Almost exactly a year later, Saka had another penalty for Arsenal, in Sunday’s game at West Ham. He shot in the same direction but, this time fired wide. Within 142 seconds, West Ham had equalised, and two points had been lost. “Apologies Gunners,” Saka said afterwards. “I’ll do everything I can to make it right.”
The story of Round and Saka’s one-to-one session is especially relevant now because it indicates how Arteta and his coaching staff will handle the next few days. After back-to-back draws, in which Arsenal have twice surrendered two-goal leads, there are serious questions being asked about the Premier League leaders’ mental strength heading into the run-in with Manchester City breathing down their necks.
Many fans fear a blip could quickly become a collapse similar to last season, when Arsenal missed out on the top four. How will they try to prevent that from happening again?
Arteta will take the lead this week, as he has done all season, and coaches such as Round, Albert Stuivenberg and Carlos Cuesta will also speak to players one-on-one. Success is a collective pursuit but, as Round and Saka demonstrated last season, it also requires a personal touch.
Arsenal do not have an official club psychologist, but they do use consultants, who players can speak to when required.
Arteta likes to read in his spare time, but only non-fiction books that help him become a better manager. He is interested in leadership techniques and methods of management, and regularly speaks to coaches in other sports, including rugby union’s Eddie Jones.
With a match against Southampton looming on Friday before the trip to City a week tomorrow, Arteta will need to deploy the most effective of these techniques if he is to steady the ship. Arsenal cannot afford to stumble again, and -certainly cannot afford to keep blowing two-goal leads.
Prof Andy Lane, a sports psychologist at the University of Wolverhampton, says the key for Arsenal’s players is to live in the moment. The more liberated they feel, and the less concerned about the bigger picture, the better they will play.
”If they are thinking they are close to the end of the season, it brings anxiety,” he says. “They need to do as much as possible to simply play football. Focus on the quality of the movement, the enjoyment of playing. They could watch back successful performances, trying to recapture what it was like when they were winning. It is about being the best in that moment. Tennis players are a good example of this, as they can’t be thinking about anything else but the next point. One serve after another serve. It is easy to say, but very hard to do.”
Arsenal have shown better resilience this season. They have beaten some of their biggest rivals, and have consistently struck late winners. With Gabriel Jesus and Oleksandr Zinchenko in their team, they also have two players who know what it takes to win the title.
They appear to be the most mentally robust Arsenal team for many years. As the title race reaches its climax, and the pressure grows to almost unbearable levels, they cannot allow their minds and bodies to soften.
-The Daily Telegraph