

One of the best Premier League subplots during the late 2000s and early 2010s was just how easily Tony Pulis Stoke City could get under the skin of Arsene Wengers Arsenal.
The contrasting styles of the two sides saw The Potters physical approach often leave the more elegant Gunners battered and bruised when they headed to the then-Britannia Stadium.
In fact, during Pulis tenure at Stoke, Arsenal would only win once in six visits to the Potteries.
Pulis on getting the best of Arsenal
Pulis oversaw five top-flight seasons with Stoke, who never finished lower than 14th in the table, thanks to their set-piece prowess, Rory Delaps famed long throw and their general ability to make a nuisance against even the most skilful opponents.
The club that complained most about their tactics was Arsenal, who deployed a much less physical style under Wenger, but have since become the Premier Leagues set-piece kings during Mikel Artetas reign.
Its an irony that isnt lost on Pulis.
We always seemed to have it over Arsenal, psychologically as much as anything else, Pulis tells FourFourTwo. Arsene was bemused by the fact that Rory could throw the ball that well, and bemused that we could cause so much trouble by doing that.
He tried to ban throw-ins, then he complained about the length of the grass on the pitch, then he mentioned that our pitch was the smallest in the league it wasnt, it was the same size as the pitch at Goodison Park.
He found all these reasons to have a dig when they came to play at the Britannia, but it was brilliant if we could have played Arsenal every week, we would have done, because it was so enjoyable.
The crowd were always up for it.
Mind you, for the first two or three years in the Premier League at Stoke, every home game was extraordinary.
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