Archive November 7, 2025

‘Arsenal attack like ‘Invincibles’ and defend like class of 97-98′

  • 852 Comments

The way Arsenal are behaving at the moment reminds me very much of the Arsene Wenger teams I won three Premier League titles with.

In those teams, it was done from a strong base and Mikel Arteta’s side has got a similar look about it, very similar characteristics, if not better in some ways.

The Gunners have only lost one game in all competitions and have conceded fewer goals than any other Premier League team.

They have the most clean sheets so far this season across all competitions and have won all of their past eight games without conceding.

Arteta’s men have faced 75 shots in the Premier League this season – 19 fewer than any other team – and conceded only three goals.

There’s a passion to defend as much as there is to score goals with this Arsenal team. I am seeing what I saw in the past. It had disappeared and now it’s all coming back again.

Arsenal should never lose this DNA again, because they lost it for too long. The best way to keep it is to win something, to keep everyone together and that secures the future.

You have to live it, breathe it, keep it, eat it. Nothing else matters more, and it just becomes a part of your character and your personality. It’s like a badge that you walk around with. It can take quite a few years to get to to that boiling point. And that’s where Arsenal are now.

The teams I lifted the top-flight title with in 1998, 2002 and 2004 all have something in common with Arteta’s current side – all of them have suffered the pain of not winning something.

In 1998 we had gone six years without a title. In 2002 it came after we finished second behind Manchester United for three years in a row and again before the 2004 ‘Invincibles’ season.

This team has finished runners-up for three successive seasons and it’s a collective thing, the energy that comes out of defeats, you get to the stage where you’re so incensed and so motivated to try to win.

It was mentioned to us that we were second best as a group because we kept coming second to Manchester United.

That breeds an inner feeling of ‘over my dead body, this will not happen again, we’re going to make sure we win this’. I can see all the similarities with this group.

The mentality changes when you see other teams picking up trophies and you’re subjected to everybody else winning silverware, and the only thing you don’t have is that same celebratory feel that comes at the end of any success. Those first photographs, they’re not there yet.

You’re not going to stop until that changes, until trophies start coming through the door.

It just sort of galvanises you and I’m seeing all of that now. It’s like a fight breaks out, and there’s three people that turn up at the fight.

It’s maybe the wrong terminology to use, but you’re never on your own. You never look around and think ‘I’m in trouble here’. There’s always somebody who has your back because they’re all of the same mentality, all of the same mindset.

Two or three years ago, I thought we’re back in the fight again. Arteta has got that Arsenal fight. It had disappeared, that DNA disappeared and since Mikel came in, he has done a magnificent job of changing the culture.

I think there’s been an internal fight for places that’s made everybody go that little bit extra to add to the mix.

Gabriel looks like he’s a leader. Declan Rice looks like he’s a leader. I think Gyokeres looks a character. You want personality. You want character.

I remember the dressing room under Wenger and the pinnacle of that group – there was such an aura about the group, and there were so many leaders.

I can’t chose between Sol Campbell and Tony Adams, Lauren or Lee Dixon. It’s like asking me to choose between siblings. All I can tell you is every one of those was affected by the other, and all of them took that baton and that mood and that behaviour.

A graphic showing Arsenal's stats concecedOpta

‘You don’t want to be the best statistically and still not be champions’

Ashley Cole, Sol Campbell, Lauren, Kolo ToureGetty Images

The Gunners equalled a 122-year-old club record by keeping their eighth consecutive clean sheet in all competitions.

But you don’t want to be the best statistically, defensively, like we were in 1999 and still not be champions. You’ve got to be better in all areas.

The back four takes a lot of strength from all the plaudits and the talk about how this team is so good defensively because as a defender, you don’t really grab the headlines.

Of course, it’s different when you have Gabriel scoring loads of goals from set-pieces, but you do your job and then you get your pat on the back when you start to create history with your clean sheets.

In 1999 we only conceded 17 goals. That’s the second-best ever in the Premier League, but it didn’t win us anything.

There has been a lot of talk at the moment about the defensive platform, but it’s what they do with the ball that will make them champions.

In 1997-98, we had Manu Petit and Patrick Vieira. Honestly, you could almost get your deck chairs out at the back because of the amount of work they were doing in front of us, but they needed good instruction to be in the right places.

Let’s not forget Ray Parlour in all of this, on the right side, working, grafting, and then we kind of had Marc Overmars just tearing people apart. Dennis [Bergkamp] and [Nicolas] Anelka as well.

