Bernd Leno Makes Amends as the Arsenal Repair Job Picks up Pace

 Bernd Leno challenges Sébastien Haller during Saturday’s win. Photograph: Elli Birch/IPS/Shutterstock
Bernd Leno challenges Sébastien Haller during Saturday’s win. Photograph: Elli Birch/IPS/Shutterstock
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Bernd Leno Makes Amends as the Arsenal Repair Job Picks up Pace

 Bernd Leno challenges Sébastien Haller during Saturday’s win. Photograph: Elli Birch/IPS/Shutterstock
Bernd Leno challenges Sébastien Haller during Saturday’s win. Photograph: Elli Birch/IPS/Shutterstock

It was another great Arsenal No 1, David Seaman, who always claimed that the real gauge of a keeper’s worth is not in the mistake itself, but the reaction. Dropped crosses and fumbled shots are an occupational hazard. Nobody is immune. But if you want to judge a goalkeeper, Seaman argued, watch their next game.

How’s their confidence? How’s their mettle? Do they shrink? Do they hide? Here, nine days after the error that helped eliminate Arsenal from Europe, was Bernd Leno’s answer. Left out of the squad for Arsenal’s FA Cup game last Monday, Leno will have had plenty of time to contemplate his hashed 119th-minute clearance against Olympiakos: to watch some of the scathing media reaction, to dwell on his misjudgment. Then he stepped out against West Ham on Saturday and produced a performance of nerve, resilience and outstanding reflexes that was probably the difference between three points and none.

It was Alexandre Lacazette who grabbed the headlines for his late winning goal but on a day when Arsenal looked curiously vulnerable, this felt like Leno’s victory. With West Ham’s cagey 4-4-2 system generating plenty of openings on the break, it was Leno who stood up to them: smothering the ball at Sébastian Haller’s feet in the first half, saving a close-range shot from the same player late in the second.

His standout moment, however, came on 55 minutes, when he somehow managed not only to stop Michail Antonio’s free header from seven yards, but parry it so powerfully that it set up Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang for an immediate counterattack. It was, Lacazette would later gush, an amazing save, albeit of the sort Arsenal would rather he did not have to make quite so often.

This, in many ways, is the goalkeeper’s paradox: very often their own success is a figuration of the team’s wider failures. You only had to watch the bristling reaction of the Sheffield United manager, Chris Wilder, to the news that Dean Henderson was named man of the match in their 1-0 win over Norwich on Saturday (“He’s only made a couple of saves! That’s what he’s there for.”). If your goalkeeper is the standout player, something’s probably gone wrong somewhere else on the pitch.

Yet this is not the only reason Arsenal fans have often been ambivalent to Leno in the two years since he joined from Bayer Leverkusen for around £19m. As the past fortnight has perfectly demonstrated, Leno can lose games, but he wins and rescues plenty more. The draws against Wolves, Southampton and Norwich immediately spring to mind as games that Arsenal would almost certainly have lost without their big flexible German to bail them out.

Equally, there was the horrible mistake against Chelsea in December, when he came for a cross and ended up flapping at thin air as Jorginho scored. Then there was the botched save in the north London derby in September, when he palmed Érik Lamela’s shot straight to Christian Eriksen.

Leno came to Arsenal with a reputation for inspired shot-stopping and the occasional calamitous lapse, such as the error-strewn display for Germany at the 2017 Confederations Cup that probably cost him a place in Joachim Löw’s World Cup squad the following year. Thus far, that pattern seems to have held: since his arrival in England, no Premier League goalkeeper has made more errors leading directly to goals (Martin Dubravka, David de Gea and Jordan Pickford are level with him, on seven).

You might think Leno’s mixture of greatness and madness would not necessarily be the ideal tonic for an emotionally brittle club trying to shrug off the vexing inconsistency that has beset it for more than a decade. In fact, as Seaman would doubtless point out, Leno’s value to Arsenal is more complex than a simple ledger of points won and points lost.

