Daily Archives: August 17, 2011

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August 17, 2011 posted by Tim Stillman

A right good tongue lashing

Tim Stillman Column

In the age of the microwave culture, with the spectre of media hyperbole dangling grimly in front of us like King Kong’s nutsack, every week is an enormous week for a club like Arsenal. Every result has permanent ramifications; every fluctuation of fortune is intransient and every whisper of discontent has the tabloids reaching into their clipart files for the broken cannon graphic. But even in respect of vituperative and omnipresent crisis coverage, the last seven days have been something of a whirlwind for Arsenal.

The most striking incident of the week has obviously been the conclusion of one of the more torturous transfer pursuits of the modern age with our captain finally sealing his move to Barcelona. I have covered my impressions of the transfer elsewhere,  so I shan’t retread old ground, save to say that Cesc should leave with our best wishes and be remembered as a true great of this club.

Cesc FabregasHowever, the Chinese water torture approach to the transfer from Barcelona leaves me feeling embittered towards them, to the extent that I am actually willing that obnoxious cunt Mourinho to take them down a peg or two. That, my friends, is akin to urging a pack of rabies infested hounds to go easy on Piers Morgan’s testicles. An unthinkable prospect I’m sure you’ll concur.

I know there are many arguments to suggest that Arsenal should have concluded this saga much more quickly; but that misunderstands that we weren’t really in the driving seat here. If Barcelona had made an acceptable offer back in May, the club would’ve done business. That Barca didn’t adds further documentation to the portfolio marked ‘Barcelona cuntishness.’

The manager angered some with his press conference a few hours before the wheels really moving on the Fabregas transfer, when he pithily announced, “I expect nobody to leave.” I’d have to stick up for the manager here, even if the phrasing was unfortunate. I think he’s been semantically misinterpreted. Looking at how he emphasised the word “expect” I deduced that he meant he expects nobody to leave in the same way I would expect no human being to murder another. I think it was a nuance of language that didn’t translate into print.

Anyway, Robin van Persie is the new captain now and I think that’s a sound choice. He’s grown up with the club, from being a bit of a “problem child” into one of the most respected and senior figures in the squad. Vermaelen will effectively deputy him. There were a lot of calls for Vermaelen to have been made captain, but I don’t think we need to obsess over minutiae. Since he operates in a different area of the pitch, Vermaelen will be expected to lead the back line. Whether or not he has a piece of cloth strapped to his arm won’t alter that role one tiny bit.

Any eulogies for Cesc really have to put on hold, because we’ve lost an enormous player from our squad and the funds simply must be used to replenish our roster. There is no two ways about that. The Nasri situation is still rumbling on and I do think the club have mismanaged that situation badly. Their apparent indecision, shifts in emphasis, the hard line followed by the grapevine in terms of openness to sale. It has all contributed to a situation where he is still at the club, but not being utilised as a player due to being unsettled. Now we have the unseemly situation of him being at war with the club’s supporters whom, I can personally testify, volubly sung a rather unpleasant song about him at St. James’ Park.

He is effectively dead weight in our squad that needs shipping and replacing. The problem is, one assumes we knew that in June but didn’t act. Whichever way you slice it, the situation is a farce. If you’d asked any Arsenal supporter at the end of May whether they’d have taken the current situation with a fortnight left in the transfer window, I don’t think you’d have had a lot of takers. We’re in a situation where we are perilously close to requiring the panic button in our transfer dealings.

Prospective sellers know this, the club’s fans know this and it will likely lead to us being asked for some inflated prices in the market place. Within reason, we are going to have to say so be it. We cannot go into the season with the squad as threadbare as it is. That we’ve gone into a tie like Udinese without the faintest idea what our playing squad will look like come September 1st is hardly ideal. To progress much further in this shape would be negligent. The club have backed themselves into a corner now.

It’s the sort of situation that led to around 50-60% of the 3,000 travelling fans around me on Saturday imploring the manager to “spend some fucking money.” I didn’t agree with the chants at the time. I thought the team battled hard at St. James’ Park. The chant went up with about eight minutes to go, when we were down to ten men, away from home and grinding out a point. It wasn’t the opportune moment. Particularly when most of those chanting would probably venture that we should spend most of our wedge on defenders, at a time when Koscielny and Vermaelen (along with Szczesny) were enjoying quite superb games.

If anything, I think those chants would probably have had more credence during the Udinese game. Once again, the defence aside, it was a rather impoverished performance that lacked cohesion. But the chants did not air during that match, for no other reason than we were winning. Supporters’ indignation is a fickle tune to dance to. People’s impressions of performance are always dictated by scoreline.

