Daily Archives: April 12, 2012

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April 12, 2012 posted by Tim Stillman

Video’d kill the referee tsar

Video’d kill the referee tsar

It’s been a week to get the pulses racing. If the deserved late win against Mercenary City was a night out at a strip club with John Bonham and Shane McGowan, Wednesday’s win against Wolves had the air of soothing satisfaction of a night in with a bottle of Blue Nun, pizza, ice cream and a rom-com. These twin delights have been seasoned with occasional peppering of outrage.

The Football Association can always be relied upon the tickle the taste buds of righteous indignation. Elsewhere, heads are served up on silver platters. The hostile brand of self righteousness practised by some Liverpool fans, coupled with the mischief making of the media sees a reasonable question (that almost nobody has even deigned to answer) become front page fodder. The little vein in my forehead has spent a good deal of the last seven days dancing the watusi. I tell you, my John Terry voodoo doll has taken a real hammering.

I’ll begin with the lighter, fluffier side of life. Sunday’s win over City was sweeter than a Tullamore Dew milkshake. There was something very instructive about our winning goal and about the man who scored it too. It’s surely not an enormous coincidence that Arsenal have lost the only two league matches Arteta has been unable to start since his signing. I think his role has been well appreciated by Arsenal fans this season, so it was apposite to see him step into the soda lights with a big winning goal.

But the manner in which he scored it was telling too. In the 87th minute, he was still prepared to harry and press opponents in their own half. At the risk of sounding simplistic, in all of Arsenal’s best performances this season we have executed that facet of the game excellently. In all of our worst the failure to respect that tactic has been notable. I genuinely believe the success that this team can achieve in the future hinges almost entirely on how consistently we are prepared to activate a high octane pressing game.

There is an art to knowing when to press, which areas of the pitch to press and when to plug any gaps left by colleagues. For all of their cuntery, it’s an art Barcelona have down to a tee. But largely, it comes down to simple application. Elbow grease. Are we prepared to do it in every game, to every team for a whole season? The team is settling and a lot of the kinks appear to be ironing out. We’re spreading the goals around the team now, our reliance on van Persie no longer so pronounced. We have some competition in key areas of the field too – which hasn’t always been the case over the last couple of seasons.

Integral to this gradually emerging symphony has been Wojciech Szczesny. Two of Arsenal’s great frailties have been set-pieces and long balls over the top. Our organisation from corners was of playground standard this time last year. This season we have been nowhere near as susceptible and I think Szczesny’s positivity has been key. But the Pole in the Goal is ideally equipped to handle long balls through the middle. He’s strong and positive from his line.

Compare the assertive race from his line to deny Balotelli on Sunday with indiscretions of our previous custodian here and here. I know he can cause anxiety with his distribution, but a whole generation has passed since the backpass law was introduced. The modern goalkeeper needs to be good with his feet and Szczesny’s pass completion stats are way above most of his contemporaries. That’s important in a team like Arsenal that builds from the back. Sometimes it can put your heart in your mouth, but it’s preferable to simply humping the ball downfield straight back to the opposition centre halves.

Staying with the City game, how bloody funny was the impromptu Poznan that followed Arteta’s winner? This picture, via @beardedgenius on Twitter, cemented the comedy. There was an attempt to revive it at the Molineux which, thankfully, didn’t really take off. Terrace wit is as its best when it’s spontaneous and unchoreographed. Continuing to wheel out the same joke over and over dilutes the hilarity. The irony was, many around me at Molineux tried to start it after van Persie’s penalty and, as a direct result, completely missed Walcott’s beautifully crafted effort less than two minutes later.

Moving onto more spleen baiting elements of the week past. We have the insular old dinosaur club that is the Football Association providing equal measures of daftness and mirth. I think the whys and wherefores have been covered rather emphatically on this site and elsewhere. What’s clear is that the F.A. is actually creating animosity towards its own referees by holding them up as infallible. In our more sober moments, I’m sure most supporters realise that it’s an unenviable, difficult job and we accept that not every call is going to be correct.

I won’t go into the argument around technology because, frankly, I can’t be arsed and I’m still undecided myself around its in game application. But when presented with a chance to administer retrospective justice for violent conduct, I just can’t see any reason not to act. The lie around of legislative restrictions has been exposed on this site and elsewhere too.

Some argue that retrospective action undermines the referee’s authority. I think their authority is more undermined by the erosion of respect that occurs when there exists a refusal to admit (understandable) errors and administer justice. The organisation is creating an atmosphere of hostility and mistrust all by itself. Many also argue that retroactive punishment puts us on a slippery slope to a kind of video replay nanny state, where entire games are resketched days after their conclusion.

It’s been over 23 years since Paul Davis was handed a 9 match ban for busting Glen Cockerill’s jaw on the basis of video evidence (when do we start calling it DVD evidence, by the way?) Other countries have handled punishing violent offenders and I don’t see Orwell’s eye in the sky as a 5th official or robotic super linesmen punishing thought crimes on football pitches. There is room for incidents such as Balotelli’s dangerous assault to be treated appropriately without us tripping the light fantastic to the 51st state.

So why do the F.A. refuse to act under the guise of bureaucracy? What are their motives for their staggeringly uneven application of retrospective action? Is it incompetence? Fear of opening a can of technological worms? I’ve even seen some question whether corruption is afoot. (Though bloggers, particularly in Britain, should be wary here. Libel laws in the UK are some of the strictest in Europe. Particularly where the subject of corruption is concerned). My own view is that it’s pure idleness. The F.A. remind me of the BBC. A smug, chummy golf club of an institution very secure in its cash lined bubble.

