They are now unbeaten on their last eight visits to the Mersey area. Oh, and just for good measure, they have blasted 33 goals against Liverpool and Everton in four years.
Never mind the one-goal victory margin, the Gunners were in a different league for so much of the game.
Goals from Bacary Sagna - about as likely as a long-term contract extension for Roy Hodgson - and Cesc Fabregas had wrapped up the points after 48 minutes.
Tim Cahill's late close-range effort did raise Blue hopes of a comeback to match the one which saw them bag the unlikeliest of draws against Manchester United here.
But, in all honesty, David Moyes' men could have expected a charge of daylight robbery had they managed it again.
In fact, the biggest surprise was it took until 10 minutes before the break for the Gunners to find a way through - that and the identity of the scorer of course.
Prior to yesterday Sagna had managed just one goal for the club in three years, the opener in a 2-1 loss at Chelsea back in March 2008.
Well now he can make it two in 32 months, after a tight-angled rocket which nearly took the net from its mooring.
Three minutes after half-time that lead was doubled, courtesy of a goal that left manager Moyes raging on the touchline.
Fabregas paved the way by feeding Marouane Chamakh on the right, but even then Everton had plenty of bodies back to deal with the danger.
Yet when he clipped the ball across, Fabregas - despite the attention of FIVE defenders - stuck out a boot to guide it home.
It was a goal which summed up Everton's woeful lack of bite and spirit to that point, even more galling given those are two things they usually have in abundance.
Only John Heitinga had shown any real desire for a scrap, picking up a yellow card off referee Howard Webb for one late lunge on Jack Wilshere as he did so.
Yet having been sent off by the same official in the World Cup final, Moyes hauled him out of the action for the second half.
It took that second goal from Fabregas to finally spark the rest of those in blue into any sort of angry response.
Yet even then you sensed the Gunners could have picked them off at will should they have needed a third.
Quite how they did not manage it from Chamakh, however, had to be seen to be believed as the Moroccan somehow ballooned over from three yards out without a defender in sight.
Tim Howard also had to produce heroics to deny Nasri yet again, while only a superbly-timed Phil Jagielka tackle nicked the ball away from Arshavin. If Arsenal are guilty of one thing, it is giving opponents a glimmer of hope when really they should be out of sight. It was the same story at Goodison yesterday.
Even then it took until 10 minutes from time to call Lukasz Fabianski into action - and what a response we got from the Gunners keeper.
His full-length dive to push away Jermaine Beckford's opportunist strike was the best of his saves, but the ones to deny Louis Saha and Steven Pienaar were not far behind.
Cahill eventually pulled one back but the Gunners held on for another Mersey killing.
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