City’s game at West Ham is about to begin, so it’s time for me to sign off. Thanks for your company and correspondence, your nerves when it was 0-0 and your joy when Dowman made all the difference. Teenage kicks.
Do join Scott Murray to see what happens at the London Stadium.
Updated
Now Sky is showing the way the Arsenal bench reacted to Dowman’s goal. Arteta was jumping for joy and punching the air, behaving like a 16-year-old himself. Lovely to see.
“I think,” says Rían McKeagney, “Max’s parents/guardians need to sign a release every time he’s interviewed, so that’s probably why he wasn’t giving the post match. I might be wrong but I remember someone saying that a few months ago.”
“Hammers v Citeh,” says Alexander Whitney, licking his lips. “The upcoming match must be the most engrossing 3rd and 4th party match for Arsenal fans since... a long time ago. Imagine the combo of Spurs falling into the relegation zone, and a near-guarantee of the league title for the Gunners. Just need the match to go a certain way.”
The pundits are analysing Dowman’s goal. He headed the ball down, to himself, about 30 yards from Arsenal’s goal, then dribbled 70 yards, twisting past one man, keeping the ball close, keeping himself calm. Delicious.
“Tip of the hat to Martinelli,” says Paul Curievici, “for looking behind Dowman, seeing an Everton man closing him down, and stepping paternally into his path. Real duty of care stuff.”
At last, a bit of Arsenal blocking that we can all get behind.
Meanwhile Dominic Jones quotes me back at myself. “‘Everton are defending in a 4-5-2 and it’s working so far’... You’d bloody well hope so with all extra man on the pitch! Or have they gone full schoolboy and are playing rush goalie?!” Ha, no, sorry – I meant 4-5-1.
And it only worked until Dowman came on. That was a good, bold move by Mikel Arteta – sacrificing Zubimendi, and some security, for the fearlessness of youth.
“Dearest Tim,” says Angus Chisholm. This doesn’t bode well. “Dowman had to beat two players to get an open goal,” he points out, “and every touch he took in that sequence was perfectly judged and coolly executed. Absolutely stirring stuff for what was essentially a superfluous goal.” Nicely done. Have you thought about applying for a job here?
“When Dowman was running up the field, he looked every inch the Premier League player,” says Kári Tulinius. “But in the close up of his face at the final whistle, he looked like a kid who couldn’t believe how happy he was. What a beautiful moment.”
Arsenal’s goal difference is now +39, seven up on Man City, who are about to play at West Ham. If City stumble there, it’s all over, isn’t it?
Updated
Yes, the player of the match is Max Dowman. Sweet sixteen. Arsenal trust him to play on the right wing, but not to give an interview, so Viktor Gyokeres accepts his prize on his behalf.
Max Dowman has spent the past few minutes being hugged by team-mates who are clearly thrilled for him. Now he finally heads down the tunnel, pursued by high-fives from the fans. His face is going to be all over their socials, just as soon as they can get some signal.
The other game, at Chelsea, finished 1-0 to Newcastle. So they rise to ninth and Chelsea remain fifth for now, three points adrift of Man United and Villa, who meet tomorrow.
The man of the match is surely going to be …. a boy.
FULL TIME! Arsenal 2-0 Everton
And so, after 89 minutes of angst, Arsenal finish with ten minutes of euphoria and go ten points clear at the top of the league. They have never had a younger goalscorer.
GOAL! Arsenal 2-0 Everton (Dowman 90+7)
Arsenal counter… and Dowman, who has dribbled half the length of the field, coolly sends the ball into an empty net! He is just 16. What a great moment.
Updated
90+5 min Everton win a corner. Pickford’s going up!
90+4 min Arsenal dawdle over the corner, then send the ball all the way back to Raya. He goes long, so does Pickford, and Barry’s knock-down ends up back with Raya. Moyes has one last sub, Tyrique George. Everton have a free kick but Gabriel heads it away.
90+3 min The crowd are singing again, warming up for their next rendition of North London Forever. Martinelli has a long shot, tipped over by Pickford.
90+1 min There will be six minutes of added time. And Arsenal are ten points clear at the top, largely thanks to Max Dowman, who is too young to celebrate with a pint afterwards.
GOAL!!!! Arsenal 1-0 Everton (Gyokeres 89)
Sure enough. Dowman whips in a lovely cross, Hincapié knocks it down, and Gyokeres has an open goal.
