Daily Archives: August 9, 2012

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August 9, 2012 posted by Tim Stillman

Drill a hole in your own head

Drill a hole in your own head

Having been linked variously with Chris Samba, Scott Dann, Kevin Doyle and Kieran Richardson over the last twelve months, it is quite understandable that’s there has been a palpable sense of excitement around Arsenal this week. The acquisition of Santi Cazorla represents the third signing this summer that I have actually heard of. Dizzying times indeed.

There has been plenty of talk this week about this representing a shift in paradigm from Arsene Wenger. Three recognised internationals in their mid to late twenties. Whilst there’s clearly a signal of intent in there, I don’t believe this to be the philosophical volteface some are portraying it as. It’s more fiscal than philosophical. The stadium debt is gradually shrinking, so the wallet gets a little fatter every summer, thereby facilitating the purchases of more proven (i.e. pricier) players.

It’s been an incremental trend since 2006 that Arsenal are opting for players of a more experienced vintage. Just take a look at our signings since the 2006 summer window closed. (Even in the summer of 2006, we bought Rosicky and Gallas). Sagna, Mertesacker, Vermaelen, Koscielny, Arteta, Diarra, Nasri, Eduardo, Park (!), Santos, Chamberlain, Ramsey, Silvestre, Squillaci, Fabianski, Arshavin, Jenkinson, Gervinho, Chamakh, Benayoun. Varying degrees of success in there, for sure, but the tadpoles are somewhat outnumbered by the fully formed bullfrogs.

“Project Youth” as it has been labelled, wasn’t a product of Wenger’s vanity as is crudely offered by many, but a necessity of economics. The belt’s loosening and, in reality, the “project” ended years ago. Take a look back to the halcyon days in the early part of the 21st century. Arsenal’s wage bill was very close to being the highest in the league. The likes of Wiltord, Pires and Campbell were parachuted in at expense and at an age of experience to boot.

Nevertheless, it has been heartening to see Arsenal behaving like a big club with money behind them in the market this summer. I’ve sometimes wondered aloud as to whether Arsenal were struggling to shake off the parsimonious attitude the stadium move necessitated- despite the fact that stinginess was becoming slightly less necessary as every window passed and every down-payment was made.

At the risk of standing astride your chip pan with a bladder full of booze, I think we should temper that excitement a tad lest it turn to giddiness. Back in May, I rather considered that the club had a three part project ahead of them this summer. 1) Buy experience and quality to supplement the squad and to hold onto key players. 2) Coach the team better. Drill a sense of defensive discipline into them so that they work much, much harder off the ball. 3) Sweat out the squad flab.

As it stands, 50% of Objective 1 looks like a resounding tick. The other 50%, maintaining key players, still very much up in the air. Van Persie and Walcott don’t seem to be shopping for ink cartridges. (Though one of them appears to be lasciviously eyeing up the Trafford centre). We all run the risk of being blinded by the bling bling of new acquisitions, but what we do on the training pitch is every bit as important. If not more so.

Stefan Schwarz was supposed to be the creative midfielder that turned George Graham’s increasingly dour side into title challengers in the summer of 1994. We subsequently finished 12th because the team were still coached to be unreasonably negative. Middlesbrough once signed Ravanelli, Juninho and Emerson in one summer. But they were relegated because they were coached by Bryan Robson. The balls, the bibs and the cones count for just as much as the chequebook. We won’t have any idea how successful Objective 2 has been for some time yet.

With regards to objective number 3 we’ve still some distance to run. It’s now even more likely that we will be enormously undercut on prices for our bargain bin players. This sort of player always tends to trade towards the autumn of August anyway. But the 25 man squad restrictions weaken our hand further. Currently we potentially have a squad of more than 30 players, so if we can’t shift them from the car boot, they will have to sit in the loft gathering dust till January. Expect some last minute bids of 10p a packet of lovehearts.

