Category Archives: Arsenal

Striking power the difference between Arsenal and Liverpool

A ‘winning machine’ - why Liverpool did not miss stars

That was the headline on the BBC following Liverpool’s 4-0 victory over Bournemouth that saw them go 5-points clear at the top of the league, despite Mo Salah being at the African Cup of Nations / injured.

There are 187 million reasons why they did not miss Salah.

Liverpool’s front 3 against Bournemouth was:

Luiz Diaz: £40m
Diogo Jota: £38m
Darwin Nunez: £74m

And then coming off the bench was £35m Cody Gakpo.

If you throw in Mohamed Salah, Liverpool’s forward options have cost them £225m. And that does not even take into account the add-ons. I would be surprised if too many other teams across Europe have spent more on their forward options.

So lets stop pretending that Liverpool were plucky underdogs and did well to thrash Bournemouth despite missing their key man. They have invested plenty in their forwards. And that is the difference between Liverpool and us right now.

In defence and midfield, I would say Arsenal and Liverpool are fairl equal – both in terms of starting players and squad depth. It is the forward line where you can see the difference in investment.

Our 6 forward options cost us just £71m – less than a single Darwin Nunez:

Gabrel Jesus: £45m
Gabriel Martinelli: £6m
Bukayo Saka: £0m
Leandro Trossard: £20m
Emile Smith Rowe: £0m
Reiss Nelson: £0m

Now whilst I subscribe to “it is not what you spend but who you buy”, Liverpool simply have more strength in depth to us up front. And that is mainly because of good investment overtime.

They signed Mo Salah in the summer of 2017. Diogo Jota joined in 2020 with Luiz Diaz arriving a year later. In 2022 they went big on Darwin Nunez, and Cody Gakpo completed the quintet in January 2023.

Liverpool’s investment has been consistent over a long period of time – driven by Champions League football and the finances that competition brings.

Since Mo Salah signed, Liverpool had qualified for the Champions League 6 times in 6 seasons. They had only qualified once in their previous 7. This year was the first time they had missed out in over half a decade.

Champions League football is worth in excess of £50m (and towards £100m if you make the final) of additional revenue.

In that same 6-year period, Arsenal did not make a single appearance in the Champions League. From 2017, we had 5 appearances in the Europa League and 1 with no Europe. This was the first time in over half a deacde that we got into the Champions League.

So over the last 6 years, we have earned around £300million less than Liverpool from our European exploits. And you can see that lower revenue when you compare the two teams front lines.

Shut your eyes a minute and imagine an Arsenal front line that had Saka (Salah) and Jesus (Nunez), and Martinelli (Diaz) but instead of Trossard, Smith Rowe and Nelson, we had Jota and Gakpo. I am sure we would not have had the misfiring games we have recently had.

Liverpool have not had “one big summer”. What Jurgen Klopp and his team do is constant improvements ever year, lead by clear succession planning.

The year before Sadio Mane left, Luiz Diaz came in, and the year before Roberto Firmino departed, Darwin Nunez was signed. This allowed them to have a year of settling into the squad before they were expected to have big impacts on the first team.

The top end (first XI) of our squad is now in a decent position. What we now need to be doing is upgrading on those fringe squad players that Mikel Arteta clearly does not trust. And this can only be done if we remain top 4 and increase our revenue over the next couple of years.

Replace Smith Rowe and Nelson with a single forward to create our own quintent of top forwards, all of whom Arteta has faith in. Playing Football Manager, it would look something like this:

2024: Sign top forward, sell Smith Rowe and Nelson
2025: Upgrade on Leandro Trossard
2026: Upgrade on Gabriel Jesus (he will be 29 by then!)

Come 2026/27, we then have forward line options of 25-year-old Martinelli and Saka, as well as the 3 new signings made over the 3 previous summers.

But you can only do this long term thinking if (a) we consistently qualify for the Champions League and (b) we stick with the current regeime like Liverpool have done with Klopp.

As Manchester United and Chelsea have shown, constantly chopping and changing manager means you can not have long term transfer plans, and you waste a lot of money on players who, in 18-months time, are surplus to requirements as the new manger does not want them.

For those who say “but Real Madrid change their manager often”. Yes, but Spain is a two team league, in which Madrid are the richest in. It is not a comparable scenario.

It is not just upfront we need this succession planning, but all over the pitch.

Next summer we need to replace Mohamed Elneny, Jorginho and Thomas Partey.

