
Mikel Arteta does a Benitez as he rants about xG and tells Luis Enrique ‘look at the stats' after bold Arsenal claim
MIKEL ARTETA doubled down as he insisted KO'd Arsenal WERE the Champions League's best team — and told Luis Enrique to 'look at the stats'.
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Mikel Arteta is basing his verdict on figures like expected goals
Credit: Reuters
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Rafa Benitez famously hit Alex Ferguson with stats in 2009
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Arteta reckons the Gunners were unlucky in Paris
The
'When you look at all the important stats, the ones that give you the best platform to win football matches, it's crystal clear who was better.
'With an expected goals of five against three, which we had over the two legs, normally you're in the final.'
Arteta's statistical claims echoed then-
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Arteta said: 'If you face PSG and they blow you away, you shake hands and say, 'We're not ready still'.
'When you look them in the eye, suffocate them in the way we did there, you were the better team.
'But it's not about the winning probability, it's actually making it count.'
But the Gunners chief did accept Liverpool 'deserve' to be crowned Prem winners because his side have taken a 'step backwards'.
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Martin Odegaard and Co were shattered by their semi-final KO
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Arteta had been under fire for claiming Liverpool's title-winning tally — they can still reach 91 points — was less than the 89 his men racked up last term or 84 in 2022-23, when they were again runners-up to
He said: 'It's true. With the amount of points we had, we could have been champions twice.
This week's title: How 'brave' Arsenal were denied by PSG in Champions League semi-final
'But we were not. In the Premier League we've gone a step backwards. Liverpool deserve to be champions.'
While the thought of telling his team to line up on the Anfield pitch and give Liverpool their guard of honour on Sunday will be hard to swallow, the Spaniard knows it is something his players MUST do.
To realise how close they came. To dig deeper to make sure the boot is on the other foot next term.
Another campaign of near-misses has left Arteta wounded, no question.
It is now five years and counting since the Basque watched his players parade round an empty Wembley with the FA Cup, the 'Covid Final' win over
Since then, while Manchester City,
Being the unwitting walk-on extras at an Anfield party tomorrow will rub home that point, as Arteta knows.
He said: 'Paris was a very emotional moment.
'It was one of the saddest but one of the proudest moments that I have had as an Arsenal manager.
'We put a lot of hope and energy and work into that and we didn't get the outcome. You need to go through that to become stronger and better and that's what we do.
'We are providing the numbers that win you titles. We have to be a little bit luckier or still do better.
'Again, with what we did in the Champions League, with those numbers, you have a big probability of winning it. That's why a lot of people were thinking that we could go all the way.
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Last-eight hero Declan Rice couldn't quite help Arsenal past PSG
Credit: Shutterstock Editorial
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Arteta consoled Jurrien Timber as the Gunners missed out on the final
Credit: Reuters
'Those two words, 'success' and 'failure', they are not part of my vocabulary.
'But not winning trophies bothers me a lot because I love winning and absolutely hate losing.
'If it doesn't hurt then it means you don't love winning as much as I do, that's for sure.'
The fear of some Gunners fans is that Arteta might end up as another North London 'nearly man', the sort of jibe they loved to throw at Mauricio Pochettino and Spurs when their most bitter rivals were in the local ascendancy but could not get over the winning line.
Arteta and his 'trust the process' mantra retain the backing of most of the Emirates faithful but the manager wants his players to feel as bad as the travelling fans shortly before 4.30pm on Sunday.
He added: 'Liverpool have been the best team, the most consistent team. When somebody is better you have to applaud and accept and try to reach that level.
'Something that has to drive you, motivate you, and pain probably is a good one to use.
'When you don't really want to do something but it's the right thing to do, usually it is a motivation for next season.
'We cannot win the Premier League, that is clear. But over the last 16 days, with three games to go, we must make sure that we do ourselves proud and compete to the end in the manner we deserve.'
For many Arsenal fans — and outside critics — it was the failure to address the elephant in the room in January, the club's lack of an out-and-out striker, that ended up being exactly as costly as was widely predicted.
I have no doubts about these players and their attitude. I know how much they are still hurting — now we have to show the fight.
Mikel Arteta
Pressed on that and the fact that Mo Salah's goals for Liverpool have been one of the key differences in the campaign, Arteta did bristle.
He asked: 'Did I have to make it more clear in January? Was it clear or not?
'If you score over 90 goals you have a high probability of winning the Premier League.
'It doesn't guarantee you, but you have a high probability if your defensive record is very good and very dependable.
'Of course, there's not that many who can put up those numbers in the Premier League, so I must improve and love the ones we have right now.
'This is not the moment to judge players.'
That is on Arteta himself as well. He said: 'I have so much to achieve and do. That is what drives me every day.
'The only way to achieve what you want is to have really high standards and demands.
'We are very, very close to achieving it. I understand the disappointment, and the criticism. That is all part of it.
'At the end there is one winner and the rest of them aren't going to win, so they need to reinvent themselves and do better.
'But I have no doubts about these players and their attitude.
'I know how much they are still hurting — now we have to show the fight and how much we care about what is happening.
'And what we still have to achieve, which is a big thing because we haven't done it yet.'
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Thomas Partey gave his all in vain in the return leg at PSG
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The 42
2 hours ago
- The 42
The great transfer gamble: Why League of Ireland clubs must not rely on add-ons for value
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So, should Kelleher's star rise in the Premier League and a club decides he is the first €50m Irish goalkeeper, Ringmahon and Rockmount (he spent half a year there) will be divvying up another 2% that is calculated by the recently-established Fifa Clearing House system. In November, the world governing body confirmed that just shy of €110m had been distributed to grassroots and professional clubs over the last two years, and around €200m more is pending. Advertisement A decade after Kelleher left for Anfield, Ringmahon finally hit the jackpot financially. That's because Liverpool's initial outlay for the teenager was only in the region of €50,000. And therein lies the great add-on gamble for clubs when players are moving on. In hindsight, Ringmahon's 20% sell-on clause with Kelleher was astute. In reality, it was a price the Premier League giants were more than willing to pay given the odds of it ever being triggered are stacked against any youngster leaving in their mid-teens. 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Irish Independent
2 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Paul McGinley disappointed as Rory McIlroy blows great US Open start: ‘He didn't glue it together on that back nine'
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Irish Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Evan Ferguson given reality check after Newcastle and Everton transfer links
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