Arsenal fans should not be “scared” to lose Hale Enders

The big news yesterday was how the door may be open for Myles Lewis-Skelly and Ethan Nwaneri to leave the club. This did not come as a surprise for me.

I was already in the process of writing a blog about the players who may leave this summer, and MLS and Nwaneri were on my list.

No one wants to see academy graduates leave, especially those which have shown the potential of MLS and Nwaneri. But to be a success in football you need to evolve and Arsenal may have evolved beyond the pair.

A few years back we had the likes of Emile Smith Rowe, Eddie Nketiah, Reiss Nelson, Bukayo Saka, Joe Willock and Ainsley Maitland-Niles breaking through. We returned as top 4 challengers based on the performances of Hale Enders.

But to evolve into the consistent title challengers we now are we had to look at better than wha we had. And that meant the likes of Kai Havertz and Mikel Merino coming in.

The only one from that group who is still at Arsenal is Bukayo Saka. He has gone on to be one of the best right wingers in the world. And that really is the level you have to be to make it at Arsenal.

Last summer we spent, or committed to spend, around £150m on Eberechi Eze, Noni Madueke and Piero Hincapie. It is the fellas who have “taken the minutes off” MLS and Nwaneri.

Some will argue that MLS and Nwaneri are superior to those that replaced them. but that is simply not true and is just their anti-Arteta agenda (anyone Arteta doesn’t play regularly they overhype).

Madueke has log been Saka’s understudy for England. He offers something that neither Saka or Nwaneri do – raw pace and brilliant in 1 on 1 situations. Madueke is an upgrade on Nwaneri, who I don’t actually think is a winger.

When we signed Eze under the nose of Spurs, everyon celebrated. Everyone was excited. It then baffles me why some are complaining about lack of minutes for Nwaneri when a player they were so excited to secure was always going to take minute off him.

Long-term, I think Nwaneri will play more centrally. Martin Odegaard if first choice and we then spend £65m on Eze to give Arteta another top class option in that area.

Eze is a proven Premier League player and another regular in Thomas Tuchel’s England squad.

Whilst most expect Eze and Madueke to go to the World Cup, Nwaneri’s name is not in contention. That says a lot about those who rate him above the senior pair. The might criticise Arteta, but Tuchel also thinks they are superior.

Over in Marseille, Nwaneri is struggling for regular minutes with the French team. The thinking over there is my thinking. That he is not really suited as a winger, but does not yet have the durability to play centrally. He needs more time, and that is time Arsenal can not afford to give him.

As for MLS, he has become a victim of system change at Arsenal.

Last season he looked fantastic, playing as an inverted full back and providing an extra body in midfield. This season we have changed things up.

Jurrien Timber tends to be the man playing inverted on the right hand side, that has left the left being used to maintain the with. Something which Ricardo Califori and Piero Hincapie do brilliantly. And something that MLS does not.

In Califori we have a marauding left back who, when for, is one of the best in the league. A fantastic player and regular starter for Italy, although his injures area concern.

I think we signed Hincape due to Califori’s injuries and wanted a left back cover who was closer to want the Italian provided.

The Ecuadorean has been an excellent signing, and may become our first choice next season. He joined, on loan, having been part of the Leverkusen invincible side and over 50 caps for his country at 24. His class is not in doubt.

Arsenal still have a lot to learn in the transfer market. Our poor sales are well documented.

What Manchester City, Chelsea and Liverpool do very well is selling academy graduates, taking the profit and reinvesting.

Cole Palmer, Jadon Sancho, Morgan Rodgers, Liam Delap, Romeo Lavia, Pedro Porro, Brahim Diaz and Taylor Harwood-Bellis have all left Man City over recent years. None have gone on to achieve more than the players that replaced them.

Chelsea have sold the likes of Mason Mount, Conor Gallagher, Lewis Hall, Tino Livramento, Tammy Abraham, Fikayo Tomori and Marc Ghuehi.

Jarrel Quansah, Rhian Brewster, Neco Williams, Bobby Clarke, Tyler Morton, Ben Doak, Caoimhin Kheller, Sepp van den Berg, Fabio Carvalho have all left Liverpool earring them nearly £150m.

We made a mistake not selling Maitland-Niles and Nelson back in 2021 or 2022. The pair would have generated a combined £50m. Money which could have been invested in someone better. We at least made close to £100m in selling ESR, Nketiah and Willock.

Estimations are that we could net over £100m in selling MLS and Nwaneri. That is a lot of money (and pure profit) for 2 players that do not actually need replacing.

Eze and Hincape are already an upgrade on the Hale End pair. we would basically be getting the same fee as what we spend upgrading.

MLS and Nwaneri are clearly both talented. The just need game time and right now their transfer value is based on their potential.

Ideally I would like us to do similar to what Liverpool have done with Quansah. Take a lesser fee from a European side with a buy back clause.

