Yearly Archives: 2015

What 1 word best describes Arsenal’s Champions League campaign?

1 word

Answer: All of the above.

Last night was a disaster. It was a shocking defeat. One which has left us hanging on to our Champions League future by the thinnest of threads. And it is simply not good enough.

Every team will lose a game. It is the nature of football. No one can go through a season unbeaten in all competitions. However it is the manner in which you lose a game that is important.

Lose when you have been on top, the opponents have defended with 11 men behind the ball, and scored a goal from a corner, a snatch and grab victory, then wasted time and scrapped through, it happens. However, conceding 3 goals at home in a defeat, well that is not unlucky, that is just deservedly losing.

The concern in defeats like yesterday are not a one off. Already this season we have been humiliated in the Champions League by Dinamo Zagreb, and destroyed at home by West Ham. And it is not a new thing.

Last season we conceded 3 at home to both Monaco and Anderlecht in the Champions League. That is 9 goals conceded, at home, to fairly average sides. Add in 3 conceded away to Stoke, 2 against Southampton, and you are starting to get the picture. I could go through the results of the last 10 years and it will be littered with huge defeats at home and in Europe. City, Liverpool, Chelsea, Munich, Man United, Swansea, Hull and more, they have all done us. Comfortably.

We put so much on Champions League qualification. The club boasts about 16 or 17 years in the Champions League. Qualifying from the group stages for god knows how many years. But then when it comes to the competition itself, we always fall short.

Yes, we have had some tricky 2nd round draws over recent years. Barcelona, Munich, AC Milan, but we always seem to shoot ourselves in the foot. Whether it be a heavy defeat in the 1st leg at home, or a poor group stage which see’s us fall to second.

And then when we do get a favourable draw, such as Monaco or, many years ago, PSV Eindhoven (this one still hurts), we capitulate.

What is the point of being in the Champions League if you are not going to put in a good effort and win it? You can count on 3 fingers how many times Arsenal have been competitive in the competition;

  1. The Quarter Final defeat in 2004 when the invincible lost to Chelsea, a year we really should have won the competition
  2. The 2006 Final appearance
  3. The Semi Final loss to Manchester United in 2009 when Cristiano Ronaldo ripped us a new one

It is simply not good enough.

And then we come to last night. Considering how much we praise we are supposed to give the side for finishing in the top 4, we then rest our only summer signing. Now some say he was injured, but for me, if you are fit enough for the bench, you are fit enough to start. Cech should have started.

Not playing your strongest 11 makes me wonder what are we doing with the Champions League? Are we taking it seriously, or do we now realise we can not win the competition so are playing weakened sides to rest players for weekend games (we could go top this weekend).

If that is the case, then there is only one motivation for qualifying for the Champions League. Money.

Just qualifying for the group stages earns the club around £30m in ‘prize’ money and TV revenue. Add in gate receipts (this year Munich being a Cat A) and that figure is touching £40m. You can see the clubs motivation from qualifying. Of course, in theory, it is important to qualify. That additional £40m could get you an additional £25m signing on £125k a week. But this of course is Arsenal.

As for the players, in their contracts they will have Champions League bonus payments. In recent accounts, Manchester United’s wage bill dropped £12m. The likely reason for this is that they failed to qualify for the Champions League. £12m disturbed to players for finishing top 4. No wonder a few years back we celebrated finishing 4th at Newcastle like we had won the league. The players were due to get a £400-500k bonus each. Clearly after earning this, their motivation to win the thing drops.

With Munich still to be played at home and away – we could be on 0 points after 4 games – qualification is unlikely, not matter, how Arsene Wenger tries to big it up. The only question then is do we want to finish 3rd of 4th?

The Europa League is a winnable competition. Chelsea showed that a few years ago. Were we to drop down a level and take it seriously, a trip to Switzerland in May for the Final could be a highlight of the season. For an away fan, it could also threw up a few cheeky away trips to Norway, Denmark & Austria, places we do not often get a chance to go.

On the flip side, it would mean playing on Sunday. Whilst I do not buy into the ‘playing in a Thursday & Sunday disadvantage’ as in the Champions League you often play on a Wednesday and a Saturday, it would be a nightmare for travelling fans as it would mean pretty much every game in the New Year would be moved to the Sunday, by the time the TV companies ruin the rest of the fixtures.

No one can justify last night defeat, although I am sure some will.

Keenos

Arsene’s Arsenal, from 4-4-2 to Tika Taka

For many, it is the traditional and best way to set up a football team. To others, it’s too rigid and not adaptable enough for the modern game. However, whilst playing the 4-4-2 system, Arsene Wenger won the Premier League three times. Since changing his philosophy, he hasn’t won it and has only rarely looked like doing so. This article will try to understand the reasoning behind the change from 4-4-2 to the modern 4-3-3.

