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45 min +1: Xhaka clambers onto the back of Eze, and earns himself a booking. What odds the combustible Sunderland skipper seeing out the match in this heightened atmosphere against his old pals?
45 min: Sure enough, the board goes up for nine additional minutes.
44 min: Roefs and Geertruida pass it around the back. For too long, as it turns out, and eventually the Arsenal press forces the keeper into slicing out for a throw. Sunderland better not be running the clock down, waiting for the half-time whistle, because there’s going to be a lot of additional time.
42 min: Now Trossard has a nibble at a red and white shirt, conceding another free kick. Arsenal getting collectively irritated.
41 min: Calafiori throws long from the left. Mukiele wins a header, then simply refuses to give way as Calafiori tries to revive the routine. Calafiori, frustrated, clatters into his opponent and the resulting free kick releases the pressure on the hosts.
40 min: Saka crosses from the right. Reinildo blocks. A cheer almost as loud as the one that met the goal. Only almost, though, let’s not get silly.
38 min: The Stadium of Light took off for the moon when that goal went in. Ballard properly roofed that shot, and it was met with a soundtrack to match. Arsenal fall behind for the first time in nine matches.
ShareGOAL! Sunderland 1-0 Arsenal (Ballard 36)
Roefs sends the resulting free kick down the inside-right channel. Arsenal don’t deal with it. Traore heads down towards Ballard, who powers into the box and takes one touch, before arrowing an unstoppable riser into the top right! There goes that clean-sheet run!
Photograph: Richard Lee/ShutterstockSunderland’s Daniel Ballard celebrates. Photograph: Scott Heppell/ReutersShare
Updated at 13.17 EST
36 min: Zubimendi clips Isidor from behind, in the hope of stopping a quick break. He’s booked. But much good his cynicism has done him, because …
35 min: Saka dribbles into the Sunderland box from the right. He’s surrounded and has no right to keep going, really, but he manages it, and eventually pokes a shot through the crowd. There’s not any pace on it, though, and that’s easy for Roefs.
33 min: It’s 11 versus 11 again. Merino goes over, and Xhaka, with whom he’s just come second best in a 50-50, leans over him and issues some beneficial advice. Players on both sides running hot.
32 min: Raya gets play restarted with both teams momentarily down to ten men.
31 min: Le Fee is back up on his feet. Timber is still down, having taken a whack to his right eye. He’s getting taped and bandaged up.
30 min: Le Fee and Timber collided during the build-up to that half-chance, and on come the physios. This has been more stop than start. Expect quite a bit of time tacked onto the end of the half.
28 min: Sadiki clips a pass down the inside-left channel, freeing Isidor into space. Isidor enters the box and whips a low shot across Raya and harmlessly wide of the right-hand post.
27 min: … and now it’s Arsenal’s turn to get annoyed when penalised for not very much. Timber catches Le Fee in a 50-50, the whistle goes, and Mikel Arteta spins around waving his arms around in an agitated fashion. An edge developing.
25 min: Reinildo jumps into Timber, contesting a long ball on the edge of the Arsenal box. The Stadium of Light erupts in anger as Arsenal are awarded a free kick.
23 min: Le Fee gets overly intricate near his own D, and gifts the ball to Eze, who attempts a curler towards the top-left corner but gets it all wrong. Sunderland are beginning to make mistakes under relentless Arsenal pressure.
22 min: Ballard scuffs a hopeless pass upfield straight at the nearest blue shirt. He’s fortunate that Merino doesn’t take advantage, shovelling straight through to Roefs, when there were runners either side.
20 min: Traore turns on the jets down the right, and reaches the Arsenal box. Then he loses control of his legs and slips over, options in the middle untapped. A sad end to a rare Sunderland attack.
19 min: A little bit of sterile possession for Sunderland. Much needed, as Arsenal had started to crank up the pressure, over 50 percent of the play in the last five minutes having been in Sunderland’s final third.
17 min: With Saka preparing to dribble down the right, Sadiki is forced to lunge in and concede a corner. The set piece is played short, then pulled back for Rice, who buys another ticket to the raffle from distance. His shot is blocked.
