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Arsenal Player Ratings vs. Sunderland: Uncharacteristic Performance Stings Leaders

Arsenal drew with Sunderland at the Stadium of Light to head into the November international break on a disappointing note.

The Gunners hadn’t conceded in 41 days coming into the game, yet they found themselves down in the first half with some sloppy defending. Daniel Ballard latched onto a loose ball in the Arsenal box and fired a shot past David Raya. The visitors turned up the pressure in the second half and got themselves back into the game.

Bukayo Saka and Leandro Trossard each scored to turn the tie, but Brian Brobbey had the final word. The former Ajax man refused to give up and contorted his body to beat both Gabriel and Raya to rescue a point.

Sunderland have been one of the best stories of the Premier League so far and proved to be a physical match for the league leaders. Arsenal were light in attack, but were defensively shaky in a way fans have not seen so far this term.

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Arsenal

Arsenal made just one substitution at the Stadium of Light. / Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

*Ratings Provided by Fotmob*

GK: David Raya—5.3: His long-range distribution lacked quality, but conceding two goals will come as a shock to what has otherwise been the best defence in the league.

RB: Jurriën Timber—6.8: The right back was solid once again combining in attack with Saka.

CB: William Saliba—6.6: Active on the ball and strong in the air. Was better in the second half.

CB: Gabriel—6.4: An uncharacteristic showing from the Brazilian. His frustration after the late equaliser showed he was unhappy with his performance.

LB: Riccardo Calafiori—6.6: Could have scored a late winner, but his header went right at the Sunderland keeper.

DM: Martín Zubimendi—8.2: Strong in midfield, won the most duels in the game. Credited with the assist for Trossard’s goal, though that was mostly the Belgian’s work.

DM: Declan Rice—6.9: Rice marauded through midfield at will and looked decisive. Bizarrely did not take a single corner the entire game.

AM: Eberechi Eze—7.0: Showcased his quick feet at times, but Eze was in and out of the attack.

RW: Bukayo Saka—8.3: A tale of two halves for the Arsenal captain on the day. Sloppy at times, but lethal for Arsenal’s first goal.

ST: Mikel Merino—7.0: Led the line once again given the attacking absences. Worked hard and pressed high, but Arsenal lacked a central presence at times.

LW: Leandro Trossard—7.6: Consistently was a threat with the ball at his feet and did well to score the second Gunners goal on the night.

Substitute Rating (Out of 10)

Cristhian Mosquera (88’ for Eze) N/A

Subs not used: Kepa Arrizabalaga (GK), Ben White, Myles Lewis-Skelly, Piero Hincapié, Christian Nørgaard, Max Dowman, Andre Harriman-Annous, Ethan Nwaneri

Sunderland (5-4-1)

Starting XI: Robin Roefs; Trai Hume, Nordi Mukiele, Daniel Ballard, Lutsharel Geertruida, Reinildo; Bertrand Traoré, Granit Xhaka, Noah Sadiki, Enzo Le Fée; Wilson Isidor

Subs used: Brian Brobbey, Simon Adingra, Chemsdine Talbi, Eliezer Mayenda

The hosts were up for the occasion to begin the game pressing high to put the leaders under pressure. Any early effort was met by raucous cheers from the crowd.

An errant elbow from Daniel Ballard brought the game to an early stoppage as Mikel Merino received treatment on the field. The makeshift striker was deemed fit to continue following a lengthy delay. Arsenal eventually established their patented strings of possession with most play going through Declan Rice.

Granit Xhaka, the former Arsenal man, was a physical and vocal presence often. The Swiss captain imposed himself and was constantly around referee Craig Pawson.

Ballard sent the Stadium of Light into a frenzy with the opening goal in the 36th minute. Eight straight Arsenal clean sheets in all competitions came to a thunderous end by the right foot of the centre back. Sunderland were reinvigorated and looked sharper from there on maintaining their shape and frustrating their opposition.

Narratives that defined Arsenal last campaign were prevalent at the interval—stagnant and unable to decisively break down an organised, low block.

Behind at the interval.

Time to up the ante, Gunners. pic.twitter.com/Gg5m3BFjPt

— Arsenal (@Arsenal) November 8, 2025

Saka got his side back level less than 10 minutes into the second half after Rice latched onto a loose ball in the Sunderland half. Merino played the captain through and fired a right-footed shot past Robin Roefs at his near post. Eze and Zubimendi had half-chances shortly thereafter to establish a lead, but could not find the back of the net. The latter came closest rattling the crossbar.

Sunderland made three attacking changes looking for a bit more of a threat, though Arsenal kept piling on the pressure. Trossard eventually found the second goal through a thunderbolt of a shot. The Belgian carefully sized up Sadiki, created a bit of space and unleashed a shot that Roefs was helpless to stop.

Just as it seemed Arsenal would come away with all three points, Brian Brobbey with an acrobatic effort beat both Gabriel and Raya to equalise. The Gunners threatened from two set pieces, but could not find a last minute winner.

The points were shared at the Stadium of Light in one of the best games of the Premier League season. Arteta will likely draw criticism for his lack of substitutions given the defensive options he had available to see out the tie.

Statistic Sunderland Arsenal

Possession 31% 69%

Expected Goals (xG) 0.18 0.54

Total Shots 3 5

Shots on Target 1 2

Big Chances 1 1

Passing Accuracy 78% 88%

Fouls Committed 6 6

Corners 1 1

Statistic Sunderland Arsenal

Possession 35% 65%

Expected Goals (xG) 0.44 2.09

Total Shots 6 17

Shots on Target 2 7

Big Chances 2 4

Passing Accuracy 79% 87%

Fouls Committed 13 13

Corners 2 2

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