Manchester Cityâs saviour John Stones said Arsenal has become one of the hardest teams to face because Mikel Artetaâs side is so adept at using the darker arts of the game.
Arsenal used every trick in the book as they hung on to a 2-1 lead for virtually the entire second half with 10 men after Leandro Trossard was sent off for kicking the ball away.
But substitute Stones popped up in the eighth minute of stoppage time to equalise and preserve Cityâs near two-year unbeaten run at home in the Premier League.
It was a huge relief for Manchester City which returned to the top of the table, two points ahead of rival Arsenal who slipped to fourth.
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In truth, City looked woefully short of ideas as Arsenal played with 10 men behind the ball, its usual slick passing game bogged down by Arsenalâs red wall.
âTheyâve done it for a few years, and we know to expect that,â defender Stones, who played more like a centre-forward when he came on, told Sky Sports.
âYou can call it clever or dirty, whichever way you want to put it, they break up the game and obviously upset the rhythm for everyone. They use it to their advantage.
âI thought we dealt with it really well. Itâs not easy. When those things are happening, youâre trying to gain momentum. Youâre trying to get a foot into the game and get above them.
âThose little stoppages stop that. We controlled our emotions really well.â
Arsenal has become a streetwise unit under Arteta who has twice taken them toe-to-toe with City in title races and for all its attractive football, it has become a master at disrupting the rhythm of opposing teams.
City threatened to blow Arsenal away in the opening stages with Savinho setting up Erling Haaland to fire his side in front with his 100th goal for the club.
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But Riccardo Calafiori equalised out of the blue with a stunning long-range effort before Gabriel headed Arsenal in front shortly afterwards.
Everything changed, however, after Trossard became the second Arsenal player this season to be sent off for delaying a restart by kicking the ball away.
He was given a hug by Arteta as he trudged off and the Spanish manager said he was proud of the way his team kept City at bay for so long despite being a man down, even if its delaying tactics were not to everyoneâs taste.
âWe played the game in a difficult context. Playing against the best team in the world.â he said.
âObviously, it is already a miracle we played 56 minutes at the Etihad with 10 men. It is unbelievable what we have done.â
Source Agencies