That was Wenger’s sort of pioneer team. Before that, it was ‘one-nil to the Arsenal’ under George Graham. Wenger made us all become footballers, but then took it to the Invincibles a couple of years later.

I remember when Lauren came in at right-back. Ashley [Cole] was at left-back. Nigel Winterburn had gone. Dixon was still there. And he [Wenger] said, ‘right, our right-back now Martin is going to be playing like a winger’.

I said, ‘no problem, boss’, but I was always in Lauren’s ear to make sure we had a balance. I didn’t want him to go forward too often because he was given a license by the manager to fly forward. So it evolved into more like we’re seeing now with Arteta’s full-backs.

Cole was actually a centre-forward in the Arsenal youth team who ended up playing left-back, but it’s only a starting position. And the same for Lauren. Lauren was a midfield player who went to right-back. What I’ve seen now is probably very similar.

‘The modern day Bryan Robson’

Declan RiceGetty Images

Arsenal have been pretty consistent over the past four years, but they’ve never looked as strong as they do now. This is a jigsaw puzzle we’ve been putting together for five years.

It is similar to the past title-winnings seasons. There was a strong defence, but obviously there also was a really good platform in midfield.

Arteta has been slowly putting the pieces together. Eze in the midfield. He’s also got a new centre-forward in play, although, of course, he’s desperate to have Kai Havertz and Gabriel Jesus back.

He’s got two central defenders that are probably the best, if not the best in Europe.

[Cristhian] Mosquera is a player in the same mould, the same DNA. Maybe that wasn’t the case with other replacements in the past.

At full-back, Ben White starts the season, then gets injured and [Jurrien] Timber has been a revelation ever since. And at left-back, you’ve got Riccardo Calafiori – an Italy international left-back – up against Myles Lewis-Skelly. It’s one hell of a battle for a first team place, isn’t it?

In front of them, [Martin] Zubimendi is as good as anything I’ve seen in Europe. And then Declan Rice, he’s like the modern day [ex-Manchester United and England captain] Bryan Robson. He’s up and down the pitch. The distance he’s covering is ridiculous, not to mention the quality on the delivery.

The only thing missing from their CV is trophies. We can see with our own eyes how good the defence is.

‘Like a tug-of-war’

Arsenal's defenders celebrate togetherGetty Images

But there’s nothing won, there are no celebrations. There’s lots to go in the season. They need to be lucky.

In the past, I’ve described it like a tug-of-war. When you win and they lose, the rope comes your way, and if they win and you lose, it goes the opposite way.

At the moment, Arsenal are pulling hard in that tug-of-war, and they’re toppling their opponents. Because when you win emphatically – like they’re doing in all competitions – everyone’s looking at their opponent. They’re all messaging each other.

That’s all Arsenal are doing at the moment, they’ve sent a huge message that they’re in the race here. They’re massively in this race. Now you’re going to see the other teams wake up.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Arsenal
  • Football

More on this story

‘Arsenal attack like ‘Invincibles’ and defend like class of 97-98′

  • 852 Comments

The way Arsenal are behaving at the moment reminds me very much of the Arsene Wenger teams I won three Premier League titles with.

In those teams, it was done from a strong base and Mikel Arteta’s side has got a similar look about it, very similar characteristics, if not better in some ways.

The Gunners have only lost one game in all competitions and have conceded fewer goals than any other Premier League team.

They have the most clean sheets so far this season across all competitions and have won all of their past eight games without conceding.

Arteta’s men have faced 75 shots in the Premier League this season – 19 fewer than any other team – and conceded only three goals.

There’s a passion to defend as much as there is to score goals with this Arsenal team. I am seeing what I saw in the past. It had disappeared and now it’s all coming back again.

Arsenal should never lose this DNA again, because they lost it for too long. The best way to keep it is to win something, to keep everyone together and that secures the future.

You have to live it, breathe it, keep it, eat it. Nothing else matters more, and it just becomes a part of your character and your personality. It’s like a badge that you walk around with. It can take quite a few years to get to to that boiling point. And that’s where Arsenal are now.

The teams I lifted the top-flight title with in 1998, 2002 and 2004 all have something in common with Arteta’s current side – all of them have suffered the pain of not winning something.

In 1998 we had gone six years without a title. In 2002 it came after we finished second behind Manchester United for three years in a row and again before the 2004 ‘Invincibles’ season.

This team has finished runners-up for three successive seasons and it’s a collective thing, the energy that comes out of defeats, you get to the stage where you’re so incensed and so motivated to try to win.

