Manchester City and England legend ready to step up for Arsenal

So William Saliba’s back finally gave way on Tuesday during the game against Spain.

Arsenal medical staff had been currently monitoring William Saliba’s back condition. 

It was well reported that the Frenchman had been managing a debilitating lower back and sciatic nerve issue and had been playing with the help of pain-relief injections in recent months. Against Spain he could not take it anymore, and he is now set to go under the knife.

What is now fairly obvious is that Saliba will not be fit for the start of the season, and the type of surgery he likely needs on his lower discs could sideline him for up to 4 months. We will be lucky to see him before Christmas.

The club were already scouring world football to find someone who could cover for Saliba’s absence. Ezri Konsa’s name was the one they seemingly landed on with the Englishman able to sufficiently cover for both Saliba and Jurrien Timber, replacing Ben White. But there is another man we need to be looking at. John Stones.

Stones is a Manchester City legend. Played nearly 300 games for them. 6 league titles, 3 FA Cups, the Champions League and plenty of other minor honours. He is also closing in on 100-caps for England.

Still only 32, Stones still has plenty to give on the pitch, and he has shown that for England when called upon during this World Cup.

Questions will rightly be raised about his fitness – Stones has never played more than 30 league games for City and has played 20+ just once in the last 5. Just 36 league appearances in the last 3-years should raise a concern.

But Stones could be the perfect short-term replacement for Saliba.

We could take inspiration from PSG who only seemed to roll out Marquinhos for Champions League and big Ligue 1 fixtures. We could play Stones on a Saturday in the Premier League. He is oven ready and can perform from day one. And then keep Cristhian Mosquera for the Champions League group stages, which actually throw up easier games than the English top division.

Stones would only need to get us through to December and Saliba return. At that point, we could ease Saliba back in, playing once a week, with either Stones or Mosquera playing the other game.

The kickr is Stones is available on a free transfer. So whilst he would likely command big wages, the deal is financially doable. And offering him another 2-years of playing league title chasing football may be enough to edge Arsenal ahead of any rivals in the chase for him.

Stones for 2-years would also allow us to continue the development of Mosquera without the need to expect the 22-year-old starlet to play twice a week. In the 20-30 games we will play before Christmas, you would basically have Stones playing in half, Mosquera playing in half. Stones, at his age, would also not impact Mosquera beyond 2027.

It just feels like a sensible deal to make. And one which would be quick to do once the World Cup is over.

Keep an eye on this one…

Keenos

French star plays himself out of Arsenal move

Before the game, I did not really get why France were such big favourites. And nor did I understand why their defeat to Spain was such a big shock.

Yesterday’s game was actually an interesting watch.

In the French corner, you have players that are terrific athletes. Runners. Big, strong lads. Facing them was Spain. They sacrifice athleticism for control of the ball, for passing and technique.

The result answered the thoughts that man American’s have shared this summer: If our best athletes trained to be soccer players, we would be unbeatable. But this view always ignored that football is not just about being athletic. It is about having the technique to pass the ball, at the right time, at the right pace, to the exact right spot.

Top footballers are likely top golfers – they have an exact place they are aiming to get the ball too.

Golfers will aim the ball to land in around a meter or two of an area. For footballs it is not just about passing the ball to your teammate, but passing it to the correct foot, or into the correct space for them to run onto without breaking stride. And yesterday was the perfect example as to why being a top footballer is not just about being a top athlete.

Spain played like a team. They controlled the game and won the ball back at ease. France played as individuals, rarely putting together passages of play and looked like they were waiting for Spain to lose the ball rather than trying to win it. Result: Spain win.

One player to really struggle was Bradley Barcola.

Barcola is your typical athletic footballer. He is big, strong and quick. But he is not actually that great with the ball at his feet – crosses often go over the cross bar, shots tamely roll into the keepers gloves, and when in tight spaces with no where to run into, the ball gets stuck under his feet.

If you are now thinking “Barcola reminds me of someone”, you are right. Gabriel Martinelli.

Barcola is basically the French Martinelli. He has the same strengths and weaknesses, and for me is no better. And you can chuck Anthony Gordon and Rafael Leao into the same box.

All these players are the same profile. Fantastic runners, super quick. But rely on having space in behind to run into. Space that you do not get when playing for Arsenal.

Prior to this World Cup, I saw no point in selling Martinelli and signing Barcola. It all felt a little “Emperors new clothes”. This World Cup has reinforced me view.

