As Aaron Ramsey stroked in Arsenal’s fourth, in a sun-swathed Emirates stadium, Wenger might just begin to feel more and more vindicated by his stubbornness in not willing to invest to replace the outgoing players.

It was the Arsenal of old which turned up at Emirates; the blitzkrieg counter-attacking, the silk and delightful passing, the jaw-dropping one-two’s, this was the Arsenal which loved to play football.

Arsenal did take time to find their stride, but once they did, Pompey were always chasing shadows for the length of the pitch. They were resistant for quite sometime, but the once the wall was broken down, it was always going to be a rout.

Eduardo, who started his first EPL game since that fateful day at St. Andrews, showed some mesmerising down the left hand side and then squared the ball quite brilliantly for Abou Diaby who lifted the nall into the top corner of the net from 18 yards. The next goal came in the next minutes.

From a deep-lying Arsenal area, Fabregas released Eboue with microscopic precision and Ivory Coast man, starting his first EPL game of the season, put it on a plate for Diaby’s second from the edge of the six-yard box.

The bell-ringing visitors had hope around the corner. From a Krancjar corner, the ball found Belhadj, who put in a teasing cross into the six-yard box. Younes Kaboul escaped the attentions of his marker and Almunia went backwards to cope with the rising ball, but the young Frenchman took advantage of the situation to make ir 2-1 before half-time.

Second half saw Fabregas removed in place of Ramey, with the Spaniard suspected to have complained about a tight hamstring. Pompey had the better of the early exchanges in the second-half and could have had a possible last-man offence against them. But the referee ruled in favour of William Gallas the the gunners. When you are down at the bottom, things never go your way.

Gallas and Vermaelen combined to make it three on the day for the gunners, the Frenchman enjoying a great scoring start to the campaign. David James was substituted, while Arsenal called upon Merida and the impressive Bendtner.

Robin Van Persie cut a frustrated figure as he could not score from numerous opportunities but he will be satisfied with the pass which found Ramsey. This goal was the Welshman’s first in the EPL.

Manchester United played superbly to put aside any doubts on the frying pan with five unanswered second-half goals.

The stage is now set for the Arsenal and Man United, undoubtedly the doyens of the English game, to do battle next weekend and chalk up a victory in the psychological department.

Whenever the Champions league music is played, there is that uncontrollable feeling of emotion. With the music plus a chorus of Scottish fanatics crying “You Will Not Walk Alone,” one might have wondered whether this Arsenal side had the bottle to cope with the situation and come out trumps. They did have the bottle and dismantled Scotland’s best, Celtic, two-nil in a warm evening at Parkhead.

Before the match three Arsenal players had fitness tests, one of them being Fabregas, the others being Denilson and Sagna. All three of them cleared the tests. Celtic also had injury problems going into the game but Loovens did manage to make the final cut.

The match started a bit sombrely with both teams testing each other out. Arsenal’s counter-attacking system was deployed more than once as the half wore on, but it was Celtic who had the first clear opportunity. From an Arsenal corner, the ball broke kindly to the Men in Hoops, and if not for Thopmas Vermaelen, who put in a last ditch clearence, the story could well have been different.

Arsenal, then began playing with their usual style and substance and the gulf in class was pretty evident. The first goal did come pretty soon but in the most unlikeliest of fashions. From a Fabregas free-kick, 25 yards out, the captain took his shot. The ball was deflected to the other side of the goal by William Gallas, completely wrong-footing Artur Boruc, the Celtic keeper. A lucky break for Arsenal before the whistle.

Celtic were the dominating of the two parties in the early exchanges of the second half, but they could not do anything with the possession they had. Arsenal flicked the switch with incoming Diaby replacing the Russian, Arshavin. It immediately paid dividends. Diaby showed some brilliant skill down the left hand side before passing it to Clichy and from his cross, Gary Caldwell put in to his own net.

Arsenal were well on thier way to the group stage proper. Marc-Antoine Fortune and Scott McDonald both came in for the Hoops but the Arsenal back-four stood the test of time and the atmosphere to return home with a famous result.

The return leg is fixed for next Wednesday and Arsenal might well ring-in the changes as they have two daunting trips to Manchester, first to the red-half and then to the blue-half, all in the space of a week.

