Key Arsenal pair set for long-term lay off

Towards the end of last season, it was clear that many of our top stars were running on empty

Martin Zubimendi completely ran out of gas in his first season in England, whilst Bukayo Saka struggled to shrug off on injury that has continued to plague him going into the World Cup. But it is the long-term fitness of two of Mikel Arteta’s key men that is of biggest concern to Arsenal management.

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

The Frenchman has reportedly been managing a debilitating lower back and sciatic nerve issue and has been playing with the help of pain-relief injections in recent months. It is expected that Saliba will need to undergo back surgery on his lower discs following the World Cup, which could sideline him for up to 4 months.

In 2006/07, Thierry Henry was also managing a back issue. He was never really the same player again and the remainder of his career was plagued  by injuries.

The Saliba situation would explain why Arsenal are going for Ezri Konsa.

Whilst moving for a 28-year-old centre back might leave some scratching their head, he could be the perfect replacement for Saliba both in the short and longer term.

Konsa is Premier League ready. Once he has recovered from England’s World Cup exploits, he will require no settling in period. He has the pace and physically to deputise for Saliba and ensure we do not need to rush the Frenchman back.

Moving beyond the initial 2-4 month period of Saliba’s rehabilitation, we may need to restrict his game time in the mid-to-long-term. To put simply, Saliba may never be able to play two games a week again, worst case scenario.

We then need to take inspiration from PSG who only seemed to roll out Marquinhos for Champions League and big Ligue 1 fixtures. Could we see a situation where we keep Saliba for Europe, and potentially the cups, whilst Konsa plays in the Premier League?

It should also be remembered that Konsa has played a lot of Premier League games at right back. With Jurrien Timber having pulled out of the World Cup and Ben White perpetually injured, Konsa may be the perfect man to come in.

As already stated, Konsa is Premier League ready. He would be able to come in for both Saliba and Timber and play at a level that has seen him become one of England’s best centre backs.

If we can not get Konsa in, it is worthwhile keeping an eye on John Stones.

The veteran Englishman (still only 32) is available on a free transfer having not renewed his contract with Manchester City. He might be worth a punt to bring in to cover for Saliba without needing to spend the big bucks.

Another concern for Arsenal’s medical team is Declan Rice.

Rice is a machine. He is non-stop action. But he looks like he is on the verge of breaking down.

As the slog of last season dragged on, he was that little bit slower to get up, the odd limp came in, and he sought treatment more often. This has continued at the World Cup, with a minor injury ruling him out of England’s final group game against Panama – although had that game been important, and against better opposition, I am sure Rice would have played.

Rice has clearly been playing in the so-called “red zone” and you feel that if he is not given an elongated rest soon, a major injury could be on the horizon – and that injury could have long term consequences if he is not able to fully recover his best-in-the-world stamina.

The plan will surely be to give Rice a break until potentially even October. And throughout the season Arteta will look to rest him more often. But to do that we need to bring someone in.

Mikel Merino is fantastic, but he does not offer anything Rice does – the Spainard next season will likely be used as a box crashing impact sub when we need a goal. That will leave us needing to go into the market.

Like Konsa, Bruno Guimaraes is also Premier League ready.

We turned down the opportunity to sign the Brazilian back in 2022, instead opting to go for the duel signings of Leandro Trossard and Jorginho. Bruno went to Newcastle and has developed into one of the best midfielders in the Premier League.

With their earlier-than-England exit from the World Cup, Brazilian players would likely be fit and ready for the start of the Premier League season come the 21 August. And that could be key in the decision to go for Bruno.

If we signed Bruno, we could basically say to Rice “go away, get your weary body rested and come back in September for 4-weeks of rehabilitation ahead of coming back in the team in October”. We could then basically play Rice and Bruno once a week, with the pair rotating throughout the season without a drop off in quality.

Some will be concerned about both Konsa and Bruno being 28. But if we want ready-to-go players to come in for Saliba and Rice then that is the sort of age players we will be targeting.

We would basically be signing both knowing that they will only be with us for 4 or 5 years, and that they have zero sell on value. But that is the sort of decisions you can make when you generate record revenues. We do not need to sell to buy.

If Arsenal can take advantage of Aston Villa and Newcastle massively spending beyond their means in recent years, we could recruit Bruno and Konsa for less than a combined £150m. That would be brilliant business in the current market.

Ultimately we have a fantastic squad. This summer will all be about trying to reduce the minutes for key players next year, keeping them fresher for the business end of the season.

UTA

Keenos

Patience key for The Arsenal

You can almost set you watch by it.

Every year, on around the 2nd or 3rd of July, fans flock to social media to cry that their club has not signed anyone yet. It honestly mystifies me, especially when many of those have lived through man, many transfer windows, and should know how things work.

