João Palhinha stuns Arsenal as 10-man Fulham battle back to earn late point
On a wild, storm-wracked afternoon Arsenal and Fulham played out a draw that felt by the end like three games in one, as well as at least two different, largely opposed tactical versions of this Arsenal team.
Fulham were neat, sparky and compact in central midfield. They took the lead via the first attack of the game, then equalised with two minutes left of normal time and 10 players left on the pitch after Calvin Bassey’s late second yellow card.
In between Fulham exposed for long periods the weaknesses in Mikel Arteta’s attempts to reconfigure his team in these early days of the league season. Thomas Partey may or may not be an instinctive positional postmodernist, able to slip into a fluid right-back-midfield role. But there was very little evidence of it here and his 55 minutes on the pitch felt like time lost pursuing an under-researched experiment.
Bukayo Saka’s attempted pass back into his own defence emerged instead as the perfect through ball for an unmarked Andreas Pereira. The finish was also excellent, Pereira spotting Aaron Ramsdale scrabbling about trying to gauge the danger in the middle and curling the ball inside the near post, a lovely piece of improvisation.
Arsenal’s instant response was frantic. There were high looped crosses towards Leandro Trossard, who came in for Eddie Nketiah up front, some defiantly urgent crossfield switches, and, above all, a sense of self-induced struggle.
Kai Havertz looked unremittingly confused, not just by his role on the left of midfield, but by the basic fact of taking part in a Premier League match. “He got in great areas but the ball didn’t arrive,” was Arteta’s verdict.
Partey started at right-back again, stepping into midfield alongside Declan Rice when Fulham had the ball. Even in this more natural role he seemed always wary of Pereira sniping into that outside-left position, so hesitant at times you expected to look down and notice he was still thumbing through the manual on how to play this position, thumbing the index, wondering why it is all in Swedish.
It is hard to blame Partey for this. Very few players are able to step in and fill such a complex role without glitches.
Havertz was replaced by Fábio Vieira and it was he who forced the breakthrough for the equaliser, zipping in from the left and drawing Kenny Tete into a wild sliding challenge.
Saka took the penalty, a little odd given Martin Ødegaard’s precision last week. But as ever with Saka and penalties this had an element of destiny, redemption, vibes. He buried it to level the scores and give Arsenal a 20-minute run at victory.
They needed two to take the lead. Again, there was fine work from Vieira, measuring a perfect low cross into the path of Nketiah.
“He looks a real threat at the moment. He’s full of confidence. There is a fire in the eyes,” Arteta said of a player he left on the bench.