Rather than selling the pair to Man U or Chelsea for £50m each, a better move would be to take £35m from a Dortmund, Leverkusen or Atletico Madrid. And then have a nice sell on clause and an option to resign them for £50m. That is also the sort of deal that Man City had done a lot over the years.

That way, if either do kick on and fulfil their potential, we can resign them as the finished article. And if they do not become good enough for Arsenal, we may be able to pocket some more profit of they move again.

It is way to forget that both are still just 19. £100m for players with as little experience as them is a lot to turn down. And money we could then invest in players who are playing at a higher level.

It is hard to see academy graduates leave after many of us have invested emotionally in them. But that is why those running the club do the job they do. They do not let their emotions influence their decision.

Keenos

Zubimendi still a class act despite tough spell

The heavy criticism Martin Zubimendi has been getting recently baffles me.

I have seen fans and pundits label the Spanish midfielder as a flop, and must be replaced next season. What a load of hyperbole.

Zubi was superb at the beginning of the season. Dictating games and running the show.

He has played over 3,000 minutes, and more than 4,000 for club and country. If you were looking at a reason why Zubi is a huge upgrade on Thomas Partey, it is o his availability.

Yes, Zubi is now looking like he is running out of steam. Arteta should have used Norgaard a bit more early in the season. But what Zubi has done, and is still doing, is fantastic considering this is his first season in a new league. And one which is a lot more physically demanding than La Liga.

Zubimendi has also suffered due to Martin Odegaard being out – our captain drops deep and always offers a passing option to help get out the press. Something Kai Havertz and Eberechi Eze do not really do.

When Odegaard is not playing, an easy out all disappears. Likewise Jurrien Timber also plus narrower than Ben White, giving Zubimendi another close passing option to ply one twos off and progress the ball up the field.

What we need to do next summer is sign someone to compliment both Zubimendi and Declan Rice. Who can take some of the game time off both of them to keep them fresher for the run in.

Ideally we need a bit of a unicorn player who can be called upon to be the metronome at the base of the midfield, but can also do the power running of Declan Rice further forward.

For me that man is Sandro Tonali.

The Italian is someone who can sit as the deepest midfielder, break up play and begin our attacks, and can also bring the energy of Rice if asked to do so further forward.

You sign the Newcastle man, we then have Rice, Zubimendi and Tonali and rotate the 3 without seeing too much of a quality drop off. We then have Mikel Merino as the 4th option.

After a season on the bench, Norgaard May win to depart for first team football. I can also see him transitioning to centre back and being a back up option for us there.

The criticism Zubi is getting is similar to that of Xabi Alonso in his first year at Liverpool, and they are very similar players. 

Both players dominate the midfield through their positional awareness and reading of the game. They are not all action defensive midfielders like Partey. This can lead to criticism from fans who don’t quite understand the game and want to see their midfielder playing like Robbie Savage and covering every blade of grass.

Zubimendi will flourish next season. He would have had a year in England under his belt. And hopefully a new team mate who can share some more minutes with him.

Keenos

Arsenal quartet remind world of their talent

There is an old adage in football that players can become better when they are not playing.

This was certainly the case with Gilberto Silva, when many fans only began to appreciate his insane talent when he fractured his back ruling him out for nearly a year. It was only when he did not play did many fans realise that what he contributed allowed others to flourish, and that he was not an invisible player, he was an invisible wall.

Last night the stock of Declan Rice and Bukayo Saka shot up quicker than the S&P500 following Trump saying the US will leave Iran ‘whether we have a deal or not’.

England lost 1-nil to a hardworking Japan side. They were overwhelmed in the middle of the park and struggled to create out wide. There only threat, ironically, was from corners. Many of which were poorly taken.

It baffles me how fans of opposing clubs dismiss Rice as an average player. Just because you might prefer one of your own (Man City with Rodri, Moises Caicedo with Chelsea) should not lead you to the conclusion that an opponents player is not very good. All 3 are amonmgst the best central midfielders in the world.

You then have Man U fans who continually make the Rice v Bruno Fernandes argument, ignoring the fact that they are two completely different midfielders who influence the game in complete different ways. If you were making a “best Premier League XI”, the midfield three would be Fernandes, Rodri, and then one of Caicedo or Rice depending on your preference.

Newcastle are another set of fans who dismiss Rice’s talents, trying to put both Bruno Guimaraes and Sandro Tonali above him. The irony is they have inflated the ability of Tonali so much, the Italian now wants to leave for a bigger club.

Finally West Ham fans hate Rice because he left them. When Rice was at West Ham, they labelled him the best midfielder in the world. They day he left, he was overrated. That is football tribalism in a nutshell.

Anyone that is able to put aside their tribalistic traits would recognise that Declan Rice is one of the best in the world, and is the first name in midfield on Thomas Tuchel’s teamsheet.