In an age when goalkeepers are required to set the tone, to be more aggressive and proactive and open to risk than at any point in recent history, perhaps the mistakes and the inspirational match-winning displays are simply two sides of the same coin.

Leno may not yet be in the class of Ederson or Alisson, even if at 28 he has plenty of time to develop further. But it’s remarkable how much more assured he has looked since the arrival of Mikel Arteta, with the confidence that comes from a cogent strategy and the security that comes from playing behind a semi-functional defence. Arsenal have conceded 12 goals in Arteta’s first 15 games, compared with 28 in Unai Emery’s last 15 games. Though Leno is not solely responsible for that, it tallies with what the eyes tell us about a player who – with a little patience – may just show us where this Arsenal team are heading.

The Guardian Sport



PSG Beats Toulouse 3-0 and Akliouche Double Gives Monaco Home Win over Brest

Lucas Beraldo of PSG celebrates after scoring the 2-0 goal during the French Ligue 1 soccer match between Paris Saint Germain (PSG) and Toulouse FC (TFC), in Paris, France, 22 November 2024. EPA/Mohammed Badra
Lucas Beraldo of PSG celebrates after scoring the 2-0 goal during the French Ligue 1 soccer match between Paris Saint Germain (PSG) and Toulouse FC (TFC), in Paris, France, 22 November 2024. EPA/Mohammed Badra
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PSG Beats Toulouse 3-0 and Akliouche Double Gives Monaco Home Win over Brest

Lucas Beraldo of PSG celebrates after scoring the 2-0 goal during the French Ligue 1 soccer match between Paris Saint Germain (PSG) and Toulouse FC (TFC), in Paris, France, 22 November 2024. EPA/Mohammed Badra
Lucas Beraldo of PSG celebrates after scoring the 2-0 goal during the French Ligue 1 soccer match between Paris Saint Germain (PSG) and Toulouse FC (TFC), in Paris, France, 22 November 2024. EPA/Mohammed Badra

Paris Saint-Germain retained a six-point lead at the top of Ligue 1 after a labored 3-0 home win over Toulouse on Friday.
The defending champion dominated the first half but it took until the 35th minute to open the scoring.
Young Portuguese midfielder João Neves spun to meet a cross from the right and struck a superb half volley from just outside the box.
Lucas Beraldo got a second with six minutes remaining when he pounced on loose ball and fired home, The Associated Press reported.
Vitinha made it 3-0 in stoppage time when he showed fine footwork inside the box to finish off a quick counterattack.
The scoreline was harsh on Toulouse, which came into the game in a more even second half.
Only Vitinha’s last-gasp tackle stopped Zakaria Aboukhlal from equalizing after 69 minutes and then Shavy Babicka blazed over from close range a minute later when he should have hit the target.
The win was a confidence boost for Luis Enrique’s side ahead of next Tuesday’s Champions League encounter at Bayern Munich.
PSG lies in 25th place in the 36-team Champions League table with one win in four matches and outside the playoff spots.
Monaco beats Brest: The win came immediately after second-placed Monaco beaten Brest 3-2 to briefly close the gap at the top to three points.
Brest, which faces Barcelona next week in the Champions League, turned in another inconsistent French league performance and not the sparkling form it has shown in Europe.
Brest has struggled in Ligue 1, where it remains 12th, but shone with three wins from four in its first ever Champions League campaign.
It was behind after just five minutes on Friday when Maghnes Akliouche scored with a superb airborne volley, and 2-0 down after 24 minutes thanks to Aleksandr Golovin.
The Russian striker seized on a poor pass just outside the Brest penalty area and his low shot was perfectly placed to sneak in off the post and give him his first goal in nine league appearances.
On-loan Brighton striker Abdallah Sima used his 1.88-meter frame to outjump the Monaco defense four minutes into the second half and cut the deficit but Akliouche restored Monaco’s two-goal cushion when he brilliantly finished a quick counterattack in stoppage time.
Ludovic Ajorque got a second for Brest in the sixth minute of added time but it was not enough in a second half most notable for the red card shown to Brest coach Éric Roy.