Tuesday 28 January 2014

Southampton and Prices: A Tuesday Round Up

We play Southampton and their Jester between the sticks later so I'll come on to that. Firstly though there was a story today which I found pretty important.

The drawing of Liverpool in the FA Cup opened several cans full of even more worms. I'm no expert on the inner workings of the club or even ticket pricing structures so the simplified way that I saw it, is as follows:

Arsenal recently announced that next season would see a 3 percent rise in season ticket prices, I think. This was supposed to be in line with inflation but the inflation of what was far from clear. Previously, having reached the knock-out rounds of the Champions League, the home tie with European Champions Bayern Munich was penciled in as one of seven designated Cup games included in the price of a season ticket. After that occurred, we beat Spurs in the FA Cup, earning a tie with League One Coventry and pushing back the game with European Champions Bayern Munich in the fixture order, leaving it as the seventh, and last, of these designated games.

That's when things got interesting. Unsurprisingly, we beat League One Coventry almost as comfortably as we'd beaten Spurs in the previous round. So, when we drew Liverpool and that fixture was added to the list, the bout against European Champions Bayern Munich was pushed back even further chronologically, to the extent that it now fell outside of the seven designated games. If season ticket holders wish to watch their club play the German side, they will have to pay for it with the cost of their ticket renewal next season.

That's caused a little bit of controversy. With respect to League One Coventry, it would be truthful to say that every single Gooner would prefer to watch European Champions Bayern Munich play at the Emirates than the Sky Blues. But because of the order of the games, many will not be able to and those who can will have to stump up for it, after watching the predictably uncompetitive FA Cup game for free.

The one bit of good to come from this centres around the aforementioned Liverpool game in the Cup. In response to pressure from some fans groups who were upset for various reasons, the match has been changed to a Category B fixture, reducing prices for everyone.

Yes they were forced into it a little but it's still nice to see a gesture like this from the club. I've had a feeling in the past that the fans loved the Arsenal but the Arsenal didn't really love the fans. This isn't exactly a unique opinion so many people will be pleased that the club have acted to assuage it.

Southampton. We beat them last time thanks to a penalty and and a howler from a gloved buffoon. It wasn't exactly a tricky fixture but it was hardly a nail-biter either, as far as I remember. This time round I expect a challenge but one we're perfectly capable of conquering, should we choose to accept it.

All the Southampton talk in the past few days has been about Luke Shaw and whether or not he'll be leaving. A United friend of mine was talking him up as if he had signed for them already, burbling about how he was far superior to Kieran Gibbs.

Let me set something straight. I like Luke Shaw. I think he will go to United or Chelsea and have a long and successful career. I have a minor 'I knew him before he was famous claim' which means I always route for him a little bit too and to be performing week in week out the way he does, at the age of eighteen, is very impressive.

But at the moment, Kieran Gibbs has a far, far greater claim to inherit the England Left Back role than his Southampton counterpart. He is one of the most underrated players on the books of a top four club and we have a right to really show him off. Not in the way we might have made statements like 'Denilson's one of the best midfielders in the League' in the past to hide the deficiencies of the player, but in a genuine way. He's quality and I fear he won't get as many England caps as he deserves because of the hysterical clamour that will inevitably surround Shaw's bid to replace Cole/Baines when the time comes. And £25m, one reported fee for Shaw in this window, is a joke.

The team for the game has just been announced and the only surprise for me is the continued inclusion of Gnabry on the right hand side. With players coming back to fitness we could feasibly have rejigged that three to include at least one of four players who aren't starting tonight. I love the depth. While I like Gnabry, I would have maybe routed for a Rosicky tonight in a very fluid three. But the boss knows best. I hope no-one gets the hump though. I'm thinking of Podolski especially, who I expect to feature at some point tonight.

Three more routine points please. For now.

Tuesday 21 January 2014

Post Fulham and the Yoots

The Fulham game didn't throw up too many surprises. They were a bit meh, we weren't at our best and the score ended up at a professional 2-0. Granted in the first half it looked like we might be heading towards having 'one of those days' but a couple of moments of quality from a a quality player sealed the deal and we relaxed from then onwards.

