Category Archives: Arsenal

DEADLINE DAY: 9 forwards that Arsenal could still sign

I think we all agree that we need one more attacker in the squad.

Emile Smith Rowe and Fabio Vieira have departed, Eddie Nketiah has one foot out of the door (at the time of writing), and Arsenal are reportedly willing to listen to offers for Reiss Nelson. That would see four attackers who mainly played either upfront or on the wig last season depart.

In total, the four played a combined 1,969 minutes of Premier League football last season. That is just a little less than Gabriel Martinelli:

Eddie Nketiah – 1073 Premier League minutes
Emile Smith Rowe – 347
Fabio Vieira – 292
Reiss Nelson – 257

Whilst we are all exited to see Ethan Nwaneri develop this season, it is too early to expect him to play that many minutes. Nwaneri also only covers the wide right position, as well as Martin Odegaard just inside. We can no expect him to be an option upfront.

Where fans disagree is what sort of forward we need.

Whilst some are demanding a “clinical goal scorer” better than Kai Havertz, others recognise that sort of player might not be available on the market and we would therefore be best looking to buy someone better (fitter and cheaper) than Gabriel Jesus.

There is also a school of thought that instead of an out and out forward, we should actually look to buy a new left winger. Someone to improve on Gabriel Martinelli.

Out and out forward, better than Havertz

I have always maintained that there is a lack of goal scorers available on the market that an improvement on Havertz. Once you discount Erling Haaland, Robert Lewandowski and Harry Kane, the cupboard is fairly bare when it comes out and out goal scorers.

Inferior strikers to Havertz have gone for £60m+ this summer. And it is the same 3 names we continually see mentioned:

Victor Osimhen – The fact Osimhen looks Saudi bound tells you everything you need to know about what motivates the Nigerian forward. Clearly a talent but there are 650,000 reasons why he will not come to Arsenal.

Viktor Gyorkes – After a good 18 months for Coventry City in the Championship and a decent first season in Portugal, Sporting slapped a £100m price tag on Gyorkes head. Clearly over inflated. Not really sure he is an upgrade on Havertz. If a deal can be done for half of that, then we might be talking.

Ivan Toney – Big reputation. Big attitude. I have a love / hate relationship with our links to Ivan Toney and it is telling that no-one has gone for him yet. Is it his poor form since the ban? Concerns about his attitude? Or is he pricing himself out of a move with one eye on Saudi oil money? 4 goals in 17 games last season speaks for itself.

Havertz cover and competition

Recent links to forwards of a “lower level” makes me think Mikel Arteta is happy with Havertz, and he is now looking for someone who could be an improvement on Gabriel Jesus as the cover. Jesus also plays a key role in being an option outwid.

Dominic Calvert Lewin – It seems an age ago that were were getting heavily linked with DCL, with Arsenal’s interest going back to January 2022. Since then the England striker has struggled with injury and form, and has played just 67 games in the last 3 seasons, scoring just 14 goals.

Last season it looked like he had gotten over his injuries, playing 2189 of Premier League football. If Arsenal can take advantage of Everton’s financial woes, he could be a good option as an impact sub, and would be a good target man if Havertz picked up an injury. Would not pay more than £30m for him though. You would expect us to sign him and keep Jesus for at least one more year.

Darwin Nunez – Surprise links with the Uruguayan broke earlier this week. How much truth in them is yet to be seen. Whilst a deal is unlikely, Nunez would be a like for like replacement for Jesus, and an upgrade.

The pair share similar strengths and weaknesses, including their ability to play across the front 3. Nunez has less injury concerns and is 2-years younger.

Santiago Gimenez – A favourite of mine. His underlying stats show a player who is playing at a similar level to Gyorkes, but his club are demanding a lot less. A deal for £30m between Feyenoord and Nottingham Forest was agreed, but the deal broke down as Gimenez did not want to join the relegation battlers. At £30m, you could keep both him and Jesus for the season, then move big for a new winger next summer.

