Monday, 04 February 08, 04:18 PM
Well, that's only half the story, but yes, the usually uninvolved Arsene Wenger has decided to interfere in player affairs.
Adebayor's celebration this season has largely involved running towards the fans, sliding across the turf on his knees. However, Wenger has asked him not to celebrate in this way because of an incident that happened in 1997 with Patrick Vieira.
Vieira went for exactly the came celebration, but ended up injuring his knee, and spent 5 weeks out. At the time, Arsenal still had David Platt, Manu Petit, Ray Parlour and Gilles Grimandi to provide cover in central midfield, but if Adebayor got injured now, the team would be in serious trouble.
This also reminds me of another incident back in 2000 (or maybe it was 1999), where Thierry Henry ran towards the corner flag to celebrate - he pulled it back, and unfortunately was injured when it rebounded and hit him!
Do you know of any weird celebration related injuries? Let us know below!
Friday, 25 January 08, 05:55 AM
Well, the title is oversimplifying it a little bit, but let's not lose sight of everything in the midst of all the fallout from the Adebayor-Bendtner incident, and Spurs' champagne-spraying celebrations (as if they'd won the Champions' League or something).
The Carling Cup is, and always has been Arsenal's 4th priority. The Carling Cup, as Juande Ramos told us recently, was Tottenham's No. 1 target, and Dimitar Berbatov even said this was their "match of the year".
Hence we saw an extremely pumped Spurs team, at home, on the cusp of a Wembley final, playing a disjointed Arsenal side that have the slight distractions of competing for the league, and being in the Champions League AND the FA Cup.
The Spuds haven't won in this fixture since 1999, and that pathetic record of theirs was bound to end sometime. This was the perfect opportunity for it - at home, Carling Cup semi-final (which they messed up last year), and against their local rivals' second/youth side. They played like it was their "Match of the Year", and sadly we played like it was our lowest priority competition. However, while defeat is somewhat (only slightly) palpable, the scoreline was the shocking bit.
And on that, I have nothing to say other than "WHAT THE FUCK?". At 2-0 I shook my head, but though OK there's a chance. At 3-0 I grimaced, and at 4-0 I burst out laughing from the sheer absurdity of it all - who would have thought? Spurs up 4-0 against the Arsenal in a cup semi-final. Happily for them the record books will not tell us that the Carling Cup is a mickey mouse tournament, nor that Arsenal played a secondary side, but that's the price of losing.
Credit to them, they were excellent on the day, and quite clinical, but some of the Arsenal players were god awful. It wasn't even that weak of an Arsenal side, with Gallas and Sagna drafted in because of injury, and Hleb playing on the right to add some creativity. Fabregas even played most of the game after Denilson had come off injured after 20 minutes. Some of the players just did not seem up for it, and captain William Gallas particularly was awful.
Arsene Wenger gave in to the temptation of including some senior players, understandable given the size and nature of the fixture, but I understand completely his regrets in not letting some of the youngsters have a go and playing the players that he did, because some of them were just not in the game.
The players will have to respond at the weekend against Newcastle, and it will be difficult with the cloud of the whole Bendtner-Adebayor clash hanging over them. Adebayor's behaviour was seriously, seriously out of order, and no matter how much he's done for the club, striking a junior teammate in public, in a game such as that, is completely unacceptable. While Bendtner is a cocky, mouthy lad, he is one of the family, and i'm sure the players and other people within the club are just shocked by what Ade has done.
There is some serious patching up to do.
Sunday, 06 January 08, 05:18 PM
A fact that many people are unaware of, but which is still quite outstanding, is that Arsene Wenger has never lost to lower-league opposition in his 11+ years as Arsenal manager. His 616 games as an Arsenal manager have included 98 cup ties, but none of them have ever been lost to lower league opposition, and that continued to be the case today as Burnley were edged out by a patchy Arsenal side.