It was mentioned to us that we were second best as a group because we kept coming second to Manchester United.

That breeds an inner feeling of ‘over my dead body, this will not happen again, we’re going to make sure we win this’. I can see all the similarities with this group.

The mentality changes when you see other teams picking up trophies and you’re subjected to everybody else winning silverware, and the only thing you don’t have is that same celebratory feel that comes at the end of any success. Those first photographs, they’re not there yet.

You’re not going to stop until that changes, until trophies start coming through the door.

It just sort of galvanises you and I’m seeing all of that now. It’s like a fight breaks out, and there’s three people that turn up at the fight.

It’s maybe the wrong terminology to use, but you’re never on your own. You never look around and think ‘I’m in trouble here’. There’s always somebody who has your back because they’re all of the same mentality, all of the same mindset.

Two or three years ago, I thought we’re back in the fight again. Arteta has got that Arsenal fight. It had disappeared, that DNA disappeared and since Mikel came in, he has done a magnificent job of changing the culture.

I think there’s been an internal fight for places that’s made everybody go that little bit extra to add to the mix.

Gabriel looks like he’s a leader. Declan Rice looks like he’s a leader. I think Gyokeres looks a character. You want personality. You want character.

I remember the dressing room under Wenger and the pinnacle of that group – there was such an aura about the group, and there were so many leaders.

I can’t chose between Sol Campbell and Tony Adams, Lauren or Lee Dixon. It’s like asking me to choose between siblings. All I can tell you is every one of those was affected by the other, and all of them took that baton and that mood and that behaviour.

A graphic showing Arsenal's stats concecedOpta

‘You don’t want to be the best statistically and still not be champions’

Ashley Cole, Sol Campbell, Lauren, Kolo ToureGetty Images

The Gunners equalled a 122-year-old club record by keeping their eighth consecutive clean sheet in all competitions.

But you don’t want to be the best statistically, defensively, like we were in 1999 and still not be champions. You’ve got to be better in all areas.

The back four takes a lot of strength from all the plaudits and the talk about how this team is so good defensively because as a defender, you don’t really grab the headlines.

Of course, it’s different when you have Gabriel scoring loads of goals from set-pieces, but you do your job and then you get your pat on the back when you start to create history with your clean sheets.

In 1999 we only conceded 17 goals. That’s the second-best ever in the Premier League, but it didn’t win us anything.

There has been a lot of talk at the moment about the defensive platform, but it’s what they do with the ball that will make them champions.

In 1997-98, we had Manu Petit and Patrick Vieira. Honestly, you could almost get your deck chairs out at the back because of the amount of work they were doing in front of us, but they needed good instruction to be in the right places.

Let’s not forget Ray Parlour in all of this, on the right side, working, grafting, and then we kind of had Marc Overmars just tearing people apart. Dennis [Bergkamp] and [Nicolas] Anelka as well.

That was Wenger’s sort of pioneer team. Before that, it was ‘one-nil to the Arsenal’ under George Graham. Wenger made us all become footballers, but then took it to the Invincibles a couple of years later.

I remember when Lauren came in at right-back. Ashley [Cole] was at left-back. Nigel Winterburn had gone. Dixon was still there. And he [Wenger] said, ‘right, our right-back now Martin is going to be playing like a winger’.

I said, ‘no problem, boss’, but I was always in Lauren’s ear to make sure we had a balance. I didn’t want him to go forward too often because he was given a license by the manager to fly forward. So it evolved into more like we’re seeing now with Arteta’s full-backs.

Cole was actually a centre-forward in the Arsenal youth team who ended up playing left-back, but it’s only a starting position. And the same for Lauren. Lauren was a midfield player who went to right-back. What I’ve seen now is probably very similar.

‘The modern day Bryan Robson’

Declan RiceGetty Images

Arsenal have been pretty consistent over the past four years, but they’ve never looked as strong as they do now. This is a jigsaw puzzle we’ve been putting together for five years.

It is similar to the past title-winnings seasons. There was a strong defence, but obviously there also was a really good platform in midfield.

Arteta has been slowly putting the pieces together. Eze in the midfield. He’s also got a new centre-forward in play, although, of course, he’s desperate to have Kai Havertz and Gabriel Jesus back.

He’s got two central defenders that are probably the best, if not the best in Europe.

[Cristhian] Mosquera is a player in the same mould, the same DNA. Maybe that wasn’t the case with other replacements in the past.