Updated
88 min Gyokeres has had seven touches in his 28 minutes on the field…
87 min Scores on the doors. Total shots: Arsenal 22-8 Everton. Shots on target: 4-3. Clear-cut chances: 0-0.
Updated
86 min Iroegbunam is taken off, along with McNeil. Both have done well but Moyes wants fresh legs, so they give way to Armstrong and Rohl.
85 min Free kick to Arsenal just inside the Everton half. They work the ball sideways yet again. Eze has it near the D, but Iroegbunam is too quick for him and wins a free kick.
83 min Dewsbury-Hall wiggles into the box, only to be coolly dispossessed by Rice. Then Arsenal race upfield and there’s a shot from Dowman, over the bar.
Updated
82 min Everton have kept Arsenal at bay, and you can see that in this stat. Arsenal have had 12 shots from outside the box, five more than in any other league game this season.
81 min Arsenal try to stage the death of a thousand passes. The thousandth is a wild cross by Martinelli which goes straight out for a goal kick.
80 min Saka has shifted inside and Dowman is playing on the right, with brio.
79 min The cameras go looking for worried faces with red-and-white scarves attached. They’re spoilt for choice.
Updated
77 min So Declan Rice is now Arsenal’s only holding midfielder, with Dowman and Eze ahead of him. These two combine immediately as Dowman goes on a run and finds Eze, whose shot is blocked. Soon Eze has another shot, from distance, which is palmed away by Pickford – but the flag is up.
74 min Arteta, who can be defensive, decides to go for broke. He removes Zubimendi and sends on Max Dowman, aged 16. As if already wondering whether that’s too dashing, he also sends on Hincapié for Calafiori – who was terrific.
73 min Chance! Everton win a free kick on the left. Garner whips it in nicely, an Arsenal head deflects it and it just squeezes past the far post.
72 min Everton have conceded only 33 goals on the road this season. But can they hold out for 20 more minutes? Their makeshift defence will surely get weay.
70 min Moyes, by the way, was booked some time ago, presumably for his persistent complaints.
69 min Everton’s first sub: Barry for Beto. Meanwhile Max Dowman is warming up.
67 min As the ball ricochets around after the corner, Ndiaye tries to spin past Saka, who gets a solid tackle in. Poacher turned gamekeeper.
67 min Mykolenko goes on the overlap, possibly for the first time. He wins a corner.
66 min That was Arsenal’s 18th shot of the game, to Everton’s seven. But it’s still even Stevens for shots on target: 3-3.
65 min Shot! From Eze. It beats Pickford’s dive but whistles past the far post.
64 min Gyokeres is set free down the left, but finds himself well shepherded. This makeshift Everton back four has done very well so far.
Updated
62 min A box informs us that Arsenal are top of the table for goal involvements by subs, with 13 – nine goals and four assists. This does feel like the kind of game Gyokeres will fancy.
60 min Cometh the hour, cometh more subs. Gyokeres for Havertz, Martinelli for Madueke.
59 min Arsenal’s latest corner, like their first, is taken short, to no avail. When they get back upfield, Madueke goes for a delightlful little wander on the right, where Drew Lundgren wanted to see him.
Updated
59 min Keane heads the corner away, leading to an intriguing little spell from Arsenal. A fusillade of passes, a flurry of ideas, but no actual shot.
57 min Everton are defending in a 4-5-2 and it’s working so far. Gabriel plays a fine through ball down the left to Madueke, but Garner is quick to come in with a neat tackle.
55 min The crowd are making plenty of noise. “We are the greatest team the world has ever seen.” They’re not even the best team N5 has ever seen.
Updated
54 min Saka gets a cross in, headed away by Keane. The siege is resuming.
52 min Everton are being much more assertive now – though that could play into Arsenal’s hands. Saka has a shot blocked.
“I think Eze has been OK,”” says Drew Lundgren, “and one of the few Arsenal players to try a shot. But I still think he’s got to come off to get Madueke over on the right where he effects the game, Martinelli on the left, Rice pushed up, Saka in Ødegaard’s role... what do you think?” I agree that Eze has been good, and Madueke rather invisible. But I suspect Arteta will want to get a striker on.
Updated
50 min Save! In the melee that follows the corner, Raya does very well to keep out a snap shot at his near post.
