A bit like London buses, Mikel Arteta has been waiting for his left-backs to be fit and suddenly they have all come along at once.
Oleksandr Zinchenko and Riccardo Calafiori are both hoping to be in the squad for today’s trip to Crystal Palace, which will make Arteta spoilt for choice.
The Spaniard has six players to choose from when it comes to picking a left-back, with Jakub Kiwior, Jurrien Timber, Kieran Tierney and Myles Lewis-Skelly all options alongside Calafiori and Zinchenko.
Early on this season, it felt like Timber was the best choice there and he was particularly impressive at left-back in wins at Aston Villa and Tottenham.
The absence of Ben White at right-back due to a knee injury, however, has now made Timber the answer there.
Arteta has rotated between using Thomas Partey or Timber with White out, but now injuries have eased across the backline that should stop.
There is no need for Timber to play left-back and he can now get a run in the position Arsenal signed him to play.
Jurrien Timber is set for a run at right-back
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That should be music to the ears of Bukayo Saka and Martin Odegaard, who look better when he is at right-back.
Partey has his strengths, but getting forward on the overlap is not one of them and Arsenal’s right flank lacks dynamism when he is at full-back.
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Timber is the opposite of that, marauding forward and taking up such advanced positions that it feels like he is almost playing as a No10 at times when Arsenal have the ball.
“He’s doing that because first of all it’s in his nature,” explained Mikel Arteta. “He’s capable of doing it.
“He feels very comfortable doing it and we try to coach him to play to his strengths and mould the qualities around him with other players as well. I’m very pleased because I think he’s been performing really well.”
When Arsenal signed Timber from Ajax in the summer of 2023, the plan was for him to predominantly play at right-back.
It was felt he could provide genuine cover and competition for White, who has played a lot of minutes under Arteta.
Timber has shown he is capable of that and Arsenal’s recent struggles in attack have coincided with him moving to left-back.
Odegaard and Saka are key to Arsenal’s attack, but who plays behind them is just as important
They scored 10 goals against Sporting and West Ham at the end of November, when Calafiori was left-back and Timber was on the other flank.
Calafiori’s injury forced Timber to swap sides and it was noticeable how his influence was diminished in recent draws with Everton and Fulham.
Even on Wednesday, when Arsenal took on today’s opponents Crystal Palace in the quarter-finals of the Carabao Cup, Timber looked much better in the second-half when he moved from the heart of defence to right-back.
The substitutions of Odegaard and Saka meant Arsenal’s right flank was restored to what it was at the back end of last month.
The Gunners scored three second-half goals and all of them were supplied by the right flank, with Odegaard getting two assists and Saka one.
It has long been known that Odegaard and Saka are key to Arsenal’s attack, but who plays behind them is just as important.
And, on the evidence of this season, Timber is the man to do and get the best out of Odegaard and Saka.