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Miguel Veloso to Arsenal?

Thursday, 18 October 07, 01:31 PM

There have been persistent rumours about Miguel Veloso coming to Arsenal for the last 6 months. It all started with stories towards the end of last season about us trailing him, and Joao Moutinho. Then late this summer, there were quotes from his agent about how English clubs were interested. Over the past few days, there have been stories circulating everywhere about how we have come close to matching his £20 million release clause. There are also stories that he had signed a pre-contract agreement to arrive in January 2008, which appeared on his Wikipedia profile (it now says that he is on the verge of signing for a club record fee of £17 million.

I spoke to LaViz, our excellent Portuguese blogger, and she tells me that Veloso currently plays in a style quite reminescent of Fernando Redondo, the Argentine ex-Real and AC Milan holding midfielder who was a brilliant reader of the game, and had incredible technique and vision.

She also describes Veloso as being a bit like Nicolas Burdisso - in that he is very versatile, and can function anywhere across the back line or midfield, or in between. And not only can he play in these positions, he can do so effectively.

Because of the fact that he is athletic, and technically blessed, she feels that the coaches are trying to get him to play a bit like Esteban Cambiasso (she's an Inter fan, so does best with these comparisons); i.e. getting him to contribute more when going forward, and be more dynamic with his movement.

And how would he fit in at the Arsenal? The answer is... well... I have no idea. We signed Lassane Diarra this summer, and his best position is the holding midfield role, as is Gilberto's. However, neither of them have seen much playing time because of Mathieu Flamini's all-conquering, Gattuso-esque displays. Don't forget about Abou Diaby either. However, it's worth noting that Flamini is yet to sign a new deal, and that Gilberto might well be off in January (the Valencia rumours keep persisting, and Juventus haven't gone away either). Even so, with Diarra, Cesc, Diaby and Denilson around, that's quite a congested midfield.

Then again, Arsene Wenger has a habit of signing players and then doing other things with them. He spent £10m on the winger Thierry Henry (remember him?), and made him into a terrific striker. He spent £12m on left-winger Reyes, and made him into a striker (which never really worked out). He spent £11m on Wiltord, and played him at right-wing a lot of the time. Those are the big buys, there's also Van Persie, Ljungberg, Toure, Djourou and Eboue who have all learned new positions.

So where would Veloso fit in? He's played left-back, centre-back, central midfield and left-midfield, so we know he could cover all of those. He's got an excellent left-foot, and we all know that Arsene likes his gifted left-footed midfielders (Petit, Edu, van Bronckhorst, Reyes). The team has no left-footed midfielders at the moment, and is missing a bit of width, so it's quite possible that he might be sizing up Veloso as an option.

There's also the theory that he signed as the ultimate utility player - capable of playing anywhere in defence or midfield, he might hasten the departures of Hoyte, Senderos, Song, Gilberto, and maybe even Gallas, trimming the squad, and reducing the wage bill. However £17 million is quite exorbitant for a utility player, even if the club has cash to spend, and Gilberto's (possible) departure might bring in about £7 million or so.

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New Striker for the Arsenal between Monday-Wednesday?

Sunday, 24 June 07, 02:29 AM


Unfortunately not a 100% good source, but a new striker is expected to be signed by Wednesday for the Arsenal, in fact possibly even being unveiled as early as Monday, to boost the Arsenal fans as pictures of Henry doing tricks and juggling and smiling at the Nou Camp in a Barca shirt stream through.

Rumours so far are - Anelka, Michael Owen and/or Obafemi Martins. Klaas-Jan Huntelaar is also another widely mooted possiblity, although Wenger's preference for pace and Huntelaar's lack of it (especially in comparison to the aforementioned trio) will probably count against him.

The Henry transfer has been boiling for a while, maybe even from as early as January, and Wenger has been actively seeking out reinforcements. The broadsheets have also picked up on this, some saying that Arsenal are in advanced negotiations to sign someone.

Wenger won't be wasting any time this year. Two seasons ago he dilly dallied over Julio Baptista, while Shaun-Wright Phillips and Sergio Ramos both decided to sign for Real Madrid and Chelsea (respectively) instead, and pre-season (and the season) were disastrous. Early July is when the Arsenal will have their pre-season matches underway, and hopefully all signings will be done and dusted by mid-July so that the preparations for 2007/2008 can go smoothly.