My background as a community and to a lesser extent academy football coach, has enabled me to come across people at a decent level in the game. When coaching in Boston in the summer of 2014, I got talking to a coach who had recently left the Arsenal academy after 10 years. More than anything else, I’m a fan, so I was desperate to find out what I could from this bloke, who had worked with Wilshere, Akpom, and more interestingly, Cesc Fabgregas. “Why was it mate? Why did he change the whole philosophy of the club, from having a side full of power, speed, physical presence, to these shorter, technically better players and move to a 4-3-3?” I asked, expecting some insight from someone involved in the club. The answer summed up the feeling of most Gooners, he simply sniffed and replied “don’t know mate”.

Its 2004. Arsenal have just gone unbeaten, playing some of the most impressive football ever seen, combining attacking flair with defensive strength. The average height of the team is just over six feet. Vieria and Gilberto made up two in the midfield, and they lined up with two inverted wingers (usually Pires and Freddie but Reyes would begin to play more). They were based behind two strikers, more often than not, Henry Bergkamp. Like anyone, it hurts having to type these names because as good as Sanchez and Ozil are, I struggle to find a place in the team ahead of these players. Interestingly enough, that all conquering side of 2004, like 2002 and the 1998 team before lined up 4-4-2.

In any of those (4-4-2) title winning teams, Wenger had similar players, and if two players were to define the two systems, and even more so define Wenger’s Arsenal career into two parts, I would say it is Patrick Vieria and Cesc Fabregas. More on Cesc later. Patrick Vieria was 6’4 and was the first major signing by Wenger, whose instruction to his backline was simply “when you get the ball, pass is to Patrick”. He didn’t care how many men were around him, he would receive the ball, turn and pass forwards, usually to Dennis Bergkamp (The most completed pass 1997/1998 season). It also helped that he had a partner that was as big and as strong as him next to him, first Petit, then Gilberto Silva, and sometimes Edu. Arsenal could go into games knowing they had the technical quality, but also had the physical power should they need it (something clearly lacking in later years).

In 2004 though, something else happened. Jose Mourinho moved to West London and brought his “park the bus” style with him, and with the help of around £150 million from the Russian, transformed Chelsea into winners. He used a 4-3-3 system that was relatively unknown in England, the main advantage being when you are defending, 4-3-3 becomes 4-5-1. Teams began to use this style, particularly lower down the Premier League, while Arsene persisted with his tested 4-4-2. However, the emergence of Cesc Fabregas would have negative affect on the team in certain away games of the 04/05 season, I seem to remember Palace away, and the all too common physical batterings in the North West as teams began to pack the midfield and physically over run Arsenal, who continued to play with 2 in the middle. An FA cup win over Man United in 2005 marked the end of the Vieria era, the start of the Fabregas era and the start of a 9 year trophy drought.

In the following years, Wenger continued with 4-4-2 with the same stubbornness he is accused of today, partnering a two of Fabregas with first Gilberto, before the likeable Brazilian was shipped out, and this was followed by Flamini (In 08, where had it not been for awful luck, they would’ve won the title), Diarra (remember him?) and then Denilson. It was only in 2009/2010 the idea changed and we would play 4-3-3, with Fabregas quite rightly the focal point of a brilliant footballing team. Another reason Wenger may’ve been influenced was that this is around the same time Spain were winning everything and Pep’s Barca were recreating the right way to play football.

Of course, you can’t blame a trophy drought on tactics alone, and perhaps if signings had been different, or Gallas hadn’t been appointed captain etc, we may be talking differently now. But it remained obvious that in big games, against big teams (both figuratively and literally), Arsenal struggled. The average height had dropped significantly, we no longer had that midfielder that would shove 3 players off the ball and take on another 3.

As great a footballer as he was for us, Cesc was never able to do this (this is demonstrated now at Chelsea, where you see him line up, often protected throughout by Matic and Ramires). My argument with Wenger is that he was so convinced that he had found this new way of playing, he’d persist with it. When Cesc left in 2011, I wonder what would’ve happened if he’d gone out and bought two brick walls to play central midfield. Possibly would’ve slowed down Jack and Aaron’s development (although I personally feel both can play in a midfield two, just not together), but we may have a league title to be parading round the Emirates. Another crazy though, imagine having these technically gifted players being allowed to do their thing, knowing that a Matic type is behind them,

Four years on from Cesc’s departure from Arsenal, and it’s fair to say we’re in better shape than when he left. Consecutive cups and shields have lifted mood somewhat, but we as fans are crying out for a league title. Under Wenger, Arsenal will always score goals, whoever is up top, but what really disappointed me in the last window was the lack of a holding midfielder. I like Coquelin a lot, but the best way I can describe him is he is a number 16, not a number 4 (basically, we need someone bigger and stronger to play that role, or for the tough away games, play two). Arteta and Flamini I dont like criticising, because they clearly care about Arsenal and put in a shift, despite being not good enough. But why, with £100 million in the bank, has Wenger decided against Kondogbia, Krychowiak, or even Scheneiderlin?

