Daily Archives: July 12, 2012

Columnists
July 12, 2012 posted by Tim Stillman

Is our chrilden learning?

Is our chrilden learning?

Euro 2012 brought on a kind of pleasant footballing dialysis. We were largely starved of Arsenal related news but the tournament acted as a valve while the toxins of 2011-12 ebbed away. That now seems a life time ago. Two open letters have set off a klaxon of debate and conjecture in the Goonerverse. One letter addressed to the fans but really intended for the Arsenal board, one addressed to the Arsenal board but really intended for the fans. What a tangled web we weave.

A good portion of the squad is back in pre season training. The work that is done on the green and pleasant land of Colney will be as important, if not more important, than the brokering we do in the transfer market. Particularly if we once again lose the focal point of our team this summer, as seems likely. That will involve some form of tactical rethink. The promotions of Bould and Banfield don’t represent “new blood” so much as a transfusion of sorts, but this is the period where those gentlemen will look to make their mark on the team.

As much as many like to profess otherwise, we aren’t really privy to what happens on the training ground. Subjects of debate over the last seven days have focussed far more on matters backstage. 24 hours after the captain questioned the club’s direction, Red & White Holdings released a timely statement asking a similar question at greater length. Speaking broadly, I have personally been enthused by the responses to both PR stunts from Arsenal fans. Van Persie’s mawkish “you guys” rhetoric has sent the bullshit-o-meter’s doolalley.

As a PR exercise, I think van Persie’s advisors probably misjudged this one. Nevertheless, I still believe this will only represent discomfort for him on a temporary basis. Once he gets the move (and subsequent pay packet) he is angling for, he won’t much care about his popularity at his former club. It’s just business. Similar can be said of Red & White’s interestingly timed PR salvo. I am of course speaking in the most general terms based on my subjective experience here, but I think Usmanov’s whispering of sweet nothings has largely been considered populist chicanery.

And that’s exactly what it is. It puts one in mind of a shadow cabinet that blithely pledges to put more Bobbies on the beat to defeat petty crime. It sounds wonderful, but it lacks in finite detail. Maybe I’m being pernickety, but I’d like a touch more in the way of forensics. The letter highlights the manager being hampered by the repayment of stadium debt. Our stadium debt stands at roughly £15m a year. Manchester City spends around £60m more than Arsenal on wages per annum. So even if you take the stadium debt away, there’s still a £45m gap there that Red & White’s gambit doesn’t care to account for.

A couple of sentences later the supposition that we should be matching and beating offers from rival clubs for our players appears. I’m struck by how utterly bonkers this is when you consider that the likes of Chelsea and Manchester City could double any salary offer we make with the change they could find under the sofa cushions. The underlying error people tend to make when one questions Usmanov is elucidated neatly by The Beautiful Groan in this piece.

Doubting Usmanov doesn’t necessarily mean you have a penchant for silent, moustachioed types. It’s not polar; let us not fall into the dreaded George W. Bush “You’re either with us or against us” ways of thinking. Similarly, it’s all very well slapping one another on the back for our resistance to van Persie’s PR pot-shot. But that doesn’t mean worthy questions aren’t being asked – even if the motives of those putting them into the public arena can be questioned. “Freedom of speech won’t feed my children” as James Dean Bradfield once bristled.

Personally, I maintain an enormous amount of distrust towards Usmanov and Red & White. However, there is no arguing that it is lamentably dysfunctional to have two majority owners of any business that won’t even clink a glass. The AST survey suggests that most of the AST membership would like Red & White on the board of the directors; I’m yet to be convinced of what exactly they would offer. Nevertheless, constructive dialogue would surely be desirable. My hunch is that Kroenke doesn’t much care what Red & White say and will continue to administer the silent treatment.

The issue of contract management at the club has also been discussed ad nauseam over the last eight days. It’s certainly an applicable question as to how players such as van Persie, Nasri and Walcott have been able to play us like a grand piano having gotten to the last year of their remaining deals. I’ve seen a lot of criticism from many quarters, but little in the way of viable solutions. I’m sure many will be minded to accuse me of devotedly defending the club here. But I always think it’s important to put oneself in the position of decision maker at the instant a verdict is made and simply try and see why a particular resolution is arrived at.

This blog makes a good case that van Persie’s terms were renewed in 2009. Realistically, 2011 was the first time we could sensibly look to offer improved terms, otherwise we would literally be offering players improved contracts every single year. Gazidis wasn’t being cute at the recent Q & A when he said that the club would be guilty of pandering if they didn’t have some players near the end of their deals.

In this new landscape, the player is the kingmaker. Looser legislation dictates that contracts are such a tightrope. Clearly we have the dual issue of having offered subpar players generous terms too early. But this week I read an interesting letter from a Manchester United fan disgruntled about their handling of young player’s contracts. Ravel Morrison, Paul Pogba and Ezekiel Fryers have been allowed to run their deals down this year, whilst Danny Welbeck remains at an impasse in negotiations with just 12 months left on his contract. Effectively, they haven’t signed up promising youngsters early enough.

