Arsenal stayed top of the Premier League but missed a chance to stretch the lead, after a tight 0-0 draw with Liverpool at Emirates Stadium. The result left the gap at the summit smaller than it might
have been, on a night where both teams struggled to create clear chances and neither goalkeeper was consistently troubled.
The match followed a cagey pattern, especially in the second half, with both sides cancelling each other out. Arsenal produced nine attempts to Liverpool’s eight, yet neither team registered many clear sights of goal, and Liverpool did not manage a single shot on target across the 90 minutes.
Arsenal began with intent and controlled long spells, especially before half-time, but Alisson faced few serious tests. Liverpool almost punished that lack of precision when Conor Bradley struck the crossbar during the opening period, producing the closest effort of the game as Arne Slot’s side threatened on the counter during isolated moments.
Underlying numbers highlighted how few decisive openings appeared. Arsenal finished with 0.57 expected goals, while Liverpool recorded 0.36. Both defences handled most dangerous situations well, and final passes or crosses often lacked accuracy at crucial moments, despite promising positions around the penalty area for each attack.
Reflecting on the performance, Mikel Arteta felt one outstanding action was missing, and compared it with August’s reverse fixture at Anfield, when a Dominik Szoboszlai free-kick settled another tight contest. Arteta told Sky Sports: "We know that the margins are very small. I think we have two different halves. The first one, where we have a lot of domination, created big situations with players almost onside the six-yard box to pick a player up, and we didn't find the right pass to score the goal. And the second half was a bit more of a struggle. This game needs some magic moments, and at Anfield, Szoboszlai did it, and they won the game, and today it didn't happen, but you cannot win it, you cannot lose it. "
Arteta also highlighted the strain of the festive calendar and Arsenal’s attacking decisions in advanced areas. Arteta said: "We have some moments where we have the right positional advantages to really hurt them, and then when we got into these areas, we lacked quality to pick the players. We've come from a very demanding schedule. The last six games that we've played in this Christmas period, and we've come out of that in a really strong position. "
Tonight was the first time that Liverpool haven't attempted a single shot on target in a Premier League match for nearly 16 years (March 2010). Here the their team in the last Premier League match that they failed to have one. pic.twitter.com/itUMg0rtNBOpta Analyst (@OptaAnalyst) January 8, 2026
The stalemate marked the first time Arsenal failed to score in a Premier League fixture since the defeat to Liverpool at Anfield earlier this season. It was also the first 0-0 league draw between Arsenal and Liverpool since August 2015, underlining how matches between these clubs usually produce goals.
Recent head-to-head trends offered little comfort for Arsenal as league leaders. The Gunners have now gone five Premier League games without a win against Liverpool when starting the day at the top, drawing four and losing one. All three such meetings during Arteta’s tenure ended level, reinforcing how slim the margins have remained between these sides.











