back into a position of minimal threat. His overlapping runs are Ings’ source of crosses and Watkins’ source of cutbacks, therefore forcing his forays forward to be lung-busting dashes from deep in his own half allow for more flexibility in defensive transition.
Arsenal play with a risk element now that is an accepted one. They’re more willing to commit as they have more faith in their defensive shape. And, in doing so, they can hinder one of Villa’s main outlets.
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