Archive for Transfer Talk
Arsenal’s Injury Gremlins
Posted by: | CommentsAfter weekends like the one just past, I sometimes reflect on how good a club Arsenal are. It’s so much easier to focus on critiquing what doesn’t work, but it sometimes is a good idea to step back and look at the environment in which the club has worked in.
For the last 4 years, I can’t recall Arsenal ever having a full complement of players because a very good proportion have been frequent flyers into the treatment room at London Colney.
Tomas Rosicky and Eduardo have perhaps been the most recognizable absentees from the first team due to the nature of their recent long term injuries. Even so, they’re having a start stop sort of campaign as their bodies get used to the rigours of a 60 match league and cup campaign. The weekend match against Stoke City was more notable for the fact that Arsenal picked up 4 injuries to Gallas, Eboue, Traore and Rosicky – than the fact that the team got back to winning ways.
It’s eternally frustrating to constantly hear that our players are out injured – in fact, I’d go as far as saying that you always dread injury news after a game. Many have suggested that there must be a reason why Arsenal seem to have a disproportionate amount of injuries compared to other clubs. The fact that injuries also seem to cluster around the same area in the pitch – defenders in the latter stage of last season, 3 left backs this season, 3 out of our 4 recognized strikers, etc., doesn’t knock down the conspiracy theories.
Despite all the injury gremlins that hit us, it’s actually amazing that we remain competitive. Granted, being competitive if you factor in all the injuries over the seasons isn’t good enough for some supporters – but the fact that the team has constantly remained among the elite should not go unacknowledged.
Only recently, Liverpool capitulated because they had more players in their treatment room than on the pitch – and this was a factor constantly touted in the media as if in excuse for their poor performance. Arsenal on the other hand, would normally be expected to just get on with it and produce the expected levels of performance.
There is also the school of thought that perhaps our training and treatment regime is to blame – but it’s not that simplistic. The Belgian club Anderlecht recently fired their entire medical team because of the amount of injuries the team suffered. I wouldn’t go so far – in fact going so far is just outright crazy – but asking the question about how our medical team works to support the players is valid.
Others have pointed to our style of play as one of the reasons we incur injuries at such a frequent rate. The speed of our play, the way our players move, turn and accelerate, and the sheer tension they place on their bodies are pointed as a possible factor.
I’m sure someone more knowledgeable out there will have come up with some scientific explanation – but it doesn’t hide from the fact that injuries do significantly affect us. Should Wenger stock pile players? Maybe – but without a doubt, we have to depend on the players we have in the absence of any suitable reinforcements coming from outside.
Wenger has been cautious in managing expectations for this January’s transfer window – as he looks to go into the market for a relief striker to shore up our resources following Van Persie’s long term injury.
I would suggest that just because Wenger says he’s on the market, it doesn’t mean that he’ll actually find a suitable recruit. I’m one of those who don’t support the purchase of any player simply to appease fans or the media – it has to be the right player and if we don’t find one, I would happily support the decision not to buy. I do want the club to buy a player who will compliment the squad, regardless of their cost (within reason of course) – but I do not support buying so called big name players to pacify anybody.
I sincerely hope that players like Vela, Walcott and Bendtner would use this opportunity to give Wenger a reason not to go out into the market. I’ve always said it’s unreasonable to expect that they will hit the ground running – and they can only get their match sharpness by playing more games. Buying, especially when you don’t find the right sort of player (and even if you did, they may not be available and they may be too expensive) may not necessarily be the right answer.
Perhaps the experiment with our pint sized Russian leading the line will buy Wenger some time to get Bendy, Vela and Eduardo into the mix – while at the same time keeping the option to buy reinforcements open.
Arsenal’s young guns set sights on Middle Eastlands
Posted by: | CommentsA question is always posed to the many Arsenal fans who bemoan our somewhat amplified and misguided crisis of a trophy drought. ’Would the Carling Cup do?”
