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Arsenal-Tottenham derby ‘the most crucial’ in Arsene Wenger’s reign


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On the face of it, there is no reason why Tottenham’s trip to Arsenal on Sunday should carry more significance than previous north London derbies.

Two fierce local rivals, three keenly contested Premier League points and one much-coveted set of bragging rights – so far, so familiar.

But scratch beneath the surface and an entirely different picture emerges.

“This is the most important derby in Arsene Wenger’s 16 years as Arsenal manager,” former Gunners right-back Lee Dixon tells BBC Sport.

“It comes at a very poignant time in the club’s history.”

Out of contention for every domestic trophy and

facing likely Champions League elimination,

Arsenal are staring at a seventh consecutive trophy-less season.

Defeat by Tottenham, who have never finished above their neighbours during Wenger’s tenure, would leave the Gunners 13 points behind third-placed Spurs in the Premier League with 12 games remaining.

Unless Arsenal then won a probable four-way scrap with Chelsea, Newcastle and Liverpool for fourth place, their 15-year run in the Champions League would be over.

“If they don’t get Champions League football next season it’s going to be a nightmare,”

says ex-Arsenal midfielder Emmanuel Petit.

“To get back to where they were, Arsenal need to sign big players in the summer and you can’t do that if you don’t play Champions League.”

Following devastating defeats by

Sunderland

and

AC Milan

in their last two matches, Arsenal will be desperate to reignite their season against Spurs.

It is a league fixture that Wenger lost only once in his first 14 years at the club, but all evidence suggests the tide is turning.

North London derby

Scott Parker and Aaron Ramsey

  • Arsenal

    have been higher-placed in the table before
    28 of the 32

    derbies since Wenger arrived
  • On average,
    Arsenal

    have had
    10.62 points

    more than
    Spurs

    going into derby games

Arsenal have won just one of their last seven top-flight meetings and go into the game below Tottenham in the table for only the fourth time in Wenger’s 32 derbies.

“Spurs are a better team than Arsenal,” Petit admits, while Dixon adds: “There has definitely been a gradual shift of power over the last few seasons.”

Football analyst and author

Alex Fynn 

wrote a book in 2000 entitled The Great Divide, which sought to explain Arsenal’s dominance over Tottenham.

“Certainly there is no great divide now,” says Fynn. “If anything, it may be role reversal.”

This has not gone down well with the crowd at Emirates Stadium, where rumblings of discontent have been audible for some time.

Tim Payton, spokesman for the Arsenal Supporters Trust (AST), describes it a “a culture shock, a wake-up call for Arsenal fans who have been used to enjoying St Totteringham’s Day”.

That is the name Arsenal followers jokingly give to the date each season when Spurs cannot mathematically finish above Arsenal.

Unfortunately for them, that holiday looks like it will not be celebrated in 2012 and many of those fans are questioning how it has come to this.

Continue reading the main story

There’s no bigger game than the north London derby at this stage of the season with so much at stake. So roll your sleeves up and get stuck in

Lee Dixon
Ex-Arsenal defender and BBC football pundit

Wenger lifted seven trophies in his first nine years at Arsenal, but now looks set to endure the longest barren spell of any manager in the club’s history.

“Wenger needed a challenge from his backroom staff and the board,” Fynn argues. “This is the most significant problem he has failed to deal with.

“The other major clubs have arguably had better backroom staff and refreshed them on several occasions. Just look at Manchester United.

“Wenger has never had this and, as other clubs have moved on, Arsenal have stood still and maybe even gone backwards.

“Why has he not surrounded himself with men of quality? What on earth is [retired former Arsenal captain] Patrick Vieira doing at Manchester City?”

Fynn also blames the 2007 departure of chief executive David Dein, who remains Wenger’s best friend, for Arsenal slipping behind their rivals in the transfer market.

This is one of many areas in which Tottenham have excelled since chairman Daniel Levy appointed Harry Redknapp as manager in 2008.

“Spurs were branded a team without ambition for almost a decade,” Petit explains. “But in the last two years they have signed so many good players and big characters that this team seems far more competitive than Arsenal.

“All of a sudden the politics changed and they started to spend a lot of money. Big wages, bringing in many international players with big experience, big characters – mixing the likes of Rafael van der Vaart and Emmanuel Adebayor with very good players already in the team like Gareth Bale, Aaron Lennon, Jermain Defoe.

“Now the quality is there and they have the mentality too. It will be very interesting to see how Arsenal react to this, especially at home. It’s a massive test after what’s happened during the last week.”

Dixon adds: “Going into a north London derby, as fans you’ll read lots of stuff. As players you put that all out of the way, you forget it, because it is ultimately about what happens on the day.

“The thing to pay more attention to is recent results and Arsenal’s form is poor.

“That in itself is demoralising. But when I was at the club, if we ever had a bad series of results the next game you want to be a big one because it gets your mind focused on what’s coming rather than feeling sorry for yourself.

“And there’s no bigger one than the north London derby at this stage of the season with so much at stake. So roll your sleeves up and get stuck in.”

The AST estimates that missing out on the Champions League could cost Arsenal £45m and that is why Payton thinks Sunday is “much more than a north London derby”.

Victory would bring fresh hope but, for Arsenal and Wenger, defeat does not bear thinking about.

“That would be the third body shot in quick succession,” says Fynn. “It may be the knockout blow.”

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Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/17132737

Arsenal boss Wenger planning £55m bid for German stars Podolski and Gotze

By
Sportsmail Reporter

Last updated at 6:55 AM on 23rd February 2012

Two of Germany’s top stars could be on their way to Arsenal this summer.

Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger is preparing to make a bid for Cologne forward Lukas Podolski and Borussia Dortmund midfielder Mario Gotze, with German newspaper Bild reporting on Thursday that the combined offer will total £55 million.

Looking good: Mario Gotze in action for Borussia Dortmund against Arsenal earlier this season

Looking good: Mario Gotze in action for Borussia Dortmund against Arsenal earlier this season

Defeat in the FA Cup at Sunderland last weekend means the Gunners are almost certain to end without a trophy for the seventh successive season, and Wenger is desperate to reinvigorate his team.

Podolski, 26, has been a key member of the Germany team for the past eight years, while 19-year-old Gotze is already an international.

Wenger saw Gotze close up this season, when he played for Dortmund against Arsenal in the European Cup.

In demand: Lukas Podolski celebrates after scoring against England at the 2010 World Cup

In demand: Lukas Podolski celebrates after scoring against England at the 2010 World Cup

Wenger, who has also been linked in recent days with a move for Blackburn forward Junior Hoilett, is coming under increasing pressure from Arsenal fans after their long wait for a trophy.

New arrivals may well depend on whether Arsenal can again qualify for the European Cup. They are currently in fourth place, ahead of their London rivals Chelsea on goal difference.

Arsenal entertain their neighbours Tottenham in the Premier League on Sunday.

Here’s what other readers have said. Why not add your thoughts,
or debate this issue live on our message boards.

The comments below have not been moderated.

both would be great additions, but i wont believe the rumours until i see a picture of them at the emirates stadium, with their new arsenal shirt on and holding up the arsenal scarf with wenger’s arm around them, but all on the official arsenal website!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I’m getting really tired with these plastic arsenal fans who don’t know what they are talking about. The reason we have not spent is because of the mess last year with Cesc and Nasri leaving late – it’s clear Wenger thought they would not and did not have a back up plan – but aside from that what has been the issue?
We’ve been building a youth team and spending money was not an issue, we invested 400 million in the emirates which is almost sorted – seriously, some of you seem to have a ‘want it now’ consumer issue. I’m not even saying it’s wenger longterm or the board, but the reality is it’s only one year, last year when the issue of spending money has arisen. Selling Adebyeor etc was just good business.