It was a mix of youth and experience - Sagna was restored to right-back, Toure and Eboue played 90 minutes and gave whole-hearted "last" performances before leaving for the African Cup of Nations, and Gilberto and Lehmann got some first team action. There were no real surprises in the line-up, with Traore coming in for the rested Clichy, and Diaby and Denilson completing the midfield. Up front it was Eduardo and Bendtner, and the side was altogether too strong for Burnley.
Eduardo scored the first goal after being put through by a nicely weighted Toure long pass, which he controlled and then carefully poked past the onrushing Gabor Kiraly. The Crozilian then played a simple slide rule pass into Bendtner's run, and the Dane rounded Kiraly before slotting home in one cool movement.
Burnley didn't offer too much, but they had the first chance of the match, with Kyle Lafferty thumping a header against the bar. Lafferty was then sent off for a clumsy lunge at Gilberto. It wasn't two-footed, but the foot was high off the ground and it could have done some serious damage if Gilberto's leg had been planted.
Overall, Owen Coyle can be proud of the effort his boys put in, but they will need much more than fighting spirit to improve things in the league.
Friday, 04 January 08, 11:44 PM
All photos shamelessly nicked from the Daily Mail, but here they are for your enjoyment:




I hope Almunia isn't offended that Beckham copied his hairdo.
Tuesday, 01 January 08, 08:23 PM
Just wanted to wish everyone (not just Arsenal fans) a Happy New Year! All the best for 2008.
As for the Arsenal fans... well, it's a happy start to the new year.
Arseblog have said that Carlos Vela is in London with the club (the source they've got is 99% legitimate), and it's quite likely that he's going to play the rest of the season, although some are speculating that he's just going to train with the team over the winter break (this would be odd though). Notably, Vela qualifies for his Spanish passport this January, and everyone of course will have noticed the lack of punch in this Arsenal squad when the injuries have been present. At times we've been short a winger, and at other times we've been short a striker, and he can play all across the wings and forward line.
And of course Wenger announced earlier that Johan Djourou would be coming back from Birmingham, so that's two new good quality signings, in addition to Robin Van Persie's return from injury (which Arsene has said "will be like a new signing").
All this in addition to use beating West Ham 1-0 at home in a very convincing performance to maintain our 2 point lead at the top of the table.
Good luck for the rest of the season!
Saturday, 22 December 07, 04:48 AM
A lot of Arsenal fans are quite happy with the Milan draw. I am too, but because it's going to be a good contest, with brilliant football and matchups, NOT because I think it will be a walkover like others fans seem too. It's a great chance for Arsenal to progress, because playing against a defensive team would be harder, but a lot of people have this perception of AC Milan as being full of "ageing old man" and a one-man-team based on Kaka.
People seem to easily overlook Andrea Pirlo in any mentions, but he's the most important player for them. Kaka is replaceable, and they can win without him, but not without Pirlo. The key is the
Kaka-Pirlo-Seedorf trio, because they are constantly operating together all over the pitch. They are not as much of a one-man team as everyone is making them out to be. Kaka and Seedorf drag
defenders all over the place, and rarely lose the ball even when under pressure, and Inzaghi is always there waiting to move into the space they create. Gilardino is finally playing well
consistently too.
As for Kaka, even though I don't think Milan are a one man team, he's still their best shot at winning matches, and can do so on his own. Arsenal don't have anyone like that in the squad, who can
just turn it on and take on the opposition like Thierry Henry used to, so everybody has to be playing well. Let's hope they are.
Milan aren't playing that well, and they generally don't create that many chances, but they have players like Inzaghi, Ronaldo, Kaka and Seedorf on the end of them, and those guys don't miss.
Arsenal create loads of chances, but have Adebayor, Hleb, and Rosicky frustratingly missing most of them. Cesc is more clinical this season, but Robin Van Persie will be crucial.
Also, Ronaldo will be fit and ready by then - you can never rule him out, and don't forget about Pato... he is eligible from Jan 3rd onwards, and even though he's still quite raw, he's got amazing
natural ability. I saw him play in only his 7th or 8th start for Internacional, and he completely tore Carles Puyol to pieces.
