Monthly Archives: September 2011

Arseblog, the arsenal blog
September 19, 2011 posted by arseblog

Defensive coach is Arsene’s last throw of the dice

Welcome to a fairly gloomy Monday morning. Not just from a weather point of view either. Ideally we’d be sitting here now looking forwards, not backwards, and twirling, always twirling, after a good win at the weekend. The reality is somewhat different.

The team hit its easy to find self-destruct button again against Blackburn and the frequency with which we do that seems to be increasing, which is a real worry. Perhaps you could trace it back to that calamitous 4-4 draw with Sp*rs a few seasons ago, when we threw about a two goal lead with just a couple of minutes of injury time to go. Since then we have, in all competitions, conceded 4 goals a further six times, conceded 3 on countless occasions and that eight at Old Trafford will live long in the memory.

We are a team that concedes too many goals. Look at the way our goals against tally has gone in the last few years.

So far this season we have conceded 14 goals in 5 games. Perhaps the Manchester glut skews things slightly, but come the end of the season when the numbers are crunched, it won’t matter too much when or how they went in, just that they went in. And they continue to go in despite personnel changes. Arsenal’s back five against Sp*rs for that 4-4:

Almunia – Sagna – Gallas – Sylvester – Clichy

The back 5 on Saturday:

Szczesny – Sagna – Mertesacker – Koscielny – Santos

Only one player from that day remains, Bacary Sagna, who, at least, is reliable and consistent. All the rest have changed yet the defensive flaws remain the same. We are liable to the quick ball over the top, our offside trap is ineffective (witness both Santos and Koscielny playing Yakubu onside), there appears to be a lack of communication and despite the manager saying we had improved from set-pieces that’s clearly not the case.

Yet there’s something more to it, I think. Something less tangible. We’re almost schizophrenic in the way we can turn from a team playing good, confident football to one that looks bereft of any self-belief in an instant. If we were a boxer you might say we have a glass jaw. One good punch and we’re reeling. You could almost see the team go into its shell after Song’s own goal, knowing that any further blows could be knock-outs.

Do we have a club pyschologist? If so, he’s rubbish. I suspect, had we equalised late on Saturday, we might have heard something about the mental strength we showed to fight our way back. And sure, there’d be something to that, but wouldn’t it be better to show the mental strength not to go 4-2 down in the first place? Winning games, performing well, producing consistent results, all these things are a product of mental strength too. Clawing your way back into a game isn’t the only way to demonstrate it.

The real worry for me is that when a team is struggling for form and confidence, the way we are right now, you eschew any grand designs you might have, and go back to basics. Keep it simple, do the easy things, do them well and often and they become the building blocks for recovery. So when you read the manager talk about that you can’t help but be concerned. He said:

We made mistakes and, at this level, you cannot make the mistakes that we made. We made basic errors.

I highlighted the talk about lack of focus yesterday and that too is an issue, but when you can’t even have any confidence in your safety net, the ability to do the basics properly, then you know things are going to continue to be very difficult.

There’s talk that the players themselves are behind the manager still but want improved defensive coaching. However, it seems to me that this kind of appointment would require the manager to seriously compromise his beliefs. His training sessions are sacrosanct. We know how he controls everything, to the minute, his drills etc are his own, and while there’s no doubt he’s put together a great defence before (The Invincibles), he seems unable to do it now.

Stevie BouldPeople talk about Martin Keown, which is a fair shout, but he seems to be more focused on a career in the media at the moment. Which is entirely his right. I have no idea if he’d want to get into the nitty-gritty of coaching day in, day out. He did some work with the back four during our Champions League run but he was never our defensive coach and never had that much control over the work he did.

What strikes me as so obvious is that Steve Bould has been at the club for years now, working his way up, learning as a coach, and is now stuck in something approaching limbo. He’s a ‘Youth-team coach’ and while I’m sure he enjoys that work he must feel he’s paid his dues at this stage. He’s done it the hard way, no managerial position straight after retirement, no failing because he had no experience, he’s put the hours in on the training ground.