Barcola would thrive at a mid-table team that plays on the counter attack. The likes of Aston Villa or Newcastle. But playing for a top team he would struggle. And anyone that watches PSG regularly will see that struggle. He only puts in the goals and assists he does in France because Ligue 1 is a hugely inferior team outside the top 1. In Europe, playing against better opposition, his output sinks quicker than West Ham.

If we are looking to replace Martinelli, the player coming in needs to provide the same electric pace and directness, but also have the addition of being composed on the ball and able to beat players in tight places. Beyond the top 2 or 3 left wingers in the world, others just have the same deficinies as Martinelli.

I would be surprised if any Arsenal fan still wants Barcola after this World Cup. And Liverpool are welcome to him.

Keenos

Trossard set to become “one of the most expensive 31-year-olds in football history”

Leandro Trossard is off to Besiktas, and good luck to him.

The transfer has led to a bit of head scratching. Why leave Arsenal now? Could Trossard have moved to a bigger club? Why only €18m plus add-ons?

Why leave Arsenal now?

Trossard is 31-years-old. He has a year left on his contract. He is also facing what could be an expensive divorce.

The situation reminds me a lot of Ray Parlour all those years ago.

The Arsenal legend left Arsenal at the age of 31. It left fans in shock as he looked set to become a one-club-man. But it soon transpired that Parlour left to finance his divorce. 

When joining Middlesbrough, he got big wages for someone who was nearing the end of his best and a signing on fee. That move ensured that he would be financially set for life despite the groundbreaking divorce.

At 31, this summer might be the last change for Trossard to get one last big contract. Yes, his current Arsenal deal runs out in 12-months, but who knows what the next year could bring.

By leaving now, with his stock at a peak, Trossard will be on big wages which will enable him to finance whatever divorce proceedings and future payout he will be obliged to make.

Even taking the divorce out of it, a 3-year deal from Besiktas takes him through to 34. He is basically earning his retirement money.

Could Trossard have moved to a bigger club?

There is no doubt that Trossard could still do a job for a top team playing in a top league. He could easily have gone to the likes of Juventus or Atletico Madrid and taken up the similar squad role that he plays at Arsenal. But like with all transfers, money talks.

Those clubs would unlikely have offered what Besiktas are offering – both in wages and length of contract.

Turkey has become a bit of a retirement home for European-based players who do not really fancy Saudi (and the money in the desert seems to be drying up anyway

In recent years, Victor Osimhen, N’Golo Kanta, Ederson, Leroy Sane and Marco Asensio have all moved to Turkey and all earn big money despite being past their time.

Milan Skriniar, Matteo Guendouzi, Ilkay Gundogan, Davinson Sanchez, Nelson Semedo, Andre Onana and Lucas Torriera are just some more of the names who opted to “step down” to the Turkish league rather than continue to play at the highest level in Europe.

A mixture of the lesser intensity of the game out there (these stars only need to perform at 60% to be the best in the league), the wages, the Istanbul lifestyle and the low taxes for football has made Turkey a bit of a Turkey Europe’s football retirement haven.

Earn your money, enjoy a final few years in the sun, relax. It is a good life and one which was clearly attractive to Trossard.

Why only €18m plus add-ons?

As with everything Arsenal, some fans are unhappy about what they deem a low fee.

Yes, on the face of it, €18m plus add-ons is not a huge sum. But we have to remember that we are selling a 31-year-old player with just one-year left on his contract. We were not in a strong negotiating position.

It is also easy to forget that once a player turns 31, his transfer value completely plummets:

At €18m, Trossard will be the 13th most expensive player aged 31 or over since 2020.

Six of those ahead of him moved to Saudi Arabia during that crazy summer of 2023. If you exclude them, Trossardbecomes the 7th most expensive player to move clubs since 2020.

In the history of the game, only 9 players aged 31 or over have moved between two European clubs for more than the €18m we are getting for Trossard. This excludes those players that moved to the likes of Saudi Arabia, China and America.

This should bring into perspective as to what a good fee is for Trossard, especially when you consider that those who moved for more than him include Ronaldo, Lewandowski, Koulibaly and Griezmann. The only real outlier was West Ham spunking €27m on Niclas Füllkrug.

An €18m move is good for Trossard, and good for Arsenal. And in Christos Tzolis we are getting someone 7-years Trossard’s junior.

Keenos