As for Gattuso, he's got a reptuation for being a nutter and a hardman ni midfield, but he's really not that physical. The Premiership offers much tougher tests, and he gets more of a reputation
for that than he should, probably because he's such an oddity for an Italian/Serie A player. I was never a big fan of his, but he's worked hard on his game, and his ability to foul tactically is
tremendous. Physically, his main asset is the non-stop running, which I guess is Flamini's as well, but Gattuso is much quicker than Flam, and so can press harder and faster. They also play with
two defensive midfielders, and Ambrosini is definitely the stronger of the two. If Emerson plays I think Arsenal will take over the midfield, because he's completely past it.
Milan's main weakness is that fact that they don't have any fullbacks. Jankulovski and Oddo are clueless, but love going forward. Maldini and Bonera are basically centrebacks, and are on the slower
side. Ancelotti has this really bizarrely weird habit of only playing them in pairs, so it will either be Maldini and Bonera, or Oddo and Jankulovski. They are still class in the centre of defence,
but Kaladze has his dodgy moments. Adebayor will be key against them.
Ultimately Arsenal's main strength will be pace, especially with the fullbacks. Even with Jankulovski and Oddo bombing forward, those guys aren't super quick, and Milan don't attack with as much
pace (Kaka excepted). I think that's always been Wenger's strength against the Italian teams, especially when he lets them attack with their slow buildup and then massacres them on the
counters.
I think Arsene's record against Italian teams so far (post Wembley) is: P 10, W 5, D 3, L 2
That's home wins against Juventus (x2) and Lazio, and wins away to Inter and Roma. The draws were away to Lazio, where we were unlucky to conede an own goal, away to Juve when we had already won
2-0 at Highbury in the first leg, and a really poor 1-1 home draw to Roma after Totti had been sent off. The losses were of course the 3-0 at home to Inter, and the 1-0 away to Juve where we were
virtually out of the group stage already, and Thierry Henry missed a penalty.
That's only 3 bad showings in 10 games, and all of those were in the group stages. Arsenal have won all their knockout stage ties against Italian sides, so the signs are good.
Monday, 10 December 07, 08:16 AM
For his first title,
Arsene Wenger used a slew of shrewd signings to push Arsenal to victory. He had inherited a solid defensive base, and needed to add the right ingredients, which he did. So Patrick Vieira, Marc
Overmars, Emmanuel Petit and Nicolas Anelka all arrived (amongst other) to complement the legendary back 5, and Dennis Bergkamp. In May 1998, Arsenal were Champions.
Some years later, with his back 4 ageing, Wenger once again made additions in Freddie Ljungberg, Silvinho, Lauren and Sol Campbell. Thierry Henry, Robert Pires, Edu, and Sylvain Wiltord all arrived within a few years of each other, and provided a combined exercise of focussed team building and once again buying the right ingredients when needed. In May 2002, Arsenal were Champions.
Wenger had bought very cleverly, and of a good age group, so with just the slightly younger Jens Lehmann replacing David Seaman, Arsenal were the Unbeaten Champions in May 2004, having been boosted in January by the signing of Jose Antonio Reyes.
Since then, Wenger has been building, building, and building, but not purchasing too much. While this was frustrating for the fans, you can't fault the logic behind it. When you are building something, you have to know what you have before you start to make decisions on what to do with it.
So since 2004, Arsene has been carefully building - Cesc, Van Persie, Clichy, Eboue, Toure, Senderos, Flamini, Adebayor, Diaby, Denilson, Walcott and Djourou - they all arrived as promising youngsters, or backup players, but Wenger has gradually built them all into a team, allowing them time to grow into what he hoped they might become, and being careful not to stifle them with a glut of signings.
Hleb was added one year, Rosicky and Gallas the next, and the excellent Sagna this year. They have all complemented and enhanced the fantastic base that was built up slowly, and now Wenger knows what his baby has become. And while this baby has played some excellent football, worked hard, and gotten good results, it has it's failings, and January is the time to address these.
No matter how he chops and changes things, there are two things that Wenger cannot build or adapt to at the moment.