There’s been some (understandable) shoe gazing about having our better players cherry picked by richer clubs. I think there’s resentment especially towards clubs whose wealth hasn’t exactly been hard earned poking around N5. It’s probably worth reflecting that we won’t receive much external sympathy on this point. We, of course, headed a syndicate of clubs that chose to form a breakaway Premier League some twenty years ago.

The purpose of the league was, effectively, to pool resources between a select band of clubs. There is many a Championship / League One team that would look at the inequality the Premier League created and regard our predicament with little bonhomie. We created the greed is good league and it spurned a monster that is stomping on our building. (You might also reflect on the fact that we were very active members of G14). There’s little mileage in any piety we might feel. You don’t have to accept that point, but it’s worth entertaining in any case. Till next time. LD.

Follow me on Twitter @LittleDutchVA

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

We only wanted to be your weekend lover

We only wanted to be your weekend lover

Morning all,

and welcome to purple Thursday. No doubt many people will have an opinion about our new away kit. I’ve given up and accepted that there’s somebody inside Nike having a huge laugh at this.

“Purple. Haha. They went for it. That’s $5 you owe me, Dirk.”

Kudos to the club for the ‘Purple Reign’ bit (I do like a good pun) but apart from that it doesn’t look much like any Arsenal kit I’ve ever seen before or hope to see again. Purple. I ask you. As for poor Wojciech, he looks like a lanky highlighter pen crossed with a Dynorod man.

Anyway, onto matters more pressing and … well … it’s gone very quiet despite the players being back in training. Reports that Robin van Persie was back from holiday and going to talk to the club without his agent appear wide of the mark as he’s either still away, or gone on another holiday. He’s in Ibiza. We know this thanks to Ruud Gullit’s Twitter account. One of those moments I feel where life itself has jumped the shark. Still, Robin looks like he’s having a good time and that’s all that counts.

Earlier, Gilles Grimandi had a bit to say about his situation:

We want him to stay but he is left with one year contract so it’s complicated. Was the recruitment of Olivier Giroud made ​​to compensate for his departure? Yes, we work to avoid being cornered. But we do everything to keep him [Van Persie] and we want him to stay.

If there’s a great offer and if he wants to leave, it will be difficult to keep him.

The writing, if we didn’t know already, is well and truly on the wall. Signing Giroud early is a sign that we won’t let a summer saga drag us down, like last summer, but also a sign that there’s a willingness on our part to let him go. From everything I hear he’s pushing hard for a move to Man City, that’s where he wants to go. It doesn’t preclude him going elsewhere, I suppose, but if the club do put their foot down and refuse to buckle under the Middle Eastlands pressure (and that coming from van Persie’s side of things), then it might well get a bit ugly.

As I’ve said before, we owe him nothing, he deserves no favour or special treatment to find his new club, so the next few weeks could be very interesting indeed. And while I think City is his likely destination, I would dearly love it if we made it as difficult as possible for him to go there. Not out of any real spite towards him, nor due to the contempt I have for City (already at maximum), but because it’d be Arsenal showing some backbone which I think is long overdue.

Theo Walcott’s situation is ongoing too. According to his agent he’s on holidays at the beach somewhere and although he told me yesterday there are no deadlines or time-frames involved, the plan has always been to sit down and talk to the club after the Euros. He refused to be drawn on whether or not they had turned down offers of a new deal from the club, citing this weird thing called ‘confidentiality’, but there was no suggestion that signing was a priority for him or anything like that.

I could be wrong – I often am – but the longer this goes on the more pessimistic I would be about him signing a new deal. Much will depend on what his options are, of course. I think there will be more clubs willing to make a bid for him with one year left on his contract than if he had two or three, but he’s also looking for a substantial pay increase, which might narrow things down a bit too. A situation to keep a close eye on.

The Great Forward Clear-Out 2012©® continues with Carlos Vela being on the point of signing for Real Sociedad. This has been going on for weeks and weeks now despite Sociedad’s clear desire to get a deal done as quickly as possible. Perhaps it’s because Vela’s loan spell last season was a real success (no pun) and he’s the one deal from which we can generate real transfer funds, but it looks like €4m + a load of add-ons and sell-on fees which are probably what’s taking so long to get things finished.

There appears to be little interest in Marouane Chamakh or Ju Young Park (which isn’t much of a surprise, really), Andrei Arshavin is interesting Zenit again according to reports in the Russian press, while there’s still no deal been done for The Greatest Striker That Ever Lived. It’s hard to know if that’s because we haven’t had any offers or if we have had difficulties dealing with offers. I was reminded this morning of information from last summer when more than 6 Premier League clubs apparently bid for Bendtner, but it took us so long to deal with them the Sunderland loan was the last option we had left. There is still much shifting to be done.

Finally, after I expressed my reservations regarding Kyle Bartley yesterday, he’s only gone and been promoted to the first team squad for the upcoming season. He has declared himself ‘over the moon’ and who can blame him? He’s got a lot to do to show he’s got what it takes, the Carling Cup seems the most likely opportunity for him, but the way we pick up injuries he’s got to be prepared for the more important stuff too.

Beyond that not much to tell you, let’s hope for some real news at some point today. Any old thing will do. Till tomorrow.