I’ll believe it when I see it DM! Seriously though, if he has any interest in keeping his captain he’ll spend on quality. Even if it’s just one player. the stats will show that if it wasn’t for RVP’s goals we’d be middle of the table easily.

Earlier in the week we were told Arsenal would be given a £55million transfer budget – Now they are making a bid for Podolski and Gotze….How convenient!

Don’t get your hopes up about this it’s the same old speculation. Until it happens there is no point getting excited. Arsenal have to count there losses and give away players for free, as mentioned Squid, Almunia, Denilson, you will make the money in freeing up wages. sell Cham for anything you can get (maybe close to 5mil). Sell
Vela, Arshavin and Theo. Our squad is to big with below average players and some that are classified as stars but clearly not ( Arshavin and Theo). Once the clear-out has happened then we can focus on QUALITY signings. Most of those mentioned don’t even get a game so its not like we cant buy 3 or 4 quality and use some younger guys like Coquelin, Frimpong, Miguel, Ryo and Bartley as backup and rotation players. PS – Quality is not Sessenong he is an average player having a good season like most of the guys we bought last summer.

My season ticket renewal reminder came through the door this morning…weird timing of this story, don’t you think?

usual rubbish from the “Sportmail Reporter” !!!

I smell BS…

Can everyone stop getting excited, this is a repeated stunt pulled by the Arsenal every year when any chance of a trophy is gone, we will quite simply sign neither of them. This is carrot that is dangled annually while the fans decide whether or not to renew their season ticket. These signings are too obvious for Wenger to make as they are proven players. He prefers young players with no experience or pedigree, this way we get to decide after 5 years that they aren’t quite good enough e.g. Bendtner, Eboue, Fabianski, Ramsey, Denilson, Walcott, Almunia, Senderos, Djourou etc etc. This relieves the manager of immediate pressure to succeed with the promise of trophys always on the horizon. We now have an owner who’s in it for investment, a board that can’t negotiate with players for contracts, a manager who’s ambition died 6 years ago, and a team that can’t defend (down to coach also).

amazing deal that would be why ? because They will join Per Mertesacker who i still believe we miss him a lottttttt in Defense after his injury. Imagine our Midfield ( Song -Frimpong DM)- ( CM Wilshere-Ramsey)- CAM (Arteta- Goetze) Goetze he is 19 , with Arteta being 29 now i guess this is good combination between youth and Experience. and Podolski is 26 with already international Caps he can play St LW. he will do gr8 with Gervinho and RVP + OX Chamberlain

The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.

Article source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/article-2105204/Arsenal-plan-55m-bid-Lukas-Podolski-Mario-Gotze.html

Zenit want Arsenal’s Arshavin on loan: director

Moscow: Zenit Saint Petersburg have entered loan negotiations with Arsenal for the London club’s troubled midfielder Andrei Arshavin, according to the Russian champion’s general director.

Arshavin, whose contract expires in June 2013, has been the subject of widespread speculation of his imminent return to Russia after spending much of the season on Arsene Wenger’s bench.

He has also been targeted by Russia’s big spenders Anzhi Makhachkala, who signed Dutch coaching legend Guus Hiddink last week.

Zenit’s General Director Maxim Mitrofanov told the Sovietsky Sport daily Arshavin was still interested in staying in England but had also realised he needed to get match fit before joining Russia’s Euro 2012 squad.

“Arshavin would interest Zenit in loan terms,” Mitrofanov told the online edition of the daily.

“We have talked to (Arsenal). We will have to see what they do next.”

Russia’s transfer window expires on Friday.

Sovietsky Sport had earlier reported that Zenit wanted to eventually make the 30-year-old Russian squad skipper a coach of the club’s youth squad.

Arshavin’s stock soared when he spearheaded one of the most dazzling Russian sides in decades to a semi-final appearance to in the Euro 2008 championship.

Arsenal signed him early the following year after paying a 16.5-million-euro transfer and saw him make an immediate impact with six goals in 12 games.

But he only scored once in the Premier League in 13 appearances this season and has only started for the squad on six occasions.

Article source: http://sports.ndtv.com/football/news/item/185867-zenit-want-arsenals-arshavin-on-loan-director

Champions League defeats for Arsenal and Chelsea undermine Premier League’s …

Excitable reactions to minor setbacks are the lingua franca of football but
there is no escaping the scale of English disappointment.

Napoli’s ground would be closed down by the Premier League’s impresarios. They
would inspect its archaic facilities, recoil at its moat and examine the
piles of rubbish gusting around outside with a lemon-sucker’s wince.

Into this cauldron stumbled a club who spent £30million changing their manager
from Carlo Ancelotti to Andre Villas-Boas; who splashed £70million on two
players who have become an expensive ornament (Fernando Torres) and a
defensive liability (David Luiz).

The appropriated Russian wealth of Roman Abramovich was trampled on in Naples,
just as Arsenal’s dream of eternal self-reliance was shredded by Milan at
the San Siro a week earlier.

By an odd twist, the most troubled of England’s four candidates made it
through to the first knock-out round. The league’s top two teams, City and
United, fell at the group stage and found themselves exiled to the Europa
League.

In a tough group that included Bayern Munich and Napoli, City displayed an
inability to cope with the twin pressures of Premier and Champions League
competition at this point in their development.

They are geared primarily to ending United’s local dominance and appeared
tactically ill-equipped in Europe.

United’s downfall was complacency, especially against Basel, whose Xherdan
Shaqiri said on Wednesday: “United underestimated us.

“You could feel it in the tunnel before kick-off and even in the warm-up.
They weren’t fully focused and I’m not even sure a United player made even
one sprint. Afterwards you couldn’t even swap shirts; they were gone that
quickly.”

Is the Premier League a fading force in Europe

The domestic tortures suffered by Chelsea and Arsenal showed on two painful
nights in Italy when Serie A sides ran up a combined 7-1 first-leg lead. A
2-0 win for Chelsea in the return will send them through on away goals yet
few would bet the farm on Marek Hamsik, Edinson Cavani or Ezequiel Lavezzi
not scoring at Stamford Bridge.

Arsenal (4-0 down) meanwhile must endure a ceremonial confrontation with a
Milan side who displayed qualities more commonly associated with Premier
League action: pace, energy, quickness of thought. Highly instrumental in
their victory were Kevin-Prince Boateng – once of Spurs and Portsmouth — and
Robinho, whose acquisition by City was the first big demonstration of Sheikh
Mansour’s wealth.

The enfeebling of English clubs reflects also the resurgence of Serie A and
the power of Spain’s big two, where so many of the world’s best players are
located. The Premier League houses Robin van Persie, David Silva, Juan Mata,
Sergio Agüero and Wayne Rooney, but La Liga wins the individual talent
battle with Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Xavi Hernández and Andrés
Iniesta.

O’Leary said on Wednesday: “Chelsea have gone backwards, Arsenal have gone
backwards, Liverpool are not a challenge any more. I think even Sir Alex
would not view his current United side as his best crop so it was a
fantastic achievement to get to the Champions League final and win the
league last year.