The first, is a lack of punch up front - most of the goals have come from midfield, with Adebayor often erratic and ineffective, and Van Persie injured. Beyond them, there is no one - Walcott is still a long way off, Eduardo is taking too long to adapt, and Bendtner is too raw.
The second, is a lack of a genuine left-sided player. Rosicky has been there for 2 years now, and looks progressively less comfortable in that position. It's not that he's right-footed (both Pires and Overmars were right-footed, but they were very comfortable in their roles), it's just that it doesn't suit his style. Apart from him, there's no one but makeshifts - Clichy, Traore or Eduardo.
And that is the glaring truth - we have only 2 strikers, of which only one is a really threatening goalscorer (Van Persie), and no left-sided player (although Hleb often roams in that area too good effect). There's no solving these from within the squad (if he could have, Wenger would have tried something other than the 4-5-1), so it's time to buy in January, and I think this is the year that it really might happen.
Wenger has spent sparingly for 5 or 6 years now, and especially with the huge revenue from the new stadium, he is sitting on a large amount of cash (nevermind his "We have no money" protestations). Like I've said, apart from the fact that he's cheap, he's also been mindful of the fact that he wanted the youngsters to achieve their potential, and they've done that. So now is the time to add quality and experience. He only needs two players, and there's a very good chance that he will buy them in January, and that he'll spend good money on them too.
As for who they might be? Well I'd like to hear your thoughts on that!
Friday, 19 October 07, 08:10 PM
The big story ahead of this Saturday’s matchup against Bolton is that Manuel Almunia will keep his place in the team, with Jens Lehmann not even making the bench. Wenger also mentions that he has three world class keepers, and that he can’t please all of them. I know that referring to the occasionally walkabout Almunia and the untested Fabianski as “world class” will cause a few laughs, but we can’t really question Arsene’s judgement, especially after this season’s resurgence.
This will all come as a shock to Jens Lehmann though – he’s been progressively getting more antsy and mouthy, and his latest interview is a bit of a shocker and a challenge to the boss. He claims that his absences have been purely through injury (“Did you seen me sitting on the bench once?”), and that he expects to play from now on. Well, this will come as a shock to his system I’m sure.
Arsene is never one to publicly criticise, but he will not have appreciated Jens’ outburst, and leaving him out of the squad when he’s declared himself fit is a strong reproach. Whilst Almunia hasn’t really convinced or done anything exceptional, he has been solid, and the team have won all 10 games in which he’s played. We must remember that it was Lehmann who lost his own place with his errors in the first two premiership games, and it’s only fair that Almunia has gotten his chance.
We need to show a little patience towards Manuel too – after all, this is his first real run in the team in the 4 seasons that he’s been at Arsenal, and he’s not let anyone down. He’s been getting better over the years, and we won’t really see the best of him until he’s had about 15-17 consecutive games in which to cement his place and feel comfortable.
Jens on the other hand, has been “in decline” for a while. There were several errors from him last season, although he redeemed himself with some stunning saves, but the signs were there, and for many his mistakes this year weren’t that surprising.
It’s going to be a tricky situation though, because Jens has challenged the boss, and the boss has responded. He’s said that Lehmann needs to be patient and win his place back, but the harmony of the squad is now at stake. Jens has already made disrespectful statements towards Almunia, and the more agitated he gets, the worse it will become for the team. He’s also got his Euro 2008 place at stake, and the next few months will be very interesting.
In my opinion, it will all come down to how well Almunia keeps doing. If he starts to make mistakes, then Lehmann will come back into the team and be first-choice till the end of the season. However, if Almunia keeps doing well, then Lehmann will be off in January. Either way, Jens has no future at Arsenal beyond this season.Thursday, 11 October 07, 05:43 PM
And for once he's not talking about how wonderful he is, or how regretful Chelsea should be, or how nobody around him is good enough. That's right ladies and gents - it seems that when the going is good, it gets Gallas going (or something like that). Seeming happy and cheery before France's Euro 2008 qualifier, he's talked about the various goings-on at the club, including his own absence, as well as giving his optimistic opinions on a few teammates.
