Mikel Arteta urges Arsenal to bring City losing streak to an end
Mikel Arteta has called for Arsenal to change their Premier League losing streak against Manchester City ahead of their clash at the Emirates on Sunday. Arsenal are without a league win against the treble-winners since 2015 and a defeat on Sunday would extend their losing run to 13. Arteta highlighted that his side have broken winless streaks against other sides and called for his players to do the same against City. “When I came here I think it was 18 years at Old Trafford, 17 years at Stamford Bridge and we have since done it, so lets change it,” Arteta said. “My only worry is the quality of the opponent and that’s unquestionable and on Sunday we have to be at our best for 100 minutes. That’s what we can control and we need to focus. “In these big games you need big players with talent who make it count. Duels are a big thing in a game which can go one way or another.” Arteta lauded “top player” Declan Rice who he believes has adapted quickly to life in north London after his summer switch from West Ham. Rice moved for a reported £105m in July and has featured in all seven league matches for the Gunners, scoring their second in a 3-1 win over Manchester United in September. And Arteta highlighted the midfielder’s attributes which has allowed him to adjust to his new surroundings. “With Declan, I am extremely pleased. He has the qualities, the presence, the understanding to be a top player for us in his position,” Arteta added. “When you pay that sum of money you hope that they adapt really quickly but I think overall he’s adapted really nicely. “The league, the opponents, the demands we have here, the player he is for the national team, his previous club as well are all really relevant (reasons he has settled in quickly).” Erling Haaland failed to score when Arsenal beat City in the Community Shield in August and Arteta believes his defenders have the physicality to nullify the Norwegian’s strengths. He said: “That game was a while ago and it will be different, they will do different things as well but we are prepared to play to our strengths. “I think we have enough physicality in the backline to deal with those players (Haaland) and we have to prove it with every action on Sunday.”
1970-01-01 08:00
Chris Rock to direct Martin Luther King Jr. biopic
Chris Rock is in final talks to helm a movie about the civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr. with Steven Spielberg also on board as an executive producer.
1970-01-01 08:00
'I still do have my faith in the taste of people in this country': Oasis triumph in 1990s album countdown
Oasis have taken the two top slots in a countdown of the most streamed albums of the 1990s with '(What's the Story) Morning Glory?' and 'Definitely Maybe' respectively.
1970-01-01 08:00
John 5 studied Motley Crue before joining the group
John 5 wanted to make sure he knew everything about the band's performance style so he wouldn't be "nervous".
1970-01-01 08:00
'The world is so vast': David Gordon Green has lots to explore in The Exorcist trilogy
David Gordon Green has a range of ideas for 'The Exorcist' trilogy ahead of the release of his movie 'The Exorcist: Believer'.
1970-01-01 08:00
'These are musical things that I don't get to do in the band': Chvrches singer Lauren Mayberry on making solo music
Chvrches singer Lauren Mayberry wanted to make different music as she embarks on a solo career.
1970-01-01 08:00
Ukraine Recap: Russian Missiles Strike Odesa Grain Facilities
Russia struck multiple targets in Ukraine’s Odesa region with missiles, damaging port infrastructure and grain stockpiles and injuring
1970-01-01 08:00
Russia plans to reverse global nuclear test ban, announces envoy
Russia plans to withdraw its ratification of the 1996 treaty that prohibited the testing of nuclear weapons, the country’s envoy to the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organisation [CTBTO] said on Friday. “Disturbed” by the move, the US denounced it as endangering "the global norm" against nuclear test blasts. The announcement by Mikhail Ulyanov on Friday added new fuel to tensions between Russia and the United States over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine and arms control disputes between the world’s largest nuclear weapons powers. Mr Ulyanov, Moscow’s envoy to the CTBTO, said on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, that "#Russia plans to revoke ratification (which took place in the year 2000) of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty." "The aim is to be on equal footing with the #US who signed the Treaty, but didn’t ratify it. Revocation doesn’t mean the intention to resume nuclear tests," he said. The CTBT has been signed by 187 countries and ratified by 178 but cannot go into force until eight specific holdouts have signed and ratified it. China, Egypt, Iran, and Israel have signed but not ratified it. North Korea, India and Pakistan have not signed. While the United States signed but did not ratify the treaty, it has observed a moratorium on nuclear weapon test explosions since 1992 that it says it has no plans to abandon. "We are disturbed by the comments of Ambassador Ulyanov in Vienna today," a US State Department spokesperson said in a statement. "A move like this by any State Party needlessly endangers the global norm against nuclear explosive testing." It said that Russia should not be “wielding arms control and irresponsible nuclear rhetoric in a failing attempt to coerce other states”, in an apparent reference to Moscow’s efforts to pressurise countries into withdrawing their arms support and aid to Ukraine. Mr Ulyanov’s statement came a day after Russian president Vladimir Putin said that Moscow could look at revoking its ratification of the CTBT. He argued that Russia could mirror the stand taken by Washington. “Theoretically, we may revoke the ratification,” he said, after Moscow successfully tested an experimental nuclear-powered cruise missile. Moscow last tested a nuclear weapon in 1990, before the collapse of the Soviet Union a year later. It ratified the global test ban in 2000. Many Russian hawks have spoken in favour of resuming the tests, since its invasion of Ukraine, in February last year. Mr Putin said that while some experts have talked about the need to conduct nuclear tests, he hasn’t yet formed an opinion on the issue. “I’m not ready to say yet whether it’s necessary for us to conduct tests or not,” he said. "It would be concerning and deeply unfortunate if any State Signatory were to reconsider its ratification of the CTBT," Robert Floyd, the executive director of the CTBTO, which monitors compliance with the pact, said in a statement. "The Russian Federation has consistently reaffirmed its strong support of the CTBT since its very inception, helping to negotiate the Treaty in the Conference on Disarmament, signing the day it opened for signature on 24 September 1996, and ratifying it in June 2000," he added. Russian withdrawal could be a blow to the treaty since, like the eight key holdout countries, it is one of the "Annex 2" countries that must all ratify the treaty it for it to enter into force. "I look forward to continued close cooperation with the Russian Federation and all States that have committed to creating a world free of nuclear testing," Mr Floyd said. Read More Ukraine-Russia war – live: Putin’s ‘inhuman’ missile strike hit area with no military targets, says Kyiv Ukraine village reels after deadly missile strike: ‘Everything was burning’ ‘You can still smell the blood’: Inside the village where more than 50 were killed by a Russian missile The Body in the Woods | An Independent TV Original Documentary The harrowing discovery at centre of The Independent’s new documentary
1970-01-01 08:00
'I was talking about...': Travis Kelce's mom Donna teases details about game day chat with Taylor Swift on 'Today'
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce have become the talk of the town and the singer has been attending the football tight end's games along with his mother
1970-01-01 08:00
Europe’s Fiscal Champion Just Can’t Win as Irish Budget Awaited
Ireland’s imminent budget announcement may succeed in turning a fiscal position that impresses everybody into a policy announcement
1970-01-01 08:00
Russian Attacks Are Edging Closer and Closer to NATO Territory
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization has an increasingly tricky problem in its backyard: how to confront the spillover
1970-01-01 08:00
Bangladesh wins the toss and will bat first against Afghanistan at the Cricket World Cup
Bangladesh has won the toss and chose to bowl against Afghanistan at the Cricket World Cup at Dharamsala, India
1970-01-01 08:00
