Why Arsenal’s future looks brighter then ever after demolishing Leeds — Independent 23/8/25
Arsenal 5-0 Leeds: Viktor Gyokeres and Jurrien Timber bagged braces while 15-year-old Max Dowman made a memorable Premier League debut
Will Castle
The future looks bright at Arsenal. Hoping for it to be
“fourth time’s a charm” in their pursuit of Premier League glory, a flawless
start to the new season feels imperative. It meant a home victory over
newly-promoted Leeds United, in itself, was not so much a headline as it was an
expectation. Instead, the stories of the day centred around a select few
individuals, those that spark visions of rediscovered success.
Arsenal fans began the afternoon on tenterhooks, waiting for
the imminent confirmation of new arrival Eberechi Eze from Crystal Palace. They
wouldn’t have to wait long. The Gunners’ new No 10 was unveiled to the Emirates
faithful prior to kick-off to raucous reaction, returning to club he grew up
playing for and supporting. To call this a homecoming, as was proclaimed over
the PA, might be inaccurate - Eze was of course dumped by Arsenal as a
teenager, something not fitting of a nurturing home. But as the 27-year-old
calmly waved to his new fans, he let out a wry smile, almost as if to stick it
to those who lost faith in his 13-year-old self all those years ago. That
mistake has just cost Arsenal £60m.
Eze could well be the final piece to Mikel Arteta’s
title-dreaming puzzle. He is exactly the player they need, a dribbler with
creative spark who can break down the most stubborn defences. Yet his
acquisition has already become something more of a necessity rather than a
luxury. Martin Odegaard’s first-half substitution against Leeds followed the
latest injury blow to Bukayo Saka, adding more strain to attacking options
following Kai Havertz’s knee injury earlier this week. It means Eze’s role,
even more now, will be multi-faceted, likely to be deployed on the left or as
one two attacking No 8s - note that his more favoured position, the No 10, is
rarely operated by Arteta. The need to adapt to a new system means there’ll be
a learning curve to his early life in N7. But off the back off the back of an
instrumental 2024/25, leading Palace to their first major trophy in history,
there’s no doubt his confidence will be sky high as he begins this new chapter.
Confidence has comparatively looked an issue for a fellow
new recruit. Viktor Gyokeres is another summer arrival perceived as a crucial
piece to the puzzle - the presence of a proven, prolific goalscorer could be
paramount to ending their 21-year wait for a league title. But their £55m man,
who scored 97 goals in two years for Sporting, has admittedly shown signs of
struggling to get up to speed so far.
As Arsenal searched for an opener, a mistake from Anton
Stach saw the ball ricochet to Gyokeres in space on the edge of the six-yard
box, a gilt-edged opportunity you’d expect a player of his calibre to tuck
away. But the Swede snatched at the effort on the spin, scuffing wide with the
goal gaping. It was a horror miss, one that maybe led those inside the ground
to temper expectations further after an underwhelming debut at Old Trafford
last week. After all, the jump from Portugal has a history of causing stumbles
- just ask Darwin Nunez.
Gyokeres’ first-half shortfalls meant the Gunners had to
look to another source for goals to get things going against Leeds. Not many
would have pegged right-back Jurrien Timber as the solution.
The Dutchman latched onto Declan Rice’s inswinging corner,
emerging superior from a crowded six-yard box to head home and break the
deadlock on 34 minutes. He then turned provider on the brink of half-time - his
down-the-line through ball slipping Saka into the box for Arsenal’s talisman to
fire past Lucas Perri - before adding to his own tally in the second half,
turning in from a goal-mouth scramble to take the game out of sight.
So much has been made of Arteta’s need for an out-and-out No
9, but this acted as a timely reminder that potency does not always have to
come from up top - something that perhaps eased the pressure on Gyokeres, who
came out for the second half like a new man. Within three minutes of the
restart, he burst into life, driving through Struijk and Jayden Bogle into the
area before clinically drilling into the corner. A first real glimpse of the
player Arsenal worked tirelessly to sign.
Leading by four against a Leeds side devoid of a response,
it gave Arteta the opportunity to give Max Dowman his Premier League debut off
the bench at the age of 15 years and 229 days. The second youngest player in
league history - only behind fellow Hale End product Ethan Nwaneri - the
soon-to-be year 11 pupil looked anything but out of his depth. He showed no
fear of challenging those his senior, sprinting past Gabriel Gudmundsson before
drawing a foul to a huge ovation. It wouldn’t be the last problem he caused for
Leeds defenders, capping off a stellar cameo by winning a penalty as Stach
caught his shin.
Standing over the spot was Gyokeres, who put the exclamation
point on a personal performance of two contrasting halves by sending sent Perri
the wrong way and doubling his own tally. There was so much to like from this
Arsenal performance, and in a campaign that feels like it could well be boom or
bust for the Arteta project, there is a distinct feeling that the former could
prevail.