At full-back, Ben White starts the season, then gets injured and [Jurrien] Timber has been a revelation ever since. And at left-back, you’ve got Riccardo Calafiori – an Italy international left-back – up against Myles Lewis-Skelly. It’s one hell of a battle for a first team place, isn’t it?

In front of them, [Martin] Zubimendi is as good as anything I’ve seen in Europe. And then Declan Rice, he’s like the modern day [ex-Manchester United and England captain] Bryan Robson. He’s up and down the pitch. The distance he’s covering is ridiculous, not to mention the quality on the delivery.

The only thing missing from their CV is trophies. We can see with our own eyes how good the defence is.

‘Like a tug-of-war’

Arsenal's defenders celebrate togetherGetty Images

But there’s nothing won, there are no celebrations. There’s lots to go in the season. They need to be lucky.

In the past, I’ve described it like a tug-of-war. When you win and they lose, the rope comes your way, and if they win and you lose, it goes the opposite way.

At the moment, Arsenal are pulling hard in that tug-of-war, and they’re toppling their opponents. Because when you win emphatically – like they’re doing in all competitions – everyone’s looking at their opponent. They’re all messaging each other.

That’s all Arsenal are doing at the moment, they’ve sent a huge message that they’re in the race here. They’re massively in this race. Now you’re going to see the other teams wake up.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Arsenal
  • Football

More on this story

‘Arsenal attack like ‘Invincibles’ and defend like class of 97-98′

  • 852 Comments

The way Arsenal are behaving at the moment reminds me very much of the Arsene Wenger teams I won three Premier League titles with.

In those teams, it was done from a strong base and Mikel Arteta’s side has got a similar look about it, very similar characteristics, if not better in some ways.

The Gunners have only lost one game in all competitions and have conceded fewer goals than any other Premier League team.

They have the most clean sheets so far this season across all competitions and have won all of their past eight games without conceding.

Arteta’s men have faced 75 shots in the Premier League this season – 19 fewer than any other team – and conceded only three goals.

There’s a passion to defend as much as there is to score goals with this Arsenal team. I am seeing what I saw in the past. It had disappeared and now it’s all coming back again.

Arsenal should never lose this DNA again, because they lost it for too long. The best way to keep it is to win something, to keep everyone together and that secures the future.

You have to live it, breathe it, keep it, eat it. Nothing else matters more, and it just becomes a part of your character and your personality. It’s like a badge that you walk around with. It can take quite a few years to get to to that boiling point. And that’s where Arsenal are now.

The teams I lifted the top-flight title with in 1998, 2002 and 2004 all have something in common with Arteta’s current side – all of them have suffered the pain of not winning something.

In 1998 we had gone six years without a title. In 2002 it came after we finished second behind Manchester United for three years in a row and again before the 2004 ‘Invincibles’ season.

This team has finished runners-up for three successive seasons and it’s a collective thing, the energy that comes out of defeats, you get to the stage where you’re so incensed and so motivated to try to win.

It was mentioned to us that we were second best as a group because we kept coming second to Manchester United.

That breeds an inner feeling of ‘over my dead body, this will not happen again, we’re going to make sure we win this’. I can see all the similarities with this group.

The mentality changes when you see other teams picking up trophies and you’re subjected to everybody else winning silverware, and the only thing you don’t have is that same celebratory feel that comes at the end of any success. Those first photographs, they’re not there yet.

You’re not going to stop until that changes, until trophies start coming through the door.

It just sort of galvanises you and I’m seeing all of that now. It’s like a fight breaks out, and there’s three people that turn up at the fight.

It’s maybe the wrong terminology to use, but you’re never on your own. You never look around and think ‘I’m in trouble here’. There’s always somebody who has your back because they’re all of the same mentality, all of the same mindset.

Two or three years ago, I thought we’re back in the fight again. Arteta has got that Arsenal fight. It had disappeared, that DNA disappeared and since Mikel came in, he has done a magnificent job of changing the culture.

I think there’s been an internal fight for places that’s made everybody go that little bit extra to add to the mix.

Gabriel looks like he’s a leader. Declan Rice looks like he’s a leader. I think Gyokeres looks a character. You want personality. You want character.

I remember the dressing room under Wenger and the pinnacle of that group – there was such an aura about the group, and there were so many leaders.

I can’t chose between Sol Campbell and Tony Adams, Lauren or Lee Dixon. It’s like asking me to choose between siblings. All I can tell you is every one of those was affected by the other, and all of them took that baton and that mood and that behaviour.