And he seems to get slightly overlooked when people talk about the famous George Graham defence. Here’s a man who went through drill after drill after drill, George pitting his back four on the training ground against 6 attackers, then 8 attackers, honing the offside trap, teaching them, making sure that what they did was second nature.

To me it seems obvious that if Arsene Wenger wants help with coaching his defence he’s got the perfect man right under his nose. Bould has been brought up as a coach with the new Arsenal, focusing on the technical side of the game, ensuring players are comfortable with the ball in order to keep possession as much as possible. But he was forged in the old Arsenal, where organisation, communication, and hard work on the training ground translated into performances on the pitch.

Perhaps it’s a case we’re hankering for halcyon days but these are difficult times. We would be entirely wrong, frustrated as we are, to lose sight of all that Wenger has done for the club and the style of football he’s provided. However, it would be no shame to admit needing help, the numbers don’t lie, we’re conceding more goals and looking less solid. Confidence, or lack of it, plays a part, no question, but it’s not simply a question of that.

Something has to change and at the moment it seems unlikely to me that it will be the manager. I just don’t see this board making that decision, unless things continue as poorly as they have been for some time to come. And here’s where we come to the vicious circle. If the manager isn’t going to be changed then the only thing that can change is his staff. I said if Arsene wanted help with defensive coaching he’s got the perfect man at the club already, but does he want help?

Does he still believe that he and Pat Rice and Boro Primorac can turn things around? If so, there’ll be no call for Stevie Bould to make the jump up to, perhaps, add something fresh (if vintage in origin) to the training. And I’m worried that without that our defensive woes will continue. And if they do I fear we’re going to have a long, frustrating season on our hands.

When things aren’t working you have to try something new. Doing the same things over and over again, seeing the same problems repeat themselves, is madness. Whatever about Arsene not listening to the fans or the media (in all its forms) when they speak about our defensive woes, if the story above is accurate, he’d be mad not to listen to his players.

Arseblog, the arsenal blog
September 18, 2011 posted by arseblog

Blackburn 4-3 Arsenal: a game of two halves

blackburn_away

Video highlights and reaction

When Arsene Wenger spoke about the need to add consistency to our game, like most of you I thought about a sequence of results and performances which would win points for the football club. I’m pretty sure that he did too, looking to add to the midweek draw and the win against Swansea last weekend.

What became obvious at the final whistle yesterday is that this Arsenal side is not capable of consistency over 90 minutes, let alone from one week to the next. The first, despite conceding an equaliser, was something like the Arsenal of old. Dynamic, attacking, dangerous play, pulling Blackburn apart at times, particularly down our right hand side. The second, Wenger’s Arsenal at their self-destructive worst, casual, sloppy and ultimately punished because of it.

It had started so well. As I said, the first 45 minutes were great to see because it reminded us that when we click we’re a good footballing side. The midfield trio of Arteta, Ramsey and Song were outstanding, while Sagna and Gervinho down the right had Givet pulling his beard out, such was the ease with which they found space and time behind him.

Song set up the first for Gervinho, a lovely ball behind the defence which the Ivorian hit first time back across goal and into the bottom corner. He was involved in the second too, feeding Ramsey who cut it back for Arteta to slam home emphatically. Two first-time scorers for the club, two nice goals. Of course there had been an equaliser between them, Santos and Koscielny played Yakubu onside and his finish was really clever, leaving the onrushing Szczesny stranded.

Then a decisive moment close to the end of the half. Gervinho had waltzed through the Blackburn defence, into the box, and instead of passing to the unmarked Robin van Persie to slot home from 6 yards out, he took a shot which was blocked for a corner. To say the captain was unhappy would be an understatement. Had we gone in 3-1 up at half-time I suspect things might have been different. And I know we always complain about trying to walk it into the net but when the pass is that obvious it has to be made. And on such tight margins can games change.

Whether there was something in the tea at half-time I just don’t know but the Arsenal that came out for the second half was almost unrecognisable from the Arsenal that played in the first. People might talk about us being unlucky, two own goals and an offside goal certainly sounds unlucky, but our woes were of our own making, our defensive frailties all too obvious.

