
Papers: Sir Jim Ratcliffe hesitant to give Carrick permanent Man Utd job
Sir Jim Ratcliffe unsure about making Carrick permanent manager of Manchester United
Arsenal's recent performance at the Etihad and the potential return of key players provide hope despite a disappointing loss to Burnley.
What the mood around Arsenal is missing
Photo by Alex Livesey/Getty Images
Manchester Cityâs 1-0 win against Burnley on Wednesday night means that for the first time this season and with just five games left to play, they are top of the table.
In football stadiums and pubs across the land, everyone is clearing their throats and tuning up our old favourite, âSecond again, ole oleâŠâ
This is going to hurt.
Itâs been a bruising time in the Premier League for our beloved Arsenal.
Back to back defeats in the Premier League for the first time this season, with the latest one coming at Manchester City, means that the footballing manifestation of Harry Enfieldâs Loadsamoney now have one hand on the Premier League trophy.
The important thing to remember here is, so do we.
Still.
I know, I know.
Events over the last week have been gutting and, if youâre angry about the Bournemouth game last weekend Iâm not here to tell you not to be. It was the worst possible performance at the worst possible time and it was galling to see our players apparently sleepwalk through a game which, had we won, would have given us a safety net in Manchester.
Arsenal displayed a strong performance at the Etihad despite ultimately losing the match.
Burnley's narrow win over City added to the disappointment surrounding Arsenal's recent results.
The article suggests that the likely return of key players could boost Arsenal's morale and performance.
Fans can remain optimistic due to Arsenal's solid display against Manchester City and the potential reinforcements from returning players.

Sir Jim Ratcliffe unsure about making Carrick permanent manager of Manchester United
Celtics predicted to draft 6'10 forward Jayden Quaintance from Kentucky.

Joan GarcĂa se destaca como el tapado para ganar el Zamora en la liga española.
Austin Reaves upgraded to questionable for Game 3 against the Rockets.
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
I think there are a couple of factors which played into that performance which were out of our control, but I also realise theyâre going to sound like rationalisations (fair, they are) and you probably donât want to revisit it anyway.
So, letâs not. Especially as I think itâs fair to say, even in Sundayâs defeat there was much more cause for optimism than a week previously.
I would even go so far as to say that if the players can play at the level they produced in Manchester across the next five weekends, then there is every chance we will basking in golden South London sunshine come May 24.
Wouldnât that be appropriate for the âWoolwich Nomadsâ?
I do realise, by the way, that at this point I am starting to sound like Monty Pythonâs Black Knight, but whatâs the alternative really? Weâll have the whole summer to be angry if things donât go our way â for the next five weeks Iâm choosing positivity until itâs over and, as Declan Rice was seen saying on Sunday evening, âItâs not doneâ.
Anyway, if youâve got this far and youâre still feeling angry about the last week and unconvinced by what Iâve had to say so far, then can I offer you the two Spurs fans I overheard in our work kitchen yesterday, genuinely having a conversation about how if they beat West Ham, theyâd probably stay up.
The fact that this is even being discussed on April 21 is joyous to me â not quite as joyous as Xavi Simons was when he scored his, admittedly, very good goal, but close enough.
I donât know what was funnier, the excessive celebration, or the look on his face at the full time whistle. The full Richarlison, you might say.
Anway, as I said to the two of them, much as I would love them to go down, I would much rather we won the league and I do feel we have a much better chance of being able to achieve this lofty ambition with Martin Odegaard and Ebere Eze operating in tandem.
Odegaardâs pass and move style exponentially improves the way we can play through a midfield, whilst Eze can (and on Sunday so nearly did) provide the killer instinct in the final third.
It felt instructive, didnât it?
As did having a centre forward in Kai Havertz up top who can link the play and make us feel like a functioning team again.
I know he should have done better with the chances he had and if we donât get what we all want out of this season, then Kaiâs header over the bar is a moment which is going to haunt us for weeks/months/years (delete as applicable), but I canât ignore the difference he makes to how we play when he is leading the line.
For me, itâs night and day compared to his Swedish colleague, who, to borrow a line from my favourite band, seems to be very much âin the wrong place at the wrong timeâ.
Yessir, when times are bad reach for the appropriate Depeche Mode reference.
I completely understand that when we look back on this season, if it doesnât go our way, everyone will focus on the home games with Bournemouth and United and, to a certain extent, the much reduced Liverpool as well as the dreadful giveaway of points at Wolverhampton.
If you want to call our failures to win those games one of bottle, then by all means have at it.
Again, Iâm not here to argue with you, but I donât think itâs intellectually honest to compare the performance against Bournemouthwith the one against Manchester City without also acknowledging the difference in personnel.
The fact of the matter is that you canât look like a team full of ballers if all your ballers are lying on a treatment table in North London.
Again, I totally understand that nobody really wants to hear it, but you donât even have to take my word for it â you only have to look at what happens to Arsenalâs attack whenever the technical disasterclass that is MGM (yes, Martinelli, Gyokeres and Madueke) are on the pitch together.
We have ample evidence now that this particular combination of players doesnât work and yet weâve had to roll it out in a must win game against Bournemouthas well as a Champions League quarter final.
My hope now is that we wonât have to see this front three ever again.
There have been conflicting noises about Bukayo Sakaâs availability for the weekend â some are saying heâll be back, some are saying out for the season [Editor â We hear he should be back in the next week]. If he doesnât make it, for me Eze has to stay out on the left if only to provide some technical quality in forward areas.
After a seemingly endless cycle of weekend/midweek/weekend games, we now have to negotiate just two more midweek fixtures.
Next week we will be in Madrid for the first leg of the Champions League semi final with the return fixture a week later â congratulations to the boys for making two in a row!
The Madrid trip will see us done with leaving London for the rest of the season.
A short trip to the London Stadium to face West Ham and the aforementioned final day journey to Crystal Palace is as far from home as weâll be travelling, 40 minutes on the Windrush Line.
Will it be 40 minutes to glory?