Daily Archives: July 26, 2012

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July 26, 2012 posted by Tim Stillman

Dan! Dan! Dan! Dan! Daaaaan! Dan! Dan!

Dan! Dan! Dan! Dan! Daaaaan! Dan! Dan!

The pre season checklist is gradually becoming scattered with ticks. The season review DVD, the release of the fixture list, Sky’s subsequent desecration of the fixture list, the club captain transfer saga and now, the first pre season friendly have all been dutifully marked off of the calendar. I too have been limbering up for the season, having taken in my first instantly forgettable and ultimately pointless friendly of the summer at Borehamwood last weekend.

In accordance with our summer fitness regime, we colonised a Wetherspoons in the immediate vicinity of the ground well in advance of kickoff (though mercifully, at non league grounds they allow you to consume alcohol inside the stadium – which is possibly a comment on the standard of football. We became reacquainted with the hostile cynicism that publicans specially reserve for football fans. Finally we fine tuned our sense of entirely irrational tribalism by gently baiting the opposition left back who, in our defence, looked like a girl.

It was all suitably light touch, but the regime will be stepped up next weekend. There will be cans of Special Brew on the train to Stevenage. We need to be fully prepared for full on sensual assault come mid August. Meanwhile, the first team have been out milking the Asian cash cow over the last few days. As a result, the manager’s lines of communication with the press have been reopened, bringing us a slew of juicy sound bites to chew over / consider like adults / piss our collective pants about.

At the risk of going all Alan Partridge on you, contracts appear to have been this week’s hot topic. The captain has made it quite clear he has no intention of signing a new one, resulting in the club leaving him in London and all but admitting he will be sold this summer. Theo Walcott is just about keeping his buttocks away from the naughty step as he is apparently still in negotiations, whilst Laurent Koscielny has earned all of our displaced van Persie affection for signing a new deal.

Understandably the club’s contract dealings have come under some scrutiny this summer. I alluded a few weeks ago to this being an inevitable by product of looser legislation and that Arsenal are by no means unique in their struggle to adapt to player power. The success or otherwise of Gazidis’ tenure as a CEO is still very much a matter for the jury, (the proof in that particular pudding won’t begin cooling softly on the window sill until 2014), but I do believe some of the criticism he attracts over the matter is very harsh.

The thing is, it’s not even a particularly recent live issue. We all know how the likes of Wiltord, Edu, Flamini and Kanu were all allowed to run their contracts down in the years of yore. But Patrick Vieira and Thierry Henry both got to the final year of their respective deals before renewing in the summer of 2003 when all things were bright and beautiful. Having seen Roy Keane’s infamous victory of brinkmanship when he forced Manchester United to break their wage structure in 1999, Nwankwo Kanu did exactly the same to Arsenal just months after joining.

Kanu used a particularly rich vein of form to manipulate improved terms out of the club, after which he spent much of that lucrative new deal on the bench. Vieira was more than content to use the arrival of Abramovic at Chelsea in order to induce Arsenal into an improved offer (he eventually put pen to paper just five days before the season kicked off). Gazidis’ response to Arsenal’s contract issues isn’t a huge departure from what we’ve seen previously, the coverage is just that little bit more intense. Plus, now we’ve got a couple of clubs that can double our offers within our borders. In negotiation terms, that’s an agent’s wet dream.

With City in particular, they have now reached a kind of economies of scale. They’re the Premiership champions. They can offer tangible success as well as bundles of sweet, sweet cash. It’s no longer just mercenaries such as Tevez, Adebayor, Bridge and Nasri that they can attract to their project. In short, it’s a southern fried bastard of a situation and there aren’t many solutions to it. I’ve seen a lot of talk of holding van Persie to his deal in the face of City’s interest in order to transmit a strong message. It’s a nice idea in principle but one that I think would be flawed in practise.

For a start, van Persie could easily wait for a year and then go to City for free anyway. But I think most players (or at least their erstwhile advisors) would know full well that such a stance is fiscally conditional. At the age of 29 and with his injury record, economically, we could afford to play hardball with van Persie. But when 25 year old Alex Song reaches the same point next summer, he’ll not likely be deterred from holding the club over the barrel based on our actions with an older client.