I understand fans look at Tottenham with a jealous eye – once Sandro Tonali is confirmed, that will be over £200m spent on new players. But their desperate transfer spending should be expected – they can not afford another season finishing in a relegation battle.

There is a World Cup going on. And that always impacts when you buy players.

Yes, some will move during the World Cup, such as Elliott Anderson. But others will be saying to their agent “I do not want to hear from you. Speak to me after”. And if you are targetting those players, your transfer spending is on hold.

So lets look at Tottenham, whose fans are already claiming yet another transfer window win.

Their two big signings – Tonali and Mateus Fernandes – were not at the World Cup. That makes the deals much easier to do. I also think they have paid a premium for the pair. Met the asking price. Not negoatiated. Again, making them an easier deal to do.

I like both players, but we are in the market for players to act as cover for Martin Zubimendi and Declan Rice. The transfer fees and wages being spoken about are the levels of starters, not squad players.

Then you have Jan Paul van Hecke. A good signing for them. Paying £52m got the deal done quickly. The deal will make it £230m on van Hecke, Fernandes and Tonali. Huge money on players that would not even start for Aston Villa.

Tottenham basically had a free run at all of these players because everyone else had walked away. No one wanted to pay those asking prices. Manchester United, Arsenal and Liverpool decided there was better value eslewhere.

Tottenham have also completed free deals for 32-year-old Andy Robertson, 37-year-old Martin Dubravka and 29-year-old Marcos Senesi. Easy deals to make when the players are out of contract.

The reality is had Arsenal wanted to sign these players, at the fees and wages they are costing, we would have. But we decided not to.

When you are looking at the market and seeing £116m for Elliott Anderson, £100m for Tonali, £85m for Fernandes, you just have to laugh. And this shows whay Arsenal need to be patient.

I feel this summer, you move early tou over pay. That is what we risk doing with someone like Morgan Rogers.

Rogers is a good player, but a £130m player he is not. Considering Anthony Gordon went for £80m to Barcelona, Arsenal would expect to do a deal for in and around this figure. If we can not, we move on to another winger who represents better value. And Aston Villa are stuck with an unhappy player who has been valued out of a move to a top club.

One of those other midfielders is Christos Tzolis. The Greek winger is not at the World Cup, but the man he is replacing is.

I think Leandro Trossard will depart this summer. He potentially has a bit of a Ray Parlour situation coming up. A costle divorce at 31. Our diminutive winger might see this summer as an opportunity to go to Turkey or Saudi, get himself a huge signing on fee and silly wages, thus funding his divorce.

Tzolis is clearly lined up to replace Trossard, but we are being respectful of our current player and do not want to sign someone until Trossard confirms he wants to leave. And he will not do that until Belgium are out of the World Cup. Once Trossard gives us the nod, Tzolis will come in.

We can expect to get £20m for Trossard, and Tzolis will cost us around £30m. So a £10m net swing on a player with a similar profile and is 7-years younger. It is a good deal and we just need to remain patient whilst the dominos fall.

Like many, I was disapointed about the news of Jeremy Monga last night – Arsenal have walked away from the deal and Man City are swooping in.

Monga is clearly a talent. The reports are we were looking to pay around £6.5m, similar to what a recent tribunal ordered Liverpool to pay for Rio Ngumoha. I would say that is reasonable. But Leicester City demanded a fee north of £10m.

That led Arsenal, looking at the Ngumoha tribunal fee, and agree to “take him on a free and let the courts decide”. The result was the door was left open and City are seemingly swooping in.

Over the years, Man City have spent a lot of money recruiting the best young players from across Europe. But there is a huge swath of “where are they now” blogs with those that they signed and just seemed to disappear into the City Group’s loan system.

Many of them do get their careers back on track – think Morgan Rogers, Jeremie Frimpong, Romeo Lavia, Jadon Sancho and Felix Nmecha. But it is often a rocky path,

City are chucking millions at these young kids and families, setting them up for life. Every year more players seem to move between academies aged 16-18. Getting a £30k a week contract where their existing club only wanted to pay £10k. And then they go back to playing the same PL2 level and struggle to ever break thourhg (Chido Obi Martin anyone?).

We need to stop getting annoyed when youth players leave. Remember, our coachs know more about these kids than anyone and will know their value based on the chances of making it. Likewise, lets stop getting upset when we lose out on a Mongao or Sverre Nypan (what happened to him?).

Ultimately, spending £10m+ on a 16-year-old is a huge investment. And there is more chance he will be playing for a small club like West Ham in 5-years than being a regular at Arsenal.