A graphic showing Arsenal's stats concecedOpta

‘You don’t want to be the best statistically and still not be champions’

Ashley Cole, Sol Campbell, Lauren, Kolo ToureGetty Images

The Gunners equalled a 122-year-old club record by keeping their eighth consecutive clean sheet in all competitions.

But you don’t want to be the best statistically, defensively, like we were in 1999 and still not be champions. You’ve got to be better in all areas.

The back four takes a lot of strength from all the plaudits and the talk about how this team is so good defensively because as a defender, you don’t really grab the headlines.

Of course, it’s different when you have Gabriel scoring loads of goals from set-pieces, but you do your job and then you get your pat on the back when you start to create history with your clean sheets.

In 1999 we only conceded 17 goals. That’s the second-best ever in the Premier League, but it didn’t win us anything.

There has been a lot of talk at the moment about the defensive platform, but it’s what they do with the ball that will make them champions.

In 1997-98, we had Manu Petit and Patrick Vieira. Honestly, you could almost get your deck chairs out at the back because of the amount of work they were doing in front of us, but they needed good instruction to be in the right places.

Let’s not forget Ray Parlour in all of this, on the right side, working, grafting, and then we kind of had Marc Overmars just tearing people apart. Dennis [Bergkamp] and [Nicolas] Anelka as well.

That was Wenger’s sort of pioneer team. Before that, it was ‘one-nil to the Arsenal’ under George Graham. Wenger made us all become footballers, but then took it to the Invincibles a couple of years later.

I remember when Lauren came in at right-back. Ashley [Cole] was at left-back. Nigel Winterburn had gone. Dixon was still there. And he [Wenger] said, ‘right, our right-back now Martin is going to be playing like a winger’.

I said, ‘no problem, boss’, but I was always in Lauren’s ear to make sure we had a balance. I didn’t want him to go forward too often because he was given a license by the manager to fly forward. So it evolved into more like we’re seeing now with Arteta’s full-backs.

Cole was actually a centre-forward in the Arsenal youth team who ended up playing left-back, but it’s only a starting position. And the same for Lauren. Lauren was a midfield player who went to right-back. What I’ve seen now is probably very similar.

‘The modern day Bryan Robson’

Declan RiceGetty Images

Arsenal have been pretty consistent over the past four years, but they’ve never looked as strong as they do now. This is a jigsaw puzzle we’ve been putting together for five years.

It is similar to the past title-winnings seasons. There was a strong defence, but obviously there also was a really good platform in midfield.

Arteta has been slowly putting the pieces together. Eze in the midfield. He’s also got a new centre-forward in play, although, of course, he’s desperate to have Kai Havertz and Gabriel Jesus back.

He’s got two central defenders that are probably the best, if not the best in Europe.

[Cristhian] Mosquera is a player in the same mould, the same DNA. Maybe that wasn’t the case with other replacements in the past.

At full-back, Ben White starts the season, then gets injured and [Jurrien] Timber has been a revelation ever since. And at left-back, you’ve got Riccardo Calafiori – an Italy international left-back – up against Myles Lewis-Skelly. It’s one hell of a battle for a first team place, isn’t it?

In front of them, [Martin] Zubimendi is as good as anything I’ve seen in Europe. And then Declan Rice, he’s like the modern day [ex-Manchester United and England captain] Bryan Robson. He’s up and down the pitch. The distance he’s covering is ridiculous, not to mention the quality on the delivery.

The only thing missing from their CV is trophies. We can see with our own eyes how good the defence is.

‘Like a tug-of-war’

Arsenal's defenders celebrate togetherGetty Images

But there’s nothing won, there are no celebrations. There’s lots to go in the season. They need to be lucky.

In the past, I’ve described it like a tug-of-war. When you win and they lose, the rope comes your way, and if they win and you lose, it goes the opposite way.

At the moment, Arsenal are pulling hard in that tug-of-war, and they’re toppling their opponents. Because when you win emphatically – like they’re doing in all competitions – everyone’s looking at their opponent. They’re all messaging each other.

That’s all Arsenal are doing at the moment, they’ve sent a huge message that they’re in the race here. They’re massively in this race. Now you’re going to see the other teams wake up.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Arsenal
  • Football

More on this story

‘Arsenal attack like the ‘Invincibles’ and defend like class of 97-98′

  • 168 Comments

The way Arsenal are behaving at the moment reminds me very much of the Arsene Wenger teams I won three Premier League titles with.

In those teams, it was done from a strong base and Mikel Arteta’s side has got a similar look about it, very similar characteristics, if not better in some ways.