Any attempt to dress the ditty up as some kind of hard-line statement rather falls down in view of the fact for me. If your principles on the matter are that flighty. Maybe that’s just me though. But this is the level of fatalism that is embroidered onto the psyche of the Arsenal populous now. It says, “Unless you are winning, we are going to give you a right tongue lashing.” Nevertheless, it was nice to get back out on the road for an away game again.

In between the fits of pique and the tweets of Pique, there has actually been some football played. There have been positives to glean from the first two games. The partnership of Vermaelen and Koscielny has looked a very symbiotic one. Koscielny in particular doesn’t get the credit he deserves. If he were currently plying his trade for Bolton or Blackburn, Arsenal fans would be feting him as the cure to our defensive ills. He is also unlikely to garner any vestige of credit from the wider media because it doesn’t quite chime with their “Arsenal need Giant Haystacks at centre half” line.

Wojciech Szczesny too seems to have grown an extra foot in stature over the summer. He has been a commanding presence in goal, leaving his line with impunity to relieve the pressure from his defence. It has been notable that he has edged off of his line very early as opponents have shaped to take set pieces. This allows him to make swift decisions as to whether to come and collect or not. He’s given us an assurance in the nets that Almunia and Fabianski have been unable to provide.

However, the creative gumption has been missing badly in both games. We simply have to refurnish our options in the transfer market to amend that shortfall. I have been quietly impressed with Gervinho and his directness. The final ball has been somewhat lacking, but I think that will come as the chemistry with his new team mates froths and bubbles. What a shame that fucknugget Barton has enervated Gervinho’s progress there.

That will have to about do it from me this week. Let’s hope that when I speak to you again next week, we’ll be some way closer to being familiar with our squadron for the campaign ahead. Next week’s blog is likely to be a touch later in the week, as I don’t arrive back from Udine until Thursday evening. I hope to see some of you out there. Up the Arse. LD.

Follow me on Twitter – @LittleDutchVA

Arseblog, the arsenal blog
August 17, 2011 posted by arseblog

Good result but this Arsenal squad is scary

theo_udinese

Video and such

Right, let us start with the positives. A win! And a clean sheet!

The goal came in the 4th minute, Aaron Ramsey got free down the right, his cross had quality and precision and Theo’s finish at the near post was excellent. Just the start we needed to settle everyone down. The team, the fans, Arsene up in the director’s box who spent a lot of time sending messages in electronic bottles to Pat Rice on the touchline, everyone.

Udinese were certainly a threat though. What was noticeable was how quickly they turned defence into attack. At one stage Song was dispossessed deep inside their box, within 10 seconds Vermaelen had to stretch out a leg to prevent a one on one situation inside ours.

Antonio di Natale hit the bar with a free kick that seemed to bamboozle SZCZ and from an Arsenal corner Udinese broke and found themselves one on one with our keeper. Thankfully, Szczesny made a fantastic save, then Song got back to make a great block from the follow up, so there were definite warning signs there.

The start of the second half saw Johan Djourou replace Kieran Gibbs who, unsurprisingly, had picked up a hamstring injury. Counting on the young Englishman was always going to be a risk and just 9 minutes later Djourou did the same thing and was replaced by Jenkinson.

I thought we struggled badly in the second half, we lacked cohesion, there was nobody in midfield to control the game for us, and up front we needed more of an outlet from Chamakh whose form isn’t so much in the toilet as halfway down the u-bend and heading out for sea. Frimpong came on for Rosicky and added some energy to things but it’s a sign of his inexperience that the first two incidents he was involved in gave free kicks to Udinese. One of them in a very dangerous position and di Natale forced a good save from Szczesny.

Theo had our best chance of the half, put through by Ramsey, but he shanked his attempted curler. Late on we might have doubled the lead, again through Theo. Gervinho managed to add a final ball to his dribble, Walcott hit it first time from close range but Handanovic pulled off a really great save to prevent it being 2-0.

Overall, can’t argue with the result. A win and that all important clean sheet. With the players we had missing, with the gaps we have in our squad, and with the quality of the opposition, there was no way we were going to put this tie to bed in the first leg. It was crucial we kept them out, we did that and we go to Italy in decent shape in my opinion, especially as we have a bit of time to sort some things out. More on that anon.

There was no post-game reaction from Arsene who refused to take part in the press conference. There’s some suggestion he was involved in a dispute with UEFA over communication between him and the bench during the game. The risible Geoff Shreeves was giving updates on Sky like some kind of snivelling tell-tale. I’ve rarely heard more pathetic coverage of anything during a football match. I fervently hope that somebody, some time, will simply punch him in the snout during a post-game interview.

