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Game played on 22 Feb 2025

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Arsenal 0-1 West Ham

Premier League    2024-25Match review
Emirates Stadium   60,262
  SubsGoals  
23Alphonse Areola    
29Aaron Wan-Bissaka    
25Jean-Clair Todibo   
26Maximilian Kilman    
3Aaron Cresswell    
68Oliver Scarles   
28Tomas Soucek    
8James Ward-Prowse   
19Edson Alvarez    
20Jarrod Bowen 1  
14Mohammed Kudus    
15Konstantinos MavropanosSubed #25   
34Evan FergusonSubed #20   
4Carlos SolerSubed #19   
 PosTable as at 22 Feb 2025PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Liverpool269 21261095 0361661
2Arsenal268 41271174 2241253
3Nottingham Forest257 32221072 4191947
4Manchester City258 22281553 5242044
5AFC Bournemouth266 34171064 3272043
6Chelsea266 42221563 5262143
7Aston Villa277 71251842 6142342
8Newcastle United256 24201463 4221941
9Brighton and Hove Albion264 62171464 4252440
10Fulham265 54202154 3181439
11Brentford267 24292542 7181737
12Tottenham Hotspur265 26282351 7251533
13Crystal Palace262 56122164 3191133
14Everton264 64201734 591631
15Manchester United265 17172235 5131530
16West Ham United264 27162744 5142030
17Wolverhampton Wanderers263 18162433 8203022
18Ipswich Town261 49103024 6142417
19Leicester City262 39112722 8143217
20Southampton261 11193712 1010249
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

West Ham's Jarrod Bowen delivers major blow to Arsenal's title hopes
Ed Aarons at the Emirates Stadium
Date published: Sat 22 Feb 2025 17.07 GMT

So it turns out Arsenal should have signed a striker. Fourteen months after they last put a major dent in Arsenal's title aspirations, Jarrod Bowen secured West Ham's second successive Premier League away win over their north London rivals as Mikel Arteta's side saw their hopes of maintaining the pressure on Liverpool evaporate.

To compound Arteta's misery, the substitute Myles Lewis-Skelly was shown a straight red card in the second half as Arsenal - who had toiled all afternoon with Mikel Merino again filling in as a makeshift attacker - struggled to find an equaliser against a defence that would have done Graham Potter's predecessor David Moyes proud. Yet while this was a welcome triumph for Potter, it also laid bare the deficiencies in Arsenal's squad caused by so many injuries to forward players that has made their task of overhauling Arne Slot's side almost impossible. A first defeat in 15 league games - a run that had stretched back to the start of November - almost leaves them needing snookers, regardless of the fact Liverpool have to play Manchester City and Newcastle in their next two matches.

Arteta had hinted Merino would start after his heroics off the bench against Leicester and it still was a damning snub - if unsurprising given his struggles of late - for Raheem Sterling to be the player who made way. Spain's Euro 2024 winner has enjoyed mixed success since joining in August for €32m from Real Sociedad and hadn't been selected in a Premier League lineup since playing in his more conventional midfield role against Aston Villa here five weeks ago. A measure of his sudden importance was that Merino's name received an extra loud cheer when it was read out before kick-off, although his performance didn't live up to the hype.

Potter insisted this past week that there has been an increase in intensity on the training pitch since he succeeded Julen Lopetegui last month, even if results on the pitch have been disappointing. Four points from his first five league matches and an early exit from the FA Cup hardly constituted the start the former Chelsea and Brighton manager would have hoped for. But he got the response he wanted here in a committed display and they took a surprise lead during the first half.

The teenager Ollie Scarles was one of four changes from their defeat at home to Brentford last week and he managed to keep Ethan Nwaneri quiet on his first Premier League start at left wing-back at the ground where he helped West Ham win the FA Youth Cup two years ago. "He was amazing - it was some performance," said Potter. "It's a big thank you for our academy."

Nwaneri and Lewis-Skelly both also played in Arsenal's 5-1 thumping that night and have already progressed to become key members of Arsenal's title challenge, although Riccardo Calafiori was preferred to the latter at left-back from the start. The Italian was involved in an early move when Leandro Trossard whipped in a dangerous ball to the near post and all three of West Ham's central defenders were fortunate there was no one attacking the six-yard box. While he will never be a natural No 9, at least Merino gave Arsenal's attack a focal point as Calafiori's drive stung the gloves of Alphonse Areola midway through the first half.

West Ham's only sight of goal until then had been a Tomas Soucek header that just cleared the bar after he was picked out by James Ward-Prowse. A surging run down the right flank from Aaron Wan-Bissaka set up Bowen but he could not direct his shot on target with his right foot.

Arsenal did not heed their warning and disaster struck on the stroke of half-time when they lost the ball on the edge of West Ham's area. Bowen fed Wan-Bissaka and the next time the West Ham captain touched the ball it was to guide his header into an empty net to leave an already jittery home crowd fearing the worst.

Arteta increasingly bore the expression of a manager who knew his opportunity was quickly slipping away and it took only 10 minutes of the second half for him to act. Bowen was inches away from doubling West Ham's lead just as Lewis-Skelly and Oleksandr Zinchenko were about to come on and the decision to withdraw their former captain Declan Rice only increased the volume in the jubilant away end. "You should have signed for a big club," they sang as Rice trudged off.

Zinchenko's last league appearance came in the win over Tottenham here last month but suddenly the Ukrainian was thrust into an attacking midfield role and only a block from Soucek denied his goal-bound shot before Areola saved well from Trossard.

Lewis-Skelly initially seemed to have earned a reprieve when he brought down a flying Mohammed Kudus on the halfway line but the video assistant referee had other ideas and West Ham were able to see out their victory with relative ease as many of the home fans slipped away before the final whistle to drown their sorrows.

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS AND PLAYER RATINGS
Arsenal (4-3-3): Raya 6; Timber 6.5, Saliba 6.5 (White 86), Magalhaes 6.5, Calafiori 5 (Lewis-Skelly 56, 5); Partey 6, Rice 6 (Zinchenko 56, 5.5); Nwaneri 6.5 (Sterling 82), Odegaard 6, Trossard 6; Merino 5.5
Manager: Mikel Arteta 5.5
Subs not used: Butler-Oyedeji, Tierney, Neto, Jorginho, Kiwior
Booked: Partey
Sent off: Lewis-Skelly
West Ham (5-3-2): Areola 7; Wan Bissaka 8, Todibo 7.5 (Mavropanos 61, 7), Kilman 7.5, Cresswell 7.5, Scarles 8; Ward-Prowse 8, Soucek 7.5, Alvarez 7 (Soler 88); Bowen 7.5 (Ferguson 82), Kudus 7.5
Manager: Graham Potter 7.5
Subs not used: Irving, Emerson, Ings, Fabianski, Rodriguez, Guilherme
Scorer(s): Bowen 44
Booked: Todibo, Scarles, Ward-Prowse
Referee: Craig Pawson 5
Attendance: 60,262
Read full Daily Mail report:

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much respect to John Northcutt, Roy Shoesmith, Jack Helliar, John Helliar, Tony Hogg, Tony Brown, Fred Loveday, Andrew Loveday, Steve Bacon, Steve Marsh and all past/current West Ham players and supporters