

4 Footballers who have played for both clubsĪ particularly memorable match between the two sides came on 1 February 1958, when they met in a league fixture at Highbury.1.4 2004–05: Unbeaten run ends, tunnel fracas.1.3 2003–04: Brawl and Cup semi-final meeting.Several players have featured for both clubs at different stages of their career, including Brian Kidd, Andy Cole, David Platt, Robin van Persie, Danny Welbeck, Alexis Sánchez and former manager George Graham. Wayne Rooney has scored the most goals in the fixture with 12, while Ryan Giggs has made the highest number of appearances with 50. United have won 98 to Arsenal's 86, and 53 matches have ended in a draw. Īrsenal and Manchester United first played a competitive match in October 1894 as of 4 September 2022, the two clubs have faced each other 237 times in total.

Other factors for the diminishing importance of the rivalry in the 2010s were the ascendancy of other clubs, including local rivals of both ( Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester City). Ferguson also stated that the two teams' meetings had cooled from their previous "heated" exchanges. A season later, Manchester United ended Arsenal's unbeaten run in controversial circumstances, which led to more disorder, this time in the tunnel.īy 2008 former Arsenal player Lee Dixon noted that the rivalry had diminished. The league fixture in September 2003, known as the " Battle of Old Trafford", was marred by a mêlée instigated by Arsenal players, who felt striker Ruud van Nistelrooy had cheated to get Vieira sent off. There was also an enmity between the managers, Arsenal's Arsène Wenger (1996–2018) and United's Sir Alex Ferguson (1986–2013), and club captains Patrick Vieira and Roy Keane, and their contests often involved on-field trouble – seven red cards were shown in matches from February 1997 to February 2005. Although Arsenal and Manchester United have frequently been in the same division in English football since 1919, the rivalry between the two clubs only became a fierce one in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when the teams regularly competed against each other for the Premier League title and FA Cup.
