Daily Archives: July 19, 2012

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July 19, 2012 posted by Tim Stillman

Theo Walcott ate my hamster

Theo Walcott ate my hamster

It’s summertime and the season of subterfuge is well and truly upon us. This week has provided a neat encapsulation as to why I always try to remain remote in the off season. For a start, particularly at Arsenal in recent times, the focus always tends to be on individuals. June and July always serve to remind me of exactly where the game seems to have lost its purpose. I guess I find it slightly distasteful that a team sport is reduced to a soap opera played out against the pivot of sole protagonists.

The back pages dictate conversation and conversation fastens itself to the malleable frame of a single player. Wednesday evening of this week was a perfect encapsulation of this maelstrom of madness. One minute Robin van Persie has signed a new contract on the dubious say so of Boris Becker, the next he’s definitely being sold to Manchester United on the basis that Alex Ferguson slurred his intentions to “pals.” (Does Ferguson strike you as the kind of guy that has “pals”? Minions? Maybe. Flying helper monkeys that smite unsympathetic referees? Definitely. But pals? Pssssht).

I took a sunshine sabbatical this weekend passed with infrequent access to wifi. It’s fascinating how quickly rumour and innuendo move on. At one glance, Theo Walcott is definitely being sold to Liverpool, but when you check back seven or eight hours later, it’s already passed into the darker recesses of our hard-drives. There used to be a saying that today’s headlines are tomorrow’s chip paper, but nowadays you couldn’t even nuke one of those suspicious looking cartons of McCain’s microwave chips in the time it takes for our emotions to be all of a tizz.

Being a football fan is an emotionally irrational pass time anyway. In the absence of the rollercoaster of élan one experiences in the battlefield of a competitive game or a league season, it is possibly displacement therapy to feed off this never ending theatre of deception. I’m not going to wax philosophical on the instant nature of social media because it’s been said by many an internet sage already. Nor do I seek simply to tell you how boring I find transfer speculation, because if there is one thing more genuinely tedious than bullshit rumours, it’s someone wibbling on about how boring they find bullshit rumours.

My point is that the game used to be a sport that was entertaining. Now it’s a branch of the entertainment industry that happens to be a sport. The parallels with the tawdry world of celebrity are endless. For statements about contracts on personal websites, read Las Vegas weddings and quickie divorces. For every player that is “flattered” by the interest of another club, see a Heat magazine spread on who’s fucking who and who’s getting fat. Is Theo Walcott getting cellulite? WE SIMPLY MUST KNOW!

Maybe I shouldn’t complain. Perhaps I should just accept that this is all simply another branch added to a game that’s very addictiveness relies on its unpredictability and lack of grounding in the real world. In any case, I know many people who become just as weary about the subject of football finance, but this is an area I’ve tried to embrace and educate myself in – especially since Kroenke and Usmanov parked their boots under our bed.

But I’m troubled because of who it is that’s powering this asinine shite. I think we are all well versed enough in the machinations of the media to feel suitably cynical about them. Yet they are not unaided in this coterie of camouflage. Slick haired, shiny shoed, multi blackberry wielding agents pull the strings like crazed puppeteers. Planting stories, drafting statements “for the fans” etc, etc. I guess what I’m trying to say is that this isn’t for us. None of it is for us. Its purpose is simply to grease the palms of individuals and we should communally and emphatically withdraw our emotional interest from it at once.

As a man that spends around 20% of his annual wage watching a cadre of strangers run around a field, I’m probably in no position to dish out lectures on emotional intelligence. But is it really any wonder that footballers become such cosseted ego maniacs when we invest so readily in the mini dramas that dance around them? I am minded of an old situationist saying. I contribute. You contribute. We contribute. They profit.

Theo Walcott’s contract is important. Robin van Persie’s contract is important. Arsenal’s contract policy at large is very important. But only because of what they mean for the club. That so many have their bellies tickled by agents, journalists and washed up tennis pros is evidence of a game gone sick to the guts. Anything that doesn’t emanate directly from an involved party’s mouth on record ought to be ignored. Otherwise we are merely contributing to celebrity status and the ego accessories that come with it.

The players play for the team, not vice versa. Nothing will kill the neon flames of this sorry fandango like our cold, naked indifference. We have to take our share of the blame for inflating the egos of these people that are meant to be pawns in a team sport. We live in an age where a grown man- with grey hair that suggests his advancement in years- thinks nothing of standing outside a courthouse with a life-size cardboard cut-out of John Terry. What an apposite symbol of how fucked we all are.

And we are. Like I said, maybe it’s a symptom of being a football fan, but our emotional incontinence is a contributory factor. It’s not just the jargon of agents that skews football’s lexicon in the summer months, where terms such as “ambition”, “direction” and “boyhood dream” become synonyms for something darker. There never was any loyalty in the sport; the opportunities for movement are simply greater due to looser contract legislation. But players are discouraged from being honest not just out of boardroom brinkmanship, but fear of emotive backlash. (We are just as disloyal to players as they are to us in any case. Johan Djourou is our longest serving player and a lot of people seem to genuinely hate him for some reason).