“Manchester City have had an unbelievable amount of money to spend but they
are still emerging. We have got carried away with it. I’ve just come back
from Dubai and the only football they really get excited about is the
Premier League. Defending-wise the top teams are conceding too many goals
and that really hurts them in Europe.

“Think of the Chelsea side under Jose Mourinho with a young John Terry and
Frank Lampard – a really strong team; think of the Arsenal side of a few
years ago or Manchester United when Cristiano Ronaldo was there. Are they as
good [now]? No way.”

A counter view was offered by the manager of Stoke’s Europa League opponents,
Valencia. “No, the quality of the Premier League has not fallen,” said Unai
Emery. “The first six teams in the table now are very equal and the
competitiveness in the league has increased. Manchester City are in a
different playing field financially, but it’s a very open league, unlike the
Spanish League.

“Over the last few years, two teams have developed massively and those two,
Real Madrid and Barcelona, are probably the best two teams in the world.
Unfortunately, the rest of us have fewer chances to win things, the gap is
big. All we can do is keep trying. In England the concept of football is
very different, they created the game and it is much more equal in their
league than ours.”

Those of us who attended both calamities in Italy left with the sense that the
Arsenal and Chelsea squads are clogged up with sub-standard players for this
elite level and that both clubs are beset by structural problems.

Bafflingly, Arsenal also appear financially deficient while Chelsea’s panic
extends beyond Andre Villas-Boas’s abilities to uncertainty about a host of
recruits: mainly, Torres, Luiz, Romelu Lukaku, Gary Cahill and Raul
Meireles.

The aura is gone, and money alone will not buy it back.

Article source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/chelsea/9099432/Champions-League-defeats-for-Arsenal-and-Chelsea-undermine-Premier-Leagues-grand-claims.html

Arsenal’s Board Discuss Absurd Wages, Lansbury Keeps a Clean Sheet

Arsenal’s shambolic loss to AC Milan has made me to lose some interest in the Champions League this season, and the fixtures played yesterday weren’t worth breaking sweat over. To those that actually care, Olympique Marseille left it late to see out Inter Milan while the giant killers FC Basel stunned Bayern Munich with a 1-0 victory.

Unlike Manchester United that’s scared of any team with the acronym “F.C.B.” and a red and blue jersey with vertical stripes, the Bavarians put up a good shift and are at odds to run riot against the Swiss outfit in the second leg. If it’s any motivation, the finals will take place in Bayern’s home ground Allianz Arena and they would like to “feel at home” come May.

The Gentle Frog Avram Grant successfully guided West Ham to the deep bowels of relegation after ushering Portsmouth in the same direction, but Big Sam Allardyce has changed the club’s fortunes and his team is currently topping the npower Championship with 15 games left.

While Arsenal Reserves mauled Norwich Reserves with “cheats” like Andrey Arshavin, Park Chu-Young, Marouane Chamakh and Yossi Benayoun present in the starting lineup, West Ham locked horns with seventh-placed Blackpool at Bloomfield Road. The Hammers were leading the Tangarines with a 2-1 scoreline when first choice goalie Robert Green received his marching orders in the 53rd minute for dashing off his line to bring down Roman Bednar.

For reasons best known to Aliens scared to attack the Earth because Chuck Norris still leaves, Big Sam didn’t include a spare goalie on the bench so he called up Arsenal’s loanee Henri Lansbury to wear a pair of gloves and stay between the sticks for the remaining 37 minutes plus added time.

Lansbury went into the pitch and kept a clean sheet while West Ham went on to inflict further damage on Blackpool with two more goals to run out as 4-1 winners.

Funnily enough, Lansbury has had a stint between the sticks in an Under-21s match between England U-21s and Germany U-21s. Youngster Jason Steele earned himself an early bath after conceding a penalty in the box. Lansbury came in his stead, let the penalty in but kept Germany U-21s at bay until the game finished.

It’s been a long while since I heard of an outfield player that manned the sticks for the remainder of a game. The last players I can recall share the same first name, John. Former Manchester United’s utility man John O’ Shea kept in the Red Devils 4-0 victory over Tottenham in February 2007 while John Terry kept for Chelsea against Reading in a game that was marred by that horrific injury suffered by Petr Cech.

Moving over to important off-the-pitch events, Stan Kroenke arrived in London two days ago to host a meeting that will take place today with the main agenda being the absurd wages fringe players are earning in the club. The Board is currently unhappy with the present wage bill and they are looking to reduce it with massive sales this summer.

Deadwood like Manuel Almunia, Sebastien Squillaci and sadly, Marouane Chamakh earn £60,000 per week, Nicklas Bendtner earns £52,000 per week while Johan Djourou and Lukasz Fabianski earn £50,000. Park Chu-Young earns £40,000 and he’s more or less a fringe player because Arsene Wenger made him so.

The sales of these players this summer would create the much needed space for fresh blood and new contracts can also be handed to quality players that deserve fat salaries such as Arsenal’s talisman Robin van Persie. I would like Lukasz Fabianski to stay, but if he decides to leave this summer, I won’t begrudge him.

Besides, there’s Henri Lansbury. 

Article source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1076982-arsenals-board-to-discuss-over-absurd-wages-and-lansbury-keeps-a-clean-sheet

£60k for ex-Arsenal and Wales footballer Charlie Jones memorabilia

A pencil sketch of Charlie JonesCharlie Jones was one of Wales’ “unsung heroes,” the FAW says

Football memorabilia from 80 years ago which belonged to Wales captain and Arsenal star Charlie Jones has sold at auction for £60,189.

Born in Troedyrhiw, Merthyr Tydfil, Jones started at Cardiff City, and won three league titles with the Gunners at the end of his career in the 1930s.

The auction in Chester included shirts, medals and Wales caps.

The same sale also saw the Football Association of Wales buy a shirt once worn by late Wales manager Gary Speed.

Five items once owned by Wales World Cup squad player Derrick Sullivan also made £3,712.

Sullivan, born in 1930, played for Cardiff, Newport and Ebbw Vale, among other clubs, and was in the Wales squad for the 1958 World Cup in Sweden.

His lots included three caps, a World Cup Sweden glass vase and identity card and a Welsh Cup Winners (runners-up) trophy.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

Arsenal were the team at the time – the Manchester United or Chelsea of the day”

End Quote
Ceri Stennett
Football Association of Wales

Memorabilia once belonging to Jones, who won eight caps for Wales as a winger and ball-winning midfielder, attracted considerable interest from Arsenal fans.

Jones, who was born in 1899, was released after one game for Cardiff in the early 1920s and joined Stockport County.

He went on to play for Oldham Athletic and Nottingham Forest, before signing for Arsenal in 1928 under Herbert Chapman, where he won three First Division championships in the early 1930s.

He retired at the end of the 1933-34 season aged 34, and went on to manage Notts County from May 1934 to December 1935. Jones died in 1966.

The most expensive item sold on Wednesday was a 1933-34 Arsenal Division One champions medal, which sold for £11,875.

A similar medal for the previous season made £8,750 and another, for the 1930-31 season, fetched £10,000.

A 1932 Arsenal FA Cup runners-up medal, expected to fetch up to £2,500, was bought for £4,000.

A 1930-31 Arsenal Division One champions medal awarded to Charlie JonesRare valuable items like 1930s medals could prove attractive to Arsenal fans

A 1932 Arsenal FA Cup shirt sold for £3,500.

