Following contrasting victories in the EFL Cup in midweek, Arsenal and Leicester City cross paths in Saturday's Premier League bout at the Emirates Stadium.
While the Gunners demolished Bolton Wanderers 5-1 on Wednesday evening, their newly-promoted visitors needed some goalkeeping heroics to get over the line against Walsall.
Match preview
The kids were more than all right for Mikel Arteta on Wednesday evening, where the visit of League One outfit Bolton Wanderers for the EFL Cup saw the Arsenal manager start four teenagers who had not even been born when the Gunners played their first non-competitive match at the Emirates Stadium.
One of those - 16-year-old goalkeeper Jack Porter - became the youngest-ever starter for Arsenal's men's team, and even though he was denied a debut clean sheet, the teenager witnessed fellow academy star Ethan Nwaneri score twice while Raheem Sterling, Kai Havertz and Declan Rice also got in on the act.
Rewarded for their endeavours with a fourth-round tie against Preston North End, Arsenal - who are still unbeaten in all tournaments this season - return to top-flight duty a week on from their explosive Etihad affair, where only a 98th-minute John Stones equaliser denied the Gunners a first win away to Manchester City since January 2015.
Putting every man behind the ball after Leandro Trossard's sending-off saw Arteta take the flak from rival fans and indeed players, but few could realistically knock the Spaniard for employing an all-out defensive approach with a numerical disadvantage at the home of the English champions.
Failure to cling onto their one-goal advantage saw Arsenal miss the chance to leapfrog Man City at the summit, though - they currently sit fourth with a two-point gap to make up to the champions - but their win rate of 70% in 2024 is their joint-best in a single calendar year along with 1932.
Furthermore, Arsenal are seldom outfought on their own patch when newly-promoted teams come to town, having strung together a 39-game unbeaten run at the Emirates versus such clubs in the Premier League since being outclassed by Newcastle United in 2010.
As Arsenal scored against Bolton for fun in midweek, there was no way through for Leicester against a resolute Walsall defence at Banks's Stadium, where Steve Cooper's men were taken all the way to penalties by their plucky League Two hosts.
However, Foxes goalkeeper Danny Ward - whose penalty heroics memorably lifted Huddersfield Town up to the Premier League in 2017 - was impenetrable from 12 yards, stopping all three of the Saddlers' penalties as Ricardo Pereira, Conor Coady and Oliver Skipp sent Leicester through.
The manner of the Foxes' hard-fought victory will hardly inspire confidence for a fourth-round trip to Old Trafford next month, though, and Cooper's men now have bigger fish to fry in the Premier League, where they remain winless after last weekend's 1-1 draw with Everton in abhorrent conditions.
While Leicester are one of six sides still searching for their first top-flight win of the season, their superior goal difference means that they are actually the highest-ranked of all those teams in 15th place, but only in their 2022-23 relegation season have they ever gone without victory in their first six games of a Premier League season.
Speaking of six-match streaks, Arsenal could secure a sextet of consecutive victories against their lowly opponents, whom they have defeated in each of their last five Premier League battles since a shock 1-0 Emirates loss during their dismal end to 2020.
- W
- W
- D
- W
- D
Team News
As Trossard's suspension applied to all competitions rather than just the Premier League, the Belgian is now back in Arteta's ranks after missing the Bolton win, where second-choice goalkeeper Neto sat on the sidelines due to being cup-tied.
The Bournemouth loanee could now follow Porter in making his Gunners debut, as David Raya is still a major doubt with the muscular injury he picked up at the Etihad, but Jurrien Timber, Ben White and Myles Lewis-Skelly are all fine after recent knocks.
Martin Odegaard (ankle), Mikel Merino (shoulder), Takehiro Tomiyasu (knee), Kieran Tierney (hamstring) and Oleksandr Zinchenko (calf) are all in the infirmary for the depleted Gunners, though, and the hosts should revert to their strongest XI despite the imminent visit of Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League.
In contrast, Leicester are not so unfortunate on the injury front, as only Patson Daka, Jannik Vestergaard and Jakub Stolarczyk - all of whom are nursing serious ankle injuries - are watching on from the treatment room.
Changes will no doubt be afoot on the visitors' end, as Ward's exceptional display against Walsall will not be enough to see him retain his place in goal over Mads Hermansen, and a recall also awaits Jamie Vardy at the tip of the attack.
A perennial tormentor of Big Six sides, Vardy boasts 11 goals in 16 games against Arsenal in all competitions - only against Watford has the 37-year-old found the net on as many occasions.
Arsenal possible starting lineup:
Neto; White, Saliba, Gabriel, Timber; Havertz, Rice, Partey; Saka, Jesus, Trossard
Leicester City possible starting lineup:
Hermansen; Justin, Faes, Okoli, Kristiansen; Skipp, Winks; Ayew, Ndidi, Mavididi; Vardy
We say: Arsenal 3-0 Leicester City
Each of Leicester's five Premier League games this season has seen the Foxes both score and concede, but even with Arsenal's chief nemesis Vardy back in the XI, the visitors' golden streak at the correct end should cease at the Emirates.
With a plethora of big-hitters enjoying a complete rest or only playing cameo roles in midweek, Arsenal should not run into too many obstacles on Saturday, as they warm up for PSG in perfect fashion.
For data analysis of the most likely results, scorelines and more for this match please click here.
body check tags ::
Previews by email