Tuesday, September 22, 2009



















Thomas Vermaelen continued his fine form with a couple of goals as Arsenal cruised to a 4-0 victory over Wigan at Emirates Stadium.

The Gunners never quite hit top gear but they were still far too strong for a Wigan side that has struggled to find any consistency during the early part of the season.

Vermaelen headed Arsenal in front from Robin van Persie's corner in the 25th minute, but his team-mates were less ruthless for the remainder of the first half and missed several good chances to score again.

The Belgian defender doubled Arsenal's advantage early in the second period with a delightful left-footed strike that any centre-forward would have been proud of.

Emmanuel Eboue got the slightest of deflections on an Eduardo shot to make it 3-0 with half an hour remaining and Cesc Fabregas added a late fourth with a close-range flick.

Simple win

If Arsenal were desperate for a simple win, their 25th-minute opener was certainly uncomplicated.

Van Persie, back after missing the midweek comeback against Standard Liege with a slight knee problem, swung over a corner from the right and Vermaelen thundered the ball home with his head after climbing higher than Titus Bramble and Henry Thomas. It was his second this week after netting in his native Belgium.

Arsenal fans have taken to Vermaelen since his arrival from Ajax, while Eboue needed to win back their trust after being jeered in this fixture last season for constantly giving the ball away.

Eboue's unpredictability means he is never far away from a brilliance or madness. In the first half he went over with shot and set up a chance for Van Persie with a powerful run and precise low cross, then a minute later was cautioned for trying to handball Eduardo's cross towards goal.

He went close again before the break after Van Persie sent him through - just one of Arsenal's many chances.

Van Persie broke the offside trap in the dying moments of the opening half but his scissor-kick lacked power and limped wide, William Gallas had an effort cleared off the line, while Maynor Figueroa bravely blocked Abou Diaby's shot on goal in the penalty area.

Wigan's tactic was to contain and counter-attack, and they gave the hosts a huge scare before the break.

Emmerson Boyce's header was saved by Vito Mannone - with the Wigan defender also claiming a handball by Gallas - then the rookie goalkeeper bravely saved again when the rebound fell for Bramble.

Decent contribution

It was a decent contribution from the man deputising while Manuel Almunia has a chest infection, particularly as there was little else to do in the match.

Vermaelen's second goal, three minutes after the restart, was a classic strike. The defender picked up a loose ball and exchanged passes with Eboue before curling his finish around Chris Kirkland and into the top corner from the edge of the penalty area.

The third goal came just before the hour mark. Eduardo struck the post with a volley from Gael Clichy's cross, then Diaby prodded the rebound back in the path of the Croatia forward. Eboue got the telling deflection to divert Eduardo's shot beyond Kirkland.

Alex Song almost added another after a surging run from the halfway line - but his finish hit the outside of the post.

Eboue's cult-hero status with the Arsenal fans was confirmed when he was substituted in the 73rd minute and cheered off as Tomas Rosicky replaced him.

Paul Scharner tapped in after Mannone made a decent save - but the assistant referee ruled it offside.

Fabregas, in stoppage time, tapped home Nicklas Bendtner's cross for the fourth.

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Aaron Ramsey is confident Arsenal's youngsters are capable of winning the Carling Cup as he prepares for his first start of the season.

Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger has treated the competition as a means to blood his young talent in recent seasons and is set to continue with that policy in Tuesday's third-round tie at home to West Brom.

Ramsey, who started three matches in the Carling Cup last term, has been pencilled in to face West Brom and believes the Gunners can go all the way to Wembley.

"Of course it is a competition we can win, even if the manager fields a young team," said Ramsey. "We can win any competition.

"No matter what the side is, we have the same mentality to win every game and to win every competition if we can."

Ramsey added: "It is good that the manager uses the competition to give some youngsters a chance and it is a good opportunity for us to show what we can do.

"It gives us experience and helps us to get used to the surroundings and big crowds."

Settled

The Wales international has made six appearances as a substitute so far this season and feels he has improved as a player since his 2008 move from Cardiff City.

"My awareness is better and my touch has improved," he said.

"I don't give the ball away as much as I used to, but all of that comes with experience and, hopefully I can continue improving and start playing league games as well."

Ramsey added: "To come here from Cardiff was a big step up in terms of everything.

"I am settled now and feel like one of the lads. I am not a kid in the dressing room anymore, I really feel part of it.

"I want to play every game and put pressure on the manager. I don't just want to be the guy who starts in the Carling Cup.

"I am still only 18, but I am like every other player - I want to start every game and do well for Arsenal."

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