Still, it was obvious there was something going on. Pat Rice might have stiff neck this morning from looking up at the director’s box but apparently Arsenal had cleared the channels of communication with UEFA beforehand, before they decided to get the hump with it. Whatever the nuts and bolts of it, it’s all a bit of a storm in a teacup. Much as Sky would like you to believe Wenger was some arch-criminal, it’s fuck all about fuck all, really.

Now, it’s impossible to look at last night and not discuss the state of our team/squad. It is frighteningly thin at the moment, in terms of experience and quality and fitness. Yesterday, the club announced the departures of Emmanuel Eboue and Carlos Vela to Galatasaray and Real Sociedad respectively. To be fair to the manager many people wanted him to get rid of players like Eboue, Vela, Denilson and even Clichy, but I think there was an expectation that there would be replacements.

Cesc is gone, Nasri looks like he’s going (even if the Facebook comments attributed to him yesterday seemingly were false – despite the Arsenal press office telling journalists they were kosher), Bendtner could be off to PSG, both left backs at the club are currently injured, Djourou is injured, Wilshere is injured and still in a protective boot/cast, Gervinho is now into a 3 game domestic ban and I expect Alex Song to join him. If you looked at the Arsenal XI that finished last night’s game, it’s one that you’d associate more with a Carling Cup game than a crucial Champions League qualifier.

It is staggering to me that in a month as important as this our squad is in such poor shape. We know that certain players are extremely injury prone, Gibbs for example, so counting on him to be fit is a gamble. It’s a gamble that lasted 135 minutes of the new season. Djourou’s injury means we’re heading back into Squillaci territory if anything happens to Vermaelen or Koscielny (who, it has to be said, look to be forming a good partnership).

Our midfield is seriously lacking if craft and guile, without van Persie we look toothless in the central striking position, and all the while Arsene has at least £50m (with more to come when we sell Nasri) burning a hole in his pocket. I fully accept that transfers are difficult things, that it’s not like going to a supermarket blah blah blah, but when you hear Arsene talk on Sky about how he’s not afraid to spend money, he just doesn’t want to spend it on average players, it’s hard not think unsavoury thoughts. I mean, I get what he’s saying, and maybe it’s a reflection of the market at the moment, but he spent money on Sylvester, didn’t he?!

And with absolutely no disrespect to the youngsters we have brought in, and the likes of Frimpong who is being blooded at the moment, is it realistic to expect them to be anything other than average? They are being asked to come into a team like Arsenal, where the standards have been set so high, and perform to that level with barely a first team game between them. Look at Frimpong, for example, sent on last night, to make his Champions League debut in a game of such importance, after a grand total of 6 minutes of first team football in his career!

In a way it’s unfair on these young players. There’s throwing them in at the deep end and throwing them in a deep end. I hope that people are aware of how difficult it is for these guys and show them the patience they need. I fear that frustration is so high at the moment this won’t be the case and the fallout from that, and the damage to their confidence, will rest entirely on the shoulders of the manager. He’s asking for too much, too soon, in my opinion.

You cannot let a player of Cesc’s quality go and not replace him. The same with Nasri. He may not be anyone’s favourite right now but you can’t overlook the fact the team, and the squad, will be weaker without him. It might well be a case the departures this week are Arsenal clearing the decks for new arrivals. Remember the 25 man rule, remember the number of players who have to be ‘home grown’, and if we’re making space in the squad for the potential new recruits, then that’s great stuff, but we need those new recruits as quickly as possible.

There’s no scope for playing the market, no time for brinkmanship, August is too important to haggle over price too much. With the money he has available Arsene could bring in three or four experienced players, of good quality, who would add something straight away to the Arsenal team. They would add depth to the squad, allow the youngsters to develop without so much pressure, and provide experience and knowledge to the lads who barely have double-figures in first team football between them.

We got a good result last night, and a point at Newcastle was ok under the circumstances, but in both games Arsenal struggled in terms of performance. That is entirely down to the lack of quality in the squad and it has to be addressed. Urgently. The money we have is no good in our bank account, it must be invested in the squad. Failure to do so, and failure which costs us points, well, I shudder to think at the reaction.

As I said, I can only assume the players going out are making room for players coming in. It’s the only way I can make sense of what’s happening at the moment. If Arsene can’t see that this is the weakest squad he’s had, by some distance, since taking over in 1996, then I’d be very, very worried indeed. T-minus 14 days for the transfer window, but there’s only 4 to Liverpool on Saturday. They need to get their arses in gear.

Finally, Robin van Persie has been appointed the new captain of the club, with Thomas Vermaelen ‘helping’ him. A good decision for me, even if Robin’s contract situation is a touch precarious at the moment. I think both of them have that bit of spike to their character that we need. Think of Robin taking Diaby to task at Blackpool last season, he won’t put up with any slacking.

Right, that’ll have to do. I wonder who we’ll get rid of today.