AN opportunity squandered for Arsenal, but no more than that.
At Christmas, If you’d offered Mikel Arteta and his side a six point lead going into the FA Cup break, they would have bitten your hand off.
And while some inside the Emirates were left frustrated by their failure to grasp the nettle and dominate Arne Slot’s depleted men, only the most demanding Gooner could really find something to moan about.
Titles are won point by point, match by match.
Sometimes, you just need to be grateful for getting away with a below-par display.
This was a game of few moments of genuine quality and even fewer real chances, with the best of them Conor Bradley’s first half effort that bounced back off the Arsenal crossbar.

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Admittedly, Arsenal’s first blank since they lost at Anfield in September offered further evidence that Viktor Gyokeres cannot hit a barn door with a banjo, his replacement soon after the hour badly overdue.
The Swede had just EIGHT touches in 64 minutes, none in more than half an hour in a first half spell.
At some stage soon, surely, his blatant limitations will force Arteta into a change up front, whether that is Gabriel Jesus or taking a gamble on Kai Havertz, the best scorer of the trio by far.
Gyokeres’ struggles were part of one of Arsenal’s poorest displays of the entire season, with Alisson’s goal rarely threatened.
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With a proper line leader, you suspect, they would have taken more advantage of Bukayo Saka’s mastery of Milos Kerkez.
But, truly, there is no reason for worry.
Half a dozen points is a big advantage, even if the home fans had arrived anticipating they would end the evening eight to the good.
The pre-match mood was indicative of the transformation of the Emirates from a venue of hope to one of expectation.
Even so, there remains a nervousness that even these Gunners have yet to banish.
Too many near misses under Arteta mean that even this minor disappointment will cause a flicker of concern.
Indeed, it might have been greater had Liverpool, again without Hugo Ekitike as well as Mo Salah and Alexander Isak, been able to take fuller advantage of the insecurities, which spread in waves from the stands for much of the second period in particular.
But while Arsenal looked vulnerable at times, especially when Piero Hincapie was forced off through injury, Liverpool never really looked like landing a killer blow.
Not “boring”, as Slot had admitted his side might have appeared recently, but without the wherewithal to actually force David Raya into a save.
It was that sort of match, one that spluttered without ever catching fire, more about shadow boxing than actual blows being struck.
The exception was that one moment of vision, from an unlikely source after 27 minutes.
Raya was so nearly embarrassed by William Saliba’s panicky back pass, after Bradley drove forward and looked to find the recalled Jeremie Frimpong.
The keeper, stretching his right foot desperately, could only hack back to Bradley, who took a touch and adroitly chipped the keeper, only for the ball to bounce back off the bar.
Other than that, though, with Liverpool struggling to get up the pitch – Florian Wirtz more a peripheral shadow than the “false nine” he was supposed to be in the extended absence of Etitike – Arsenal were ascendant without creating too much.
Most of what they did came down the right, Saka and Jurrien Timber double-teaming Kerkez, who was horribly exposed by a lack of cover by Cody Gakpo.
While both Arsenal men got in behind, the final ball was not quite good enough.
Alisson saved from Saka and Declan Rice, although it was the counter that ended with Leandro Trossard’s shot deflected wide that brought the only other talking point.
Liverpool, Virgil van Dijk in particular, were spewing that Arsenal had played on with Frimpong down holding his ankle at the other end after a tussle with Piero Hincapie.
It left Anthony Taylor struggling to keep tempers controlled as the players squared up, a situation not eased by Rice telling the Liverpool skipper that you do not have to stop play unless there is a head injury.
Tension was clear, Arsenal looking accusingly at Wirtz early in the second half when the German’s dance into the box ended with him on the deck after Trossard tracked back to bump him off the ball.
The VAR check came back in Arsenal’s favour. They might have got away with one.
Liverpool had the lions’ share of the ball as Arsenal’s nerves twanged but without being able to actually test Raya, although the keeper was relieved when Dominik Szoboszlai’s attempt to repeat his Anfield late free-kick winner scraped past the frame of the goal.
That, though, was as close as either team came, Gabriel Jesus’ late header easily held by Alisson.
There was time for a second bust-up, sparked by Gabriel Martinelli, who threw the ball at the injured Bradley and then hauled him off the pitch, bringing a bad-tempered response from Ibrahima Konate.
Yet it was little more than a bump in an otherwise smooth road that still looks to have only one destination, the chequered flag and champagne celebrations to mark the end of the 21 year wait for title success.