Among the other Wales-related lots were various international caps and shirts.

The Football Association of Wales (FAW) attended the sale, and before the auction, spokesman Ceri Stennett, admitted he had been in “hopeful mode, not confident mode,” because many of the Charlie Jones items were likely to be of interest to “well-heeled” London collectors, particularly those keen on the Arsenal collection.

However, he managed to buy a bundle of programmes for £1,500 plus commission, which included two 1926 programmes for Wales matches against England and Scotland during Jones’s era.

Mr Stennett said the price had been “relatively cheap” for sought-after programmes.

He described Jones as one of the “unsung heroes” of Welsh football in the 1920s and 1930s, because clubs were often reluctant to release players for international duties from the smaller home nations.

A match shirt worn by Charlie JonesJones’ low level of Wales caps could be down to his club not releasing him

He added: “In those days, internationals were often held on Saturdays.

“Arsenal were the team at the time – the Manchester United or Chelsea of the day.

“If there was an international on a league day, then the big teams might release the English players, because that was looked upon as an honour.

“They would then quite happily say ‘We can’t afford to release Charlie Jones, or whoever, because we can’t afford to lose him’.”

The FAW had planned on buying items once belonging to Derrick Sullivan, but they fetched higher prices than expected.

However, Mr Stennett bought a match-worn Newcastle United shirt once belonging to former Wales player and manager Gary Speed, who was found hanged last year.

He said: “It just seemed like fate. The bidding was opened at £150, and I was the only bidder.

“We have a Wales shirt which Gary had kindly given us previously.

“In light of our circumstances, I thought it was only fitting to bring this one home as well.”

The auction at Bonhams was part of a sporting memorabilia sale which included items once belonging to the late George Best and Liverpool legend Tommy Smith.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-17113970

Why Arsenal hope copying Man United’s wage structure will help keep van Persie

By
John Cross

Published 22:32 22/02/12

Arsenal-Manchester-United-Robin-van-Persie-Premier-League cropped

Arsenal are carrying out a stringent review of their wage policy. It is intended to ensure “efficiency” and that every pound is accounted for in a shake-up of player contracts.

Arsenal majority shareholder Stan Kroenke has flown in this week for a board meeting and new contracts for Robin van Persie and Theo Walcott, which could see both players end up being quids in, will be high on the agenda.

At the moment, Arsenal’s star player van Persie is behind other big Premier League stars, and the club realise that they need to get better value for money from their squad.

Manchester United is held up as the model as Wayne Rooney is on £200,000-a-week and his strike partner Danny Welbeck is on £15,000-a-week.



Then you have the likes of Chris Smalling who was upgraded to around £50,000-a-week last summer. Javier Hernandez is on around £60,000-a-week and Phil Jones, an England international, is not far behind.

Welbeck’s impressive season will be rewarded with a great new contract. but, for now, hes being kept young and hungry.

The really interesting thing about United is the discrepancy between the biggest star in Rooney and his team mates. The club are prepared to pay stellar wages for stellar players.

The difference at Arsenal is that all of the squad – from Johan Djourou to Robin van Persie – are kept within reach of each other.

It is important to stress that there is no wage cap or formalised structure at Arsenal. Just a long held belief by Arsene Wenger that there should be some kind of equilibrium among players who share the same dressing room.

Thierry Henry earned the best contract at Arsenal of around £100,000-a-week plus a big signing-on fee when he signed on for one more year in 2006.

Since then, Cesc Fabregas, Samir Nasri, van Persie et al, have not reached six figures. Van Persie is on £70,000-a-week plus and Arsenal, in the current climate, are unlikely to offer him over £100,000-a-week as they try and renegotiate his contract. Thomas Vermaelen got a hefty signing-on fee when he renegotiated his deal last season.

Arsenal know van Persie likes London and has a great affection for the club, and believe they have a good chance of keeping him. Fabregas wanted to go “home” to Barcelona. Nasri would have re-signed if the deal had been put in front of him at the right time.

The truth is that for a team that is supposedly stingy on wages, Arsenal’s wage bill is sky-high. It’s £130m-a-year and is 40 per cent higher than Tottenham who do have a wage structure.

Clearly, that means Arsenal are not getting good value. And there is a reason for that. There is a whole raft of squad players – Abou Diaby, Denilson and Nicklas Bendtner – who are on great money because they have been given parity.

Diaby is on £60,000-a-week. Bendtner has never denied the story that he chose shirt number 52 as it represents his weekly wage. If they were at Manchester United (which on recent form is hard to believe) they would not even be earning half as much.

They are earning so much that Arsenal could not offload them last season. Some were shipped out on loan. Diaby was put up for sale but there were no takers, not because of injury but because of his sky-high wages.

Now Arsenal may be willing to review the decision to keep the top players within touching distance of the squad players. It also means a whole raft of middle squad players – Diaby, Carlos Vela, Denilson, Bendtner – may be moved on and new ones shipped in.

Japanese winger Ryo Miyaichi was brought in for peanuts, is on relatively low wages and will be rewarded with a contract when he has earned it.

The same is likely to happen for Carl Jenkinson. He was brought in from Charlton for £1m, signed a good deal and will be rewarded for an impressive start. But within reason.

It’s similar lines for Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain. He was signed for big money and has been outstanding and yet his wages will be kept realistic for now – rather like the United philosophy for their exceptional young English talents.

The money saved is then open to Arsene Wenger to use to reward the likes of van Persie, Jack Wilshere and Theo Walcott.

The upshot is that while Arsenal’s big stars get the big money to keep them happy and the young players are kept happy and hungry, the players in the middle of the squad will lose out. They won’t be allowed to sit back, not worry if they are in the team because they are on great contracts.

Look at this way: Abou Diaby has been on more more than Luka Modric this season. Incredible. No wonder Spurs want to  renegotiate.

Arsenal have not been getting value for money and they are looking to change. As the club moves forward and looks to make changes, it could be a valuable weapon in the armoury to attract and keep top players.

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Article source: http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/opinion/columnists/john-cross/The-Arsenal-column-Why-Gunners-hope-copying-Manchester-United-s-wage-structure-will-help-keep-stars-like-Robin-van-Persie-by-John-Cross-article868943.html

Rangers administration: Criag Whyte blasted after sale of historic Arsenal shares

By ALAN PATTULLO

Published on Thursday 23 February 2012 00:00

CRAIG Whyte has managed to enrage fans of another club after selling off a historic share holding in Arsenal held by Rangers since the beginning of the last century.

Fans of both sides have united to register their dismay at the sale of 16 shares acquired by the Ibrox club in 1910, with one member of the Arsenal Supporters Trust yesterday accusing Whyte of destroying the history between the clubs for his own personal gain.

It emerged yesterday that Whtye had sold the shares for £230,000 shortly before the Ibrox club went into administration. The sum was not paid into the Rangers bank account, Instead, it remained lodged in one of his companies, Pritchard Stockbrokers in Bournemouth. Pritchard’s assets have now been frozen on the orders of the Financial Services Authority.

