Community
9 September 2025 9 comments
Bordeaux FC Bordeaux FC
Share:

Community writer Bordeaux FC heralds Arsenal’s defence, from the strength in numbers to Mikel Arteta’s cautious approach.


The Arsenal defence is, to FPL managers, a safe haven. A tried and trusted fortress protected by the metaphorical moat of Mikel Arteta’s cautious nature.

Arteta is a manager who served his apprenticeship under Pep Guardiola, and inherited his obsession with controlling football matches. The cut and thrust, with which the Premier League is so often associated, subdued by metronomic passing, overwhelming technical skill, and the occasional tactical foul.

After Arteta left Manchester to take up his position at Arsenal’s helm, Pep evolved once more, enlisting gladiatorial centre-backs to finally overcome the hurdle of UEFA Champions League glory.

In that year, Arsenal had led the way in the Premier League for much of the season. As City mounted an imperious run that led to a historic treble, Arsenal faded meekly. Arteta’s side conceded 16 goals in the last nine games, and a lack of squad depth was exposed when an injury to William Saliba (£6.1m) coincided with a run of four league games without a win, and 14 goals conceded.

This porous backline sits in stark contrast to the Arsenal of 2025. And this is not by accident.

STRENGTH IN DEPTH

FPL pre-season: Calafiori debut, Nkunku benched + Maresca on Neto

When the Gunners lost a 2-0 lead at Anfield and succumbed to City’s superior strength, it appears Arteta made an oath: never again. Only once this century has a team won the Premier League when conceding 43 goals, the number that Arsenal conceded in 2022/23. Over subsequent seasons, he has sculpted his team into a defensive masterpiece.

Alongside Saliba, Gabriel Magalhaes (£6.1m) and Ben White (£5.4m), Arteta has assembled his own band of iron-plated warriors. With the additions of Jurrien Timber (£5.6m), Riccardo Calafiori (£5.7m), Cristian Mosquera (£5.4m) and Piero Hincapie (£5.5m), and the departure of Rob Holding, Kieran Tierney and Oleksandr Zinchenko, among others, Arsenal have built one of the most formidable backlines in recent history.

Sceptics may point to last season, when the Gunners only mustered 13 clean sheets after a promising start, but again injuries to White, Gabriel, Calafiori and Timber meant Arsenal regularly fielded a backline that was far from first choice. Now, Arteta has seven (yes, seven) robust and accomplished defenders in place, with the impressive Myles Lewis-Skelly (£5.4m) offering another option at full-back too.

This summer, Arsenal’s transfer business has seen this defensive depth replicated across the rest of the squad, when previously it seemed the fixation on accumulating defensive assets had come at the expense of investment in attacking areas. This should mitigate the fatigue that can compromise Arsenal’s intensity out of possession and the drop in quality when injury inevitably strikes.

A TEST OF ARTETA’S RESOLVE?

FPL notes: Arteta on rotation, Saka's fitness + Merino

Maybe then the risk to Arsenal’s defensive fortitude this season is not injury, fatigue, or inexperience, but a test of Arteta’s resolve. At Anfield, his side, minus Bukayo Saka (£9.9m), Martin Odegaard (£7.9m), Saliba and Kai Havertz (£7.4m), quietened the crowd and dominated the first hour. Yet there was still a caution and measure about their performance – a backwards pass, a slow walk to the corner to deliver a carefully choreographed set-piece. These are, for any visitors to Anfield, advisable precautions, but there was an inescapable sense that this was a missed opportunity.

Yes, Dominik Szoboszlai’s (£6.5m) outstanding free-kick was, from Arteta’s perspective, bad fortune (with an xG of 0.03). But when you embrace tight, low-scoring games, moments and small margins can snatch your success. Arne Slot wants Liverpool to rout their opponents, and this is driving the tactical evolution of his title-winning side. The ever-restless Guardiola has also pivoted away (perhaps inadvisably) from the rugged defence which brought such success in 2023.

But I don’t think Arteta will throw caution to the wind. He has come too far down this road and invested too much of himself and Arsenal’s transfer budget in it. This is, of course, good news for FPL managers looking to cash in on clean sheets in a world of defensive contribution plays. And it could still be good news for Arsenal fans, too. This team has come far – second is now a failure, when for so long fourth was a success.

There are no guarantees in football, and with so many sides in transition (including Liverpool), Arteta’s consistency and conviction may still bring him the title he so craves. If it does, he will stand on the shoulders of Arsenal’s defensive giants.


9 Comments Login to Post a Comment
  1. Skonto Rigga
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • Has Moderation Rights
    • 8 Years
    2 months, 26 days ago

    Great piece, this, Bordeaux. Given the strength in depth and 'utility man' status of a few of their backline options, I'm certainly leaning towards set-and-forget Raya on a GW6/7 Wildcard.

    1. Bordeaux FC
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      2 months, 26 days ago

      Thank you! I'm on wildcard this week and have gone with Raya - I know he had a good start last season but can't see past him as the best set and forget GK option this year.

  2. FPL Virgin
    • Fantasy Football Scout Member
    • 9 Years
    2 months, 26 days ago

    Nice article, Bordeaux FC. Well done.

    Which Arsenal defender(s) are you going for in your own FPL team?

    1. Bordeaux FC
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      2 months, 26 days ago

      Thank you! I think Raya is a great pick given price and Arsenal low on def cons. Calafiori has looked great so far, even in the Liverpool game - so weighing up the rotation risk against the high ceiling with attacking returns.

    2. Pariße
      • 10 Years
      2 months, 25 days ago

      It comes down to their nailedness vs threat and defcons, and I think Raya is the most boring pick from their defence.

      But others have a certain downside:
      - Timber is too good to bench at the moment, but the same often goes for White. He's very active in build-ups on Arsenal's much more dominant right hand side.
      - Calafiori is competing with Skelly and Hincapie, and winning, and looks by far the most attacking in open play, both overlapping and cutting inside.
      - Gabriel, nailed, big threat with a special role in Arsenal's corner tactics, but opponents seem to focus on that a lot and he's not getting too many DefCons.

      I think Gabriel altogether is worth the extra cash. Calafiori might sit one out immediately once the fixtures get lighter.

      1. mixology
        • Fantasy Football Scout Member
        • 13 Years
        2 months, 25 days ago

        Nice summary here. I still think Saliba is also a good pick. Sometimes Gabriel’s goal threat is overstated as you mention.

        I swear whenever Ars are on pace for a clean sheet you’ll see Saliba in the bonus, whereas Gabriel is typically a few bps out of the bonus. He’s that off-beat stream of 7-8 points while Gabriel owners get 6 with an “almost scored” justification to go with it

        1. Pariße
          • 10 Years
          2 months, 25 days ago

          Exactly, left out Saliba due to injury. We could also try to analyse Mosquera, but truly Saliba is the DefCons and Baps magnet of the bunch.

  3. I Member
    • 10 Years
    2 months, 25 days ago

    If Cole is confirmed fit and ready to start which combo would you prefer on FH?

    A) Palmer + Burn (4-4-2)
    B) Gyokeres + Barnes (3-4-3)

    1. Bordeaux FC
      • Fantasy Football Scout Member
      2 months, 25 days ago

      Close call. Chelsea have Bayern away in the CL so might be cautious with Palmer's minutes, and Gordon will likely play in the CL meaning Barnes could get 90. So on that basis probably prefer B.