Still, it’s enthusing to see that Arsenal have prioritised reinforcement ahead of deforestation. The whole reason we undertook the stadium move was so that we could arm ourselves with the resources to speculate once in a while. Obviously we don’t want every summer to take on the appearance of a garage sale, but a rainy day has arrived and we spent close to half a billion on a big fuck off gazebo to shelter us for such occasions.

There have also been whispers that the summer splurge has, in part, been expedited to cater for the whims of Lord van Persie. I find the suggestion fanciful and not just because it makes me want to vomit blood. It’s highly unlikely that Gazidis and Wenger identified their targets after the meeting with van Persie in May. (Not least because the Podolski deal had already been agreed by then). We tried to buy Cazorla last summer too don’t forget.

The signings would have been scouted and identified well in advance of that May social call and you have to think van Persie would have been totally au fait with them. I also believe it unlikely that the meeting would have been the first the CEO and the manager knew of the captain’s refusal to sign a new contract. He may not have said it in words of one syllable before that, but they must have had more than an inkling. The idea that the summer activity was scribbled on the back of a fag packet in late May just doesn’t ring true with me.

In any case, United appear to be taking a sustained interest in van Persie and if that’s the case, you have to think it’s because his representatives are encouraging it. From our point of view, selling him to Ferguson would be the ultimate symbol of diminished status. The club would need to think very carefully about the signals that would send out. There again, they could hold van Persie to his contract, he could act up for a year and then just go to United for free next summer anyway. It’s an uncomfortable situation to say the least.

Furthermore, there’s plenty of smoke around Barcelona’s rumoured interest in Alex Song. In fact, it’s become something of an inoperable rumour tumour. It refuses to go away and it looks like it’s going to get bigger. Barcelona’s band of capricious motor mouths are teaming up with the agenda benders in the Spanish press to make sure that’s the case.

It’s like a scene out of the movie Pi. They just keep prodding and prodding at your brain with a number 2 pencil until you go a bit nuts and drill a hole in your own head just to make the ear piercing noise stop. (If you have not seen the move Pi and that reference was foreign to you, I’m sorry to be the one to tell you that you have wasted your life to this point).

I’ll be honest; I’m lukewarm to Alex Song. I think he’s a good player and very much improved. I’m not always convinced he’s as good as he seems to think he is, but further improvement is likely at his age. I’m perfectly happy having him in the side. But he’s not irreplaceable. But I would be wary about letting him go. Continuity is something we have lacked for a few years now. Every summer seems to be a huge purge followed by a rebuild.

With Lord van Persie almost certainly leaving and Walcott’s contract unresolved, I would question the decision to wantonly cull another member of the starting XI when we don’t really have to. It would also be nice to feel as though the players we’re bringing in are intended to supplement the squad and add much needed depth to it. If Song and van Persie leave, it’ll feel as though the sense of competition the squad is beginning to promote will have been diluted. We shall see I suppose. Till next week. LD.

Follow me on Twitter @LittleDutchVA

Arseblog, the arsenal blog
August 9, 2012 posted by arseblog

Thoughts on van Persie and Manchester United

Thoughts on van Persie and Manchester United

So yesterday morning the Manchester Evening News reported that Robin van Persie was on the brink of signing for Manchester United.

They said he could leave our training camp and sign as early as last night. Clearly that didn’t happen but there does appear to be something going on. Apparently van Persie told Juventus he was in advanced talks with another club and also apparently doesn’t want to join Man City, leaving just United in the mix. And obviously, given the history between the clubs, there’s a reluctance on our part to sell to them.

Things might well have softened between Wenger and Ferguson down the years but they are a rival and reports suggest we want a premium to the fee to sell to a club which is going to be challenging for the Premier League title. Ferguson spoke about the potential deal last night, saying:

We have made a bid and they’ve been trying to negotiate with other clubs. I don’t have a gut feeling on it at the moment, I must admit. We’re not getting any breakthrough with Arsenal. It’s difficult to say why they’re operating this way. I don’t know what their thoughts are because they’re not giving anything away.