It would be the most short term and pyrrhic of victories. Maybe I’m more passive about this than I ought to be, but I think we might just have to get used to this brave new world of rotating player rosters. There’s precious little we can do about it and ultimately, the most competitive clubs will be the ones that can adapt to rebuilding their team on a regular basis. In fairness, it looks like the club want to try and draw a line under van Persie as quickly as possible and give him no more consequence than is necessary.

The pursuit of Santi Cazorla is interesting. With his (unsuccessful) attempts to sign Juan Mata and Mario Goetze last summer, it says to me that the manager still wants to create a slight shift in the team’s creative impetus. Replacing Fabregas with an equally craftsmanlike central midfielder is a fool’s errand and it looks to me like the manager is still trying to move the creative pivot of his team to the wide positions. Specifically, I think he wants a “number 10” style of player that starts from the left but cuts inside to create ammunition for the strikers.

It’s a role Mata has excelled in for Chelsea and one that Nasri had begun to show real promise in too. At the beginning of his Arsenal career, Arshavin too played that function from the left but drifted in field to influence the game. He ultimately lacked the fitness to maintain it on an ongoing basis. Gervinho and Walcott represented something of a shift last year because they are much more orthodox and direct in their wide play. My reckoning is that Wenger wants to reintroduce a Pires style player that can simultaneously protect his full back, but still affect play centrally during attacks.

In theory, this would mean the central midfield three representing more of a solid block. Three players who share the responsibility of maintaining and retaining possession, covering wandering full backs / centre halves and patrolling the centre of the pitch without being expected to create all the time as well. Arsene made a clear demarcation in some of his remarks about his midfield this week, explaining that he was well stocked for “defensive and box to box” players, but neglecting to mention his more attacking options.

He experimented with playing Ramsey from the left in the spring, but ultimately settled on Benayoun to reconnect with our possession based game. But I still think Wenger sees a hole in the team for that prowling, creative winger to take up the playmaking burden, leaving the midfield three to become a more compact, focussed unit. Then they might, you know, help out their back four once in a while. Which would be nice. The signing of a Cazorla type could concurrently make us more compact defensively and more detonative in the final third too.

At least that’s what it says on the back of that fag packet I found at London Colney. You know EA Sports or someone ought to make a computer game that allows you to simulate the experience of being a football manager over a league season? Maybe I’ll make a pitch? Till next week. LD.

Follow me on Twitter @LittleDutchVA

Arseblog, the arsenal blog
July 26, 2012 posted by arseblog

Numbers, arrivals and the Arsenal departure lounge

Numbers, arrivals and the Arsenal departure lounge

Sometimes getting started is the most difficult part of writing a blog so I’ll just jump straight in with Arsenal’s announcement of the squad numbers for next season.

New boy Olivier Giroud will wear 12 while other new boy Lukas Podolski has not yet been allocated one despite many numbers being free. I guess you don’t need to be a genius to work out he’s holding on for Robin van Persie’s number 10, so at this moment he’s just a man, not a number. Although it would be quite something to see him run out with TBC on his back.

Wojciech Szczesny is now literally and figuratively the Arsenal number 1, he replaces the departed Manuel Almunia, while new boy Kyle Bartley marks his ascension into the first team squad by taking the prestigious number 35. Le Coq is now number 22, but other than that nothing has changed, players retain the same numbers they were allocated last season, regardless of how much they’ve played or how much they’re likely to play in the season ahead. I’m sure some inevitable departures will free up numbers for the players that have still to arrive.

And speaking at a press conference yesterday in China, the manager said the shopping was far from done just yet. He said:

I am ready to talk a lot, but not a lot about transfers, because it is a very fragile subject and a very secret subject. But we are not at the end of it [transfers] – we will still bring players in.