For Rangers supporters, the sale of the shares, coupled with the uncertainty over whether the Ibrox club will ever see the sum gathered, is yet another betrayal of the club’s past by someone who has already mortgaged off Rangers’ future courtesy of the notorious season-ticket deal with Ticketus. For Arsenal fans, as well as cutting a bond between the clubs, the move also impacts on an ownership bid being prepared by the Uzbekistan-born billionaire Alisher Usmanov, who is understood to have bought Rangers’ stake in Arsenal for around £15,000 per share.In the view of both the Rangers and Arsenal fans, they were not Whyte’s to sell. For supporters of the English club, the outrage was compounded by the swiftness, and secrecy, with which the deal was done. Arsenal shares are at a premium and are traded infrequently on PLUS, a specialist market.

Whyte chose not to offer the shares to the Arsenal Supporters Trust or the Arsenal Fanshare group, which would have at least ensured that the historic stake came back under supporter-control. Instead Whyte struck a deal with Usmanov, who is now just a fraction away from amassing the 30 per cent share stake which permits him to a place on the Arsenal board and also grants him access to important financial data.

Although small in number, the sale of the shares that were once owned by Rangers could have a significant bearing on Arsenal’s future, with Stan Kroenke, the club’s majority shareholder, under pressure to increase investment. Arsene Wenger’s side look likely to complete a seventh successive season without a trophy. Usmanov has been regarded as persona non grata by the current Arsenal board, but, having agreed a deal with Whyte, he is now just an estimated 50 shares short of reaching the magic 30 per cent mark.

“Every single share is one share closer to 30 per cent, when we might see some pressure brought to bear [on Kroenke],” said Nigel Phillips, of the Arsenal Supporters Trust. Usmanov is reported to be in favour of ending Wenger’s 16 year reign as manager.

“From the Arsenal supporters’ point of view, we are disappointed not to have had the chance to try and buy them, having made representations to both the previous ownership, under David Murray, and having registered an interest with the administrators last week,” he added.

Martha Silcott, an Arsenal Fanshare board member, contacted representatives from Duff and Phelps last week, just hours after she heard Rangers had gone into administration. “I wanted to know whether the shares were still in the possession of the club,” she said. “I said: look, I know you will be leafing through a pile of paperwork, but I wanted to let them know that we [the Arsenal Fanshare group] exist, and we would be interested in buying the shares, if they were ever to be sold.”

The administrators told Silcott that they would be back in touch once they had managed to get a sufficient handle on the finances. But Silcott hadn’t heard back by the time she was stopped dead in her tracks yesterday, when a fellow Arsenal fan phoned to inform her of the sale.

“I was walking through St Pancras Station, and I just froze,” she said yesterday. “I felt sick to the pit of my stomach. It is so disrespectful. It is not as if he (Whyte) didn’t have options.” Indeed, not only does the sale build up Usmanov’s holding in the club through his Red White consortium, it ends one of the longest associations in football. As recorded in The Scotsman in 2006, Rangers acquired two shares in the London club in 1910. George Morrell is the person who is believed to have facilitated the exchange. Morrell had worked at Rangers before becoming manager at Woolwich Arsenal, as they were then known, in 1908. The clubs played a friendly between each other in April of that year in Glasgow and the English side, who were then based in south London and on the brink of liquidation themselves, later transferred two shares to Rangers in what is believed to have been a thank you gesture. When there was a share split in 1991, both these shares grew into a stake of eight shares each.

Knowledge of Rangers’ share holding in Arsenal only became public knowledge six years ago, after Phillips contacted then Rangers owner Sir David Murray and David Joliffe, the club’s financial director, to ask why they were not listed in Rangers’ accounts. It had become an issue due to the recent rise in value of the shares. Only 62,217 have ever been issued, with the London club now valued at £1.1 billion. “I got a copy of the shareholders’ register from pre-computer days, an old printed paper, it was over 150 pages long,” recalled Phillips yesterday, when asked how he came to learn of the existence of the shares. “I went through and it and there was an entry saying Glasgow Rangers.”

It is not unique for one football club to own shares in another club. Indeed, Fergus McCann was surprised to learn that Celtic owned some shares in Rangers when he took over the Parkhead club in 1994, and swiftly sold them on.

But the Rangers stake in Arsenal was a symbolic one, as much as anything. “It is a great pity,” said Robert McElroy, the Rangers historian. “It’s a part of the heritage of two clubs.”

His view was supported by Silcott, who seethed at the actions of Whyte yesterday.

“This is about a lot more than money,” she said. “It’s about history and the close relationship between two clubs. In one fell swoop, it has been swept aside for personal again. It goes against everything the shares stand for.”

A solid metal cannon, a gift from Arsenal to mark Rangers’ centenary in 1973, is said to reside in the Ibrox club’s Blue Room. Someone had better go and check that it is still there.


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Comments

There are 4 comments to this article

I’m boycotting Ibrox, I’m walking away, and advise others to do the same. Tom English is correct.


Tom English’s suggestion for Rangers fans to boycott Ibrox: Get f***ed Tom.


#1 Celtic did buy shares in Rags fc so that they could attend the AGM’s – this is well documented.


Celtic did not own shares in rangers. This from the paper that last week claimed the daft female who almost lost her pram complete with infant inside it to the sea at cramond island whilst trying to cross the causeway was a you-tube hit. It wasn’t even on you-tube. If only the scotsman was subject to administration then we could get rid of the lazy, useless overpaid journalists (in the loosest sense do i use that word) that, very sadly, reside there permanently it seems. – - – - – - – - – Incidentally, i wonder if the SPL will look into the sectarian chanting at tynecastle last week by not one or two ididots as lawell and lennon always try and claim but by the entire away end? Just wondering because they are apparently still hot on the heels of the govan mob for their apparently shameful behaviour on Saturday? I won’t bet a huge amount on the SPL doing that as it’s not really the agenda they want to follow now is it?


Your view

Please

http://www.scotsman.com/sport/rangers_administration_criag_whyte_blasted_after_sale_of_historic_arsenal_shares_1_2132877

Leaving Arsenal was right decision — Nasri

Posted on February 23, 2012, Thursday

TRAINING SESSION: Manchester City’s players warm up during a training session at their Carrington training complex in Manchester, northern England. — Reuters photo

MANCHESTER, England, Feb 21, 2012 (AFP) – Samir Nasri is confident he is starting to prove that Manchester City did not make a mistake when they signed him for 24 million pounds from Arsenal last summer.

The Frenchman, 24, has taken time to settle at Eastlands and has made just 15 Premier League starts since his move.

City manager Roberto Mancini has claimed that Nasri needed to improve the defensive side of his game in order to thrive for the Blues.

But Nasri has started to establish himself in recent weeks as City close in on the climax to the Premier League and the Europa League.

The winger maintains he was never concerned about his price tag but accepts it has taken time for him to get used to life at City.

He claims he has taken Mancini’s advice on board and feels he is starting to show the club what he is capable of.

“It’s always tough when you change, when you go to another team and have to be involved 100 per cent and I wasn’t,” he said.

“Now I start to be settled and you will see a better Samir every week.

“You have to work when you don’t feel well and not producing what everyone expects.

I was always confident about my quality and you will see that.

“I never asked City to pay 24 million so it’s not me.

It was a lot of money but every transfer now has a lot of money.

“What you want to do is to give something to the team and the people who bring you here and trust you.

The money and everything isn’t my problem.

“It’s not the same way (as playing at Arsenal).

You need to settle.

Now I want to show everyone it wasn’t a mistake.” Nasri’s former club Arsenal are struggling to press for a top-four place, out of the FA Cup and 4-0 down in their Champions League tie with AC Milan.

