Arsenal v Chelsea: Premier League updates – live

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Myles Lewis-Skelly is another – like James – I only had to see once to say “player”. I love his fearlessness and intelligence and like Saka – another in that category – I think he could excel almost anywhere on the pitch.

Maresca laughs that Palmer is “not in the toilet, for sure; Palmer had diarrhoea ugh, ugh*, last week. He should, though be back after the break.

Otherwise, he accepts Arsenal are ahead of them now, and offers very little else.

*was this just a chant in my primary school?

That said, I’m far from certain James could’ve saved Tuchel – even winning the Champions League couldn’t convince Todd Boehly that good management outranks insufficient deference.

“Emphatically agree about Reece James,” says Rob Hobson. “I’m convinced that if he and Chilwell had stayed fit, Tuchel would still be manager. For me, James has the skill and engine of Ashley Cole with an extra stone of muscle on top. I sincerely hope his career won’t be a series of brief returns from injury.”

I first saw James in October 2019, in a League Cup tie against Manchester United. There was a moment Marcus Rashford got away and usually when that happened he stayed away, but James had the gas to catch up and the ability to make a proper tackle. Obviously there’s loads more to him than that, but in that moment i was sure I was watching a player.

Arteta says this is a big game and the players are focused on that. They’re excited to face Real Madrid and the international break is coming next so they need to play well and hopefully get some players back afterwards.

Where is the game? Arsenal will fancy Declan Rice and Martin Odegaard to run off James and Moises Caicedo, while their left flank of Lewis-Skelly and Leandro Trossard will surely target Jadon Sacnho, unrenowned for his physicality or relentlessness, and Wesley Fofana, a centre-back playing out of position.

Chelsea, meanwhile, might feel able to commit more men forward than usual given Arsenal’s absent attackers. There’s not, though, much weakness in the hosts’ defence, so I’d expect Neto to dart in behind with the three behind him looking to move the ball quickly as they probe for space.

Also going on:

Email! “What perplexes me is why Arteta starts with Merino as a striker, rather than using him as the super-sub role that worked against Leicester,” writes Kieran McKintosh. “By that point there were some tired legs on the field bar Nwaneri, and the two combined for two goals. Lo and behold, when Merino starts as a striker he doesn’t get much of a look in. To me a wiser idea would’ve been to start with Martinelli in the centre and Newaneri on the left wing, then swap Martinelli for Merino about 70/80 mins in. But hey, I’m sat at home typing this and he’s at the Emirates. So we shall see.”

I imagine it’s not just about who is the better centre-forward, but about the physicality Merino brings. Arsenal will want to play into and off him, which isn’t doable with Martinelli, and I daresay his presence in both boxes will be useful at set-pieces. If we were a year further down the line, it’d be Nwaneri through the middle, I think, and I’m a little surprised he’s not playing off the flank today because there’s not much magic in Arteta’s front three.

So what do we make of Reece James in midfield, then? I guess I can see it because I think he’s a brilliant footballer who has the skill, will and brain to play anywhere, but I also think that if he can stay fit he can be the best right-back in the world. It felt like there was a time when England were arguing over whether Kyle Walker or Trent Alexander-Arnold should play there, but actually James, a mixture of the two, is better than both. Still, it’s great to see him back.

Enzo Mareca, meanwhile, brings in Benoît Badiashile and Reece James who, by the looks of things, will be playing in midfield; missing out are Cole Palmer, who’s injured, and Tosin Aderabioyo, who’s on the bench.

Mikel Arteta makes two changes to the side that drew at Old Trafford last time out: Myles Lewis-Skelly returns at left-back – though of course he also played in midweek – replacing Riccardo Calafiori – while on the right wing, it’s Gabriel Martinelli, not Ethan Nwaneri. Oh, and Raheem Sterling, player of the match in midweek, is ineligible to play against his parent club.

I’ll write these down, then we’ll look at them in greater detail.

Teams!

Arsenal (4-3-3): Raya; Timber, Saliba, Gabriel, Lewis-Skelly; Partey, Rice, Odegaard; Martinelli, Merino, Trossard. Subs: Neto, Tierney, White, Kiwior, Zinchenko, Jorginho, Calafiori, Butler-Oyedeji, Nwaneri.

Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Sanchez; Fofana, Badiashile, Colwill, Cucurella; James, Caicedo; Enzo, Nkunku, Sancho; Neto. Subs: Jorgensen, Bettinelli, Tosin, Chalobah, Gusto, Acheampong, Lavia, Dewsbury-Hall, George.

Preamble

There are few emotions more acute than disappointment. Though, on the face of things, it is more benign than its more intense relations – devastation, wrecked and so on – it is that exact benignity that makes it so powerfully consuming, a sense that things haven’t gone as the cosmos planned for them to go, leaving a lingering, nagging, feeble sense of entitlement, powerlessness and injustice.

Arsenal weren’t meant to sit 15 points off the top of the table with 10 games to go. After the surprise challenge of two seasons ago, they got closer still the following year and, fortified by those experiences, were expected – expected themselves – to have another serious tilt at the title.

Not so, and if that weren’t enough, the champions this time will be not a state-funded front under investigation by the football authorities and managed by the foremost football genius of the generation. After pushing Manchester City so hard and even injuring the man who makes them tick, it is Liverpool set to benefit from the subsequent drop-off. And because it’s happened slowly, without drama, there’s no sense of rebuild and repair, rather the constant irritation of opportunity spurned, with no guarantee it will return to a team now three years into a cycle.

However there’s a however: Bukayo Saka is nearing full fitness and might be available when, early next month, Arsenal meet an unconvincing Real Madrid in the last eight of the Champions League. Immortality is still not beyond them.

In the meantime, though, they must secure their spot in next season’s competition, with today’s visitors, Chelsea, keen to do the same. After a decent period early in the season, in recent times they’ve found it harder to hit a consistent level as Enzo Maresca seeks the best deployment of his frankly ludicrous resources. But they have the talent to give anyone a game and if they win today will be just three points behind their London rivals, bringing the various teams behind them back into the equation, which is to say disappointment may morph into devastation yet.

Kick-off: 1.30pm GMT

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