When Arsène Wenger took Arsenal to Liverpool in
September 2012, he watched two of his summer signings, Lukas Podolski and Santi
Cazorla, score the goals in a 2-0 win.
It got the club up and running for the season after a couple of
disappointing draws and it felt like a spark.
Liverpool had a new manager in Brendan Rodgers and he was
struggling at the time with various problems. The result meant Rodgers had
presided over the club’s worst start since 1962-63 and his team would finish in
seventh – one place and two points below Everton. Nevertheless, it went down as
a notable away victory for Arsenal.
The reason for bringing it up, as Wenger prepares to take his
team back to Anfield for a fixture laced with significance in the fight for
Champions League qualification, is its rarity value. Since that day, Arsenal
have played 22 away games in the Premier League against the clubs that are
considered to make up the Big Six with them – Manchester United, Manchester
City, Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool. They have won two of them.
For the record, they were the Tomas Rosicky-inspired 1-0 victory at Spurs in
March 2014 and the 2-0 triumph against City in January 2015,
when Cazorla, from the penalty spot, and Olivier Giroud got the goals.
The City result was held up as a breakthrough; the evidence that
Wenger’s team could tough out a major win in the backyard of a title contender.
The statement has gone on to lose its sheen. Over the past five seasons,
including this one, Arsenal have secured some honourable draws on their league
travels to the Big Six but have taken some bad beatings – most recently the morale-shattering 3-1 loss against Chelsea on
4 February.
The numbers are on Wenger’s mind. They are on everybody’s minds.
If Liverpool are experiencing the first pronounced downturn of the Jürgen Klopp
era, with all of the soul-searching that entails, then Arsenal’s angst has an
all-too-familiar feel. The 5-1 loss at Bayern Munich in the
first leg of the Champions League last 16 on 15 February merely deepened the
negative preconceptions about Wenger’s team.
The manager has delved into the psyche of his players in an
attempt to inspire a boost and his buzzwords during the week have been
“freedom” and “belief”. In short, they have been lacking from many of the
important away days in recent seasons. Wenger has to see them return at
Anfield.
“We lost at Everton and City [in December] after being 1-0 up
and it was because we were not proactive after we went ahead – we were too
passive,” Wenger said. “After that, we lost at Chelsea under special
circumstances a little bit [Wenger disputed Chelsea’s opener] but I agree that
we didn’t look like we played with enough freedom or the belief that we would
just turn up and do it.
“That is what we want to add to our game. What is most important
for me now is the attitude to just go for it – to go and take. What is linked
many times with belief is a passive mode and not enough proactivity. You have
to make things happen. It is always a mindset. How do I bring it out in the
players? By making them conscious of it.”
Wenger is mindful that his team have not played since the FA Cup win at Sutton United on
the Monday of last week and he said he had put the emphasis on high-intensity
work in training so that they would be ready to start strongly.
Although Wenger is not a manager to park the bus, he did stress
the need for defensive solidity and it has surely not been lost on him that
each of the three away wins over Big Six rivals since 2012‑13 have featured
clean sheets. The one at City was marked by an unusually defensive approach.
Above all, though, Wenger wants his players to have the courage
to express themselves and it was in this context that the discussion turned to
his artist-in-residence, Mesut Özil, who has been off-colour in recent weeks.
“I think confidence plays a part,” Wenger said. “If you want to park the bus,
then you lose Özil. He is a guy who needs possession. With possession, he is a
marvellous player.”
So, too, is Cazorla and the midfielder has been sorely missed
since his heel injury in October, which is set to rule him out for the season.
“Özil has suffered a lot from the loss of Cazorla,” Wenger said. “Cazorla can
get out of pressure in deep midfield; he gets the ball played through to a
player who is higher up and then Özil, with the ball at the right moment, can
always do damage. But I don’t want to make this a debate about one player. It’s
not Özil alone who will win us the game.”
Arsenal’s home and away league record against the Big Six since
2012-13 reads: P46 W10 D18 L18. It is not good enough. They need a spark and
one that will stand the test of time.
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2010
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