He is adamant he has never doubted his decision to leave the Emirates Stadium but is sure that Arsene Wenger will turn it around.

Nasri added: “I don’t want Arsenal to fall down.

I want for them to win the FA Cup or something because I have respect for the players and the manager.

“I know from the start that I made the right choice.

Sometimes it’s good to win ugly you don’t always have to play good football to win.

“Arsenal play good football but after seven years they don’t win so that’s difficult for them but they have a good philosophy.

I know they’ll find some solution.” – AFP MANCHESTER, England: Samir Nasri is confident he is starting to prove that Manchester City did not make a mistake when they signed him for 24 million pounds from Arsenal last summer.

The Frenchman, 24, has taken time to settle at Eastlands and has made just 15 Premier League starts since his move.

City manager Roberto Mancini has claimed that Nasri needed to improve the defensive side of his game in order to thrive for the Blues. But Nasri has started to establish himself in recent weeks as City close in on the climax to the Premier League and the Europa League.

The winger maintains he was never concerned about his price tag but accepts it has taken time for him to get used to life at City.

He claims he has taken Mancini’s advice on board and feels he is starting to show the club what he is capable of.

“It’s always tough when you change, when you go to another team and have to be involved 100 per cent and I wasn’t,” he said.

“Now I start to be settled and you will see a better Samir every week.

“You have to work when you don’t feel well and not producing what everyone expects. I was always confident about my quality and you will see that.

“I never asked City to pay 24 million so it’s not me. It was a lot of money but every transfer now has a lot of money.

“What you want to do is to give something to the team and the people who bring you here and trust you. The money and everything isn’t my problem.

“It’s not the same way (as playing at Arsenal). You need to settle. Now I want to show everyone it wasn’t a mistake.” Nasri’s former club Arsenal are struggling to press for a top-four place, out of the FA Cup and 4-0 down in their Champions League tie with AC Milan.

He is adamant he has never doubted his decision to leave the Emirates Stadium but is sure that Arsene Wenger will turn it around.

Nasri added: “I don’t want Arsenal to fall down. I want for them to win the FA Cup or something because I have respect for the players and the manager.

“I know from the start that I made the right choice. Sometimes it’s good to win ugly you don’t always have to play good football to win.

“Arsenal play good football but after seven years they don’t win so that’s difficult for them but they have a good philosophy. I know they’ll find some solution.” — AFP

Article source: http://www.theborneopost.com/2012/02/23/leaving-arsenal-was-right-decision-nasri/

Arsenal and Liverpool transfer target: Marko Marin

Werder Bremen starlet Marko Marin has again been linked with a move to the Premier League once more.

Liverpool are the team who have been linked, as well as Arsenal, but would signing Marin be a good move for either side?

GMF feels it is its duty to run the rule over the Germany international winger a comment on where Marin will be able to fit in to either side.

Marin currently plays for Werder Bremen in the Bundesliga and has been part if the German international set up for a couple of years now, though only on the periphery.

The 22-year-old was born in Yugoslavia but moved to Frankfurt when he was just two years old and despite also being eligible to play for Bosnia and Herzegovina, he decided he wanted to represent Germany.

His first club was Eintracht Frankfurt but moved to Borussia Monchengladbach when he was 17. After impressing in his first two years there, he was sold to Werder Bremen where he still resides.

Marin was also a part of the Germany squad for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, but he has not been able to secure a regular place due to intermittent form in the past year.

However, in recent months he has begun to rediscover some of the form that had so many clubs in Europe watching him initially, which could be behind the reported interest from Arsene Wenger and Kenny Dalglish.

Would Marin be suitable for the Premier League? It is hard to say, but he is blessed with undeniable talent.

Marin’s greatest asset is his dribbling; he loves to attack from the flanks, move inside and take on defenders one or two at a time.

His ball control is exceptional and he possesses that very rare attribute of being able to switch direction extremely quickly and at great pace.

Comparisons to Messi have been made but Marin has a long way to go if he is to even approach a similar level, although he does appear to be supremely talented.

As with Messi, Marin’s size is an issue and may be something that would make him a target of physical tactics, were he to move to the Premier League, but the Bundesliga is reasonably vigorous and so he should be able to adapt.

He is prone to lose concentration in games and is known to drift at times when games get tough or tight defensively. There is also a question of his willingness to track back, which is not his favourite pastime it must be said.

Liverpool and Arsenal would both be able to utilise the winger in the current systems they use, but he possesses the adaptability to play in a number of positions.

The Gunners play with two wide men, but they have a wealth of options there now that Gervinho has returned from the Africa Cup of Nations – whether these options are effective or not is another matter.

Marin would be a typical Wenger signing in that he is technically gifted and can pass accurately, although he may be more useful than a player such as Theo Walcott due to being able to play in more central role in midfield.

Liverpool are desperate for some creative spark and Marin would most likely be a better fit for the Anfield side than their southern counterparts.

Verdict

While being a frustrating player, Marko Marin does have the ‘X’ factor and things seem to happen when he is on the ball in and around the opposition box.

He is fast, technically gifted and also pops up with the occasional goal, but there are questions over his physique.

It would be a toss-up as whether he could be bullied out of matches in England, but he would be a valuable signing should learn to brush off any defensive bullying. A very hot prospect indeed.

Article source: http://www.givemefootball.com/premier-league/in-focus-marko-marin

Arsenal FC: Per Mertesacker’s Injury Update and Robin Van Persie Going Nowhere

It all started when Arsenal visited the Stadium of Light to take on a resurgent Sunderland side in a game that signaled the end of Thierry Henry’s fairy-tale adventure in the Premier League. For an established Premier League outfit like Sunderland, the pitch was an aberration but the home side was unfazed by such conditions.

Alex Song lost the ball far up in midfield and the home side launched an attack that was brilliantly intercepted by Bacary Sagna. The ball fell to the path of Gentle Giant Per Mertesacker, then a simple step-over turned into a nightmarish scene as the German hit the turf clutching his ankle in agony.

James McClean didn’t have the time to express his gratitude for such a gift and scored Sunderland’s goal,  but when the orderly came into the pitch with a stretcher, reality donned on everyone that Arsenal’s defensive woes were about to be compounded.

Shortly after the game, the scans came out and Arsene Wenger confirmed that he’ll be out for a long while.

With this disappointing season a few months away from conclusion, all eyes would be firmly fixed on the soccer fiesta scheduled to take place in Ukraine and Poland this summer. Per Mertesacker has used his Facebook Page to give his fans an injury update:

“My participation in Euro 2012 is not in danger. Dr. Stöckle in Tübingen did the operation on Tuesday evening, attached a piece of bone back to the ankle and patched up the deltoid ligament on the inside of the ankle.

“All went well and I’m in Donaustauf, Bavaria, for the physical rehabilitation.”  

It’s certain that the Gentle Giant won’t be seen wearing the red and white this season, but his absence will be immensely felt. They say that you’ll never know what you have until you lose it. It’s fair to say that Mertesacker has proved this adage right.

If he received a back pass from Thomas Vermaelen last Saturday in the FA Cup fixture on the same putrid pitch, he wouldn’t have panicked on the ball before conceding a free kick that ultimately led to the first goal conceded.

Mertesacker’s Germany was drawn in the most mouth-watering group of the tournament alongside Holland, Portugal and Denmark. I’m not a huge fan of international football, but I’ll would ensure that I won’t miss any game in this group at least.