16 min: Rice nearly takes full advantage, his free kick dipping and oscillating at speed towards the bottom right. Roefs stoops and punches clear, albeit in not particularly convincing style. But he’s done his job.
15 min: Isidor and Gabriel contest a high ball, 30 yards from the Sunderland goal. Isidor leads with a high-kick and though he doesn’t make much contact, Gabriel makes sure to make the most of it, and goes down screaming. Xhaka is then doing similar, into the referee’s face, arguing that it’s not a foul. It was soft, but Isidor gave the referee a decision to make with his ungainly challenge, and here we are.
13 min: Eze wedges a pass down the middle, hoping to release Merino, but gets it all wrong. The ball sails through to Roefs.
11 min: Merino is back on. Both teams now need to rediscover their early verve after a long stoppage.
10 min: Merino is back up on his feet. But that was a long check. More checking the state of his jawbone than dealing with any concussion, it would seem. Arsenal down to ten for now.
9 min: Merino is sitting up now, which is better news to report. For a while, he was lying stock still. The doctor still doing his checks.
7 min: Merino doesn’t look in too good a shape. The physio is treating him very carefully. Mikel Arteta is furious, up in the fourth official’s grille, performing the elbow mime. He’s not happy with Ballard’s challenge at all.
6 min: Trossard crosses from the left. Ballard heads clear, though in doing so catches Merino on the lug with a pointy elbow. Accidental, but that’ll have hurt, and the Arsenal player stays down.
Daniel Ballard in action with Arsenal’s Mikel Merino. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images/ReutersShare
Updated at 12.47 EST
5 min: It’s Arsenal’s turn for a long throw. Rice puts it in from the right, but Sunderland clear their lines without fuss. Sunderland counter, and for a second it looks as though Traore will get on the end of a long ball down the middle, but Calafiori is covering and puts an end to that particular dream.
4 min: All of which means that Arsenal have now gone 13 hours without conceding a goal.
3 min: Eventually the ball’s flung into the mixer. Arsenal can only half clear, and Le Fee wins another throw on the other side of the pitch. Mukiele hoicks this one long as well, but Arsenal deal with this one better.
2 min: Sunderland get their press on early doors. Raya is forced to hack out for a throw. Mukiele prepares to fling it into the box … but before he can do so, the referee needs to fetch a new flag for one of his linesmen. Tum-te-tum.
Sunderland get the ball rolling. What an atmosphere!
… but before kick-off, there’s a moment of silence in honour and respect of the fallen. A wreath of poppies laid by the centre circle. Immaculately observed. Pin-drop perfect. Then the Last Post. And finally a Roker-style roar of gratitude to break the silence. Here we go, then.
Fans, players and match officials, observe a minutes silence ahead of Remembrance Day. Photograph: Alex Livesey/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 12.40 EST
The teams are out! Sunderland in their storied red and white stripes, Arsenal in second-choice mid-Nineties-throwback squiggly blue. A fine anticipatory atmosphere bubbles away, and there are poppy mosaics in the stand ahead Remembrance Sunday. We’ll be off in a couple of minutes.
Sunderland boss Regis Le Bris speaks to Sky Sports … “We will see if we can find an opportunity to win … or to score, because it’s really tough to score against them … keep improving … we need play against the best to improve … [Granit Xhaka] is really important for us … a really good player … a strong leader … an ability to lead by example … on the pitch in real time … to help others and create new leaders … so it fits really well with our journey and I hope he will be at his best today.”
… then his Arsenal counterpart Mikel Arteta takes his turn. “There is excitement to come here and do what we have been doing … earn the right to win the game … every game in the Premier League is a really tough place to come and we are really aware of that … when you move a player from a deep position to a front position, normally the other way around is easier, that way is more complicated and Mikel [Merino] has done a brilliant job every time … we are going to need him today again.”