49 min Now Everton do win a corner, their first of the game (to Arsenal’s seven). The excellent Ndiaye sent in a cross that was headed behind.
48 min Dewsbury-Hall powers into the Arsenal box and is dismayed to find that he hasn’t won a corner.
46 min The second half begins and Calafiori, the man of the first half, strolls forward. Rice shapes to shoot but an Everton toe gets in his way.
Sky is showing an important moment from the other game, in which Newcastle lead Chelsea 1-0. The moment occurred in the Chelsea huddle, which took place with the ref in the middle of it. Seriously. I shudder to think how many memes this will inspire.
“Not all Arsenal fans are nervy quite yet,” says Zach Neeley. “Personally, whatever bad thing might happen today, this season feels like the real pain will be later. City will then do something wrong to put us back in it, then the actual death blow will come in April.” So, not nervy yet, but somewhat gloomy?
“Their fans might not forgive me for saying it,” says Simon McMahon, promisingly, “but I think if Arsenal win tonight, the league title is pretty much a done deal. To borrow a cricket phrase, runs on the board, and scoreboard pressure for the chasing side. Though Arsenal being English, there’s always the possibility of a late collapse. It’s never over till it’s over…”
I’m not sure this match makes much difference to the title race, unless Arsenal mess it up. The key will surely be their trip to the Etihad: if they can get a draw there, that all but settles it.
HALF-TIME! Arsenal 0-0 Everton
Everton win the 50th minute, as McNeil sends a cross in from the right. And that’s half-time, with Arsenal wondering how they haven’t turned 13 shots into one goal. Perhaps because only two of them have been on target, the same as Everton have managed in their occasional forays upfield.
“It’s been a nervy watch for Arsenal fans,” says Alan Smith. Aren’t they all?
Updated
45+4 min Mykolenko lofts a hopeful ball towards Beto, who can’t shake off the attentions of Gabriel.
45+3 min Havertz wins a free kick in a fashion Tim Stappard would not approve of. Arsenal knock the ball around. Everton scrap but can’t escape. Zubimendi almost carves out enough room to shoot. Saliba tries a through ball to Saka but overhits it, showing why Arsenal need Timber.
Updated
45+1 min The first of five added minutes.
45 min Arsenal add another three to their collection of shots. Two are blocked and one is blazed into Row Z.
44 min Arsenal proceed smoothly through midfield with some well-aimed headers, and eventually win a corner.
“Alan Smith is absolutely wrong,” says Tim Stappard. “Blatant dive by Havertz and why no yellow?” Presumably because the ref didn’t think it was a dive, blatant or otherwise.
41 min Everton win a free kick, 35 yards out. Raya comes for it and scuffs his attempted punch. Saliba is on the grass, off the pitch, after being caught, possibly by Raya. Friendly fire!
40 min The sub Arteta sent on is not Ben White, as you might have expected, but Cristhian Mosquera.
39 min Close! That man Calafiori gets a flick-on from a corner and Everton do well to keep it out at the far post, with Keane keeping calm and heading away.
37 min Saka goes on a slalom and very nearly gets a cut-back in. More significantly, Mikel Arteta is having to make a substitution: Jurrien Timber is going off injured.
36 min Rice takes the free kick … and can’t get it over the wall.
35 min While Arsenal hold a committee meeting, Everton put down a draft excluder.
34 min Saka, who looks as if he’s returning to form, twists and turns and wins a free kick 25 yards out.
32 min Another shot from Everton! It’s well struck by the busy Dewsbury-Hall but comfortably saved by Raya, low to his left.
30 min As the half-hour ticks over, Dewsbury-Hall shapes to dance through the midfield before being outnumbered. A camera finds Martin Odegaard in the stand, wearing baggy pale jeans and going in for a bit of a manspread.
29 min There have been three shots in the past 14 minutes, and they’ve all come from Everton. Arsenal do get into the box now, with Rice, but Garner times his tackle just well enough.
28 min As Everton escape, there’s another good cross from the gifted Ndiaye, but this time nobody is there to meet it.
26 min Arsenal knock it around in the final third. Havertz and Saka swap places for a moment and Havertz wins a corner. “It’s a foul all day long,” says Alan Smith as the Keane-Havertz incident is replayed. Saka’s corner finds the head of Calafiori, but the whistle has already gone for an Everton free kick.
