Monthly Archives: April 2012

Site news
April 30, 2012 posted by arseblog

Arseblog launches in Chinese

Arseblog launches in Chinese

After much discussion and some rather tricky fiddling with WordPress, I am delighted to announce that Arseblog and Arseblog News are now both available in Chinese!

From now on every single post on both sites will be available on our Chinese sites – http://arseblog.cn.com and http://news.arseblog.cn.com

As well as that the Chinese language team will produce specific content for the local readers when possible.

As far as I’m aware we become the first unofficial Arsenal site to go multi-lingual and I want to thank Joan and all the other contributors for their help in getting this set-up. There may still be some small bits and pieces that need adjusting but we’re open for business, with blog posts, news articles and comments.

Arsenal is a club with fans all around the world and I hope this will provide some of them with another way of keeping up with, and enjoying, all that The Arsenal has to offer.

Come on you reds.

Arseblog, the arsenal blog
April 30, 2012 posted by arseblog

Reliance on Robin is not Wright

Reliance on Robin is not Wright

Morning all, and welcome to a brand new week.

I will, this morning, be avoiding the hot topics of hatred and abuse and Match of the Day. In the first instance there’s very little you can do about it (especially as no club/fans are whiter than white) and in the second any programme that would have The Goblin Prince as its guest, to peddle his footballing philosophy, hardly needs me to further its agenda by complaining about them and giving oxygen to the nonsense they broadcast most of the time,

Anyway, plenty to be going on with this morning, starting with the manager looking for the skipper to drag us over the line and into third place this season. He says:

He has to push us over the line, there are two games to go. We have been a bit over-reliant on him, I concede that. But it is difficult to change that before the end of the season.

It is kind of unusual for the manager to so publicly put pressure on one individual, even if he is the most likely source of goals. Maybe he wants to focus Robin ahead of the last couple of games, but with Rosicky in the team, Gervinho, Benayoun, and even someone like Ramsey who can get himself into good positions, I’m surprised he didn’t look to urge more from the team rather than one individual.

Maybe he saw Gervinho miss that header on Saturday and realised that it’d be asking too much to expect others to contribute, but it’s a bit odd nonetheless. What’s also interesting is that Yossi Benayoun has pretty much backed up the manager by comparing him to Fernando Torres (in his most effective years) and saying it’s up to the team to give van Persie the ball in areas he can score from. He says:

We know we must give Robin the ball in the right place and he will score. That is what we did against Stoke and he has been doing that all season.

Again, it’s understandable that when you have a player as good as van Persie on your team you try and play to his strengths, but there’s an inherent danger in becoming overly-reliant on one player for his goals. This is from Tony Adams book ‘Addicted’ when he talks about being too dependent on Ian Wright:

With Ian you could hardly help yourself sending ball over the top for him all the time to run on to. It can make you lazy, so that you were looking for him all the time and if it didn’t come off, you didn’t have other options.

I guess it’s a good thing that the manager recognises that a) we have been a bit too focused on van Persie’s goals when others should contribute more, and that b) it’s something we need to address in the summer. But, I do wonder if we’re falling into this trap a bit already. For example, Laurent Koscielny’s long passing.

For the record, let me state I’m a fan, I think he’s been excellent all season long and this is not meant as a criticism, merely an observation. On Saturday, against Stoke, he gave the ball away a number of times when passing it long, looking for a forward. Whether this was because he had no options around him I can’t quite remember but it did strike me as familiar, and it seems to be something of a pattern in his game.

Koscielny’s passing Stoke – 28.04.12

Koscielny’s passing Chelsea – 27.03.12

And it was very similar against Everton, Man City and plenty of other games this season. Maybe it’s an instruction, to try and hit the forwards early, and on Saturday against Stoke it didn’t seem to be because of fatigue and/or desperation. But maybe too it’s because we’re always looking to one man to make the difference and when Robin van Persie can’t do it we’re left short of ideas.

In the grand scheme of things maybe it’s not much to ask for Robin to do the business in two more league games but I would hope that his team-mates can see the other side of it. That they too have an important role to play. If they sit back and wait for their captain to do it, then we’re going to make life difficult for ourselves if he doesn’t. He’s won us plenty of points with plenty of goals, and I don’t think it would be unfair to suggest that others have not scored anywhere near as many as they should have, either through the chances they’ve had or the position they play in.

I’m glad Arsene has more or less said this is something we’ve got to find a solution for ahead of next season but I would hope there’s a focus on what the collective can do on the training ground this week. If there’s a header that requires a bit of bravery on the part of the player with the chance, I hope we see that because that can often be the difference between 1 point and 3, or 1 and none. Anyway, we’ll see on Saturday.

Chelsea and Sp*rs winning this weekend means that the pressure is still on even if it is in our own hands. However, 2 points from the last 9 (or 5 from 12) is a bit worrying when you remember how we’ve struggled to finish seasons in the last few years. We need one last big push, 2 wins will do it, a win and draw would probably do it but leave us relying on others to drop points so the former is clearly preferable.

We’ll touch on that more as the week goes on, no doubt, while tonight’s Manchester derby could well decide the title. I realise having to choose one over the other is the classic poo sandwich/vomit pie choice, but it’s United for me. As great and all as our rivalry is/was with them, there’s so much to dislike about City and how they do things. It would be just delaying in the inevitable, I know, but I can live with that for now.