The Gunners have only lost one game in all competitions and have conceded fewer goals than any other Premier League team.

The Gunners have the most clean sheets so far this season across all competitions and have won all of their past eight games without conceding.

Arteta’s men have faced 75 shots in the Premier League this season – 19 fewer than any other team – and conceded only three goals.

There’s a passion to defend as much as there is to score goals with this Arsenal team. I am seeing what I saw in the past. It had disappeared and now it’s all coming back again.

Arsenal should never lose this DNA again, because they lost it for too long. The best way to keep it is to win something, to keep everyone together and that secures the future.

You have to live it, breathe it, keep it, eat it. Nothing else matters more, and it just becomes a part of your character and your personality. It’s like a badge that you walk around with. It can take quite a few years to get to to that boiling point. And that’s where Arsenal are now.

The teams I lifted the top-flight title with in 1998, 2002 and 2004 all have something in common with Arteta’s current side – all of them have suffered the pain of not winning something.

In 1998 we had gone six years without a title. In 2002 it came after we finished second behind Manchester United for three years in a row and again before the 2004 ‘Invincibles’ season.

This team has finished runners-up for three successive seasons and it’s a collective thing, the energy that comes out of defeats, you get to the stage where you’re so incensed and so motivated to try to win.

It was mentioned to us that we were second best as a group because we kept coming second to Manchester United.

That breeds an inner feeling of ‘over my dead body, this will not happen again, we’re going to make sure we win this’. I can see all the similarities with this group.

The mentality changes when you see other teams picking up trophies and you’re subjected to everybody else winning silverware, and the only thing you don’t have is that same celebratory feel that comes at the end of any success. Those first photographs, they’re not there yet.

You’re not going to stop until that changes, until trophies start coming through the door.

It just sort of galvanizes and I’m seeing all of that now. It’s like a fight breaks out, and there’s three people that turn up at the fight.

It’s maybe the wrong terminology to use, but you’re never on your own. You never look around and think, ‘I’m in trouble here’. There’s always somebody who has your back because they’re all of the same mentality, all of the same mindset.

Two or three years ago, I thought we’re back in the fight again. Arteta has got that Arsenal fight. It had disappeared, that DNA disappeared and since Mikel came in, he has done a magnificent job of changing the culture.

I think there’s been an internal fight for places that’s made everybody go that little bit extra to add to the mix.

Gabriel looks like he’s a leader. Declan Rice looks like he’s a leader. I think Gyokeres looks a character. You want personality. You want character.

I remember the dressing room under Wenger and the pinnacle of that group – there was such an aura about the group, and there were so many leaders.

I can’t chose between Sol Campbell and Tony Adams, Lauren or Lee Dixon. It’s like asking me to choose between siblings. All I can tell you is every one of those was affected by the other, and all of them took that baton and that mood and that behaviour.

A graphic showing Arsenal's stats concecedOpta

‘You don’t want to be the best statistically and still not be champions’

Ashley Cole, Sol Campbell, Lauren, Kolo ToureGetty Images

The Gunners equalled a 122-year-old club record by keeping their eighth consecutive clean sheet in all competitions.

But you don’t want to be the best statistically, defensively, like we were in 1999 and still not be champions. You’ve got to be better in all areas.

The back four takes a lot of strength from all the plaudits and the talk about how this team is so good defensively because as a defender, you don’t really grab the headlines.

Of course, it’s different when you have Gabriel scoring loads of goals from set-pieces, but you do your job and then you get your pat on the back when you start to create history with your clean sheets.

In 1999 we only conceded 17 goals. That’s the second-best ever in the Premier League, but it didn’t win us anything.

There has been a lot of talk at the moment about the defensive platform, but it’s what they do with the ball that will make them champions.

In 1997-98, we had Manu Petit and Patrick Vieira. Honestly, you could almost get your deck chairs out at the back because of the amount of work they were doing in front of us, but they needed good instruction to be in the right places.

Let’s not forget Ray Parlour in all of this, on the right side, working, grafting, and then we kind of had Marc Overmars just tearing people apart. Dennis [Bergkamp] and [Nicolas] Anelka as well.

That was Wenger’s sort of pioneer team. Before that, it was ‘one-nil to the Arsenal’ under George Graham. Wenger made us all become footballers, but then took it to the Invincibles a couple of years later.

I remember when Lauren came in at right-back. Ashley [Cole] was at left-back. Nigel Winterburn had gone. Dixon was still there. And he [Wenger] said, ‘right, our right-back now Martin is going to be playing like a winger’.