Early arrivals to this MBM will know that there used to be a picture of a dog in a Sunderland coat at the top. The picture editor has since chased him away, but let’s see if we can entice the little scamp back, because otherwise the email I’m about to publish in today’s Pre-match Postbag will make no sense.
Here, boy!
[clicks fingers, whistles]
Here, boy!
[sound of scampering]
Here you are! Here he is! He’s back!
“Woof.” Photograph: Richard Lee/Shutterstock
Good boy! What a good boy! OK, sit. Stay.
Pre-match postbag. “The dog in your header image has the thousand-yard stare of a life-long human Sunderland supporter” – Andy (not that one) Flintoff.
“Huh?!” Photograph: Richard Lee/ShutterstockShare
All of the earlier matches have now finished. Barry Glendenning has the details of the 3pms and wins for Everton and West Ham, but only the lunchtime kick-off had any effect on this match, in so much as the point Spurs gained in their 2-2 draw with Manchester United has nudged Sunderland down one spot to fifth.
Here’s an illustration of the size and scope of the task facing Sunderland today. Arsenal last conceded a goal at 5.05pm on 28 September. Since then, they’ve only allowed 12 shots on target in 12 hours and 56 minutes of football, over eight-and-a-half matches, a sequence that equals a club record established in 1903, when they were still knocking around in Woolwich. Nick Ames digs deeper.
Sunderland are in If It Ain’t Broke mode. They name the same XI that started the 2-1 win at Chelsea and the 1-1 draw with Everton. This will be the first time Granit Xhaka has faced Arsenal since leaving the Gunners two years ago.
Arsenal make three changes after their 3-0 win at Slavia Prague. Eberechi Eze, Martín Zubimendi and Riccardo Calafiori step up; Ethan Nwaneri, Christian Nørgaard and Piero Hincapié sit down. Viktor Gyökeres remains on the injury list with a hamstring problem.
Updated at 11.32 EST
The teams
Sunderland: Roefs, Hume, Mukiele, Ballard, Geertruida, Mandava, Traore, Xhaka, Sadiki, Le Fee, Isidor.
Subs: Patterson, Neil, Talbi, Brobbey, Rigg, Mayenda, O’Nien, Adingra, Masuaku.
Arsenal: Raya, Timber, Saliba, Gabriel, Calafiori, Eze, Zubimendi, Rice, Saka, Merino, Trossard.
Subs: Arrizabalaga, Mosquera, White, Hincapie, Norgaard, Nwaneri, Lewis-Skelly, Dowman, Harriman-Annous.
Referee: Craig Pawson.
VAR: James Bell.
Updated at 11.27 EST
Preamble
Sunderland do not have a good record against Arsenal. The last time these clubs met, four years ago, Arsenal won 5-1 in the League Cup, though the Black Cats were a League One outfit at the time. The last time they met in the Premier League, in 2016-17, Arsenal won 2-0 at home and 4-1 at the Stadium of Light. Arsenal are on a 15-game unbeaten streak against Sunderland in the League that stretches back to 2009, while the last time they lost any game against them was in the FA Cup in 2012. History is not on Sunderland’s side this evening.†
The recent form book doesn’t help them either, though that’s only because Arsenal right now are on the hottest streak in the country, in Europe, in the world. The Premier League leaders are currently on a run of ten consecutive wins in all competitions, and eight consecutive clean sheets. Who can compete with numbers like that?! In fact, Sunderland’s own recent form is highly impressive: five Premier League wins already, and unbeaten at home, commendable business for a freshly promoted team. And hey, someone has to score against Arsenal at some point, right? Eh?
So there is hope for Sunderland … and we’ve not even priced in the presence in their team of former Arsenal captain Granit Xhaka, who is a headline waiting to happen tonight, one way or another. You know how football goes sometimes. Arsenal are hot favourites, but Sunderland are unlikely to go down without a fight. Kick-off is at 5.30pm GMT. It’s on!
†: To be fair, Sunderland did beat Arsenal in the semi-finals of the FA Cup in 1973, en route to their greatest triumph in the modern era. So there is that. But let’s not cloud the issue.