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Tottenham v Arsenal: north London derby, Premier League – live

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Tottenham v Arsenal: north London derby, Premier League – live

Key events

5 min: Good save by Raya! Solanke combines nicely with Son on the left. Son’s cutback is met first time by Kulusevski, whose shot is pushed round the near post by Raya. Pretty good save and a lovely move.

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3 min Spurs are starting to get on the ball, as is their wont. It looks Arsenal are playing with a box midfield, certainly without the ball: Partey and Jorginho, Havertz and Trossard.

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2 min Saka’s corner is cleared. As you probably remember, Arsenal scored twice from set pieces on this ground last season.

1 min Peep peep! Arsenal kick off from left to right and we watch, and win a corner after 20 seconds.

It’s kicking off!

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“I’ve been a Spurs fan for over fifty years,” writes Jim Denvir, “ever since Pat Jennings came to visit my primary school soon after I started there in the mid seventies. My dad didn’t like football and hated crowds but gamely took me to a few matches when I was a kid. Probably the most memorable was a 3-0 win over Ajax in the Uefa Cup which included a sumptuous goal from Ossie.

”I moved to America nearly 30 years ago. I’ve finally reached a point in my career where I travel frequently enough back to England and am fortunate enough to pay for membership, so I do now get to go to a couple of games each season. My wife was invited to present at a conference in Italy and we’d already decided to come to London and catch up with friends and family this weekend. This was all arranged before this season’s fixture list was announced but here we are.

”The atmosphere here is incredible. Yes, football has become commercialised and sanitised, and much of that is good though some of it is bad. But there is still nothing to beat this feeling of tribalism and the sense that anything could happen in the next 90 minutes. When ‘Oh when the Spurs’ broke out at the bar in the south stand an hour before kick off, I genuinely had goosebumps. Just minutes to kickoff now. COYS.”

Here come the teams, with Arsenal wearing their black away kit. The atmosphere is spectacular.

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A reminder of the teams

Tottenham Hotspur (4-1-2-3) Vicario; Porro, Romero, van de Ven, Udogie; Bentancur; Kulusevski, Maddison; Johnson, Solanke, Son.
Subs: Forster, Dragusin, Gray, Bergvall, Werner, Spence, Odobert, Sarr, Davies.

Arsenal (possible 4-1-2-3) Raya; White, Saliba, Gabriel, Timber; Jorginho;
Partey, Trossard; Saka, Havertz, Martinelli.
Subs: Neto, Gabriel Jesus, Kiwior, Sterling, Lewis-Skelly, Nwaneri, Kacurri,
Kabia, Heaven.

Referee Jarred Gillett.

No Declan Rice = no problem for Arsenal, at least when the ball is dead.

“Mikel Arteta seemed blessed with the ability to use key players throughout last season, enabling them to get closer to old ‘two-full-first-teams’ in sky blue,” says Bill Hargreaves. “Today will be a test. I still can’t say Tottenham without putting an ‘ing’ in the middle as dear old Ossie used to.”

This game does feel particularly hard to call, even more so with that ultra-attacking Spurs XI. But I’m paid the small bucks to stick my neck out, so I’m telling you now: the result will be between 5-0 and 0-5.

Big Ange: not for turning

This is a charming interview with Bukayo Saka.

Some weeks are bigger than others. In the next eight days Arsenal will play away to Spurs, Atalanta and the Erling Haaland team.

This is an excellent point from David Howell

“The other thing, with this being only September, is that we don’t know yet whether this title race is a normal one, or one where lawyers and assorted other professional interpreters of accountancy Numberwang will forcibly remove Manchester City from the equation.

“All the other teams are jostling for position in a peloton that may or may not have a sky blue breakaway to chase down. This is Schrödinger’s Table until that particular case is closed; there is indeed a huge day in the title race this week, but it’s not today. It’s tomorrow.”

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Jonathan Liew sticks his thermometer up North London

I’m the only Spurs in here,” calls the landlady, a jolly woman of middle years called Tina. As you can imagine, running a Spurs pub on derby day is not a job for the meek. The Coach & Horses will be packed to overfilling, security hired to keep order, as well as to enforce the rule on no visiting fans.

But what about the rest of the time? What if an Arsenal fan – known pejoratively in these parts as a “Gooner” – were to stray over the threshold? Would they simply be turfed out? Or would a more exemplary punishment be demanded? “Oh, that rule’s just for match days,” Tina explains. “We get Arsenal fans in here all the time. There’s one over there. She’s my daughter.

Team news: Van de Ven and Solanke return, Trossard starts

Great news for Spurs: Micky van de Ven and Dominic Solanke are fit to start. Big Ange has picked an extremely attacking team, with Rodrigo Bentancur playing Colin Calderwood in an Ossie Ardiles tribute XI. Brennan Johnson also comes back into the side. The four players who miss out are Radu Dragusin, Wilson Odobert, Yves Bissouma and Pape Sarr.

Jorginho replaces the suspended Declan Rice and will captain Arsenal in the absence of Martin Odegaard. Gabriel Martinelli replaces him, which gives Mikel Arteta a few options. Trossard or Havertz could drop into midfield, or Arsenal could play with a box. Raheem Sterling is among the substitutes.

⚫️ 𝗧𝗘𝗔𝗠𝙉𝙀𝙒𝙎 🔴

©️ Jorginho skippers the side
🪄 Trossard pulling the strings
⚡️ Martinelli out on the wing

Let’s make it count, Gunners ✊ pic.twitter.com/5P7oGVRnUc

— Arsenal (@Arsenal) September 15, 2024

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David Hytner meets Pedro Porro

Since I was small, I have had to fight for everything. You had to be tough in my house. Often there wasn’t any food. I know others have that situation, too, but that is how it was. That is why I have had to be tough. It’s not necessarily a bad thing, this spirit. It’s a winning spirit, as well. It can be positive within the game. It’s been part of me since I started. If you want to reach the absolute top level, you have to be strong mentally.

Liverpool, Man City, Chelsea and now Arsenal. Raheem Sterling has had a career less ordinary.

Preamble

The calendar never lies, and today it says 15 September. That’s right, September. Not May, April or even December. You wouldn’t know it from some of the previews of today’s North London derby, which have stopped just short of opining that world peace depends on Team X getting a result.

All North London derbies matter, and they’re usually great fun fun for the neutral. And both teams do need a result for different reasons. But it’s still September and it’s probably more conducive to world sanity if we try to remember that.

So, why it matters. Spurs need to improve their performances:points ratio, having taken only 10 from their last 10 league games, and Arsenal could be without their entire first-choice midfield for the first time in years. That’s not ideal when you are a) playing Tottenham and b) watching Erling Haaland gambol towards the horizon. If, say, Arsenal draw today and lose at the Etihad next Sunday, they will already be eight points behind Manchester City.

Then again, if they win them both they’ll be a point above City and at least six clear of Spurs. And whatever happens, there will still be 32 league games remaining. It’s September, stupid.

Kick off 2pm.

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