Till tomorrow.

Koscielny stats via the StatsZone app for iPhone – download here.

Arseblog, the arsenal blog
April 29, 2012 posted by arseblog

Stoke 1-1 Arsenal : ruffians upset monsters

Stoke 1-1 Arsenal : ruffians upset monsters

Match reportVideoBy the numbers

And so did venture a pack of brave knights into a land where did live monsters. The monsters did try and slay the knights through tactics of brute strength. They did lob high missiles into the air and a crumply giant did strike the first blow of the battle. The monsters did roar in delight but they failed to take heed of the orange knight who did combine with the knight of delightful fringe to strike back.

The goblin prince did feel the heat of rage beneath his canvass helmet, he was most assuredly steaming. And the monsters, many of them hideous disfigured and mutated, and ghouls that followed them, did bellow at the general of the knights as he did entreat his men in the midst of battle.

When he did call for reinforcements the monsters howled at the young knight of dragons with whom they did have great history. For he, this young knight of dragons, did once assault the foot of the son of the goblin prince with his lower leg, shattering it in the process and making the son of the goblin price shed tears of pus and other goo and his mum did have to come and pick him up.

When the leader of the knights declared his unhappiness that the monsters, who did boast to everyone of their power and strength, would fall to the floor with no contact, the ghouls did imitate him, but due to their mangled limbs and contorted features, they did merely twist their grotesque countenances even further.

In the end the knights did show great valour and returned home with a valuable jewel while the goblin prince did try to comfort his monsters and ghouls but the only thing that did calm them was eating the flesh of their young.

From A Trip to Stoke by Lancelot Clearmountain, AD 1012.

Who knew old story tellers could be so prophetic? In general I think yesterday’s point was a pretty decent one. On paper Stoke away was the most difficult game of the three we had left and for them this is some kind of cup final.

The passion with which they dislike Arsene Wenger, Aaron Ramsey and pretty much anything to do with us is quite something. So much so that they would boo a young man whose leg was snapped in two by one of their players. As the boss said afterwards, he understands them being behind Shawcross but the booing of Ramsey – and not just by a minority – just shows you what a pack of classless, self-fingering, bottom-feeding, low life trolls the Stoke fans are.

“You cannot be especially proud of that,” said Arsene who was also on the receiving end of their bellowing. He clearly doesn’t care about it, his comments about his ‘relationship’ with them were excellent, but I genuinely hope the Stoke fans never stop booing Ramsey because as long as they do they continue to show their true colours (hind-quarters brown, in case you were wondering).

I saw some criticism of the ref post-game but I thought in general he handled it well enough. He set down an early marker, booking Whitehead for his nasty challenge on Song, and that showed he wasn’t going to let them away with intimidatory tactics. As for the penalty that Benayoun wanted, he got that right too. If that had been given against us I’d have been fuming.

Only late on, when he should have sent off Whitehead for another foul on Song, thus allowing him to stay on to dive when Koscielny breathed on him (thus provoking Wenger to the point where he nearly lost his mind, understandably too), did he lose the plot, but overall I thought he handled what could have been a very tricky fixture well.

Our football – poor for their goal but improved immediately. Robin had missed another good chance at the back post, and Ramsey curled one just wide, before great play from Benayoun and then Rosicky set up the equaliser. We then dominated the rest of the first half and should have been ahead. Sagna’s cross for Gervinho was perfect, the Ivorian didn’t fancy it much yesterday though and a braver player would have scored that.

The second half was poor however. We couldn’t quite keep up the momentum (perhaps the fatigue we’re feeling kicking in, perhaps Stoke upped it at their end), but it was as scrappy a half as you’ll ever see. All the same, there was no lack of effort on our part, we worked extremely hard and never stopped chasing and harrying them. And there were chances. Ramsey shot just wide, it almost opened up in the box for Benayoun but Son of Pulis won the ball with an extremely industrial challenge, van Persie had a header on target, Vermaelen shot just wide from a free kick.

At the other end Szczesny was forced into one save from Jerome and late on, when Stoke had a line-out deep in our half, a wonderful piece of defending from Bacary Sagna cleared the ball from practically underneath our crossbar. At the end a point each was probably deserved although even at my most diplomatic I can’t find it in me to credit Stoke with anything and the sooner they piss off back down the leagues the better.

Afterwards, Arsene said:

I believe that it was a game where we have shown great character, great battling qualities. I can only give credit to my players for their battling qualities and the way they responded to what Stoke offered us – full commitment, well-organised, direct. We did not always cope with it but today I felt we did.

Newcastle’s 4-0 loss to Wigan makes it a better point than perhaps it might have been, and the important part is it is still in our hands. Ideally we’d have come away with all three points but I don’t think you can underestimate their desire to not lose to us and how difficult they make it. Add to that the end of season weariness we’re obviously suffering from and it was hardly a wonderful football spectacle.

Still, coming away from there with a point plus all bones intact isn’t a bad result and it means we can prepare for Norwich without having to worry too much about what anyone else does. And that we can watch today’s games and hope for more hilarious bottling from the usual suspects.

Right, have yourselves a good Sunday, back tomorrow.

Arsenal live blog
April 28, 2012 posted by arseblog

Stoke v Arsenal – live blog!

Stoke v Arsenal – live blog!

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