It was as this game entered its final 10 minutes that the Arsenal
fans were able to truly show their appreciation for Mesut Özil. They
arrived excited to see the German make his home debut, and after a
display lit up by a key role in all three goals their side scored
against a willing but limited Stoke City
team, he received a standing ovation upon being substituted. On this
evidence, the £42.5m man is sure to receive much more acclaim in these
parts as an increasingly positive season for the club goes on.
Özil
was not at his sparkling best, and it could be argued he was not even
the most impressive player on the pitch given the performances in
midfield of Mathieu Flamini and Aaron Ramsey, with the Welshman
continuing his remarkable start to the season with a seventh goal in all
competitions. Yet the record signing caught the eye with a silky,
penetrative and ultimately decisive showing.
It was rather ironic
given the tetchy history between Arsenal and Stoke, based on a supposed
clash between the beautiful and brutal, that the home team should
triumph through a trio of set pieces. Yet here was proof of the
difference Özil can make to a side and why Real Madrid's decision to let
the 24-year-old depart last summer is so baffling.
He has
provided 72 assists across the past five seasons, more than any other
player in Europe's top five divisions, and in only three appearances for
his new club already has a further three to his name, four if you
include the free-kick that Asmir Begovic parried into the path of
Ramsey, allowing him to open the scoring here after only five minutes.
That was followed by a corner from which Per Mertesacker put Arsenal
back into the lead following Geoff Cameron's well-taken equaliser and a
second-half free-kick that Bacary Sagna converted to put the seal on a
victory that moved Arsenal back to top spot.
"When you look at Özil's numbers, the assists are not a coincidence –
it is a reality of his game," said Arsène Wenger, Arsenal's manager.
"When you play against Stoke you don't expect to score three goals from
set pieces but it shows how important his delivery is, and I believe
once he has completely integrated you will see even more. He has shown
today that he is a great player."
More than anything Özil was the
difference for an Arsenal side that deserved to win but hardly took the
breath away. Disrupted by an abdominal injury to Theo Walcott, which led
to the winger being replaced by Serge Gnabry moments before kick-off,
the home side dominated large periods of the game and attacked with
fluidity, yet they created few chances in open play, with Olivier Giroud
rarely looking likely to add to his five goals this season.
Ramsey,
on the other hand, cannot stop scoring. He proved to be the right man
in the right place after the normally excellent Begovic made a poor
attempt of clearing Özil's low free-kick from just outside the area,
sidefooting the ball past the goalkeeper from close range.
That
should have been the cue for an Arsenal onslaught but Stoke's
disciplined shape and relentless pressing reduced the home side to
eye-of-the-needle through-passes and shots from long range. The
visitors, stationed deep in their own half, looked unlikely to score but
they did just that on 26 minutes when Marko Arnautovic, on his first
start for Stoke, hit an upright with a volley following Steven Nzonzi's
cross to the far post before seeing the impressive Cameron convert the
rebound to secure his first goal for Mark Hughes's side.
Arsenal
stepped up the pace of their play and retook the lead nine minutes from
half-time when, with minimal movement, Mertesacker found himself with
enough room to glance Özil's right-sided corner into the far corner of
the net.
It was from a relatively straightforward header that
Sagna also scored on 72 minutes, this time from a left-sided Özil
delivery, leaving Hughes in an unsurprisingly frustrated state with the
manner of his team's defending, particularly after an improved
second-half display had suggested they could leave with a point.
"We're
disappointed to have conceded three goals from set pieces – that
doesn't normally happen," said the Stoke manager. "We showed courage to
get back on level terms and in the second half played with a lot of
control and possession. But the third goal took the wind out of our
sails and came at a poor time."
Eight minutes after Sagna's goal,
Özil received his standing ovation, with those on their feet then
roaring Mikel Arteta as he came on to make his first appearance of the
season following recovery from a thigh injury. Joy all round, then, and
the sense that a season that began amid such rancour is shaping up
rather well for Wenger and his men.
Man of the match Mesut Özil (Arsenal)
No comments:
Post a Comment