With classiness and sumptuous football, Arsenal dismantled Everton 6-1, in a humiliation at Goodison park. By the time the final whistle was heard, boos rang around the stadium as thr Blues faithful were voicing their disgust at the Everton team and its manager, David Moyes.


With the Premeir-league, chuntering into life atlast, after 73 days of absence, it was a chance for the squads to have a good, long look at themselves before delving into the transfer market.

Chelsea eked out a win, the latest contenders to threaten the big-four cartel, Man Citeh, also started their campaign with a fine 0-2 victory against Blackburn Rovers. The pressure was on the Arsenal to suggest that their superiority would not be in question(against the smaller clubs)just yet.

Arsenal started the game with their new formation of a 4-3-3 (can also be interpreted as a 4-2-3-1) and it paid dividends. Bendtner, who seemed to enjoy Adebayor's absense provided the first goal. With quick feet and trickery, he evaded the attentions of Leighton Baines and passed the ball to Fabregas, who gave it an unmarked Denilson. Denilson, from 30 yards out, had only one thing mind, and he found it quite spectacularly. A curling shot into the corner of the net and Arsenal was buzzing.

Then Denilson had to clear off the line from a Fellaini header, the only instance of Everton's attacking presence in the first half. More impressive work from Bendtner earned Arsenal a free-kick in the right hand side. Van Persie curled in a delightful free-kick and Thomas Vermaelen was on hand to put the ball back across goal into the net. The Belgian was free and could not believe his luck.

Then Van Persie went under a physical challenge from Yobo, and from the resulting free-kick from Fabregas Gallas nodded home to make it 3-0. Again some shambolic defending. All this in the first half itself.

Things did not go on any better for the merseysiders in the second half. A quick counter from Arsenal down the left hand side saw Persie finding Fanregas, and the Spaniard stroked it home from just inside the penalty box. Moyes managed a wry smile. Fellani's rasping thirty yard shot found Almunia, who released Fabregas. The Spaniard ran the length of the pitch to make it 5-0 for the visitors. He then paid tributes to the departed Espanyol skipper, Daniel Jarque, who passed because of heart attack.

Wenger rung the changes and in came Eduardo who had the simplest of tap-ins after some good work from Arshavin found the post. As the final whistle loomed large, there was a consolation for the visitors; Saha found the net from 18 yards.

The pressure will be on David Moyes to find a solution with Joleon Lescott, who has been hangling on a move towards Man City. Arsenal next go to Parkhead to play Celtic in a Champions league qualifier. The EPL champions, Man Utd, open their defense of the title today against Birmingham.

Get the drums out of the lockers, get the fireworks and the pyrotechnics to work in tandem, get your bottle of beer and a packet of chips, get the posters hanging from the walls, besiege your cable guys and forget about the outside world; The greatest football league in the world, after in-absentia for three months, is ready to show its face once again in a new avatar.


After meandering towards a close in May, people would have almost reached the point of temporary insanity. No more United-Pool or Arsenal-Chelsea matches to adorn their gold-plated diary for the next few months. No more watching Javier Mascherano swear in Latin at Steve Bennet. All those crazy moments deserted our TV screens, but they are back, bigger and better.

Citeh have bought enough players to fight a football war with forwards, Arsenal and Spurs would put a comdom company to shame with their defenses, Pool have bought a nobody and sold a somebody, United,as it would seem, has sold a footballing god, only to get a footballing novice. Chelsea have safely steered clear of transfers, avoiding it like swine flu.

What is it that made us all from a cricket watching, sachin adoring public into shouting Henryyyyyyyyyy or a Ronaldooooooooo in the middle of the night. Football brings joy, not only to the main pieces but also to the ones who are watching the spectacle. Someone who would have been following football for being a wannabe would be the walking 'encyclopaedia' within a month. That's what football does to you. It cannot be explained, cannot be written or cannot be expressed.

With just three days for the latest editon of the EPL to hit the stands, each and every fan's heartbeat will go up a notch only to come back to normal statistic, after nine months of being close to calling an ambulance or a mortuary rather than just a tablet.

Let the games begin.


 

Copyright 2006| Blogger Templates by Our community modified and converted to Blogger Beta by Arsenal.com.
No part of the content or the blog may be reproduced without prior written permission.