The Anderson v Wharton, Foden v Bellingham v Rodgers v Palmer debates will continue long into the World Cup, but there is no arguments of Declan Rice. He is simply England’s best. And last night showed how important he was to England as Anderson struggled to step up to the “senior midfielder” role and Kobbie Manioo looking like a lost little boy next to him.

Bukayo Saka is another who has been criticised heavily this season.

Yes, the headline grabbers have not been there. His goal and assist contribution has been lost. But the underling statistics are still amongst the best in the Premier League.

Only Wayne Rooney has been named England Men’s Player of the Year more times than Saka. And he is still only 24.

Saka is still England’s best all-round attacker and, like Rice, is one of the first names on Tuchel’s teamsheet. It will be Saka, Kane and then two others. And last nights game showed that.

England had 11 corners last night and failed to work the goalkeeper from any of them. Maybe now the criticism of Arsenal and our set pieces will stop? Had Rice and Saka been playing, the delivery would have been better and we might have scored a goal.

Instead, no Saka and Rice led to a dour 1-nil defeat to Japan.

Two other players to remind the world of the talent were down in England’s U21s.

Mikel Arteta has been criticised for not playing Myles Lewis-Skelly and Ethan Nwaneri this season, with the later sent to Marseille on loan to gain some first team experience. The truth is we are in a title race, which gives us little space to give youngsters the minutes they need to develop.

5 minutes here, 10 minutes there when games are comfortably won will do nothing for Lewis-Skelly or Nwaneri. And right now for them to get more minutes they will need to be playing better than Piero Hincapié and Riccardo Calafiori (for MLS), and Bukayo Saka, Noni Madueke, Martin Odegaard, Eberechi Eze and Leandro Trossard (for Nwaneri).

The guys ahead of MLS and Nwaneri in the Arsenal pecking order are top, top players, all of who have lots of senior football under their belt and are regulars for their country (Madueke aside, but he has Saka ahead of him).

Last night for England U21s, the pair put on a performance that shows they are too good for the U21 level. And yes, I get it was only Moldova.

MLS ran the game from left back. He did what he was doing last night – too strong for anyone who got near him, driving with the ball into the middle of the park, and releasing it to a teammate at the right time. His highlights can be seen below:

One man who would have taken notice of MLS was England manager Tuchel.

The left back spot is still open, and whilst Nico O’Reilly and Tino Livramento may be getting more regular football, MLS offers something neither of them can – control and forward mobility in the middle.

It will be interesting to see what Arsenal do with MLS this summer. He is too talented to sit on the bench, but will still behind Hincape and Calafiori in the pecking order.

The club may decide to let Calafiori go, if a big enough bid comes in and taking into account his injuries. Alternatively they might decide to loan out MLS to a Premier League side which pushes the problem 12 months down the road. There is also the possibility of Calafiori leaving us.

I do not overly buy into the theory that MLS’s future is in the midfield. It is a bit like Trent Alexander-Arnold where fans often spoke about him playing more centrally, but it is a different game in the middle of the park. MLS would also need a lot more development in that position, and would probably need a loan deal to play an entire season there. But would any PL side loan MLS to play central midfield, a position he has never regularly played?

A £50m bid from Manchester United would be a huge deal to turn down for your 3rd choice left back. Arsenal may also look to see what Liverpool have done with Jarell Quansah and accept a lower fee from a European side with a buy back option. Would selling MLS for £30m with a £50m buy back clause be the best option? We would basically be paying someone like Bayer Leverkusen £20m to develop him for 3-years before potentially resigning him.

Ethan Nwaneri was the beneficiary of MLS’s dominate play last night with 2 goals, and he could have grabbed himself a hat trick.

Like MLS, Nwaneri is too good for U21 football, but not currently good enough to be playing regularly for The Arsenal. It is also hard to see how he can get his way into the England senior set up taking into account the abundance of options Tuchel has on the right wing and at number 10.

The slight concern with Nwaneri is that he ends up like Harvey Elliott, where a lack of minutes hamper his progression and he never really kicks on. Elliott made his England U21 debut at just 18 and 4-years later was still playing at that level.

It is easy to forget that both Nwaneri and MLS are still only 19.

MLS was the youngest man in Lee Carsley’s England squad, whilst only 3 players were younger than Nwaneri. This highlights where they are right now – easily the best players for England at U21 level but struggling for game time at senior level.

But last night would have been a reminder to everyone just how good they are. And whilst they might not make it at Arsenal, they should have long careers for both club and country and bring in huge fees if we do decide to cash in.

I have a sneaky feeling that MLS will be in Tuchel’s final England squad. I think the German likes him and put him in the U21s to both get him some game time and see how he responds. MLS passed the test with flying colours.

Keenos