Rice assisted the opener - curling in a free-kick that Gabriel headed home. He then assisted William Saliba for the third goal. The showing against West Ham took his goal involvement for the season to eight in the Premier League - the same number as Rodri.
The difference is Rice has split his evenly with four goals and four assists whereas the City man has five goals and three assists.
When looking at the individual numbers of the two players, there are some similarities. Obviously, they have different roles for their respective teams. Yet both have found a teammate over 90% of the time with their attempted passes this season, for example. The big difference here are that Rodri attempts 112 to Rice’s 72, so, of course, has a greater progressive distance when looking at passing yards. Another differentiator between the two are long passes - Rodri completes 84% while Rice only completes 68%.
Rodri is more progressive in possession. It is why he’s racking up 4.82 shot-creating actions and Rice is only averaging 2.36. Again though, they have different roles within their teams.
Defensively, they’re posting almost identical numbers - tackles, interceptions, challenges won. Rodri is much more dominant in the air, winning 73% of his aerial duels compared to the 43% won by Rice.
This was never going to be about the individual, was it? It is very much about their impact and influence on the team. Rice has had a significant impact on Arsenal. For context, last season, the Gunners had the third-best Expected Goals Against total (42.5) behind Manchester City and Newcastle United. This season, they have the meanest defensive unit with the lowest Expected Goals Against total - just 18.1 from 24 matches.
This doesn’t mean Rice is better than Rodri but you can confidently make the argument that he’s as important to Arsenal as the Spaniard is to City. For Rice to replace him as the best in the world, he needs to keep this up for a few years. For now, Rodri reigns supreme.
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