My sense is that winning the Carling cup will still not be good enough for the ”We must win a trophy now or else we must bring in the sugar daddy with a transfer war chest” brigade – despite evidently closing the door on the argument that Arsenal hasn’t won a trophy since 2005. This is one of them cases that we can’t have our cake and eat it. Without a shadow of a doubt, Wenger has had numerous opportunities to field a full strength team that is capable of emphatically winning the Carling cup, yet time and time again, he has elected to use the league cup as a vehicle to blood Arsenal’s fringe players.
Ask any long term strategist and they’ll tell you that Arsenal’s policy in the Carling Cup, while not a guarantee for trophies, is one of the most valuable development tools any manager can have in world football for the reason that it provides first class invaluable experience that is impossible to buy if you even tried.
Many teams have recognized the merits of Arsenal’s persistent policy to the point where the league cup is now seen as a platform to provide valuable playing opportunities for fringe players and up-coming reserves – though different clubs have mixed results. Some clubs like Chelsea, Tottenham and Aston Villa take the Cup very seriously and field full strength teams at every available opportunity. In the case of the latter 2 (as well as many other premiership clubs), the Carling cup is the most realistic opportunity for silverware in any given season – so it’s understandable that they will throw everything at it. In Chelsea’s case, I’d hazard a guess that they’d struggle to string together a reserve side that is competitive enough to challenge the best of the second stringers, but that would be conjecture really. Chelsea wouldn’t be that woeful if they strung together a reserve team, would they?
Tonight’s game at Eastlands won’t be any different in the sense that Wenger will field a typically Carling cup side with a sprinkling of experience to help guide the youngsters. The temptation after Sunday’s defeat would be to field a full strength side to exorcise the demons from Sunday, but that would not only be unfair to the young team who have so far beaten the Baggies and Liverpool emphatically to earn the right to play today – it would also be a knee jerk reaction to a situation that needs calm heads. We won’t achieve anything by sending our big guns to Eastlands – they’re best utilized by preparing for the visit from the ‘big’ men from the Potteries on Saturday.
Wenger admits that the injuries to the first team squad has influenced his approach for tonight’s team to play Abu Dhabi City, but he is confident of putting out a team capable of winning. At least for Abu Dhabi City, their cycle of 7 consecutive draws will be brought to an end, and we’re hoping our Carling cup team will put them out of their misery. The pressure is more on them than on the young Arsenal side, who let’s face it, will be disappointed if they don’t collect the honours from tonight, but nevertheless, will need no more motivation than the chance to progress to the semi-final of their prime competition. Tonight’s match is their cup final and an opportunity for our boys to put themselves in the shop window for the manager and fans alike.
Wenger also took some time to comment on the reflection that the team has done since Sunday’s defeat and rightfully so – he avers that we need to stop talking and do our business on the pitch in the games that follow. They say talk is cheap, and in the dip of form that Arsenal are in right now, the only talking that’s needed is on the pitch. There is clearly a danger that the lack of belief in this team from the outside might dare to become a self fulfilling prophecy if it ends up transmitting to the players.
We will however have to get used to daily headlines about players that are on their way to Arsenal in January, especially after Wenger confirmed that Van Persie’s injury has forced him to go into the January market for a relief striker at least. I sometimes think that journalists are so pressured by their editors, you’d find a group of them in most pubs around Fleet Street huddling in a corner and inventing rumours about players linked with certain clubs. They qualify such diatribe with attributions like ’a source close to the club said’ or ’Arsenal (fill name of preferred club here) has long been linked to (fill name of player here)’. Linked by who if not themselves I ask.
The ridiculous rumours so far are that in January, we’ll be after Ruud Van Nistelrroy or Carlton Cole – (Note: Typically the so underwhelming big lump of a centre forward stereotype that has become a mainstay in English football). I guess you can’t hold it against the journalist for this sort of pressure – they also have kids to feed and a roof to put over their heads.
The Carling Cup side though, will have a lot to play for tonight as City are a good team who will provide stiff competition if only to unbruise their battered egos. Of course there’s the small matter of Money-bye-ego who will want another opportunity to prove to Wenger that shipping him out to a non-Beyonce type club was not a cool thing to do at all.


Tue 13th September 2011; 19:45, Dortmund