Left wingers

The final option is we retain Jesus upfront, and we buy a top, top left winger. Gabriel Martinelli then becomes the second choice on both flanks and also a third choice striker.

This move can be done hand in hand with buying an upgrade on Jesus – with either upgrade Jesus this summer and buy a new left winger next, or we go big for a left winger this and then look for a second choice striker next summer.

Nico Williams – Still at Atletico Bilbao. Still has the release clause. Still at the top of every clubs “want” list. I would sacrifice a new striker for him this summer.

Kingsley Coman – Like Ivan Toney, it feels like Coman is waiting to see what is out there before accepting the Saudi oil money. I have always found Coman a little overhyped – known more for what he has one rather than what he has contributed. Turns 29 at the end of the season and we have seen how pace-merchants can fall off a cliff.

Raphinha – Heavily linked a couple of seasons ago, the Brazilian joined Barcelona for £50m in 2022. with their financial troubles, he could be available for as little as £30m. Although that is offset by £240k a week wages. Would Arsenal want to commit that much in salary? And is he really an upgrade on Martinelli? If the finances work 9maybe a sizeable signing on fee to be offset by the lower transfer fee), this could be one to watch out for.


Anyone we have missed? Make your case for them in the comments.

Keenos

Darwin Nunez to Arsenal – Making sense of an unlikely deal

The source

It ha been a while since “AFCAMDEN” has been a reliable source of Arsenal information.

During the early days of Twitter, he was a key man to follow, alongside GeoffArsenal. But he has not had reliable intel on the club since the days of Jack Wilshere was playing for us. In the preceding years, he has swung and missed on many an occassion.

The story took off with many other ITK accounts jumping on the bandwagon with “what they had heard”. Basically, they are all making it up jut so that they can farm interactions and ensure that if a deal happens, they can say “told you so”.

I also would not be surprised if this is just a big wind up.

We have seen before big Twitter accounts and blogs get together to falsely link us to a player to highlight the issue of the media and ITK accounts jumping on the link without having any knowledge. A sort of experiment to expose the idiots.

Saying that, Darwin Nunez to Arsenal is a a deal that “could” happen.

The role

I have long been of the belief that signing someone who is better than Kai Havertz is not an easy task. And this summer, we have seen inferior strikers to the German go for over £60m.

When you look at the centre-forwards that have moved this summer, only really Kylian Mbappe would have been a huge step up on Havertz. And he was always going to Real Madrid. The likes of Julian Alvarez, Dominic Solanke, Joshua Zirkzee and Elye Wahi would not have improved our first XI.

Ivan Toney, Victor Osimhen and Viktor Gyokeres are still on the market, but for various reasons (Toney – Attitude, Osimhen – Wages, Gyokeres – Overpriced) we have not moved for them. Osimhen aside, I also do not think that either Toney or Gyokeres would immediately come in ahead of Havertz.

Having missed out on Benjamin Sesko, and with Dusan Vlahovic happy to stay at Juventus, perhaps the powers that be have decided to look at players that can be an upgrade on Gabriel Jesus, provide cover and competition for Havertz, and could potentially replace him as first choice over time. A lower level of striker. A back-up dancer.

The player

Darwin Nunez has very similar strength and weaknesses to Gabriel Jesus.

Both players are not natural centre forwards, and neither is a clinical goal scorer. But they make up for that in their hardworking, trickiness and versatillity – capable of playing across the front 3.

The pair are more of a threat on the counter attack than Havertz, and more likely to make a goal from nothing. Their versatility also means then will drift wide from central positions, creating space for others to fill.

If we were looking for a “like for like” replacement to Jesus, then Nunez would be high on the “similar” list.

Where Nunez would be an upgrade on Jesus is that he does not have Jesus’s injury record, and is 2-years younger.

Nunez has missed just 12 games injured for Liverpool in the 2-years since joining. In the same time Jesus has missed 33-games. And Nunez’s injuries have been minor (shoulder problems, muscle tightness), whilst Jesus clearly has knee problems.

The finances

I like Gabriel Jesus.