I’m not convinced the free kick awarded against Arshavin was actually a free kick, I thought he got the ball, but when the set-piece was floated in over the players at the near post, it bounded off Song’s thigh and dribbled into the goal. I just can’t understand how a tame ball like that wasn’t attacked by either the keeper or a defender. To let it drop like that, with nobody taking responsibility, was poor.

We then lost Sagna to an injury, replaced by Johan Djourou whose first contribution was to haul down Junior Hoillet after the Blackburn man had gone past him as if he wasn’t there. When Djourou defended well and conceded a corner, Arsenal conceded a third. Wenger spoke before the game about how the new zonal marking system from corners was looking promising. It isn’t. It’s disastrous. Personally, I’m not a fan, and for it to work properly you need a well-oiled, highly organised defensive machine. We’re anything but. For this Arsenal team it does nothing but absolve players of individual responsibility and frankly that’s something we need more of.

There were warning signs in the first half, Koscielny and Santos both beaten in the air by Samba, who should have scored at least once. I guess if a zonal marking system is deployed well then you don’t leave a man free at the back post to fire a shot back across goal. If that man is not free to take that shot then the bloke who is slightly offside can’t tap it in to make it 3-2. Yes, he was offside, and how the linesman didn’t see it I have no idea as replays showed he was right in line, but the defending leading up to it was Sunday League bad.

And it got worse. Blackburn broke from a corner, Djourou slid in on Olsson right on the touchline, and somehow contrived to miss ball and man. At least one of them, preferably both, should have ended up in the third row with the fans. Olsson drove into the box, Song hung out a Denilsonesque leg which he easily sidestepped and his cross was turned into the Arsenal goal by Koscielny to complete a sequence of defensive wretchedness that should be used in manuals up and down the land. ‘What not to do when a team breaks’ by Arsenal FC.

We got one back, Chamakh’s first league goal since November, and had chances to equalise. Mertesacker headed over from 6 yards, van Persie had a shot saved, Chamakh headed wide when he should have got it on target at least, but it wasn’t to be. Blackburn, a team who had one point going into this game, having scored 1 goal at home, scored 4 against us. Blackburn, whose fans protested against their manager before the game, ended up above us in the table at the final whistle.

Afterwards, Arsene said:

It is terrible, it is just not good enough. Of course we are very frustrated, the spirit in the team is quite willing but if you look at the number of goals we have conceded that is not good enough.

Overall we created many chances, even in the second half but we had a lack of focus on what we knew they were strong at – corners, free-kicks.

It’s quite astonishing that just five games into the new season, and with a clutch of new, enthusiastic players at his disposal, that the manager is admitting there was a lack of focus, especially when talking about Blackburn’s threat from set-pieces. Everyone knows they’re strong there, so why on earth was there a lack of focus? Were they reading the piece on the official site about how much better we were at corners now and thought ‘job done’?

I’m not going to go trawling through the archives but I can clearly remember a number of times when players (Sagna and Clichy) and Arsene have spoken about a lack of focus in games we’ve dropped points. These guys are only asked to concentrate for 90 minutes at a time, twice a week. If that’s beyond them, or if it’s beyond the manager to get that out of them, then something has to change. That admission is staggering, the more I think about it.

Arsenal’s start to the season now reads: 2011-2012 P5 W1 D1 L3 F6  A14 GD -8 Pts 4

To put that in perspective, check out @7amkickoff‘s ‘By the numbers’ post on Arseblog News. We have never had a negative goal difference before, let alone -8. The numbers are startling, for this season alone, and when you take into account the run we’re on from last season it’s even more worrying. Just 3 wins from our last 16 league games.

By any standards that’s a concern, by the high standards Arsene Wenger has set at the club, it is, as the manager said himself, terrible. And the longer this run goes on the more you have to question if Arsene is capable of getting us out of it. If the team lacks focus, if the same defensive issues are present regardless of new signings and changes of system, doesn’t it suggest the problem lies much deeper than players and systems?

