How Arsenal adapted their corners to beat Manchester United


In December 2022, Mikel Arteta shared that he was in group chats with elite managers from the NBA, NFL, and Australian cricket.

There isn’t much cricket and football can teach each other tactically, but Arteta has learned that a predictable attack can still be unstoppable.

England bowler Stuart Broad against Australian opening batter David Warner was the proof. Broad dismissed him 17 times in 31 Test matches across a decade, with the left-handed Warner struggling against the right-arm inswinger — regardless of whether it came from around or over the wicket.

What does this have to do with Arsenal’s corners? It perfectly illustrates how the same outcome can occur from identical scenarios with subtle tweaks. At the Emirates Stadium on Wednesday night, four miles across north London from where Broad often faced Warner at Lord’s, Arsenal’s 2-0 win over Manchester United owed to two goals from corners.

It is the fourth time in 2024 they have scored multiple times in a game from corners, and the 13th match (all competitions) since the start of last season where Arsenal have broken the deadlock with a goal from a corner — they have won 12 of those, the exception being a 1-1 draw with Liverpool last December.

Against United, Arsenal were without Gabriel, who had 12 of their 25 corner attempts and scored four of their five corner goals in the opening 13 league games.

Their stock delivery is an inswinger targeted between the posts. Runners from the back post become decoys and blockers to clear space for Gabriel, who makes his runs from the penalty spot.

Arsenal corners 2024 25

Arsenal’s first corner against United was a stock ball.

Here, United used four zonal markers across the six-yard box, two near-post zonal markers (Bruno Fernandes and Rasmus Hojlund) and two blockers: Manuel Ugarte on Kai Havertz and Mason Mount tracking William Saliba.

ARS Corner 1a

Arsenal’s five back-post runners made various near-post moves. Saliba ran towards the goalkeeper. Jurrien Timber (5ft 10in/178cm) took up the Gabriel role, attacking the back post.

ARS corner 1b

The near-post runners were trying to disrupt Hojlund and Fernandes, making runs across them and giving slight nudges as they jumped. Rice’s inswinger was met by Thomas Partey four yards out, but it hit his shoulder and went wide.

ARS corner 1c

From corner two, set-piece coach Nicolas Jover tweaked things. Timber moved to the back post and started making aggressive runs to the front post, just in front of Fernandes. Andre Onana punched this one clear.

ARS corner 2a

He might be one of the smaller players, but research from StatsBomb suggests height only accounts for 22 per cent of aerial ability. Timber’s vertical jump, springing up off both feet, is excellent.

ARS corner 2b

Two corners in four second-half minutes proved Arsenal’s worth. United ticked some typical boxes on how to stop them: defend with a hybrid scheme (a mix of zonal markers/blockers) and create space for the goalkeeper to punch/catch.

go-deeper

However, their zonal blockers, Ugarte especially, did not grapple enough, and they fell foul of the golden rule — do not give Arsenal more than five corners, as beyond that point, they always create shots and finish more clinically.

Matthijs de Ligt headed clear Arsenal’s fifth corner, though United’s near-post problems were clear. The ball only reached De Ligt, a central zonal marker, because Gabriel Martinelli got in Fernandes’ way at the near post, and Hojlund mistimed his jump.

From corner No 6, Timber headed in the opener — only the second headed goal of his senior career.

United had positioned their zonal markers aggressively in the first half, though by this stage they were closer to their own goal line than the six-yard box. Onana didn’t have space to punch anymore.

Timber makes that near-post run, and it comes off.

ARS corner 6a

Because they started from deeper, Hojlund and Fernandes stepped forward to attack the ball, and overcommitted. Timber ghosted in behind Hojlund — Arsenal didn’t have any near-post blockers on this occasion — and flicked a header past Onana from Rice’s inswinger.

ARS corner 6b

ARS corner 6c

United almost conceded from the next corner, when Hojlund switched to a blocking role, on Saliba, and substitute Joshua Zirkzee took his near-post zonal position, as Mount was subbed off.

ARS corner 7a

Martinelli made the same blocking run on Fernandes, and Zirkzee jumped too late. He glanced the ball, in an almost identical way to Timber, from about the same spot, to the back-post, and Ugarte cleared off the line.

ARS corner 7b

Speaking on Amazon Prime, Rice was asked how much he practised his delivery. “Because of the game schedule, it’s hard, it’s more just seeing clips,” he said. “I know what I need to do, the weight of the ball I need, whether it’s front or back (post). It’s just repetition when I’ve got the chance, (and) it depends on the opposition”.

As threatening as Arsenal were from Rice’s corners, Saka’s delivery from the right lacked quality and consistency. But at corner eight, he switched to back-post balls, and at corner nine, Arsenal scored again.

They began creating and exploiting two-v-one overloads on back-post zonal marker Noussair Mazraoui. Timber and Jakub Kiwior blocked Mazraoui and Leny Yoro (on for Harry Maguire), United’s two deepest zonal markers, while Saliba held off Hojlund.

Mikel Merino’s introduction as a substitute, for full-back Oleksandr Zinchenko, added another aerial threat. He started making crashing runs from further out.

ARS corner 9a

It meant Partey was isolated to head the back-post ball across goal. This hit Saliba, who was in the ideal position by initially trying to block the goalkeeper, and it went in off his hip.

ARS corner 9b

ARS corner 9c

Saka continued the back-post balls, and Merino should have scored from corner 11. Arsenal repeated the routine, and as Saka’s ball was slightly more central this time, Merino was unmarked but headed wide from a standing jump.

ARS corner 11b

ARS corner 11a

Arsenal had six shots and two big chances from 13 corners. Only once in a Premier League game since Jover’s arrival in summer 2021 have they created more expected goals from corners (at home to Leicester City in August 2022).

In Gabriel’s absence, they found solutions, with different approaches from either side, and those six shots were taken by four players. Before the United game, Arsenal hadn’t scored a corner goal in a Premier League match without Gabriel since he joined in 2020. Now, they look like they don’t even need him.





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