Perspective please

Last night was not about Arsenal lacking mental fortitude but rather Bayern simply being better.

Last Updated: 20/02/13 at 11:33

Jack Wilshere rues a night in which Arsenal were second best to a superb Bayern

Jack Wilshere rues a night in which Arsenal were second best to a superb Bayern

Note to Brendan Rodgers; That's what a near-perfect away performance looks like. And the 'near' only applies to a split-second of madness after Jack Wilshere struck a perfectly ordinary corner-kick.

Bayern Munich did not need to be perfect to beat Arsenal. They did not need to be devastating, breathtaking or extraordinary. They just needed to be disciplined, determined and clinical.

They ceded the majority of the possession to Arsenal, they gave the ball away more often than Arsenal, they were clearly rocked by Arsenal for the first half-hour of the second half, Wilshere was arguably the best individual player on the pitch and yet Bayern emerged 3-1 winners and rarely looked like anything less.

This was not about Arsenal lacking mental fortitude, Arsene Wenger losing the power of motivation, the manager 'losing the plot' or any other tired story arc, this was simply one of the best two teams in European football playing against the fifth-best team in English football and predictably winning.

You can argue all day about whether Arsenal should only be the fifth-best team in English football (their wage bill suggests they should probably be the fourth) but nine times out of ten, when an excellent team like Bayern Munich come up against a merely decent team like Arsenal, the better team will win. The Gunners have been victims of the vagaries of cup football twice this season but that did not apparently earn them a shot at being the unlikely victors.

There was no shortage of motivation and no shortage of desire - the momentum they gathered after Lukas Podolski's strike would have cracked most teams - but there was obviously a shortage of quality in the final third and a lack of leadership and organisation in the first third. It's not a new story. Whether you wanted Wenger to stay or go on Tuesday afternoon, nothing you saw on Tuesday night should have changed your mind.

This was a Bayern side who had gone over four hours without allowing their opposition a single shot on target until Friday evening and had not conceded a goal in 664 minutes until Podolski's simple header. They are a phenomenon. Arsenal fans could hope for a Chelsea-style miracle but they had absolutely no right to expect.

The media revelled in a 'meltdown' that was really only a manager being grumpy for pretty much the first time in 17 years and they will revel in another defeat which probably means yet another trophyless season. Those who are sensible will know that they were simply beaten by a very, very good team.

This article first appeared on Football365

Related News

Sky Bet

    • Retrieving latest Sky Bet odds

Most Commented

Readers' Comments

I

m starting to think Roman may never actually be happy at the top level. If he wants all conquering fancy football I wonder if he'd be better off buying a lower division side then paying outlandish salaries to attract high caliber players too good for the division.

john matrix
The Most Unsatisfying European Victory...

R

afa has to be favourite for the Everton job now, surely :) He'll realise his ambition to live and work on Merseyside again, get the best out of whoever plays for them, maybe win some cups and be thoroughly loathed by the toffee fans. What's not to like? Go ead, Ken, gimajob!

captbusby
Benitez basks in final glory

T

hat is arguably the least inspiring England I have ever seen. There is not a single name in that list that makes me think I might actually want to watch this team. Not a one.

harry hotspur
Carroll back in England squad

Footer 365

Tevez open to Ligue 1 move

Manchester City striker Carlos Tevez admits he would be open to a move to either Monaco or Paris Saint Germain in the summer.

Premier League: Marouane Fellaini hints at following David Moyes to Manchester United

Everton midfielder Marouane Fellaini has hinted that he would like to follow David Moyes to Manchester United.

Ligue 1: PSG's David Beckham delighted with 'perfect' ending to career

Retiring midfielder David Beckham declared his match at the Parc des Princes "couldn't have been any more perfect".

Mail Box

James Collins Is Only 29. Tough Paper Round

He is one of a number of solid shouts for players that look old before their time. We also have the final words on lovely D-Beck and a rejection of end of season playoffs...

Without Posh, Becks Could Have Been Scholes

That's one opinion, but others give their thanks to the man. We also have ideas for a relegation playoff, happy memories of the season and a defence of Liverpool's campaign...

© 2013 British Sky Broadcasting Ltd. All Rights Reserved