Sticking with injuries, long-term absentee Carl Jenkinson was scheduled to make a comeback against Norwich Reserves in a strong Arsenal Reserves lineup that was to be bolstered with names like Andrey Arshavin, Park Chu-Young, Marouane Chamakh and Yossi Benayoun.

As expected, Arsenal Reserves ran riot against Norwich Reserves with five unreplied goals. Park opened the scoring, Arshavin had a brace while Benik Afobe and Benayoun completed the rout. It’s worth noting that Chamakh lasted for only 29 minutes on the pitch after being on the end of a rash tackle.

While forwards like Arshavin, Chamakh and Park graced Reserve League football, there’s a striker in the squad whose importance to the team is unrivaled. Robin van Persie has carried Arsenal on his able shoulders this season and already has notched 28 goals in his first season as Arsenal’s captain.

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Big Guns in Reserves

In the wake of Arsenal’s debacle this season, he has been hugely tipped to join the exodus of superstars that left for greener pastures, but it seems as if the Arsenal hierarchy is prepared to take a last stand on him. Chief Executive Ivan Gazidis has told any potential suitor that RVP is going nowhere:

“The communication has come directly from Ivan Gazidis. He flatly refuses to sell him at any price. He has told Van Persie, ‘you are going nowhere and can see out your contract’.

“Arsenal are not stupid. If he sees out his contract, he will be 30. Real Madrid and Barcelona are not going to recruit him at 30. Van Persie feels powerless and anxious.  There is no way any club will pay £40m for him this summer, because of his age. This makes him a £20m player and Arsenal don’t need to sell him for that.”

A few weeks ago, Footy Bible reported that Real Madrid is planning an audacious £70m bid for the talisman, but it seems as if AC Milan has placed him under their radar. However, it seems as if contract talks are imminent.

Still on transfer news, reports have also emerged that youngster Craig Eastmond has been sent to Wycombe Wanderers on loan and Russian free-spenders Anzhi are close to signing Andrey Arshavin.

To round it all up, Arsenal’s Scourge-of-the-North-London-Derby Rafael van der Vaart is hoping to be fit in time for Sunday’s clash. Hopefully, he may be penalised this time if he attempts to play ‘‘handball’’ instead of the beautiful game.

He has smashed in four goals in just three meetings with Arsenal. Judging from the way the defence has been atrocious, I can only hope for the best.

Article source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1076240-arsenal-fc-per-mertesackers-injury-update-and-robin-van-persie-going-nowhere

Will English clubs’ Champions League failure be a passing phase?

The vultures are beginning to circle over the stumbling, disorganised remnants of Premier League participation in Europe’s major club competition, waiting for the moment when life can be pronounced extinct and the bones of a once thriving enterprise can be picked clean, probably prior to being danced over.

In case you haven’t heard, should Arsenal and Chelsea fail to overcome their first-leg deficits against Italian opponents when the Champions League resumes next month, English football will not have a side in the last eight for the first time since its formation 1996. Sixteen years is a long time, especially when English clubs have reached the final on no fewer than eight occasions in that period, and even if the actual success rate (three European Cups) was slightly disappointing the rest of Europe seems totally delighted now that the Premier League is in danger of losing its superior smirk.

Never mind that Chelsea and Arsenal still have microscopically small chances of making progress. The rest of Europe has just seen Chelsea and Arsenal in action, and judgment need not wait until elimination becomes a mathematical certainty. By Champions League standards, indeed by the standards of previous English attempts on Europe’s summit, these are two poor sides. One can only imagine a certain amount of confusion exists in continental Europe as to how Chelsea and Arsenal ended up as the last two English representatives. If the last two are that bad, does it follow that Manchester City and Manchester United are even worse?

Not necessarily. City in particular were both inexperienced and unlucky enough to find themselves in a highly competitive group, not to mention handicapped by recalcitrant substitutes. But City were never going to win the Champions League this year, even Roberto Mancini would tell you that. They never had the same amount of wind in their sails that Tottenham Hotspur had last season, and though they would have liked to make it out of their qualification group, they would inevitably have found the going tough in the latter stages at a time when all their concentration needs to be on their bid to secure a first domestic title in 44 years.

A fact much harder to face is that United were never going to win the Champions League this year either. Reaching two of the last three finals counts for nothing when you have been so thoroughly outplayed by the same team in each, and though all at Old Trafford would strenuously deny it, the possibility exists that confidence, perhaps at some subconscious level, was irreparably damaged by the two crushing Barcelona defeats. It is hard to think of other reasons why a team of United’s experience and pedigree should come up short against the likes of Basel and Benfica, and a number of supporters are consoling themselves with the thought that as long as Barcelona are still at large there is little point in fighting all the way to the final anyway. That is an understandable reaction, though a somewhat flattering one. Barcelona are far from the only team in Europe who now look quite uncatchable to English sides. Real Madrid, Milan and Bayern Munich, if not a few others, all look capable of beating United at the moment, and by extension anyone else from the Premier League.

So English football, or at least the product produced by mostly foreign players and managers from the English Premier League, is not as strong as it used to be. The evidence is clear. We appear to be a footballing nation in decline, except that one year may not be representative of the overall situation. There was an English team in the final last season after all, and two more reached the last eight. The question now is how strong Premier League teams are going to be in the Champions League next year. Maybe Chelsea or Arsenal or even both will miss out, and on recent evidence that may be no bad thing. But who will replace them? Spurs are in prime position, though it is difficult to say who will be managing Spurs next season.

It will be a pity, from a club point of view, should Harry Redknapp accept the England position, because as Sir Alex Ferguson says, he has put together a very attractive team at White Hart Lane. Without the England distraction Spurs would ordinarily have been looking forward to using the experience gained last season and having a real go at the Champions League, a prospect that seems infinitely preferable to having Redknapp attempt to persuade Paul Scholes out of retirement for a World Cup qualifier in Moldova. It is up to Redknapp to decide what is the grander destiny, but anyone neutral in the matter would not take long to conclude that Spurs have a far greater capacity for attacking, exciting football than England, and there is no guarantee that the next manager will be able to maintain the club’s momentum.

In terms of renewing the English challenge in Europe then, there is already a question mark over Spurs. There is a question over Liverpool too, because they may not be able to qualify. There is some doubt over whether Liverpool would cause many problems for the big names of Europe when they keep ceding points to the likes of Fulham, Norwich City and Swansea City, though the recent elimination of the two Manchester clubs from the two domestic cups gave a better indication of what they are capable of when the occasion arises. Liverpool have always shown great stickability in Europe – their 2005 triumph was not just a miracle in Istanbul, they were written off at almost every stage preceding the final – and few English clubs have ever proved more adept at the art of winning over two legs. Yet unless their league form improves they will have to wait another year, and anything can happen in that time period.

The only other breakthrough contenders, unless Martin O’Neill is about to whisk Sunderland all the way into the top four, are Newcastle United. Stranger things have happened, though not many, and with due respect to Alan Pardew’s achievements the reality appears to be that the two Manchester clubs and Spurs will take the top three positions, leaving Chelsea and Arsenal to fight over fourth spot. Only in the event of complete collapse from both will anyone else get a look-in, and though Chelsea and Arsenal look as if they may have some more collapsing to do, it will be a surprise if both manage to mess up the rest of the season badly enough to miss out.