Updated
24 min Eze slips a lovely little through ball to Havertz, who goes down as Keane attends to him. The crowd bay for a penalty, the ref isn’t interested, and the VAR agrees.
23 min Everton live dangerously at the back, but Gueye clears up a mess of his own making.
22 min In this game, Arsenal have resumed their dominance after being rudely interrupted. A long string of passes ends with Saliba overhitting a cross.
20 min Meanwhile, at Stamford Bridge, Newcastle have taken the lead. A tap-in for Anthony Gordon, laid on by Joe Willock.
18 min Two chances! For Everton!! Both to Dwight McNeil. Ndiaye gets away down the left and sends in a cross which Raya can only help on to McNeil. Calafiori gets in a superb block with what may be a scorpion kick. The ball finds McNeil again and he slaloms in from the right to send a screamer into the post – but the flag was up. Still, a glimmer of hope for Everton.
16 min Everton get upfield for once and Raya sends a clearance all the way through to Pickford.
Updated
15 min Arsenal’s turn to counter. Madueke goes flying down the left. Keane gives him a hefty shove (outside the area) and gets away with it.
15 min David Moyes wags a finger at the fourth official, I’m not sure why.
13 min Save! Or it would be if Saka wasn’t offside. His header brings a fabulous reflex twist and paw out of Pickford.
Updated
13 min Arsenal have already had five shots, one fewer than they had in 90 minutes at Leverkusen. Two of them have come from Calafiori, who has made a noticeable difference.
11 min The game has already settled into a pattern, which resembles a siege. Zubimendi has a shot blocked and then Saka hits one wide.
9 min The corner is not taken short. It’s cleared, then a cross comes in which is headed into the mixer by Gabriel. Zubimendi does some juggling, then tees up Calafiori, who can’t keep his volley down.
8 min Everton threatened a counter from the corner, but Rice, moving more easily now, put paid to that. And now we have another Arsenal corner, won by Calafiori.
6 min Surprise! Arsenal take the corner short. It yields a shot that is comfortably saved by Jordan Pickford – in his 350th game for Everton.
5 min Arsenal ease forward and Eberechi Eze wins a free kick. It’s taken quickly, leading to a throw. Calafiori hurls it into the box and the upshot is … an Arsenal corner.
Updated
4 min These are the first four minutes Everton have played in the league this season without James Tarkowski. So far, so good.
Updated
3 min When Arsenal make it over the halfway line, Havertz drops deep for his first touch and is immediately dispossessed.
2 min Arsenal get some possession without emerging from their own half.
1 min Everton kick off and go up-and-under. This leads to a sniff of a chance, instantly snuffed out by William Saliba. Declan Rice goes down wincing, then gets up, limping.
The players are out there. Bukayo Saka, Arsenal’s stand-in captain, leads his team as they hand-slap their way along the Everton line. Mikel Arteta greets David Moyes with the obligatory hug, plus a broad smile. The crowd sing North London Forever and give themselves a round of applause.
“Bayern have just drawn 1-1 at Leverkusen too,” says Lenny Peters. “So it’s clearly a tough place to go.”
How bad were Arsenal in midweek? Not as bad as the other English teams in the Champions League. Their 1-1 draw at Bayer Leverkusen didn’t look good at the time but turned out to be the best result of the round by a PL club, equal with Newcastle (1-1 v Barcelona) and arguably better because Arsenal will be at home for the second leg. But quite a few Arsenal fans seem to feel their team are a bit jaded: it will be interesting to see if Havertz, Calafiori and Madueke can galvanise them.
Updated
The sun is shining in north London. But maybe not for long – the Met Office says there’s a 20pc chance of rain in Highbury between 6 and 7pm, rising to 30pc in the hour after that.
Late drama? No. So Bournemouth had to settle for a point at Burnley, which makes it six draws in nine league games since they let Antoine Semenyo go. And Sunderland went down to a rare home defeat to Brighton, which may have been decreed by the gods of symmetry. Sunderland now have 10 wins, 10 draws and 10 defeats, and so do Brighton. The upshot is that Sunderland slide to 12th and Brighton soar to 10th. Between the two are Fulham, who have a game in hand.
Updated
We’re into added time in the 3pm kick-offs, with only one goal so far in the Premier League. Do join Will Unwin to see if there’s any late drama.