I said, ‘no problem, boss’, but I was always in Lauren’s ear to make sure we had a balance. I didn’t want him to go forward too often because he was given a license by the manager to fly forward. So it evolved into more like we’re seeing now with Arteta’s full-backs.

Cole was actually a centre-forward in the Arsenal youth team who ended up playing left-back, but it’s only a starting position. And the same for Lauren. Lauren was a midfield player who went to right-back. What I’ve seen now is probably very similar.

‘The modern day Bryan Robson’

Declan RiceGetty Images

Arsenal have been pretty consistent over the past four years, but they’ve never looked as strong as they do now. This is a jigsaw puzzle we’ve been putting together for five years.

It is similar to the past title-winnings seasons. There was a strong defence, but obviously there also was a really good platform in midfield.

Arteta has been slowly putting the pieces together. Eze in the midfield. He’s also got a new centre-forward in play, although, of course, he’s desperate to have Kai Havertz and Gabriel Jesus back.

He’s got two central defenders that are probably the best, if not the best in Europe.

[Cristhian] Mosquera is a player in the same mould, the same DNA. Maybe that wasn’t the case with other replacements in the past.

At full-back, Ben White starts the season, then gets injured and [Jurrien] Timber has been a revelation ever since. And at left-back, you’ve got Riccardo Calafiori – an Italian international left-back – up against Myles Lewis-Skelly. It’s one hell of a battle for a first team place, isn’t it?

In front of them, Zubimendi is as good as anything I’ve seen in Europe. And then Declan Rice, he’s like the modern day [former Manchester United and England captain] Bryan Robson. He’s up and down the pitch. The distance he’s covering is ridiculous, not to mention the quality on the delivery.

The only thing missing from their CV is trophies. We can see with our own eyes how good the defence is.

‘Like a tug-of-war’

Arsenal's defenders celebrate togetherGetty Images

But there’s nothing won, there are no celebrations. There’s lots to go in the season. They need to be lucky.

In the past, I’ve described it like a tug-of-war. When you win and they lose, the rope comes your way, and if they win and you lose, it goes the opposite way.

At the moment, Arsenal are pulling hard in that tug-of-war, and they’re toppling their opponents. Because when you when you win emphatically – like they’re doing in all competitions – everyone’s looking at their opponent. They’re all messaging each other.

That’s all Arsenal are doing at the moment, they’ve sent a huge message that they’re in the race here. They’re massively in this race. You’re going to see now the other teams wake up.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Arsenal
  • Football

More on this story

Tottenham vs Manchester United: Premier League – team news, start, lineups

Who: Tottenham Hotspur vs Manchester United
What: English Premier League
Where: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London
When: Saturday at 12:30pm (12:30 GMT)
How to follow: We’ll have all the build-up on Al Jazeera Sport from 09:30 GMT in advance of our live text commentary stream.

The weekend’s Premier League action begins in north London where sixth-placed Tottenham Hotspur welcome eighth-placed Manchester United.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Provisional second place in the table is up for grabs in a grudge game for Ruben Amorim’s United side after Spurs beat them 1-0 in last season’s Europa League final to prevent the Red Devils from playing in the Champions League this season.

While the hosts are seeking to bounce back from a home defeat by Chelsea last weekend, the visitors are unbeaten in their last four Premier League matches – a sequence that includes a 2-1 win over champions and archrivals Liverpool, as well as last weekend’s battling 2-2 draw away at Nottingham Forest.

Frank ‘happy’ with Spurs response to Chelsea defeat

Following an insipid defeat to Chelsea last weekend, Spurs have now lost three Premier League games at home this season. Their record at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium over the last 12 months is even worse – they have won just four out of 20 home league games, drawing four and losing 12.

Tottenham did at least get a boost in midweek as Spurs thrashed Copenhagen 4-0 at home to record their biggest win since manager Thomas Frank took charge.

Frank was reluctant to point to the victory over a team from his native Denmark as a turning point after a difficult spell of one win in five, but it lifts the mood before Saturday’s visit from Manchester United.

“We talk a lot about that bounce-back mentality because in life and football there will be setbacks,” he said.

“Every team will experience that and it’s how we react to that to come out after a bad game or a bad spell and come back to it. That’s part of a good team. I’m very happy with the response the players came with.”

Van de Ven makes amends with wonder goal

Micky van de Ven got back in favour with Frank as the Tottenham defender’s stunning solo goal during the rout of Copenhagen drew comparisons to Lionel Messi.