That’s not a very encouraging picture, is it? United, Chelsea and Arsenal have failed to scare Europe this season and have given little indication that things are going to be much better next time round. City might be all right, depending on how well things go for the rest of this season, but are short of Champions League experience and are beginning to be hampered by the financial fair play rules. Spurs could be just about the best bet, but must be wishing Carlo Ancelotti was still available for a seamless takeover should Redknapp say goodbye.

The bottom line is that it is hard to see Chelsea or Arsenal improving significantly in Europe next season. Both seem to be due a major shakeup. United also seem to be battling on rather than blazing any new trails of glory, and though it could be argued a major shakeup at Old Trafford is long overdue, the owners and long-serving manager seem content with the present conservative policy. United could easily improve on this season’s performance in Europe – it is hard to see them doing any worse – but they have not progressed in recent years as much as other top sides in the Champions League. City and Spurs both have plenty of room for improvement, but plenty of scope for all manner of unexpected things to go wrong. While it would be great to predict that English clubs will be back with a bang in Europe next year, the reality is that it could be another whimper.

Article source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/blog/2012/feb/22/champions-league-chelsea-arsenal-city-united

Arsenal forward Theo Walcott is a chance maker, not a chance taker

Arsene Wenger is running out of patience with Theo Walcott, and could sell the Arsenal forward in a summer clear-out.

The 22-year-old England international is one of several big names who could be heading for the Emirates Stadium exit door, as the Gunners boss prepares to launch a major rebuilding project in north London in an attempt to end the club’s search for silverware – now set to go beyond a seventh season.

Walcott has failed to hit the heights that his early promise in an Arsenal shirt suggested, and has deservedly come under fire from fans after a series of under-par performances this year.

According to reports in today’s press, the tricky winger could be offered the chance to revive his career at Premier League rivals Chelsea, who are ready to make a move for the former teen prodigy as Andre Villas-Boas undertakes a rebuilding project of his own at Stamford Bridge.

With a little over a year left to run on his existing contract, it could be time for Wenger to cut his losses and sell Walcott this summer, or risk losing him for nothing in 12 months time.

After a limp display in the 4-0 defeat away at AC Milan in the Champions League last week, Walcott was substituted unceremoniously at half-time and has not featured for Arsenal since their San Siro mauling.

In the aftermath of the game, former Gunners midfielder Emmanuel Petit was particularly critical of Walcott, claiming he and a number of other young players have failed to repay the faith shown by Wenger, and called for those underachievers to be sold.

“In midfield there isn’t anything now, the defence is constantly under construction,” he told French website sofoot.com. “Certain young players haven’t done enough to justify the confidence that Arsene has in them.

“Walcott — somehow he’s going to have to reach the next stage. It’s been years that he’s been at the same level.”

The emergence of Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain – who followed a similar path to Walcott, arriving in north London from Southampton – has cast further doubt over whether the England winger is even worth a starting place in the Arsenal side. The under-fire star is no stranger to criticism however, and in an interview last month he confessed that his recent performances had been below par.

“I don’t pay any attention to it. I just want to play my game and show people what I can do,” he told the London Evening Standard. “I am the best judge of my performance, not anyone else.

“I wasn’t happy with my last few games but, hopefully, now I can try to get back to a level I should be at. Everyone should realise I am a good judge of my character.”

On a creative level, Walcott has certainly stepped up to the plate, having established himself as a vital influence for Arsenal this season, providing seven assists in the Premier League – a joint-club-high along with Robin van Persie – a figure only five other players in the whole division can better, with no other Englishman able to match that impressive haul of assists.

However, despite possessing blistering pace, Walcott’s dribbling success is surprisingly poor. Of the 86 dribbles undertaken in the league – the 10th highest total – he has only beat his man on 30 occasions. That equates to a completion rate of just 35 per cent – the fifth-lowest rate of any player to attempt 20 or more dribbles this season according to Opta stats.

A lot has been said about Walcott’s natural central striking instincts, but judging by his scoring and shooting stats this season, he’s not yet ready to lead the line for Arsenal.

With only three Premier League goals to his name this season, at a rate of one every 627 minutes, it’s clear that there is still plenty of room for improvement.

What’s certain is that Walcott will continue to divide opinion, but while he may still struggle in front of goal, he does provide a vital creative threat going forward – a key ingredient for any successful team.

If Wenger fails to persevere with the development of his chance maker, come chance taker, then Arsenal’s loss could turn out to be Chelsea’s long-term gain.

Article source: http://www.givemefootball.com/premier-league/is-walcott-running-out-of-time-at-arsenal-

Wenger has outlived his usefulness at Arsenal

I have much respect for Arsene Wenger for his achievements during the 16 years he has been in charge of Arsenal.
However, Wenger has run out of ideas, and this is evident from Arsenal’s seven-season run without a major trophy. Arsenal are now the laughing stock of the English Premier League. They are no longer in the class of the likes of Manchester United and Manchester City.

Arsenal, who won the Premier League title in the 2001/2002 and 2003/2004 seasons, are now just another mediocre side in the top flight to whom winning the championship has become a lofty if not impossible dream.

I don’t understand what the bosses at Arsenal see in Wenger.  I had expected the tall Frenchman to be finally shown the door after Manchester United thumped the Gunners 8-2 last August, but he wasn’t.

The crushing defeat at Old Trafford was the height of humiliation, and it’s highly unlikely that Wenger will go after AC Milan thrashed his clueless side 4-0 in the Uefa Champions League last weekend.

Millions of Arsenal fans in Tanzania and elsewhere look set to ensure yet another trophy-less season.

A.M. Siwa,
Dar es Salaam.

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Nasri says leaving Arsenal was right decision

Manchester. Samir Nasri is confident he is starting to prove that Manchester City did not make a mistake when they signed him for £24 million from Arsenal last summer.The Frenchman, 24, has taken time to settle at Eastlands and has made just 15 Premier League starts since his move.

City manager Roberto Mancini has claimed that Nasri needed to improve the defensive side of his game in order to thrive for the Blues.But Nasri has started to establish himself in recent weeks as City close in on the climax to the Premier League and the Europa League.

 The winger maintains he was never concerned about his price tag but accepts it has taken time for him to get used to life at City.He claims he has taken Mancini’s advice on board and feels he is starting to show the club what he is capable of. “It’s always tough when you change, when you go to another team and have to be involved 100 per cent and I wasn’t,” he said. “Now I start to be settled and you will see a better Samir every week.

 ”You have to work when you don’t feel well and not producing what everyone expects. I was always confident about my quality and you will see that.

“I never asked City to pay 24 million so it’s not me. It was a lot of money but every transfer now has a lot of money.
“What you want to do is to give something to the team and the people who bring you here and trust you. The money and everything isn’t my problem.  “It’s not the same way (as playing at Arsenal). You need to settle. Now I want to show everyone it wasn’t a mistake.”

Nasri’s former club Arsenal are struggling to press for a top-four place, out of the FA Cup and 4-0 down in their Champions League tie with AC Milan.He is adamant he has never doubted his decision to leave the Emirates Stadium but is sure that Arsene Wenger will turn it around.

 Nasri added: “I don’t want Arsenal to fall down. I want for them to win the FA Cup or something because I have respect for the players and the manager.  “I know from the start that I made the right choice. Sometimes it’s good to win ugly you don’t always have to play good football to win.

 ”Arsenal play good football but after seven years they don’t win so that’s difficult for them though they have a good philosophy. I know they’ll find some solution.” (AFP)

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