Newcastle 0 Arsenal 0

Last updated : 14 August 2011 By Footy Mad - Editor

AFC

NEWCASTLE 0 ARSENAL 0

NEWCASTLE: Krul, Coloccini, Steven Taylor, Ryan Taylor, Simpson, Barton, Cabaye (Lovenkrands 81), Tiote, Gutierrez, Shola Ameobi (Best 73), Ba (Obertan 46).
Subs Not Used: Forster, Williamson, Gosling, Sammy Ameobi.

ARSENAL: Szczesny, Sagna, Vermaelen, Koscielny, Gibbs, Rosicky (Frimpong 85), Song, Ramsey (Djourou 90), Arshavin (Walcott 61), Gervinho, van Persie.
Subs Not Used: Fabianski, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Jenkinson, Chamakh.

Att: 46, 894

Pardew told the boys to go out and contain the Gunners, who are starting to look a pale shadow of the side that Arsene Wenger took to Premiership glory several years ago ... and the "don't lose" factor played heavily on his players.

Wenger faced an angy mob of about 150 demonstrating Arsenal fans as he arrived at the reception at the Milburn Stand ... and he looked very shocked.

You know what they say ... a club that sells its best players has major problems ... and Arsenal may not be in the same league as us for financial affairs, but we have both lost our stars.

Andy Carroll has not been replaced, and boy did it show today.

Alan Pardew says none of his four strikers (Ameobi, Best, Lovenkrands or Ba) "are good enough" to wear the famous number nine shirt ... and he is obviously right.

We huffed and puffed with industry rather than flair, and seemed happy to take the point.

Gervinho was sent off for slapping Joey Barton in a bizarre incident, and Newcastle couldn't make their extra numbers count.

The Ivory Coast international was dismissed with 14 minutes remaining after lashing out at the midfielder when he confronted him over what he believed was a dive inside the home penalty area.

The Gunners were unable to break down a Magpies side which rarely looked like taking all three points, but was in no mood to surrender the one with which they started.

Theo Walcott might have won it within three minutes of his introduction as a 61st-minute substitute, but goalkeeper Tim Krul denied him with one of the few genuine saves he was called upon to make.

Transfer-listed Barton only started the game after assuring manager Alan Pardew that he was fully committed to the cause, but he turned in a fine individual display in a team performance which was solid rather than inspired.

But the home fans among a crowd of 46,894 left reasonably satisfied, unlike their travelling counterparts, who repeatedly implored Arsene Wenger to "spend some money" after a toothless start to the new campaign.

The corresponding fixture last season demonstrated the best and the worst of both teams as the Gunners raced into a 4-0 lead by half-time, only to succumb to a stunning fightback to allow the Magpies to snatch a point.

In that respect, Pardew will have been delighted to see his side reach the break with their clean sheet intact, although perhaps not with the pattern of play which had seen the visitors dominate.

Even without Cesc Fabregas and Samir Nasri in the starting line-up as speculation mounted over their futures at the Emirates Stadium, Arsenal moved the ball confidently with Andrey Arshavin and Tomas Rosicky particularly prominent.

Gervinho, one of the men close to the top of the list of strikers Pardew tried to sign during the summer - the vacancy at St James' Park remains unfilled - caused problems for makeshift left-back Ryan Taylor as he repeatedly pulled to a wide right position.

However, although he linked up with Robin van Persie on numerous occasions, Wenger's men were unable to break down a defence well-marshalled by new skipper Fabricio Coloccini and Steven Taylor to the extent that keeper Krul, preferred to Steve Harper and Fraser Forster, did not have a single save of note to make during the first 45 minutes.

Rosicky steered an early shot wide of the Dutchman's far post, but despite all the pressure, his only anxious moment came 14 minutes before the break when he spilled the Czech Republic international's corner under Laurent Koscielny's challenge and Danny Simpson had to clear off the line.

In fairness, opposite number Wojciech Szczesny was similarly under-employed as strikers Shola Ameobi and Demba Ba saw too little of the ball to cause any damage.

He got down well to collect Simpson's deflected 17th-minute cross and Jonas Gutierrez smashed a 22nd-minute volley well wide, but the Gunners' goal rarely came under any real threat during the first half.

Pardew changed both personnel and formation after the break when he withdrew Ba and replaced him with another debutant, Gabriel Obertan, who lined up in a five-man midfield behind lone striker Ameobi.

Kieran Gibbs and Rosicky picked up bookings in quick succession as the game restarted at a high tempo, but it was the visitors who came close to breaking the deadlock with 55 minutes gone.

Gutierrez was penalised for a challenge on Rosicky wide on the right and Van Persie sent in a viciously-dipping free-kick which dropped onto the roof of the net with Krul desperately trying to get across.

Yohan Cabaye was unable to make the most of Obertan's back-heeled 61st-minute ball into the box, and Wenger decided to make a change of his own seconds later when he replaced Arshavin with England international Walcott.

The newcomer might have given his side the lead within minutes when he ran onto Aaron Ramsey's through-ball, but he could not beat Krul from close range.

However, the game exploded into controversy with 14 minutes remaining when Barton reacted furiously to what he believed was a dive by Gervinho under Cheick Tiote's challenge inside the box.

The Ivory Coast international lost his cool and slapped Barton in the resulting melee, and referee Peter Walton had little option but to produce a red card.

Newcastle might have snatched victory at the death, only for the impressive Koscielny to deny substitute Peter Lovenkrands a close-range header, but that would have been harsh on the visitors, who were nevertheless booed from the pitch.