And by being patient and not overpaying for Monga, we have pivoted to Georgian U21 starlet Andria Bartishvili. At just £4.5m (reportedly),  Bartishvili, like Monga, is a talented young left winger. May we have just turned down the next Jeremy Doku to sign the next Khvicha 20Kvaratskhelia?

Our deals will get done this year. Be patient. Enjoy the World Cup. Go on holiday. Stop living on social media and feeling the need to get upset about everything.

We are Champions.

Keenos

“Reducing minutes” the key for Arsenal’s transfer window

PSG did not beat us because they had the better players, the better tactics, or were coached better. They beat us because during the course of the season, their key players played less minutes.

Whilst Arsenal had a real slog of a season in the Premier League, a competition were you simply cannot rest too many players, PSG strolled to the Ligue 1 title whilst being able to rest key players consistently keeping them fresh for the Champions League.

Talisman Khvicha Kvaratskhelia played more than 740 league minutes less than Bukayo Saka, whilst centre back Marquinhos played 1702 and 1566 minutes less than Gabriel and Saliba respectively. That is the equivalent of about 17/18 games less.

Seven of Arsenal’s starting XI in the semi final had played more than 2,000 Premier League- with Declan Rice and David Raya playing in over 3,000. Just 2 of PSG’s semi-final players had clocked up 2,000+ minutes in Ligue 1.

Throughout Mikel Arteta’s managerial career, he has always been able to recognise “what next” when building the team from finishing 8th, through to aiming for top 4, then title challengers, and then winners. He has continued to take Arsenal on a evolutionary journey rectifying any weaknesses from the previous season. And our biggest weakness last season was how many minutes key players had to play in comparison to PSG.

Last summer we did brilliant raising the floor of the squad. The likes of Piero Hincapie, Cristhian Mosquera, Noni Madueke and Eberechi Eze gave Arteta more options. But it was still not enough.

There are still pockets of the squad were players saw a lot of minutes. And crucially the biggest are was in the middle of the park, the engine room.

By the time the final whistle went in Budapest, Rice had clocked up 4,456 minutes for Arsenal, with Martin Zubimendi playing 4,299. Zubimendi was criticised towards the end of the season, which was unfair considering the exhaustion he must have been feeling in his toughest ever season.

Arteta can be criticised for not bringing in Myles Lewis Skelly enough, or playing Premier League stalwart Christian Norgard in a couple of games. But I am reluctant to criticise a man whose team selection lead us to our first league title in 22-years. He basically sacrificed the Champions League to ensure our tired, weary, injured troops dragged us to the league title.

This summers transfer window, I feel, will not be about buying starters. It will be about buying players who can better share the load – especially in those opening months of a season.

The likes of Bruno Guimaraes could come in for Declan Rice with the aim of sharing the 4,456 minutes. His acquisition could see Rice end up playing under 2,500 minutes next season, with Guimaraes playing around 2,000. That is similar minutes to what PSG’s midfielders player.

In defence we are being linked with the equally experience Ezri Konsa. He would be a good option to replace Ben White and has bundles of experience playing both right back and centre back in the Premier League. Konsa would certainly allow Arteta to rest Saliba and Jurrien Timber more.

What Arteta then needs to do is trust Madueke and Eze a bit more, and trust Myles Lewis Skelly more. Their development could easily see them playing 500-1000 more minutes this season, taking the pressure off Saka, Martin Odegaard and Zubimendi.

Another factor is just how many Arsenal players seem to be currently playing with an injury.

We got heavily criticised in the run-in to the title for players pulling out of international duty due to injuries – but it is clear that many players are struggling.

Saka has been managing a long-term achilles injury. Adfter the World Cup he could probably do with going on a beach for 6 weeks. A proper rest before slowly being eased back into The Arsenal team 5 or 6 games into the season.

Rice is also clearly not 100%. Nor is Saliba. Both could do with not playing in the first 6-weeks of the season, giving their bodies time to recover. They could then come back in later in the season, have their game time managed a bit better, and be that bit fresher come May.

It will also be interesting to see if Arteta decides to rest and rotate a bit more in Europe.

In 2024/25 and 2025/26, PSG finished outside the top 8 and thus had to play an additional round. They did “just enough” to finish in the top half of the 9-16 grouping, ensuring they got an easier tie in the Knockout phase play-offs. They faced Monaco and Brest in that round respectively.

Despite playing an additional game, key players had still clocked up less Champions League minutes than Arsenal come the quarter final. Accept a couple of “lesser” results in the aim of keeping players fresher.

It is quite clear that this transfer window needs to be about reducing the minutes for key players, especially in those opening 6-8 weeks of the season.

Arsenal were so close to winning the Champions League last season. For 2026/27 we need to ensure the players that turn up in Madrid are fresher, without sacrificing the league for a push at European glory.

Keenos