Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang sets Arsenal’s tone - his timely return to form will be pivotal

Captain endured a catalogue of near misses in the first half but eventually showed the conviction that’s so often guided Arsenal out of disaster

Tom Kershaw
Tuesday 19 January 2021 05:23 EST
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(Arsenal FC via Getty Images)

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For what felt like an interminable period of time during a first-half that positioned itself somewhere between lifelessly stale and murderously dull, it seemed as though Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang was destined to fail. His miss from all of four yards out, in the victory’s first resuscitating moment, was symbolic of a striker bereft of his killer instinct, his feet still going through the predatory motions, but the claws missing.

In fact, before Arsenal laid waste to Newcastle’s desperate foundations in the second half, the night had descended into something of a catalogue of Aubameyang’s near misses. After that first incomprehensible miscue, there was a left-footed scythe over the bar, a curling attempt that succeeded in staying rather straight, and even luck could not come to the captain’s aid when Karl Darlow parried away a deflected cross bound for the top corner.

It was a passage that betrayed all Aubameyang’s strange lack of convictions. During Arsenal’s various degrees of tumult in recent seasons, the 31-year-old’s goals had been the one guarantee and a constant source of rescue. And while his recent slide has often been disguised by Arsenal’s creative struggles, that was hardly the case on a night where Emile Smith Rowe and the returning Thomas Partey injected a real measure of force into the midfield.

READ MORE: Darkness of Ozil’s exit shouldn’t overshadow illuminating career

So, for all the positives to take from their 3-0 victory, perhaps, none will prove quite so crucial as Aubameyang finally shedding the burden of his bad form. Even before he eventually struck at the beginning of the second half, there had at least been a menace to his intent. His wastefulness only made possible by a series of incisive and well-timed runs.

They were admittedly made rather easier by Steve Bruce’s dictates of war and subsequent switch to a back four, which succeeded only in leaving his full-back, Emil Krafth, desperately isolated and criminally unprotected. Aubameyang tore at the Swedish defender mercilessly throughout, but that made his opening goal no less spectacular, jinking one way and then the next, a lion and a rag doll, before his left-footed shot seared into the roof of the net. It was just Aubameyang’s fourth goal in the league this season and a first brace since the FA Cup final. A simple tap-in for his second will only serve to further rejuvenate his and Arsenal’s confidence. 

“That’s what he (Aubameyang) has done throughout his career and mentally you have to be really strong in order to do that,” Arteta said afterwards. “He has come out of a difficult period. We have been missing his goals a lot. Today he has come back and scored two, and contributed to the team to win and this is exactly what we need. So I am really pleased for him.”

It is still too early to draw any grand or definitive conclusions from Arsenal’s performance. It was though at least encouraging in almost every aspect, with Smith Rowe stepping admirably into the glare left by Mesut Ozil’s departing shadow, while Partey and Granit Xhaka formed a fantastic axis. Yet, few opponents will disintegrate quite so meekly as Newcastle. In the FA Cup, Arsenal found Bruce’s side infuriatingly difficult to break down. This time, the bones were already there to scavenge and Arsenal should really have feasted on them far sooner than the second half.

And while Arsenal embark on another wild swing, it appears nothing can arrest Newcastle’s spiral. ‘The Bruce Way’ was alarming only in quite how similar it was to its predecessor, even with eight changes to his starting line-up, and the Magpies amounted just one shot on goal and turned squeamish whenever in position. In fact, the only thing that came close to Bruce’s promise of a “gloves off” approach was the hooking presence of Andy Carroll up front, whose elbows are unfortunately far sharper than his finishing. They are now winless in their last nine and walking blindly towards the edge of a cliff face.

Arsenal need pay no heed to that, though. This was the perfect release after a week dominated by Ozil’s departure and familiar creative flaws against Crystal Palace. A place in the top 10, without any hint of sarcasm, has been heady ground for the club this season and now only five points separate them from the Europa League places.

What is clearest, for all their positive notes, is that Arsenal are never truly in tune when Aubameyang is not on song. There is no use agonising over imagination if nobody is capable of harnessing it as a weapon. Since September, Aubameyang had seemed a stranger in his own body - lethargic, hesitant, suddenly aged. But in the second half, his old suits returned. Perhaps now, Arsenal can really begin to strut to the rhythm of their talisman.

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