 

 

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Champions League Round of 16, Day 1, Legs 1

Wednesday, 21 February 07, 07:36 PM

Well, closest to home, Arsenal lost 1-0 to PSV in Eindhoven and have it all to do now. They dominated the first half, probably should have scored at least one, if not two, and then started to get sloppy in the second half and Edison Mendez fired a longe range shot in. It was very shabby all in all, the defence just let him have a go and Lehmann didn't react at all. The shot wasn't the greatest, but it did the job. The Arse tried to forward, and PSV looked very threatening on the counter-attack. That worries me for the second leg, because PSV are very clever and adept, and they will probably adopt the same strategy of trying to hit Arsenal on the break, and being very stubborn to break down. One away goal and, in my mind, the tie is over. Arsenal look a bit tired, bereft of attacking threat, and most importanly Thierry Henry is in his worst patch of form since joining the club. He doesn't look confident, he can't outrun people, can't beat them, is showing a very sloppy touch, and generally doesn't look like threatening or brilliant. It doesn't help that he seems petulant, disaffected and a bit disinterested. Maybe he needs a rest, maybe he needs to be tripped off the armband, maybe he needs a good telling off, but realistically none of those are going to happen because with Robin Van Persie out, and Julio Baptista showing all the touch and composure of a boxer, he has to play. But quite honestly this season, we have played some of our best stuff without him, and he really hampers the team on days like this. Last season, and at several points over his Arsenal career, he has carried the team, but right now the team has to carry him, and the weight seems to be too much to bear. Hopefully he can reach into that moody mind of his and bring out that fire that seems to be lacking.

At Parkhead, Celtic played out a 0-0 draw at home to AC Milan, and I think that's a great result for them. Milan are having a terrible season domestically, and are under pressure to do well in the Champions League. Wee Gordon Strachan has got his team playing decently, and with committment, physicality and Shunsuke Nakamura, Celtic have every chance of making it through. The Scots play very "British" football - they will fight for everything, never give up, and with Nakamura there is always the danger of them scoring from a free-kick, or having the Japan international create chances for Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink or Jiri Jarosik. If they score first, they will fight unbelievably to try and hold on, and if Milan score first you can be sure they'll sweat blood trying to equalise. Either way that away goal will be important, and I see Milan having to score at least 2 to go through.

In Madrid, two ailing European giants squared up against each other. Real Madrid beat Bayern Munich 3-2, but those two away goals are crucial for the Germans. Both teams are former European champions, and stalwarts in the Champions League, but they are struggling badly in their respective leagues. Real have always been known for patches of comedy and inconsistency, but Bayern have always had a reputation for consistency and toughness. This year both are hovering around the top of their leagues, but unable to seriously challenge for anything. The Real circus has proved very difficult to stop, and Bayern have attempted to rectify things by bringing back the legendary Ottmar Hitzeld, their former coach and man who has won two Champions League titles. Raul scored 2 and Ruud van Horsefacerooij the other as Real went up 3-1 in the first half, Lucio had briefly answered for the Bavarians. But if Bayern were sloppy in the first, then Real were in the second, and they conceded a very late goal, Mark van Bommel scoring to make it 3-2. That's a significant away goal advantage, and I think Bayern can pinch the goal they need. Real are on the way down - Capello has been unpopular and not too effective, and has allegedly tried to hand in his resignation, but Hitzfeld has only just arrived in Munich and is still working his magic. By the time March 7 rolls around I expect Bayern will be in much better shape.

And lastly to Lille, and the most controversial game of the round so far. Man United won 1-0 right at the death with a quickly-taken free-kick that Lille were very unhappy about. The Lille players walked off the pitch in protest, and there was chaos everywhere. The fans were enraged and throwing things on the field, and it was not just Giggs' goal that made them unhappy, but the fact that Peter Odemwingie had had what seemed like a perfectly good header disallowed for a foul earlier in the match. It was a game that Lille had been brightest in, driving forward and attacking United's goal, but eventually United had more experience and solidity. You can't really blame them for taking a quick free-kick because the referee allowed them too, but at the same time the referee did not do a particularly good job. I still think it's not over for Lille, and the second leg will be interesting because Lille are a very, very feisty side. Having conceded an away goal, they will have nothing to lose, so the second leg in Manchester looks like it will be a very, very exciting game.

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Bolton 1 -3 Arsenal : Overview of the Madness & Ratings

Friday, 16 February 07, 08:15 PM

So here is the story in short:

1. There was a lot of pre-match buildup including - "Bolton are Arsenal's bogey team", "Arsenal's 'pretty' footballers can't handle Bolton's thuggery", "Allardyce spurts bravado bullshit and slags Wenger off". This included the usual rubbish about Bolton's "honest" English players, Wenger's diving foreigners and all sorts of usual xenophobic nonsense that the English press loves to throw up. Wenger stuck to his guns (as he always does, and said that they would play football and try to win.

2. The story of the first-match was - Bolton going up 1-0 through Kevin Nolan early on, Arsenal equalising for 1-1 through Kolo Toure late on. Both teams were wasteful, but it was a tense, tight affair.

