Key events
Teams in brief: Havertz in, Tarkowski out
Mikel Arteta shuffles the pack, giving Kai Havertz his first start at centre-forward for quite a while and refreshing his left flank – out go Piero Hincapié and Gabriel Martinelli, in come Riccardo Calafiori and Noni Madueke.
For Everton, it’s all change at the back. James Tarkowski and Jarrod Branthwaite are missing, presumed injured, so Michael Keane comes in, Jake O’Brien slides across from right-back, James Garner takes his place there, and Tim Iroegbunam gets a start in midfield. What a shame for Tarkowski, especially: he would have loved all the argy-bargy at corners.
Preamble
Afternoon everyone and welcome to what was, once upon a time, the Alan Ball derby. If we can believe the rumour mill, it may soon be the Myles Lewis-Skelly derby. For now, though, it’s definitely the Mikel Arteta derby.
In his days as a classy midfielder, Arsenal’s manager played more games for Everton than for anyone else. He was brought into English football by David Moyes, his opposite number this evening. The two of them have something in common which happens a lot in most walks of life and all too seldom in football: they’ve made their job their own.
Moyes is in his 13th year as Everton’s manager and they haven’t sacked him yet. Arteta, in his seventh year managing Arsenal, is the second longest-serving Premier League boss after Pep Guardiola. Not that durability guarantees entertainment. Since Moyes returned to Everton 14 months ago, his meetings with Arteta have been taciturn affairs.
In the last days of Goodison Park there was a 1-1, with Everton’s goal coming from a penalty by Iliman Ndiaye and Arsenal’s in open play from Leandro Trossard, assisted by Raheem Sterling (remember him?). Just before Christmas, at the Hill Dickinson, there was a 1-0 to Arsenal that came down to two penalty decisions. Arsenal won one, converted by Viktor Gyokeres. Everton thought they had one late on, when William Saliba kicked Thierno Barry in mid-air, but the VAR considered it “insignificant contact”.
There will be plenty of contact tonight, much of it significant. These are two big, strong, bellicose teams, who may well lay on a treat for connoisseurs of pushing and shoving.
Arsenal are top of the league, as you know, and also top of the home table in terms of points per game with 2.5, just ahead of Man City on 2.4. But Everton are top of the away form table (which covers the past six away games for each club) with 14 points, no defeats and a handsome set of victories – at Forest, Villa, Fulham and Newcastle.
Can they win at the Emirates too? Probably not, as no visitors from outside the top six have managed so much as a draw in the league this season: only Man United have gone home with all three points, and only Man City and Liverpool with one. But Moyes, who used to have a dismal record here, did win 2-0 on his last visit, with West Ham.
I warmed up for this game by going to watch Arsenal’s Under-21s last night. They too were at home, facing a smaller club who were wearing blue – Leicester City. And they lost 5-1.
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