Whilst a lot of fuss has been made over the £105m we spent on Declan Rice, Liverpool spent nearly £150m last summer on 4-new midfielders. Rice is better than any that they have, but there next 4 is better than our 3 other central midfielders (taking into account Partey can not stay fit).

Finish top 4, we can then not only invest in another forward, but also a couple of new midfielders giving us further strength in depth (alternative option will be to purchase a new top left back and then utilise Zinchenko is a midfielder).

Now I know some of you will be itching to point out just how much we spent on Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Alexander Lacazette and Nicolas Pepe during the period since Sala joined Liverpool. And you are right, we have wasted nearly £200m in attacking talent that we then failed to get a transfer feee for when they departed.

As well as long term planning, Liverpool also rarely get a transfer wrong. they recruit consistently well. We are beginning to do this, and most of our “wasted money” signings came prior to the Edu / Arteta era. What we now need to do is build on that better recruitment.

In the last couple of windows, we have had to spend big to try and close the gap. We are getting there.

What we now need is to finish top 4 consistently and reinvest that additional Champions League revenue sensibly.

Keenos

Arsenal get the the result the performance deserved against Crystal Palace

What a windy night that was! Hope everyone is safe and well!

I had a hellish drive from up the Midlands after seeing family. A 2 hour trip from Burton-on-Trent took me over 3 hours due to the wind, rain and pure weight of traffic. Was not a nice drive in the dark!

Arsenal were back (temporarily) for the weekend, winning 5-0 against Crystal Palace. We now embark on another 10-day break.

Going into the break, I blogged how we were not getting the results our performances deserved. Personally, I do not think we played any better against Crystal Palace than we did versus West Ham or Liverpool.

We lost both of those home games, yet destroyed Palace 5-0, but the performances were not too dissimilar. The main difference was Saturday we scored our chances.

I commented in the pub after the game “against West Ham, the headers were going over, Leandro Trossard would have fired into the keeper and Gabriel Martinelli would have shot wide. Twice.”

Whilst all this might seem a bit negative, it is not. I did not join others in the pit of despair during our run of 1 win in 7 games. Bar Fulham, the performances were decent. Saturday against Palace was also decent.

The victory took us to 3rd in the league, level on points with Manchester City and just 2-point behind Liverpool (who repopened the gap to 5-points yesterday). After 21-games, we are in the title race.

A couple of side notes now.

Liverpool: After 21 games, they are 5 points clear. After 21 matches last season, we were 3 points cleasr. If Liverpool do not win the league from here, will they face the same accusations of bottling from the media we got? Or as always, will those media outlets be too scared to paint Liverpool in a negative light for fear of boycotts and cancelling.

Tottenham: After 21 games last season, Spurs were 5th. After 21 games this season, Spurs are 5th. It is a myth that Ange has massively improved them.

Gary Neville: Neville has blamed Arsenal for Nottingham Forest writing to the PGMOL over what they perceived to be a poor decision at the weekend. It is all Arsenal’s fault that teams are openly criticising the PGMOL, despite Everton writing an open letter first, then Wolves, then Liverpool (twice). Just shows again mentioning Arsenal get the hits, impressions and generates that ad revenue.

Not much else happning out there. I still do not think we will sign anyone.

Have a good Monday!

Keenos

MATCH REPORT; Arsenal 5-0 Crystal Palace

Arsenal (2) 5 Crystal Palace (0) 0

Premier League

Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park, London N5 1BU

Saturday, 20th January 2024. Kick-off time: 12.30pm

(4-3-3) David Raya; Ben White, William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhães, Oleksandr Zinchenko; Martin Ødegaard (c), Declan Rice, Kai Havertz; Bukayo Saka, Gabriel Jesus, Leandro Trossard.

Substitutes: Aaron Ramsdale, Emile Smith-Rowe, Gabriel Martinelli, Eddie Nketiah, Jakob Kiwior, Cédric Soares, (Jorge Luiz Frello Filho) Jorginho, Reiss Nelson, Reuell Walters

Scorers: Gabriel (11 mins), Dean Henderson (37 mins o.g.), Leandro Trossard (59 mins), Gabriel Martinelli (90+4, 90+5 mins)

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 61%

Referee: Paul Tierney

Assistant Referees: Scott Ledger, Dan Robathan

Fourth Official: Andy Madley

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Stuart Attwell; AVAR Steve Meredith

Attendance: 60,284

After the disaster surrounding the Christmas 2023 fixtures, we are back to Premiership action today, in a hotly contested London derby against Crystal Palace. It goes without saying that we need to get back to winning ways now, especially after the mid-season break, in which we sincerely hope that the lads return rejuvenated and inspired to start the second half of the season in fine fettle in the only way we know how, with a victory this afternoon.