What a funny guy. Difficult to say why Arsenal are operating this way indeed. He knows fine well why Arsenal are behaving in whatever way he says we’re behaving. Despite van Persie’s obvious desire to leave, we’re under no obligation to make it easy for him, and we’re certainly not going to make it easy for him to go to United. In fact, given that the last piece of transfer business to the club was them selling us Sylvester, I’d be inclined to be as difficult as possible. We owe them.

The ‘captain’ is away in Germany at the moment and many people are studying the training camp photos to get an angle on what he’s set to do.

‘He looks pensive there, he must be thinking about which club he wants to sign for.’

‘That’s a contended smile, I think he might stay.’

‘Why are there no other players around him. He’s a loner, he’s going.’

‘Haha, Andre Santos called him bruv.’

Jokes aside though, Arsenal have to make a decision here. We might have signed three very good players so far this summer but from everything I hear it’s made no difference to van Persie. His desire is still to leave the club. If he thought he’d have his choice of whatever club he wanted due to his incredible form in the last 18 months, he seems to have misjudged that badly. Or maybe he knew all along that there’d be a short supply of teams willing to pay him the money he wants.

If Juventus are out (although I think there’s still some chance he might go there), and City are out (although I wouldn’t rule them out fully yet), then all he’s got left is United. To many the idea of him going there is unthinkable, but the key is whether or not he’d go there himself. If he would, knowing what he knows about Arsenal, Arsenal fans, and how he’d be perceived by going there, then if there is criticism or anger it ought to be directed at him, not the club if we decide to sell him there.

I’m sure the club also know how disappointed some fans would be if we sold to a direct rival and not just any old rival. Our history with United has been somewhat diluted in recent years due to the emergence of Chelsea and Man City and our failure to consistently challenge for the title, but the idea of selling our captain to them will see some recoil in horror. But what if United offer £20m and Juventus are only offering £8m or £10m because they can’t afford any more because of what they’re willing to pay van Persie?

Can we realistically turn down £10-12m in a summer in which we’ve spent big and probably do need to recoup some cash? Can any business afford to turn down that much money? As I’ve said previously, I’d prefer for us to sell him abroad, ignore the Premier League interest in him, even if it meant we got less money, but I’m not the one making that decision and it’s easy for me to suggest we reject a huge offer simply because it bothers us on an emotional level. That money could be re-invested in the team. We’ve got great value this summer with three good signings around the £12m mark, maybe we could do that again.

I don’t mean to say there aren’t footballing considerations too. A United with Robin van Persie is a better United, as long as he stays fit, but I’d be much more worried about a United with a decent midfield than a United with a 29 year old for whom we’ve gotten a massive amount of money. However, we have to make a decision. Talk of keeping for the final year of his contract sounds plausible but the reality is van Persie wants to go, and keeping him means keeping an unhappy, discontented player. He could well be professional and give his best but we’ve all been following football long enough to know that it’s very rare for a player in van Persie’s position to stay.

So, the club are caught somewhere between a rock and a hard place but at the same time they’re pandering to nobody. If Ferguson says Arsenal are being difficult then great. We have every right not to be dicked around by another club or by a player. If we’re trying to get the best deal for Arsenal, whether that’s from a financial point of view by squeezing United for a bigger fee, or making it clear to van Persie he stays or goes abroad (thus pressuring Juventus to up their bid or van Persie to lower his wage demands), then fair play.

But we have to marry that stance with what’s best for the team and the preparations for the new campaign. This particular issue aside the team look happy and in good spirits during the training camp. There seems to be good camaraderie, a positive atmosphere, and hopefully that will translate itself into performances once the season starts. A transfer saga, featuring a player who is captain in name only, is something of a distraction but fingers crossed we get it resolved as quickly as possible and as well as possible.

I’ll hold fire on what I’d think of van Persie if he signed for Man United, but I guess you don’t need to be an expert to figure it out.

Finally for today, a reminder that if you’re interested in any of the Arsenal related books from GCR Books, using the code Arseblog at check-out gives you a 10% discount.

Till tomorrow.