Arsenal vs Chelsea Report
Arsenal 0-0 Chelsea: Much-changed Blues hold on for point ahead of vital second leg against Barcelona

A much-changed Chelsea team held out to secure a 0-0 draw in a largely lackluster affair against Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium.
Chelsea's 1-0 victory over Barcelona in the Champions League had
evidently taken its toll on the starting XI involved in that match as
Roberto Di Matteo made eight changes to his team.
The Blues were still able to hold their own, however, and frustrated
the Gunners for the most part despite lacking a touch of class in attack
that may have enabled them to take more than one point from the game.
Arsene Wenger looked to add some spark to his side following its
disappointing 2-1 loss to Wigan Athletic by introducing Alex
Oxlade-Chamberlain into the side in place of Yossi Benayoun, who was
unable to feature against his parent club. Aaron Ramsey replaced the
injured Mikel Arteta while Laurent Koscielny and Kieran Gibbs returned
to the back four.
The Chelsea changes included the introduction of young left-back Ryan
Bertrand ahead of Ashley Cole. Fernando Torres replaced Didier Drogba
in attack, with the Ivorian left out of the squad entirely.
The Blues looked happy to sit back and absorb pressure in the early
stages when Arsenal gained possession but looked sharp and threatening
when they sprung out of their compact defensive shape to attack.
Torres nicked the ball away after some diligent defensive work in the
Arsenal half on a couple of occasions but despite moving the ball well
in midfield Chelsea could not take advantage in attack. Salomon Kalou
half-heartedly appealed for a penalty after he had lost control of the
ball when through on goal on the left-hand side.
The home side slowly grew into the game, though, and wasted a golden
chance to take the lead after 14 minutes. Theo Walcott guided a superb
free-kick towards the back post that dropped into the lap of Robin van
Persie but the Dutchman could only stab his finish wide from point blank
range.
From there, the first half petered out. Arsenal struggled to find
fluency in midfield, with Ramsey guilty of coughing up possession on
more than one occasion, while the Chelsea front three of Kalou, Torres
and Daniel Sturridge could not conjure up anything in the final third
that worked Wojciech Szczesny.
Petr Cech remained similarly untroubled until the Gunners carved out a
flurry of opportunities as the half drew to a close. Koscielny was
entirely unmarked when he headed a Van Persie free-kick against the
crossbar before the Dutchman controlled Alex Song's excellent pass to
force Cech into a good block inside the penalty area.
That brief respite in an otherwise tepid affair was not,
unfortunately, a sign of things to come in the second half. The first 15
minutes comprised of a collection of incomplete crosses, mistimed
through balls and, in defense of the two sides, reasonably solid
defending.
Walcott was hauled off just after the hour mark after pulling up with
a hamstring injury that was handled in a way that will not have pleased
Stuart Pearce, England's interim manager, who was in attendance.
Walcott attempted to play on after appearing to suffer a tweak to the
muscle and only seemed to risk aggravating the problem before he again
went down in pain and was substituted minutes later.
Gary Cahill appeared to lean on Van Persie when challenging for a
high ball in the penalty area but referee Dean remained unmoved despite
the striker's protests, while substitute Juan Mata could not instigate
much of an improvement in Chelsea's invention levels in the Arsenal
half.
Van Persie began to find more space as play became more stretched in
midfield but could not take advantage, wriggling away from a couple of
Blues defenders and a stranded Cech in the box only to see his shot
blocked on the line.
Koscielny had to be alert to slide in and prevent Sturridge from
shooting from close range at the other end as the moment of decisive
quality needed to give either side the edge did not come.
Source : Goal.com