3. The story of this match was a little more complex. I'm tempted to use bullet points, but i'm too lazy: Arsenal played football, and how. Mesmering passing and dominant possession throughout the first half resulted only in a one goal lead. Hleb, Denilson, Rosicky and Adebayor all combining beautifully in the build-up, and the Togostick scoring with a left-footed shot via a deflection off Stelios. Diaby and Denilson were magical in the centre of midfield, controlling the play, going in for tackles, and above all always moving the ball around. This lead was almost lost just before half-time when Stelios hit the bar. Time for a new paragraph.

The second half was a little bit more even, but not much at all. Arsenal lost a bit of their flow and rhythym but still controlled the game. Baptista showed great Brazilianity to win a penalty, which Gilberto slammed high into the roof... of the stadium. Still 1-0 to the Arsenal. Bolton's influence on the game was increasing, but Arsenal countered well, and Adebayor sprinted through on goal, neatly rounded the keeper, and with the goal COMPLETELY at his mercy, he fired the ball in.. to the post, from where it rebounded away to safety. Still 1-0 to the Arsenal, but things get more tense now. Then, the predictable happened. As a few Arsenal counter-attacks and half-chances were again wasted (Baptista was particularly guilty), Bolton equalised in the 92nd minute. How? Through a corner of course, because Arsenal were once again "brilliant" with their set-piece defending (although to be fair they actually were for most of the game). With Bolton keeper Jasskalainen mucking about with Toure on the penalty spot, three players queued up unmarked at the far post, the ball was headed in, and Meite stabbed it home. Pandemonium. End of normal time, and end of paragraph.

Extra-time started off with the Arse looking nervous, and I really feared for the result. I am always confident that we can win penalty shootouts when Almunia is involved, but getting to the end of extra-time seemed like it was going to be a problem, especially when stand-in centreback Gilberto flicked a cross towards his own goal, fortunately it hit the post and was sent to safety. The first-half of extra-time ended without further event, and with both teams looking tense and tired, penalties were very possibly on the cards. Not to be so however, and two substitutes combined to give Arsenal the lead. Jeremie Aliadiere showed great pace and skill to run about 45 yards, beating about 4 or 5 players along the way, and tapped a neat ball into the path of the onrushing Freddie, who a la 2002, took the ball in his stride with his right foot, and struck a perfect early shot with his left that was only ever destined for the far corner. 2-1 to the Arsenal.

Bolton surged forward in search of an equaliser, and with their keeper up for another corner, Arsenal broke, Adebayor was clean through on goal, and Anelka fouled him from behind in the penalty area. Why was it not a red card? There was no keeper in sight, so Adeabyor had a clear goalscoring opportunity and Anelka was the last man, and he made no attempt to get the ball. All that he got was a yellow. Perhaps the referee didn't want to send off a second Bolton "footballer" after dismissing the dirty, smelly and irritating Tal Ben Haim earlier on, but it's not Arsenal's problem that people like Tal Ben Haim exist is it?

Anyways, Baptista stepped up to take the penalty, and obviously him and Gilberto are having some sort of "Best Brazilian" contest, and the Beast being his humble self, he decided to let Gilberto win and smacked the penalty even harder and more inaccurately than Gil. Still 2-1.

Then finally, Arsenal got their deserved scoreline. Baptista broke through on goal, tried to round the keeper and messed it up, and ended up "passing" the ball to Adebayor who tucked it home. He deserved that second goal, and Arsenal deserved their scoreline, and Bolton deserved absolutely nothing but a loss and a lesson in football, both of which they got.

Full time: Bolton 1 - 3 Arsenal, and Blackburn await in the next round on Saturday. This was one of the most exciting games of the season, and for both excitement and quality of football, patches of it sensational.

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Almunia (8/10) - So solid, so composed. Is this really Almunia? He's good in these phsyical games, because of his temperament. People tend to always have a go at Lehmann, especially Bolton. Almunia just gets on with it, which helps the team. His shot-stopping has never been in doubt, but this season his aerial ability, judgement and command of his area have been super.

Djourou (7/10) - Played at right-back to try and combat aerial attacks and did well. Was surprisingly declared fit after his suspected "broken nose". Started to disappear later on, and was apparently injured and subbed off for Hoyte.

Toure (7.5/10) - Some people said he struggled, but he did well. He must be exhausted, but he's such a force at the back with his pace and power. He's looked a bit out of sorts and positionally suspect, but he's always there, and always trying to drive the team forward. Got beaten by Anelka once, but didn't give him a sniff after that.