I was at the game and I have to say it was pretty low on atmosphere. Fulham are quite a nice club but lack ambition like you wouldn't believe. It was always relatively comfortable. Some people counted it as a derby win but even geographically that's pushing it a bit.

Anyway there's very little to discuss so I'll move on to the more interesting story of the day, the CIES Football Observatory study. I'll hold my hands up: I'd never heard of it before today. Does that I mean I can't exploit its data to prove how great Arsenal are? Absolutely not.

As a bit of a statto, this survey is a delight for me. It provides even the most trivial statistics (Who knew that the Bundesliga was Europe's tallest top league with an average height of 183.8cm?) along with the really interesting ones. From an Arsenal perspective, it's gratifying to hear that our senior squad contains the highest proportion of so called 'home grown' players of any team in the League. We all know that statistics can be misleading and in this case the results are somewhat skewed by player like Frimpong who, despite qualifying as squad member, have no input whatsoever into the games we actually play. Nevertheless, I think it's a reason to be proud considering some of our rivals are so hell bent on killing football, that they give little or no consideration to the production of genuine talent in their respective academies.

This League high proportion (a figure of 32.2%) is a good thing for more than one reason. Firstly, it really highlights how we truely believe in youth development. Throughout all of Ivan Gazidis' chest thumping about financial strength, ability to compete, ambition, etc. the message has still remained clear; Arsenal football club is committed to producing our own players with the ability to become valued squad members at some point in the future. The figure published today proves that those are more than just words.

There is also a link to another Arsenal nugget from this week. After Liam Brady announced last year that he was to step down as chief of the Arsenal Academy, the search began to find his replacement. Many names have been mooted in the time that has since passed, including a highly rated Croatian, but this week it was finally announced that the position would be filled by Dutchman Andries Jonker. Once again, I'll hold my hands up and say I've never heard of him. But those who are in the know seem to think that it is a very canny appointment indeed.

All I know is that he was schooled by Louis van Gaal. Based on that, I wonder if, and this is purely conjecture, we may see a less personal approach to youth development. Zlatan Ibrahimovic, in his recently published autobiography, expressed his distaste for van Gaal and his machine like style of coaching. Ibrahimovic says that van Gaal referred to players not by name but by numbers which corresponded to their roles within the team. I fear that if Jonker follows a similar approach, he could alienate mavericks like Ibrahimovic within the youth sides. But that is pure speculation and his role is not that of a coach. Honestly I'm just trying to put a spin on a story I know very little of.

But the link to today. It is known that our Academy is not running perfectly. Our under 18's for example sit miserably at the bottom of their youth League. However, the League high proportion shows we can't be doing too badly. Players are successfully making the jump. That gives the new man Jonker plenty to work with which can only be a good thing.

Anyway. That's it for tonight. We play Coventry in the Cup on Saturday afternoon at three o'clock Friday night at quarter to eight so I should be back before then. Expect a Zelalem debut. For now.

Saturday 18 January 2014

Fulham Preview and the Death of Football

So I broke my wrist. Which is pretty unfortunate seeing as I now cannot write for a month. But on the upside it's not too painful.

Ok now you know what's going on in my world, let's move to football. Since last time we beat Spurs oh so convincingly, Theo Walcott received some devastating injury news and we then won against Aston Villa, picking up some further injuries along the way. We play Fulham at the Emirates today so I'll get onto that later.

The Spurs game, by nature, was a nervous affair. I was physically shivering until we got the second goal which is I think perfectly ok when bragging rights are up for grabs. But as it turned out we were in control from the moment Christian Eriksen fluffed his lines in the fourth minute. We excelled Spurs in just about every position (notably left back) and in return they gave us a few extra reasons to dislike them.* There was the obvious coin throwing, the chants of 'we hope you die' or words to that effect as Theo lay on the turf with what later turned out to be a season ending ACL injury and the attempted stamp from Nabil Bentaleb. The later is my personal favourite because, as the word 'attempted' implies, the Spurs academy graduate missed his target, stamping on the ground next to Nacho Monreal. It's nice to see they really drill in the club ethos of not being able to hit a cow's rear end with a banjo from an early age. Good of the senior players like Soldado to respect the tradition too.