Van de Ven and Djed Spence were forced to apologise to Tottenham boss Frank this week after they ignored his plea to applaud fans following Saturday’s loss to Chelsea.

But Van de Ven retained his place in the starting lineup and produced a moment of magic, running over half the length of the pitch before delivering a clinical finish to score.

“It seems like we had Lionel Messi turned into Micky van de Ven, roaring down from his own goal all the way to the other end and scored a fantastic goal,” Frank said.

“I think he’s our top scorer in all competitions, so he can keep going.”

Van de Ven celebrates after scoring Tottenham’s third goal against FC Copenhagen on Tuesday [AFP]

‘We are a better team’

United will not need motivation against Spurs, having lost all four games they played against Tottenham last season.

When asked how United had changed since the Europa League final, Amorim replied: “First of all, the characteristics of the players. So, we are a better team, we play better, we understand the game better. I think we are more confident.

“We reached that final confident that we could win because we were doing well in Europe, but in this moment we play with a different confidence.

“We manage the moments of the game better. But if you remember that game, they have that shot on the goal, they won the game.

“So, I expect a different game, that we can play better, but also to have a little bit luck to help us to win the game.”

Soccer Football - Premier League - Manchester United v Brighton & Hove Albion - Old Trafford, Manchester, Britain - October 25, 2025 Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim celebrates after the match REUTERS/Phil Noble EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NO USE WITH UNAUTHORIZED AUDIO, VIDEO, DATA, FIXTURE LISTS, CLUB/LEAGUE LOGOS OR 'LIVE' SERVICES. ONLINE IN-MATCH USE LIMITED TO 120 IMAGES, NO VIDEO EMULATION. NO USE IN BETTING, GAMES OR SINGLE CLUB/LEAGUE/PLAYER PUBLICATIONS. PLEASE CONTACT YOUR ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE FOR FURTHER DETAILS..
Amorim celebrates after United beat Brighton last month [Phil Noble/Reuters]

Amorim hits back at Ronaldo criticism

Cristiano Ronaldo, who won eight trophies at United, said this week that United were “not in a good path” after a wretched season in which the Red Devils finished 15th, and warned that Amorim was “not going to do miracles” at Old Trafford.

Amorim, who took over from Erik ten Hag in November 2024, hit back by urging fans and pundits alike to look forward rather than dwell on the past.

“Of course, he has a huge impact in everything he said,” Amorim said on Thursday.

“What we need to focus [on] is in the future. We know that we as a club made a lot of mistakes in the past, but we are trying to change that. So let’s not focus on what happened. Let’s focus [on] what we are doing now.

“We are changing a lot of things in the structure, the way we do things, the way we want the players to behave. We are doing that and we are improving.”

Head-to-head

The two clubs have faced each other 204 times, with United winning 96 of those games, Tottenham winning 57 and 51 ending as draws.

Despite doing the league double over Man United last season, Spurs have only won four of their last 12 Premier League games against the Red Devils, with three of their last five victories coming at Old Trafford.

As well as beating United 1-0 in the Europa League final last season, Spurs also won a wild League Cup quarterfinal 4-3 at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

The last time United beat Spurs was back in October 2022, when goals from Fred and Bruno Fernandes gave the Red Devils a 2-0 win at Old Trafford.

Tottenham Hotspur’s team news

Spurs could be missing as many as 10 players for United’s visit, with James Maddison, Dejan Kulusevski, Dominic Solanke, Radu Dragusin, Yves Bissouma, Ben Davies, Archie Gray and Kota Takai all ruled out through injury.

Winger Mohammed Kudus is a doubt after he missed the win over Copenhagen with a knock, potentially opening the way for Brennan Johnson to start on the right.

Midfielder Lucas Bergvall is unlikely to feature due to concussion protocols following a blow to the head that forced his substitution against Chelsea last weekend.

Tottenham’s predicted starting lineup

Vicario; Porro, Romero, Van de Ven, Spence; Bentancur, Palhinha, Sarr; Johnson, Richarlison, Simons

Manchester United’s early team news

United’s only reported injury concern is with centre back Lisandro Martinez, who has returned to training after being sidelined since February with a knee injury but is still regaining full fitness.

Harry Maguire returned to the bench for United’s 2-2 draw at Nottingham Forest last weekend after recovering from a knock, so Amorim could recall the defender or stick with Leny Yoro in the back three.

United’s predicted starting lineup