Gilberto (7.5/10) - Another oustanding performance filling in at the back from Gilberto. Very composed, and turned in a great performance, although he almost scored an own goal. He never looked confident for the penalty, and the miss was no surprise.

Clichy (8/10) - Just oustanding from the zippy Frenchman. Another one who must be completely shattered, and there's really very little relief in sight for him with Gallas still injured and Traore not being ready to play week-in, week-out yet. So quick, so alert and composed on the ball even if his passing and crossing are still off the mark. Really has come into his own over the past month or so. Was such a threat going forward and combining with Rosicky, and providing instant pace and presence on counter-attacks.

Hleb (8/10) - Immensely classy player, and never afraid to take on a game. He ran at Bolton time and time again, and was instrumental in setting up the opened. Not often the man who gives the final pass, but almost always the facilitator of it, he really is a special, unique talent. There aren't many dribblers like him, and he gives this team a whole new dimension on the right. Worked back to help out the fullback and central midfielders as always. 2/10 for the haircut thought.

Denilson (7.5) - The youngster was brilliant. What a find. So strong, so skillful. Together with Diaby he ran the show for the first 70 minutes or so, and played commitedly for all 120. Had a few lapses, but he's only 19. He plays Wengerball properly, and if Bolton's midfield is supposed to be tough, then this kid is a monster in the making. Happy birthday!

Diaby (7.5) - Time and time again, it seemed like Patrick Vieira had somehow been secretly smuggled back in to London and was playing for the Arsenal. Using his physique and winning the ball and gliding past players just like Le Grand Saucisse used to, Abou seems to have recovered well from his injury. He had quite a few awry passes, but found his feet soon enough, and was really dominant. Didn't break Campo's foot this time, but there'll be time for that at the Grove.

Rosicky (8/10) - Man of the match by a long way for the first 60-70 minutes, he faded from the game after. He tormented the Bolton defence, tackled well, and generally created almost everything in that amazing first half. He was all over the place, but always in the right place at the right time. Bolton couldn't get near him, and his style of play is perfect for situations like these. He's stronger than he looks, and almost always looks to turn and face when receving the ball so he's always got time, always got space, and is always seeing the game. Avoided all sorts of challenges, and rarely ever lost the ball. Would have been man of the match if not for Adebayor's superhuman efforts.

Baptista (4/10) - Nonsense. Wasted chance after half-chance, didn't combine well with anyone, was sluggish, and didn't look at all confident. Tried too hard at times to make up for playing shit, but this was often at the expense of teammates, especially late on where Adebayor was open in space and all that was required was a simple square ball, but Baptista dribbled and shot his wasy to nowhere. Showed bad decision making in quite a few situations, but encouragingly doesn't seem to let it get to him. Did a tricky stepover to win a penalty, but took a horrible penalty late on. I am convinced that he looks just like a Ninja turtle, but the question is... which one?

Adebayor (9/10) - Just immense. Ran from the first minute to the last minute (that's over 2 hours!). Combined well with everybody, scored two well deserved goals, but missed a sitter in the second half that would have settled the result. He's quick, he's strong, he's tricky, and he gives 150%. It was unbelievable how he just kept on running all game. Gave the Bolton defenders so many problems, and tracked back equally well, including one situation late on where he sprinted back some 60 yards to dispossess Diouf (or was it Anelka?). Man of the match by a long way. Has found his space in this team, and he loves being here, and we love having him here.

Ljungberg (8/10) - 8!! EIGHT!!! OCHO?!?!?! Yes - 8/10, because he deserves it. Not just for that super finish (which only he could have scored), but because of the way he led and guided the team when he came on. People may say he has nothing to offer anymore, but his experience is immeanse. Just watch how he dispossessed a few Bolton players, tracked back, and the positions he took up in attack and the way he tried to use the ball (not always succesfully albeit). Made two great fouls (one resulting in a booking) that were again down to experience - he made the fouls early on, before the Bolton players could leave their own halves, and both would definitely have resulted in very dangerous counters. We love you all over again Freddie!

Aliadiere (7/10) - On for Rosi in extra-time and had a profound effect on the game, setting up Freddie. Very sharp, inventive and quick. His fresh legs turned the game, and he ran at Bolton time and time again, and held the ball up very well on the flanks.

Hoyte (6/10) - Did his job, but was shaky against Diouf and Anelka. Came on for the injured(?) Djourou.

So that's the story. It's special to see this new Arsenal team developing, they all have skill, they all have camaraderie, they all love being there, and they're all about giving 150% effort. Guys like Hleb and Rosicky can easily act like primadonnas with the amount of skill that they have, but they play the game in full - attack and defence (unlike say - Pires, or quite often Henry). This is the future, and in a team full of technicians, this kind of attitude is the key to success.

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