Now I'm not a doctor but when I had a quick look at a diagram of the knee and found the part that Theo had ruptured, it occurred to me that his leg must kind of be in two pieces. I can understand why it would take so long to heal and why rushing him back for the World Cup is not only a ridiculous idea, but a dangerous one too. On a lighter note this picture is really indicative of the fantastic team spirit we seem to have at the moment and it's another reason for me to love Kieran Gibbs. If anyone can tell me why Theo is wearing some kind of Burkha that would be much appreciated by the way.

And team spirit seems to be pretty key at the moment. I'm cautious with my optimism so I'll whisper it but it feels like we've got something really good going on here. The squad is like a delicious omlette with no bad eggs to spoil the flavour. Even players like Nicklas Bendtner, who could at best be described as the seasoning to the omlette itself, are towing the line, putting shifts in, that sort of thing. Although I think Man City will win the League, we can be proud of having an excellent team made up of generally good people.

On the subject of Man City something was said this week that hit a nerve for me. Both Vincent Kompany and Manuel Pellegrini alluded to a Man City quadruple, that is to say total and complete dominance, being an inevitable outcome in future seasons, if not the current one. Kompany himself described it as being only 'a matter of time' before the World's richest club achieved it. I find those kind of statements staggering. Simply staggering.

Firstly I'll say that I don't hold any prejudices against either of them. Both Pellegrini and Kompany are likable and respectable guys and moreover they are fantastic at what they do. In fact it is for that reason that these brashly arrogant statements annoy me so much. Confidence is fine but this is disrespectful to the whole of the football community.What Kompany really means is that it's only a matter of time until the oil money injected into the club by wealthy Arabs dirties any notion of a level playing field to the extent that each and every competition is reduced to a mere procession with the inescapable outcome of complete Mancunian supremacy. And that's not ok.

Unfortunately, I think this notion gets to me because there is some truth to it. And I hate to admit that. There will come a point when a team is so saturated with money that they can afford to employ perhaps the world's eleven best players. With the best coaches, and physios and performance analysts and the best professionals in all other capacities, you have manufactured a team of incomparable quality and we come back to the notion of inevitable victory.

It's said that we enjoy the beautiful game because it's so unpredictable and cliche it may be but it's true. What City are trying to create will be the death of football, the point at which people stop watching because the results are pre-determined. A quadruple is meant to be the holy grail of of the game. Until around five years ago, it was thought impossible. Football being as irrational as it is, something, somewhere would stop a team from winning everything on offer. And that's why managing to win all four competitions was viewed with such awe.

So describe the attainment of this honour as only 'a matter of time' is obscene.

Anyway, Fulham. Injuries have been a feature over the last couple of months but it's the same for all clubs really. By my reckoning we have seventeen fit and selectable players which is fine. I don't think we'll need to leave second gear to beat Fulham today. Nevertheless, I'd like us too. Even with Brede Hangelaand, a poor man's Per Mertesacker, back in the side, Fulham will not offer much resistance and goal difference is becoming key. The primary flaw of Arsenal this year seems to be the tendency to not score as many goals as they could. Think Aston Villa this week or Marseille at home. So when facing a side with a historically poor away record and no player who could get into our team as I see it (yes, including Berbatov), the aim today should be to dish out a real tonking.

I have no idea who will play where, which, as I've previously mentioned, is a good sign of competition in the side. If I was Arsene I'd avoid risking Monreal and Rosicky but maybe there are unknown reasons why he can't do so. One thing is for sure; with Chelsea and City breathing down our necks, this is a game we must win.

Anyway, here's to a great big win that justifies my arrogance, a City defeat so horrific that the owners lose faith in the project and withdraw all financial backing and, on a serious note, the full recovery of Theo Walcott. For now.

*I am aware of the shocking comments made by some of an Arsenal persuasion on Twitter. They were unforgivable and I would encourage criminal proceedings to rid Arsenal, and football as a whole, of this minority of fools.