Simply, dishing out adequate suspensions, dealing with subsequent appeals, outlining rationale, close analysis of incidents. It’s quite the hassle. Why would they bother? They oversee one of the most cash yielding industries on the planet. The clubs run themselves as independent businesses. The Premier League and the Football League are self governing. There’s not a great deal of leverage for them in potentially upsetting the apple cart.

Poor publicity and media outrage are the only agents of change as far as they’re concerned. They don’t seem to be accountable to anybody else. So long as the boss has their back turned, why not get your feet up on the desk and spend eight hours a day reading about the continuity errors in Sam Peckinpah films on IMDB? When the headlines start screaming and the boss re-enters the room, you simply minimise the screen, bring up that excel spreadsheet you had open in preparation and vaguely pretend to look busy until the boss man leaves again.

Anyway, that will do from me for this week. I hope you enjoyed the column. Who knows? Maybe it will be front page news this time next week, as our society of increasingly hysterical offence junkies comb through and sheer it of all context- desperate for their next sweet fix of outrage. LD.

Follow me on Twitter @LittleDutchVA

Arseblog, the arsenal blog
April 12, 2012 posted by arseblog

Wolves 0-3 Arsenal : an easy ride

Wolves 0-3 Arsenal : an easy ride

Match ReportVideo -

It was a game that potentially could have been a banana skin. In the end we took the skin off the banana, ate the banana, then put the skin under Wolves who seemed unaware of the danger of a banana skin, thinking that oranges were the only fruit.

It was over as a contest in the first 11 minutes. Firstly, on loan Sp*rs defender Sebastian Bassong was sent off for hauling down Walcott when Robin van Persie’s chip put him clean through. In the light of current events it does highlight how harsh the punishment is for one small, single foul – penalty, red card, one game ban – when others get away with so much worse, but those, stupid as they are, are the laws right now. Robin van Persie stepped up and despite being without a goal in four games put away the penalty in some style. He waited for Hennessey to move then dinked a little sand wedge down the middle to make it 1-0.

A couple of minutes later and it was game over. Again it was a Walcott – van Persie combo, this time Theo took it on and finished beautifully at Hennessey’s near post to make it 2-0. From then on Arsenal knew it was simply a matter of keeping the ball, tiring out the 10 men and seeing the game out. After that we went a bit flat, it has to be said. At the time I was keen to see us up the tempo a bit and really put the game to bed, 2-0 is a good lead but hardly insurmountable, even with 10 men.

In the cold light of day, however, I guess it was a professional performance. Yes, we put the handbrake on again when I think with a bit more endeavour we could have finished the game off long before we did, but was there any real point in running ourselves into the ground against a team from whom we could keep the ball most of the time? Which is precisely what we did, setting a new PL record this season for completed passes.

The danger, however, was that one goal would see them back in it and as the home side got more into the game in the second half only a fantastic save from Wojciech Szczesny prevented Kevin Doyle from getting one back. His header across goal was touched around the post by the big Pole, one of his best saves this season, and I guess it’s a sign that he’s developing into a real top quality goalkeeper that he can pull off that kind of save despite having little else to do during the game.

It took until the 69th minute to make completely sure. Yossi Benayoun was set up on the edge of the box by Alex Song, he shaped to shoot in the far corner and wrong-footed Hennessey by going near side. 3-0 Arsenal and game over. There were others chances, the Wolves keeper saving well from Ramsey and the Welsh skipper should have had a penalty when he was clearly taken down in the box. His willingness to get up again and have a shot, combined with a ref who probably felt sorry for the home side, meant nothing was given.

In the end it was probably the most comfortable three points we’ve taken since the Blackburn game at home and while some might argue the handbrake going on was a frustration, in the grand scheme of things it’s not that important at all. All that mattered was the result and the three points which now give us a 5 point lead over Sp*rs and Newcastle, and 7 over Chelsea. Afterwards, Arsene said:

We started well and then had a situation where we could control the game. Did we push on or not? After that we played a bit with the handbrake on, they played deeper and defended like mad with a great spirit until the end of the game.

And on being in the top three:

I am very happy that we are in this position but I am also very cautious because some teams have been in that position before. We want to win our next game because where we have come from this season we must be focused. We have come from very deep and to stay in this position we have to focus on our next game.

Surely there can be no better illustration of how we need to keep working than last night’s result at the DW. United were going there to maintain their 8 point lead over City, and lost 1-0. Considering Wigan are our next opponents then it’s something we have to take note of. They were unlucky against Chelsea, beat United and they won’t be afraid of us by any means.

Overall though, it was a solid performance. Ramsey in for Rosicky raised some pre-game eyebrows but the Czech has played 90 minutes in almost every game since the start of February, and let’s remember, he’s rarely (if ever) had that kind of a run in the team since his arrival. There’s no doubt Ramsey can improve, his finishing in particular, but he finished with a 91% pass completion rate and, I thought, had a good game. I can understand people’s frustration with him at times, I just don’t get the way people say ‘Ramsey?!!!’ the same way they might say ‘Sylvester?!!!’

The other notable change, or lack of, was that even at 3-0 up there was no attempt to remove Robin van Persie from the fray. I guess it’s down to the fact he doesn’t want to come off, fancying his chances of more goals against a team playing with 10 men, but it’s also a further illustration of the pointlessness of Chamakh and Park. What can they possibly prove now anyway? There are those who say we should protect Robin from potential injury, but that could happen in the first minute of a game as easily as the last. And if he wants 90 minutes then I don’t see any harm.

So, a good night for us, 27 points out of 30 now, and third place is well and truly in our own hands. Wigan reminded us last night that Monday won’t be any kind of walkover, but we can focus on that in the days to come.

Back tomorrow with an Arsecast. Until then.