Carragher: Arteta may put Yorker in key game

Carragher recently visited Sky Sports. He believes that Arsenal coach Arteta may hide new player Yorke this summer in a key battle of the season.

The forward killer Arsenal spent £63 million this summer is responsible for ending the Gunners' three consecutive Premier League appearances, but in the first round of Old Trafford's 1-0 victory over Manchester United, the Swedish center was silent and was replaced by Havertz in the 60th minute.

Carrag and Gary Neville focused on Arsenal's 22-game unbeaten record against Big6 in Sky Sports. Although Carragher believes that Yorke, who has 52 games last season, will win something this season, he predicted: "To be honest, I think Arteta will re-activate Havertz in the most important game. Of course, Yorketa can score goals, but..."

This remark attracted Neville to refute: "Arteta cannot abandon Yorke in a key battle."

Carragher insisted: "He is completely possible, Haver Z is an indispensable core for Arteta. "

Nevil then proposed a compromise plan: "Since Arsenal has invested heavily in introducing the regular Indian center, it may be necessary to try Havertz and Yorke. Martinelli is struggling in form, and this combination is worth a try."

This summer, the Gunners also spent 60 million pounds to introduce Zubimendi and signed Maduaike 52 million pounds, and new players such as Kepa, Norgo and Moscra also came to invest one after another.

The two commentators agreed that such a bounty suggests Arteta is seeking a tactical breakthrough. Neville pointed out: "The great Arsenals in history have steel defenses and can win against opponents in tough battles. This team with championship strength but always has one goal, must change."

Carragher added: "Although Manchester United played dullly in the first game, the away win showed that they had the best central defender combination in the Premier League. However, to go to the level, they need a goal-shot hub like Zubi Mendy and an end point like Yorke to activate the offense. Last season, Arsenal relied too much on set pieces to score."