I said earlier that you could almost split Wenger’s time at Arsenal into two. Many would call it Highbury and Emirates. I would call it Vieira and Cesc. And speaking as a football coach, but more so a fan, I think it’s time Wenger returned to the Vieira ideology, to help, if not completely change, his philosophy on how a title should be won.

Up the Arsenal.

Joe

£60 to watch West Ham? That’s an East London Robbery

Before I start, let me just say Arsenal are a disgrace. £64 as the cheapest ticket games against big teams such as Liverpool, Manchester United, and Bayern Munich. And at the top end it is over £100. The fact that we charge crazy amounts of money for Category A games is disgusting. Football ticket prices in general is disgusting. No club’s fans can try to pretend to have the high ground when it comes to ticket prices. “But you charge X” as a justification to why your own clubs tickets are so high is no justification.

With that out the way, a little rant about West Ham United.

Yesterday, prices for West Ham v Chelsea were announced. Chelsea fans will be getting charged £60. This is shocking.

Last year it was bad enough, West Ham charged teams that categorised as ‘A’ £55. This year they have raised this by 10%. What justification? GREED.

Away fans of the big clubs – Arsenal, Manchester United, Liverpool – have been punished for years for being successful, for having a big away following. Fans of these clubs are charged a premium as other clubs attempt to cash in on their away following, knowing that they will sell out whether you charge them £30 or £60.

I have gone more in depth to this last year in a blog about away ticket prices, where a fan following Arsenal up and down the country would be charged 36% more than a fan of Leicester. We get screwed.

West Ham charging Chelsea £60 is an indication of what Arsenal fans will have to pay for the same fixture. It is shocking.

What is most shocking is the situation West Ham are currently in. This will be the last season at the Boleyn Ground. They are clearly trying to cash in!

From next season, they will be playing at the Olympic Stadium, paying a paltry £2m to £2.5m a year in rent. This for a stadium that not only cost £537 million to build, but an additional £272 million to make it fit for purpose. West Ham have contributed around £15 million to this.

So not only are we, the London tax payer (as it is us who paid for the Olympics through an additional tax) already paying for the worlds most expensive council house, we are now being ripped off for football tickets.

On top of this, Gold & Sullivan, West Ham’s owners, have being on a positive PR mission since winning the bid for the stadium.

They have been promoting themselves as London’s family club. That they will not use the new stadium to increase revenue, but to offer more, cheaper tickets, making football more accessible for those poverty stricken East Londoneers living in their slums. Brilliant news. On paper.

So this nice little family club, who have won the lottery getting a near billion pound stadium for next to nothing, have increased their prices the year before, ensuring that they bleed fans for every penny before their move.

I would not be too surprised if next season, in their shiny new stadium, they have a big announcement that they are to reduce ticket prices by 10%. This will be greated by a massive fan fare in the West Ham loving Fleet Street Press, who will show West Ham as a brilliant example of a club reducing prices, giving a fairer deal to fans. But ultimately, what they will be making, is the season before they added 10%.

It is like a retailer doubling the price of a TV, to then only offer it at 50% off at a later date. It is a false sale. Highly illegal.

Whilst I am thinking of the Olympic Stadium. It is going to be the worst away game of next season. Pay a premium, to watch a game in a soulless stadium, a million miles from the pitch, with no boozer near the stadium for a pint. Although  I am sure the Scouser’s are looking forward to checking out what Westfield’s has to offer…

£60 to go to West Ham, surrounded by Neanderthal knuckle draggers who are still bitter about the docks closing whilst voting UKIP. Of course, I will pay, that was what I do. I moan. I pay. I turn up. I support my team. And then I moan again. I am a mug.

So West Ham, thanks for being a family club. Thanks for charging us common football fans through the nose to watch a simple game.

It is about time the Premier League banned the price fixing of football, stopped clubs have Cat A – E (in some cases) and supported a fairer deal for fans. We are not too far away from a £100 away ticket.

Keenos

 

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