It’s a terrifying concoction of the footballer’s hubris and the football fan’s ready sense of emotional turmoil that leads, just as a hypothetical example, a club captain into releasing a statement questioning a club’s direction on his personal website. Of course he is advised to entitle this missive “update for the fans.” Don’t worry kids, the Easter bunny IS real. I think this piece sums it up rather nicely, but footballers patronise us and speak to us like children that need protecting because that is how we behave.

I’ve lost count of the amount of people I have seen say something like, “You know, I would respect player x much more if he just admitted he was doing it for the money.” And I always doubt the veracity of that. I would imagine that a lot of people wouldn’t bat much of an eyelid, but a very large, squealy-voiced proportion of football fans just wouldn’t have the maturity to deal with it. It’s one of our great tragedies I guess. We ask for the truth, but really, we can’t handle the truth. Especially when we allow ourselves to become so invested in the lies. LD.

Follow me on Twitter @LittleDutchVA

Arseblog, the arsenal blog
July 19, 2012 posted by arseblog

Robin van Stapleton? I doubt it.

Robin van Stapleton? I doubt it.

So here we are of a Thursday, most of the working week gone already, and we don’t appear to be any closer to a resolution to our most pressing summer saga: What’s going to happen to Nicklas Bendtner? Will anyone buy Squillaci? Is Arshavin going to stay? Are Chamakh and Park willing to leave football to set up a novelty cup cake business? Theo Walcott’s contract. What the hell is going on with Robin van Persie?

In the Mirror this morning it’s reported that Alex Ferguson has ‘told pals’ that he’s confident van Persie will be his for a £20m fee, teaming up with Wayne Rooney next season. Which leads me to the question: do football agents think we are stupid? I mean, really.

There was an article in The Guardian a couple of days ago which touched on the Theo Walcott situation. It was almost like a press release written by Walcott’s agents.

It is anticipated that the manager, Arsène Wenger, will attempt to talk to Walcott if the opportunity arises in Asia.

You can imagine the scene back in London, post-tour:

Gazidis: So?

Wenger: So, what?

Gazidis: You know!

Wenger: Oh. No.

Gazidis: No?!

Wenger: I tried but he was always with his friends, I was too shy. I went over once but pretended to be getting something from a vending machine, I chickened out.

Arsene Wenger will attempt to talk to Walcott ‘if the opportunity arises’? Seriously?! There’s the whole 15 hour flight, before training, during training, after training, in the hotel, on the bus, wherever the hell he likes. He’s the manager. He says ‘Theo, we must talk’ and Theo must talk.

Not that it would play out like in that way. It’d be a lot more formal but this kind of nonsense placed in the press is so transparent it might as well be clingfilm swimming trunks. And nobody needs that. Nobody. And now all of a sudden we have van Persie to Man Utd stuff. How convenient.

Look, maybe they do want him and maybe they are going to pay £20m for him, but the more jaded and cynical amongst us might suggest that involving United is a ploy to make City sort themselves out. I mean, it’s not a very original ploy by any means but van Persie and his agent know at this stage that Arsenal will be pressing for a resolution. Maybe we’ve put a deadline on it or something crazy and sensible like that.

‘If we get a bid by X date and the bid is good, you can go.’

But City, despite having more money than Zlatan, do like to take their time, play things out and see if they can spend a bit less. Look at the Nasri thing, they pretty much pulled out last August, leaving the chinless wonder scrabbling around calling up PSG to see if they would give him the money he wanted, but in the end they coughed up.

Of course this is all idle speculation as we know little or nothing about what’s going on behind the scenes. But we’re another week into pre-season training, the majority of the team is going away to the far east on Saturday, and the focus once more is on players who want out of the club. Maybe if it’s possible, if the opportunity arises, if the planets line the fuck up in the right way, we might just take these players aside and get this sorted out once and for all.

Rightly or wrongly, and there’ll be much debate about which, our stoicism and silence when it comes to matters like this lends to the perception that we’re inactive or unable to take a strong stance when necessary. It’d be nice to see us act as if we were the ones who had some control over the situation rather than being played for dimwits by football agents who, in the event of nuclear war, would be on the only living things left on the planet along with cockroaches. Then they’d breed. Cockgents they’d be called and our lovely blue planet would be a smouldering, scuttling, clickity-clackity sounding hell.

In other news, and despite reports by Sky Sports who are getting a lot wrong this summer, we haven’t had a bid accepted for M’Baye Niang, the young Caen striker. Their president said our approach was “not derogatory, but not quite what we wanted.” Which suggests further negotiation will take place should we have a real interest in the player. I know some will suggest a 17 year old striker isn’t exactly what’s needed but we have bought two experienced forwards already this summer, so adding some youth isn’t really an issue.

Also, if you asked people to associate one word with Arshavin, Bendtner, Chamakh and Park it’d be ‘gone’ or ‘sell’. At least from the more polite. Add to that the Walcott and van Persie situations and it’s no surprise that we’re looking at as many forward options as we can. Still, I guess things will happen in their own time, we can’t do anything but wait, see and hope it happens soon. Like today. Or in 12 minutes.

Finally, there’s a return to the club for the most unlikely named Republic of Ireland U21 international of all time. Kwame Ampadu played twice for the Arsenal first team and comes back to the club from Exeter City to become an academy coach. Best of luck to him and he joins other former players like Steve Bould, Steve Gatting, Terry Burton and Liam Brady in the behind the scenes set-up at the club.

Right then, that’s yer lot. Till tomorrow.