Of the back four that started yesterday, only Koscielny started the game against United at Old Trafford. New personnel haven’t solved the problem because the problem is much more fundamental. At Old Trafford we conceded eight to a very good United team, yesterday four against a Blackburn team that really aren’t up to much. As Arse2Mouse says, we embolden other teams. We fill them with confidence with our brittleness.

Defensively, we are a shambles. We have been a shambles for some time now and clearly what’s happening on the training ground and with the chequebook isn’t working. A lack of focus at set-pieces against a team like Blackburn is unforgivable and it suggests, to me at least, that the team is not responsive to the manager.

You can’t expect to win games if you concede four goals. We’ve gone away from home in the last few months, scored 3 goals and lost. We’ve scored 4 goals and drawn. The bottom line is that we let too many goals in, we let too many goals in because we can’t defend, we can’t defend because the team is not taught well enough how to defend, and while I’m certainly not privy to everything that goes on behind the scenes, all attempts to solve this problem have thus far failed.

I hear people talking about how we need a new defensive coach. I’m really not sure that’s the answer. It probably wouldn’t hurt but ultimately it’d be like zonal marking, absolving Arsene of the responsibility. The finger could be pointed at the defensive coach, if things went wrong, and not the manager. Anyway, Arsene has resisted all previous calls for an addition to his coaching squad, to do so now would smack of desperation.

Yesterday’s result left me strangely bemused, that if there’s a ludicrous way to lose a match then somehow we’ll manage to find it. This is a team, and more tellingly, a manager really, really struggling right now. If the team can’t find consistency over 90 minutes, what chance over 5 games, or 10 games?

Much as I would like to see Arsene turn it around, and I really would, sometimes it takes a seismic change to make things better. The longer this abject run continues, and the longer the obvious problems we have remain unsolved, the closer the time comes for that change to be made.

Arsenal live blog
September 17, 2011 posted by arseblog

Blackburn v Arsenal – live blog!

Join us for live blogging of Blackburn v Arsenal in the Premier League. Kick off is 12.45pm, team news posted as soon as we have it.

Live blog is 100% free to follow on your computer or mobile device and gives you real time text commentary from the match.

We’ve teamed up with Paddy Power to provide you with great bets, so for tonight’s money back specials and a £50 free bet, check out our betting page.

Click to launch Blackburn v Arsenal live blog

If you want to take part in live blog chat, you need to register an Arseblog account here and signing up. Once logged in you’ll see an option to upgrade to a season ticket premium account. 12 months access costs £10 – which works out at a whopping 0.83p per month!

The subscription allows us to provide a decent place for Arsenal fans to chat during the games, without the craziness you find elsewhere. There’s already a nice community building so come on in! The season ticket will also give you upgraded access to the arses, and other features that we’ll be rolling out over the season.

Register with the Arseblog Portal here. If you have any questions about this, feel free to get in touch.

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

Blackburn preview – defend first, then the rest

Morning all,

the last time Arsenal went this far north for a game it ended up quite badly. The circumstances that day were very different though. It was a team, and possibly a manager, overwhelmed by quality opposition after the most trying of summers. Since then we’ve added to the squad, restored a bit of pride and got ourselves somewhat back on track.

Three points at home to Swansea last Saturday need to be followed up with three points today. Blackburn’s position at the bottom of the table is not really relevant this early in the season. Anyone underestimating them because of that is being a bit foolish. How we perceive them should be based on the games we’ve played against them and at Ewood Park it’s always a test.

The fight and commitment we showed in midweek against Dortmund must be on display again and the manager says it’s like a new beginning:

It starts again, because we have taken five players. It is difficult but we want our fans to be happy, we want to win trophies and we will give absolutely everything to do it. That’s all I can say.

He spoke at his press conference on Thursday about adding some consistency, thus building confidence, and there’s an admission that he’s had to change his own ways to turn things around:

I am highly determined to show that I can do things differently. I can talk and talk and talk, but at the end of the season you will say, ‘Where did you finish?’ So let’s win the next game.