He starts off by apologising for his behaviour during his enforced absence through injury, in stark contrast to last season's hissy fit at the alleged "incompetence" of the Arsenal medical stuff, and says he's looking forward to playing for both France and Arsenal:
"It's difficult for everyone. I have experienced it before when I have been injured, and it's always the same. The first week or so you can deal with it, but three, four, five weeks later? Trust me it's hard to keep smiling. So I want to say sorry to all of the players, and also the staff at the training ground, because they could see I wasn't always happy. It's just that I really want to play."
Fair enough I suppose.
He also talks about Gael Clichy's absence from the France squad, which is quite puzzling given his excellent form this season. Clichy was named along with Gallas, Sagna, Flamini and Diaby as provisionals for the squad, but was the only one not picked. The best thing Clichy can do now is to just keep plugging away, because he's one of the best left-backs in Europe, and that cap will come sooner rather than later. Gallas:
"He has to be patient now, and I know what he is feeling because I was in the same position as him when I was at Chelsea and all I can say to him is to be patient because it will come."
Discussion moves on to another young, French left-back - the exciting Armand Traore, and Gallas clearly sees a big future for
him:
"There are lot of great youngsters at Arsenal so it is difficult to say one name above the others. The one who has monster potential and can achieve something special is Armand Traore. He is only 18 and plays for France’s Under-19 team. If he keeps his head on his shoulders he can do something big in the future."
Thankfully for Armand, his head seems to be quite small and dainty in proportion to his shoulders, so hopefully it stays firmly there. Which is in stark contrast to some very
big-headed people at the club:
And lastly, our great captain shares his wisdom on Eduardo, our Crozilian striker who is still in the process of settling in, and hasn't yet had the chance to show us what he's capable of:
"When you are on your own you ask yourself questions on your sporting performances. In such moments you have to feel mentally strong. Eduardo is not a different person. Everybody has to go through this. I can reassure Arsenal fans that he is a talented striker. We will see the Eduardo we know from Croatia in a couple of months."
Well we look forward to that, and to Gallas's return to action from injury. It's a bit annoying that he's going to play for France in the qualifiers, but he looks to be doing so
with Wenger's blessings this time, and hopefully he comes
through unscathed. Things are going well with the team at the moment, and Gallas even talks about how the French Gunners are all happy in the national
training camp because of how well they're doing in the league:
"It's a great feeling, though, for us all to meet up for France when we are top of the league, and top of our Champions League group. Of course nothing is done yet, and I would prefer to go to the national team as champions, because then you feel very strong - but at the moment things are fine, things are going well."
I have no problems with a happy, committed Gallas coming into the first team, because he's a classy defender with a wealth of experience. It's when he's in his whingey, self-centred
psychosis that he starts to become a complete pain. But so far, so good, and it's nice to see that the youngsters aren't the only ones starting to show a bit of maturity.
Monday, 09 July 07, 05:18 PM
Well, after months and months of speculation, it looks like Arsenal are about to wrap up a deal for Auxerre and France right-back Bakari Sagna, for about £7-8 million.
It's a big fee for a player that many regards as a relative unknown, and I must confess that I don't know too much about him other than that he's very fast and athletic, and was the best right-back in France last year (and some even say he was the best right-sided player overall).
One thing is for certain - this makes things a bit confusing for the fans, with Eboue and Hoyte already in the side, and the promising Kerrea Gilbert there as well. Will Hleb be sold, and Eboue pushed up to the wing? Will Sagna be the new right-winger? Maybe Freddie is on his way? It will be interesting nonetheless, because this transfer seems certain to finally take place, and it's also the kind of transfer that indicates that one of our current players will be moving on.
It will be a pleasing signing, in some ways moreso than Eduardo da Silva, because Sagna is a really, really highly-rated player, but it won't satisfy the fans, because more than anything else, they are still crying out for a star (preferrably) a striker to come in.
On David Beckham trains with Arsenal - Photos