An email has landed! It’s from Dan Hoskins, who’s picking up on the opening paragraph of my preamble. “Good afternoon Tim,” he says. “Respectfully, could we call it the Kevin Campbell Derby? A player and man close to all our hearts at both clubs, whose character is missed by us all I think.” Point taken.
Updated
Fun fact
According to our friends at Sky, this is the first Arsenal starting XI to feature both Bukayo Saka and Kai Havertz since December 2024, when they lined up against Crystal Palace. As well as a syllable, they share a quicksilver intelligence, so maybe Saka will be back to his best this evening.
Teams in full
Both teams have players missing, but one team looks way stronger than the other. Arsenal’s only worry might be if Martin Zubimendi gets clattered early on: their bench consists of a goalie, four defenders, two wingers and two centre-forwards. Presumably Myles Lewis-Skelly will slot into midfield if needed.
Arsenal (4-3-3) Raya; Timber, Saliba, Gabriel, Calafiori; Zubimendi, Rice, Eze; Saka, Havertz, Madueke.
Subs: Kepa, White, Mosquera, Hincapié, Lewis-Skelly, Dowman, Gyokeres, Jesus, Martinelli.
Everton (4-2-3-1) Pickford; Garner, O’Brien, Keane, Mykolenko; Gueye, Iroegbunam; Ndiaye, Dewsbury-Hall, McNeil; Beto.
Subs: Travers, Coleman, Aznou, Patterson, Armstrong, Dibling, Rohl, George, Barry.
Teams in brief: Havertz in, Tarkowski out
Mikel Arteta shuffles the pack, giving Kai Havertz his first start at centre-forward for quite a while and refreshing his left flank – out go Piero Hincapié and Gabriel Martinelli, in come Riccardo Calafiori and Noni Madueke.
For Everton, it’s all change at the back. James Tarkowski and Jarrod Branthwaite are missing, presumed injured, so Michael Keane comes in, Jake O’Brien slides across from right-back, James Garner takes his place there, and Tim Iroegbunam gets a start in midfield. What a shame for Tarkowski, especially: he would have loved all the argy-bargy at corners.
Preamble
Afternoon everyone and welcome to what was, once upon a time, the Alan Ball derby. If we can believe the rumour mill, it may soon be the Myles Lewis-Skelly derby. For now, though, it’s definitely the Mikel Arteta derby.
In his days as a classy midfielder, Arsenal’s manager played more games for Everton than for anyone else. He was brought into English football by David Moyes, his opposite number this evening. The two of them have something in common which happens a lot in most walks of life and all too seldom in football: they’ve made their job their own.
Moyes is in his 13th year as Everton’s manager and they haven’t sacked him yet. Arteta, in his seventh year managing Arsenal, is the second longest-serving Premier League boss after Pep Guardiola. Not that durability guarantees entertainment. Since Moyes returned to Everton 14 months ago, his meetings with Arteta have been taciturn affairs.
In the last days of Goodison Park there was a 1-1, with Everton’s goal coming from a penalty by Iliman Ndiaye and Arsenal’s in open play from Leandro Trossard, assisted by Raheem Sterling (remember him?). Just before Christmas, at the Hill Dickinson, there was a 1-0 to Arsenal that came down to two penalty decisions. Arsenal won one, converted by Viktor Gyokeres. Everton thought they had one late on, when William Saliba kicked Thierno Barry in mid-air, but the VAR considered it “insignificant contact”.
There will be plenty of contact tonight, much of it significant. These are two big, strong, bellicose teams, who may well lay on a treat for connoisseurs of pushing and shoving.
Arsenal are top of the league, as you know, and also top of the home table in terms of points per game with 2.5, just ahead of Man City on 2.4. But Everton are top of the away form table (which covers the past six away games for each club) with 14 points, no defeats and a handsome set of victories – at Forest, Villa, Fulham and Newcastle.
Can they win at the Emirates too? Probably not, as no visitors from outside the top six have managed so much as a draw in the league this season: only Man United have gone home with all three points, and only Man City and Liverpool with one. But Moyes, who used to have a dismal record here, did win 2-0 on his last visit, with West Ham.
I warmed up for this game by going to watch Arsenal’s Under-21s last night. They too were at home, facing a smaller club who were wearing blue – Leicester City. And they lost 5-1.