Friday 3 January 2014

'Tis the Season to Be Jolly

It's been too long since I wrote and due to the nature of this period, I've missed a lot of games. Some were good, other not so good but every single one of them crucial and overall I think we've done ok. We've played five games in the last couple of weeks (two of which I saw in person) and there's a big one coming up tomorrow so I'll just round up a bit and preview a little.

There are too many games for me to write about individually but a good starting point would be the 0-0 draw with Chelsea. That was one of the two that I attended but to be honest, I almost wish I hadn't. Of course it's always treat to go and see the Arsenal and a big London derby like this is no exception. However, the spectacle is not always fantastic and our encounter with Chelsea was a turgid game. I was more fascinated by the spectacular weather at the Emirates than the game being played which might have been true of some of the players as well (I'm looking at you Aaron Ramsey) (but in a playful way that acknowledges your achievements so far this season so as not to offend you). It was a really rotten night in North London, with heavy rain joining forces with howling wind to produce conditions that even the world's best may have struggled in. I got soaked high up in the stands so I can't imagine how the players might have felt.

Tactically, Mourinho set Chelsea up not to lose. Which is kind of fair enough but it did make for a dull 90 minutes. We were nowhere near our best and despite the denial of a clear penalty, a draw was just about fair. Nevertheless, it did feel like an opportunity missed. This Chelsea side may be the expensively assembled play thing of a Russian Sugar Daddy but I don't think that they are an excellent side at all. They get built up thanks to Mourinho's character and yes they may win the League but we're just as good a side and at home, we should have seized the opportunity to win.

Something I'm finding very annoying now is the Love-In between the so 'Happy One' and the Press. I think we all indulged in a little admiration first time round when he arrived with the continental swagger, accented one-liners and silvery hair but the effect wore off a long time ago for most people. Now he's damn right obnoxious. He's so boring and most of the things he says are blatant falsities. He can't open his mouth without uttering some ludicrously innacurate statement to defend his team. Penalty? 'It was a dive.' Red card? 'They cry too much.' Racism? Actually I'll avoid putting words into his mouth but you get the message.

I should add that our own manager is not adverse to protecting his players. The famous Wenger 'I didn't see the incident' is one such example. Yet despite this, I appreciate how Arsene tries to maintain a degree of honesty. Mourinho these days spouts such rubbish that he's almost inviting a response in the knowledge that he is the darling of the Press and they will never truly challenge him. It's easy to see where AVB got his odious personal traits from.

Rant over. We beat West Ham after coming from behind which I think was a notable result due to the identity of our saviour. Theo Walcott rarely scores goal that win games. Ok maybe not rarely but it's somewhat uncommon. So for him to pull the cat out of the bag, even against a poor West Ham, was nice to see and indicative of a bit of mental strength.

Anyway, we beat Newcastle then I went to the Cardiff game on Wednesday. It was another foul evening, with a little less wind than the previous Monday. Despite injuries to four automatic starters, the feeling was that we should capitalise on the Cardiff situation and record a victory. However the first half was an inert performance. Nothing really clicked (despite the best efforts of messers Cazorla and Wilshere) and Cardiff were already wasting time. It was clear that they were playing for a point and they were doing so quite effectively. In the second half we were a different team, a bit more zip added going forward. Jack Wilshere, playing in the No. 10 role that surely beckons for the future given the number on his shirt, stepped it up a gear. He was really running the show and pushing the whole team forward. The introduction of  Rosicky and Bendtner for the ineffective Podolski lead to another level of improvement and we pepered Cardiff with shots.

Some people said that it was going to be one of those days but I was personally kind of confident. It's something about this side at the moment that radiates assurance. Even so, it was getting desperate in the end so when Bendtner finally broke the deadlock, the relief was tangible. The delightful chip from the unusually involved Walcott was the icing on the cake. Aside from Podolski, the whole team performed very well. It was a confidence building victory and it rounded off a generally jolly festive period. It also sets us up well for the Spurs game tomorrow.

Once again it's got late so I may have tailed off towards the end. I've a lot to do so there won't be a preview for the FA Cup game tomorrow. I'd expect a strong side though. Anyway. I'll see you later.