Can’t really argue with that, to be honest. In terms of today’s team, it wouldn’t surprise me at all if the same eleven that started in midweek started today, but with Ramsey likely to be fit again, and Arshavin available, he might make one or two little tweaks in the forward areas.

It’s at the back that we need to show real consistency, however, and Bacary Sagna reckons that a more collective approach to defending and better communication is beginning paying off:

No, I think we are just doing the job more professionally. From Robin to the defence, everybody is giving a bit more for his team-mates and we can see the results straight away. We are a bit sharper at the back, we know we have to be a bit more consistent and talk a bit more to each other. It makes things easier.

I’ve long said that defending is not the sole domain of the back four. A team that works hard from front to back will be a much more difficult team to break down. You only need to look at the defensive work Rooney does for United to see how it should be. And there was a moment on Tuesday night, late on, when Robin van Perise hared back to our left back position to offer cover and to do the work that needed to be done.

That’s the way it should be and no player is above having to track back and at least trying to make things tough for the attacking team. Often just the presence of another player is enough to stop forward momentum and that’s something that needs to be drummed into all our players over and over again until it becomes second nature.

And on a solid defensive platform you can build a much more potent attacking unit. It’s there’s a reassurance that a team can defend well then you’re far more likely to be a threat going forward. It would be nice to see a fresh goalscorer today, to spread the goals around the team a bit. Only van Persie, Walcott and Arshavin have scored for us so far this season. I know it’s still early but if we can start to provide a goalscoring threat from other areas of the pitch and from other players it gives opponents much more to think about.

Blackburn’s Chris Samba says they want to make today a ‘living hell’ and ‘horrible’ for Arsenal. He knows Blackburn well then. But that’s the kind of attitude we’re going to face today. A team under real pressure looking to haul themselves off the bottom of the table. Regardless what’s going on with their manager professional pride will ensure they’ll give 100% until the final whistle and we need to be ready for that.

We know they’re a threat from set-pieces and long balls into the box. They may have changed their style somewhat under this current manager but when it comes right down to it I suspect they’ll go back to what they know best. We certainly look better able to cope with that kind of thing but we can’t take anything for granted.

I think, if we put the effort in, if nobody’s found wanting and if we do the simple things right, we’ll take three points today. Robin van Persie has a great scoring record against Blackburn, Walcott got a great goal here last season too, so fingers crossed we can continue to build and gain some momentum.

Kick off is 12.45, there’ll be full live blog coverage as usual. Remember, it is 100% free to follow the live blog on your computer, iPad, phone etc, but if you want to join in with the live chat you need an Arseblog premium account. Register here and you’ll see the option to upgrade.

12 months access is a mere £10 and it’s a decent place to chat about the game without the messing and hysteria you see elsewhere.

In other news, Wenger on Stan Kroenke:

I feel the owner leaves us to do the job. He listens to financial fair play, which you have to accept. But he will certainly speak out at some stage.

Surely it must be feeding back to Kroenke that the longer he goes without saying something about his plans for the club the more anxious people become. I’m very much of the opinion that sometimes it’s better not to say anything, that there’s no point talking just for the sake of it, but at this point I think it’s really important that Kroenke makes some effort at communication.

It’s beginning to feel a bit like when you have a row with someone and the longer you don’t speak the more difficult it becomes to break down that barrier. And you know that if you’d just said something the next day it’d all have been ok. Come on, Stan, we can be friends again.

Gervinho says he’s not a diver and says the 14 penalties he ‘won’ in two seasons in France were all genuine. That seems like a lot of penalties! He’s right about the Newcastle one though, for me that was a penalty, and it’s a shame he got suckered into the nasty, scrappy world of Joey Deacon Barton.

Right, that’s yer lot. Live blog coverage coming, as I said, check back about an hour before kick off for details of that. If you fancy a flutter, Paddy Power have some specials and a £50 free bet if you sign up with them – check the betting page for more.