Arsenal
dominated against Stoke in an edgy clash at the Britannia Stadium but
their lack of a cutting edge saw their stuttering start to the season
continue in another frustrating goalless draw.
The Gunners
bossed the game in terms of possession but had limited clear-cut chances
as they struggled to open their Barclays Premier League account in the
absence of Robin van Persie.
Stoke saw a
penalty shout turned down in the edgy clash as Arsenal's three-pronged
attack of Olivier Giroud, Lukas Podolski and Gervinho failed to make a
breakthrough.
No way through: Arsenal were the dominant force, but could not make the pressure count
MATCH FACTS
Stoke: Begovic,
Wilkinson, Huth, Shawcross, Wilson, Pennant (Jerome 65), Cameron,
Whelan (Palacios 81), Kightly, Walters, Crouch (Shotton 79).
Subs not used: Sorensen, Jones, Upson, Delap.
Booked: Huth, Wilkinson
Arsenal: Mannone,
Jenkinson, Mertesacker, Vermaelen, Gibbs, Arteta, Diaby, Cazorla
(Ramsey 81), Podolski (Oxlade-Chamberlain 72), Giroud, Gervinho (Walcott
72).
Subs: Martinez, Andre Santos, Djourou, Coquelin.
Referee: Lee Mason (Lancashire)
Attendance: 27,072
Gunners manager
Arsene Wenger made two changes, dropping Theo Walcott to the bench to
hand a first start to Frenchman Giroud with goalkeeper Vito Mannone
replacing the injured Wojciech Szczesny.
Stoke boss Tony
Pulis made two changes, handing a debut to American summer signing
Geoff Cameron with Dean Whitehead suspended while Jermaine Pennant
returned to the side after recovering from a thigh injury.
There was a
distinct edge as the game got under way with Arsenal booed by the home
fans and Wenger singled out as both sides looked to settle in an
intimidating atmosphere.
The animosity
dates back to an incident two and a half years ago when Aaron Ramsey's
leg was badly broken in a tackle from Stoke's Ryan Shawcross, and the
mood was evident as both sides went in search of their first league win
of the season.
Cameron, who
played against Mexico for the United States last week, started brightly
with a testing long throw in the style of substitute Rory Delap before
he released a good ball down the right hand side as the hosts dominated
the early exchanges.
Disallowed: Walters had the ball in the back of the net but the effort was chalked off for offside
The Potters
then had an early goal chalked off as Jonathan Walters strayed offside
but good linking play with strike-partner Peter Crouch gave the home
fans something to cheer in the opening exchanges.
Arsenal then
began to enjoy the majority of possession in midfield and displayed
warning signs as they began to press, but like last weekend's goalless
draw against Sunderland, they lacked a cutting edge.
They missed two
good chances in the opening 20 minutes as Podolski was unable to
overpower a stumbling Andy Wilkinson to open his account before Kieran
Gibbs' ball to the far post went begging, just inches away from the
German striker.
Santi Cazorla
began to pull the strings in midfield for the Gunners after he struck a
poor free-kick into the bottom of the wall, but the game continued to
ebb and flow with Stoke looking to steal an advantage on the
counter-attack.
Walters was a
threat on the right and he almost teed up Michael Kightly for the opener
but Arsenal goalkeeper Mannone made a comfortable save from 20 yards.
Warm welcome:
The Stoke fans treated the visiting manager to a rousing reception - and
one fan ribbed the Gunners boss over another of his stars departing for
Manchester (below)
Arsenal then
began to dominate with Cazorla weaving passes as Podolski pushed on,
before the former Malaga midfielder forced a fantastic diving save from
Stoke keeper Asmir Begovic with a 25-yard effort.
Cazorla and
Giroud then linked up well and threatened the Stoke goal but some calm
defending by Shawcross neutralised the Arsenal threat with the sides
locked at 0-0 at the break.
Arsenal got
back into their stride early in the second half and continued to look
more threatening but it was Stoke who were left to rue their chances
when they had a penalty turned down in the 58th minute.
Gibbs fouled
Pennant as he raced down the right with the Stoke winger going down on
the edge of the box, but referee Lee Mason waved away calls for a
penalty and signalled a goal kick.
No way through: Arsenal enjoyed the vast amount of possession, but could find a way to goal
Stoke looked to
be playing further up the pitch in a bid to take the attack to Arsenal
but it opened them up at the other end, with Wilkinson flying into a
challenge on Gunners defender Thomas Vermaelen on the edge of the box.
The Stoke wall
denied Arteta's free-kick as Arsenal's free-flowing game was stunted by
the home side, mirrored from the set piece as unmarked striker Giroud
miscued a volley from Cazorla's corner from the middle of the box.
Wenger was left
with his head in his hands when Arteta's 20-yard shot flew wide before
Abou Diaby had too much time to think and stumbled over a close-range
effort.
Arsenal went
close again as the clock ticked down with Giroud's long-range effort
skimming the top of the cross bar, but the Gunners were left frustrated
as they could only take a point back to the Emirates after another
disappointing result.
Chopped down: Stoke harried their opponents in their usual physical, robust style
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