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Ian Wright has expressed his concern over Arsenal’s recent tendency to exhibit ‘jittery nerves’ in the final moments of their matches, despite their progress towards capturing the Premier League title.
In a tightly contested match where the only goals stemmed from set-pieces, Mikel Arteta’s squad managed to secure a gritty 2-1 victory against their London counterparts, Chelsea, at the Emirates Stadium on Sunday.
This win pushed Arsenal five points clear of Manchester City, who still have a game in hand, at the summit of the Premier League table. However, Chelsea seemed poised for a comeback, even after being reduced to 10 men following Pedro Neto’s second-half dismissal.
Speaking on Premier League Productions, Wright commented, “Once Chelsea went down to 10 men, they actually started to play, which was concerning.”
He continued, “Arsenal showed those nerves, those jittery nerves during the closing stages of the game. They need to capitalize on their chances earlier so they can afford to be more at ease in the latter parts.”
Ian Wright says he is worried about Arsenal showing their ‘nerves’ towards the end of games
The Gunners beat London rivals Chelsea on Sunday to extend their lead at the top of the table
Wright emphasized the importance of securing victories, particularly in home games. “It’s essential for them to just win now. It might not fill you with overwhelming confidence, but a win is a win.”
Arsenal opened the scoring after 21 minutes in the tie through a corner, which defender William Saliba nodded home.
However, they were pegged back in the second minute of first-half injury time after Piero Hincapie’s own-goal from a Chelsea corner, and the Blues began the second 45 in the ascendancy before Neto was sent off.
‘We’re seeing in the second half of games, you can get at Arsenal,’ Wright added.
‘Chelsea had 10 men there, it would be nice to find out what’s happening to Arsenal in the second half.
‘It comes down to “you get the job done” and I’m happy the job is done, but I’m going to be nervous for the next game because I’m seeing that again in the second half.’
Despite Chelsea being unable to score in the second half, 14 of Arsenal’s Premier League goals conceded this season have come after the restart.
Wright also said he was ‘baffled’ by VAR not awarding the Blues a penalty when the ball struck Declan Rice’s arm just before Chelsea’s equaliser.
The Arsenal midfielder was holding Jorrel Hato as the ball came in, before it struck his elbow and almost went into his own net.
‘(Rice’s) arm has come up. I’m baffled at what they’re looking for,’ Wright said.
Wright was ‘baffled’ Chelsea were not awarded a penalty after the ball hit Declan Rice’s arm
‘Decs is actually holding him. His arm’s up there and now it moves up. When I saw that I thought they’re going to give a pen.
‘But then you don’t know what they’re going to do up there. You look at the pen that Man United got today, I’m thinking that’s definitely a penalty.’
The Premier League’s Match Centre posted an immediate statement detailing why the penalty wasn’t awarded.
‘The referee’s call of no penalty was checked and confirmed by VAR – with it deemed there was no punishable handball offence with Rice challenging an opponent as the ball hit his arm,’ they said.
Arsenal’s winning goal came when Jurrien Timber headed home from a Declan Rice corner in the 66th-minute.
But the latter stages of the clash still left the Arsenal support feeling nervy, with David Raya making a fingertip save in injury time from an Alejandro Garnacho cross, before Liam Delap’s late strike was ruled out for offside.
Arteta credited Raya with bringing his heart ‘back to life’ with his late heroics.
‘He (Raya) is a keeper that knows how to maintain his focus and decide a football match when you need it because sometimes he doesn’t participate at all, and then in one action, you have to be there, and that’s very, very difficult to do,’ the Arsenal boss said post-match.
‘The save that he made in the last action… it’s a cross, not a shot, but he ended up with an unbelievable save.
‘I got the right angle and my heart almost stopped, but David’s hand was there to bring it back to life.’