The match started quickly with our chaps pushing the ball around with confidence and positivity, although as early as the third minute, Eberechi Eze managed to get the ball to Joachim Andersen whose header went wide of David Raya’s post, which was a near miss in anybody’s book. Their early attempt appeared to spark us into life, and over the next few minutes, Gabriel Jesus and Kai Havertz came very close to opening the scoring. However, our joy was obvious in the crowd when, on the eleventh minute, we took the lead when Declan Rice crossed the ball for Gabriel to head the ball into the bottom right corner of the net. We continued to pressurise the visitors very well, and Gabriel almost grabbed a second goal when Bukayo Saka crossed a beautiful ball from the wing, which found our man’s head perfectly, but unfortunately the ball went wide. Despite some interesting midfield play from both sides, it was us that provided the more concrete chances to score out of the two teams. Martin Ødegaard slotted the ball to Leandro Trossard, whose right-footed shot from outside the box was blocked by a defender, and despite the visitors doing their best to make a difference, it was us who had the better chances to score. Thirteen minutes from half time, we grabbed the second goal of the game when Palace goalie Dean Henderson scored a ridiculous own goal, and shortly afterwards, Oleksandr Zinchenko’s left-footed shot from the left hand side of the penalty area flew past the right hand side of the goal, and during injury time, Gabriel Jesus slotted a superb through ball to Leandro Trossard, whose left-footed shot from the centre of the penalty area went very high and wide to the left of the Palace goal.

We started the second half in the same manner that we finished the first, with lots of pressure on the visitors’ goal. Declan Rice’s right-footed shot from outside the penalty area was saved in the top left corner by Dean Henderson, following a superb pass from Bukayo Saka, and then Leandro Trossard was unlucky not to score with a strong shot from outside the penalty area, which was blocked by a Palace defender. Attempt after attempt by our players to score was met by clearances and blockages by the Palace defenders, but they could not keep us out forever. A minute before the hour, we scored our third goal when Gabriel Jesus played provider for Leandro Trossard, whose right-footed shot from the centre of the penalty area ended up in the top left-hand corner of the net. Now we were truly coasting. Have a cigar, chaps. Although to be fair, the visitors were trying to make an impact, but we managed to stifle their attempts quite easily. With twenty minutes of the match remaining, Gabriel Martinelli and Emile Smith-Rowe replaced Leandro Trossard along with Kai Havertz and the pressure continued. About five minutes later, Declan Rice looked like he picked up an injury, and to be on the safe side, he was replaced by Jorginho, and we managed to consolidate, pass the ball better and advance up the field on the hunt for yet more goals. Bukayo Saka was desperately unlucky not to score when our captain set him up perfectly to shoot for goal, and then, within the space of two minutes, both Jorginho and Martin Ødegaard’s attempts to score our fourth were stymied by the Eagles’ defenders, and with nine minutes of the game left to play, Mikel Arteta decided to make two final substiutions, Eddie Nketiah, who replaced Gabriel Jesus, and because of injury, Jakub Kiwior took the place of Gabriel with just minutes of the match to go. In the seven minutes injury time awarded, we still had time to score a couple more; firstly, we broke out of our half, and Eddie Nketiah deftly slotted the ball to Gabriel Martinelli, whose right-footed shot from the left-hand side of the penalty area ended up in the bottom right-hand corner of the net, and just a minute later, the same man grabbed our fifth goal of the day when, after another smash’n’grab movement, Jorginho passed the ball into the path of Gabriel Martinelli again, whose exquisite right-footed shot from the centre of the Palace penalty area ended up in the bottom right-hand corner of the net, to finish the match perfectly. What an afternoon for the Gunners!

A superb victory, just what the doctor ordered. Obviously, as expected, the winter break invigorated them, and they cruised to victory today against a demoralised Crystal Palace side, who to be fair, were never at the races at any point in this game. This much-needed win moves the boys up to third in the Premiership table, two points behind the leaders Liverpool but having played a game more than Jűrgen Klopp’s side, but all in all, a grand return to action for our team. Well done chaps!

Remember everyone, keep the faith, get behind the team and the manager, as this season is going to be crucial for our future success in all competitions. Stick with the winners. Our next match: Nottingham Forest at The City Ground on Tuesday, 30th January at 7.30pm (Premier League). Be there, if you can. Victoria Concordia Crescit.