Interestingly, there was a line in the original article where the manager must have been asked about Santi Cazorla and said, “I share the opinion of Mikel Arteta. Cazorla is a great player”, but it was subsequently removed. Perhaps we want to keep this Cazorla thing as by the book as possible and you can’t imagine a comment about a player we had no interest at all in would be deleted. The quote is widely reported elsewhere, however.

The player himself hasn’t gone on Malaga’s pre-season tour but this is as much down to his late arrival back having been away at the Euros with Spain. There were pictures of him arriving at training yesterday with his agent and while Malaga insist there have been no offers for him, players rarely just hang out with their agents for a laugh. The smoke continues, let’s hope it’s backed up with some good old fashioned fire. Anyway, it’s good to know that the cheque-book remains open because there’s still work to do to get this squad ready for the new season.

What’s interesting is that it’s pretty quiet in terms of players going out. The only one who regularly gets any headlines is Nicklas Bendtner who has AC Milan, Galatasaray and Celta Vigo interested in him if reports are to be believed. Yet with doubts over the futures of many others, it remains a fairly static summer market thus far. I expect something to happen with Arshavin, simply because of his profile, but the difficulty we have in moving on players whose time at Arsenal has been less than successful seems to be proving difficult.

It’s no shame not to make it at Arsenal, many have struggled to make the grade and moved on in the past, but it’s the perception that they haven’t so much not made the grade as flopped completely and utterly that complicates things. And look, it’s not just perception in some case. Ju Young Park’s failure to trouble the first team is no reflection on us. Some are critical that we’ve somehow done damage to his career but that’s misplaced, in my opinion. He signed for us, he knew what he was getting into, and while he’s hardly had much time to prove himself, the simple fact that he hasn’t been given that time tells you that the manager has little or no trust in him. That’s down to the quality of the player, really, but the question as to why we signed him at all is one of great mysteries of Arsene’s reign.

Marouane Chamakh’s ‘Hey, what do you expect? Arsenal play one striker and last season it was van Persie and he was brilliant so that’s why I didn’t play’ has some merit, but again he’s a player whose stock has fallen considerably since he came. The same applies to Sebastian Squillaci. At the time his signing seemed a good one, he was an experienced international centre-half who should have added some depth to the squad, but on the rare occasion he played last season he looked a man bereft of confidence and his performances reflected that.

It’s like we’re going to car-boot sale to sell old teapots but our teapots are a bit rustier and broken-handledly than everyone else’s. What makes it more difficult is that the calibre of team interested in taking a chance on players like these is so distant from that of Arsenal that the wages/cost becomes a real problem. Squillaci from Arsenal to a mid-table Premier League team is more than doable, but if there’s no mid-table Premier League team interested and the only one sniffing around is a newly promoted Ligue 1 team then the gap becomes too much for them to bridge.

While we’ve got to try and maximise our income we might also have to be realistic. Look at the Carlos Vela situation, a 23 year old Mexican international who scored 12 goals for Real Sociedad last season went for just €4m. It’s not much at all but the club’s insistence on a high percentage sell-on fee is one way of ensuring we get some value should he be transferred elsewhere in his career (a highly likely scenario).

The same creativity needs to be applied to those who should be moved on. While you’d hope professional pride and a desire to play football would be enough for most players, ask yourself if you would take a 50-75% cut in wages to do that? As much as we might be critical of Man City when we read about how they could sell Adebayor to Sp*rs for £5m as well as giving him a pay-off to make up the shortfall in his wages there, we may have to do the same thing with some of our players. It might not seem as contentious if we give Squillaci a chunk of his final year’s wages and let him go on a free (for example), but the other clubs in Ligue 1 might think of us the way we think of City.

Whatever way you look at it, it’s an interesting but complicated issue. Saying ‘Why don’t we just get rid?’ is pointless, there’s so much to consider and work out. We have to improve the efficiency of the playing squad, no doubt about it, but we also have a finite amount of money at our disposal and maybe pay-offs and deals like that don’t work out as cheaply as just keeping the player. Anyway, we’ll see how it all goes but the departures are just as important a part of our transfer business this summer as those still to arrive.

Till tomorrow.