There are draws that feel like defeats.
There are draws that feel like warnings.
And then there are draws that quietly move you four points clear at the top of the table.
This one sits somewhere in the middle.
At the Gtech Community Stadium, we were held 1–1 by Brentford — a ground where very few leave with all three points — but after Manchester City trimmed our lead the night before, this was always going to be tense, attritional and unpleasant.
And it was.
Stale First Half: A Game of Shadows
You could feel the anxiety. League leaders on a four-game winning run. Brentford beaten just twice at home all season. Two systems cancelling each other out.
The first 45 minutes were less chess match, more arm wrestle.
Our best "chance" was Gabriel accidentally shoulder-barging a corner toward goal. That tells you everything. The only shot on target of the half came courtesy of a David Raya mishap — a misjudged roll-out that nearly turned into catastrophe before he redeemed himself with a point-blank save.
Four total shots in the half. Second-lowest first-half tally in the league this season.
The Gtech was simmering, not boiling.
A Moment of Quality
Mikel Arteta blinked first. Martin Ødegaard on. Control restored. Slightly.
Then, just past the hour mark, we finally produced something that resembled champions.
Piero Hincapié recycled a half-cleared throw, shaped his body, and delivered a wicked curling cross. And there was Noni Madueke — hanging, pausing, defying gravity — to glance a header into the far corner.
His 15th Premier League goal. His third header. Our first shot on target.
Clinical. Efficient. Ruthless.
Top-of-the-table stuff.
The Long Throw That Wouldn't Die
And yet.
You don't come to Brentford and escape the long throw. It's like tax. Inevitable.
Michael Kayode hurled one into orbit. Sepp van den Berg flicked it on. Keane Lewis-Potter attacked it like a man diving into the Channel.
1–1.
It was Brentford's fourth goal from a throw-in situation this season. The league has now seen 30 goals from throw-ins — the most in 15 years. Football, apparently, has returned to Stoke 2009.
We knew it was coming. We still couldn't stop it.
Chaos, Almost Glory
From there, the game opened up.
Thiago Silva nearly punished us. Cristhian Mosquera made a recovery tackle worthy of a mural. Silva then skied a sitter in stoppage time.
And then we had our moment.
Gyökeres fed Timber. Timber squared. Gabriel Martinelli — one-on-one, golden opportunity, script written.
Caoimhín Kelleher stuck out an arm and swatted the fairytale away.
You could almost hear the collective intake of breath from north London.
Perspective (Deep Breath)
Let's zoom out.
- 17 times we've scored first this season.
- Only twice have we failed to win.
- Brentford have lost just twice in 11 at home.
- We're four points clear.
This wasn't a collapse.
It wasn't a wobble.
It was a difficult away ground behaving exactly as advertised.
Yes, we should defend throw-ins better. Yes, Martinelli buries that nine times out of ten. Yes, I'd prefer we didn't wait until the 61st minute for a shot on target.
But title races are not won by vibes. They're won by accumulation.
And we accumulated.
What's Next
Now it's rotation and focus.
- FA Cup vs Wigan Athletic at the Emirates Stadium.
- League trip to Wolverhampton Wanderers.
- Then the small matter of a trip to Tottenham Hotspur in the second north London derby of the season.
Four points clear. February looming. The air getting thinner.
If this is what an "off day" looks like, I'll take it.
We march on.