When he joined Arsenal from Manchester City, Jesus was our marquee signing of the summer and a sign of our new era beginning; as a result he got the wages that a player of his stature would command.

Whilst in the two-year Jesus has been part of the project which has seen us finish runners-up to Manchester City twice, he himself is no longer an important starting player.

Jesus provides fantastic cover for Havertz upfront, and can also be cover and competition for both Gabriel Martinelli and Bukayo Saka. The issue (beyond his fitness), is he is on first team wages when he is now a squad player.

At a reported £265k a week, Jesus is our 2nd highest paid player after Kai Havertz (£280k a week). Side note: Jesus is still on less than Jack Grealish, Raheem Sterling, and Marcus Rashford.

Darwin Nunez, meanwhile, is “only” on £140k a week.

Whilst you would expect Nunez to get a payrise moving from Liverpool to Arsenal, I would imagine the uplift would be in the region of an additional £2million a year. That would put him on £180k a week and make him our 8th highest paid player alongside Gabriel Martinelli.

Were these figures to work out, then the club would be saving £4.4m a year in salary. A sum not to be sniffed out. But what about transfer fees and amortisation costs?

Jesus joined Arsenal for £45m in 2022 on a 5-year deal. He is currently costing us £9m a year. We would need to receive a transfer fee in the region of £27m to ensure that we “break even” on book value this summer. Anything below this will cost Arsenal money.

The same year, Nunez joined Liverpool for £64million, signing a 6-year deal. As it stands, he has a book value of £42.6m.

Now for a couple of different scenarios:

  1. Both clubs look to break even – If all both clubs want to do is get wages off the books and break even on the book value, then Arsenal need to sell Jesus for £27m, and the fee to sign Nunez would be £42.6m.

    If you assume that Nunez signs a 5-year contract, that will mean that Arsenal would have pretty much maintained the status quo in terms of breaking even on Jesus, and not increasing their amortisation costs in signing Nuez
  2. Liverpool want more – £42.6m does feel cheap for Nunez considering what other forwards have gone for this summer. So what, realistically, could Arsenal go up to without seeing their costs increase?

    If a contract is agreed with Nunez for the aforementioned £180k a week, then we would be saving £4.4m on salary. Over 5-years, that is worth £22m. So Arsenal could go as high as £64.6m. Nunez would then cost the club around £22.28m a year (£12.92m amortised transfer fee, £9.36m salary), whilst Jesus is currently costing £22.78m (£9m amortised transfer fee, £13.78m salary).
  3. Arsenal struggle to shift Jesus – You have to feel that Saudi Arabia is the only place that will pay both the £27m Arsenal would want for Jesus, and the £265k a week Jesus will want to ensure he receives pay parity. But what if the offer does not come in from the Middle East? Arsenal would then have to look at a deal that either sees us accept a lesser fee (to allow the buying club to pay more in wages), or continue to pay some of Jesus’s wages for the next 3 years.

    We would still have that £4.4m to play with, if we got Nunez for £45m. So that could see us accept an offer as low as £13.8m from a club, with £4.4m to paid to Jesus over the next 4-years. Or a deal done for £27m and Arsenal pay Jesus £13.8m to leave. Both work out the same.

    These figures would see Jesus pick up around £180k a week at a new club, with either an additional £4.4m a year for the first 3-years, or Arsenal paying him the difference. Either way, our outgoings would remain the same now.

If we can get the finances to work, where we sell Gabriel Jesus and sign Darwin Nunez with seeing an increase in our outgoings, then for me it is a no brainer.

Nunez is younger and fitter, with both players offering similar in terms of style of play and output. We would be upgrading on Jesus, strengthening the squad, with seeing any change in our finances.

But the big two questions are:

At 27-years-old, is Jesus ready to hang up his top level professional career and go into semi-retirement in Saudi Arabia?
Are the links anymore than an unreliable source just looking for interaction?

And a final thought, could we accommodate both Nunez and Jesus for a season? With Nunez coming in as Havertz cover, and Jesus then becoming Saka’s back up? And if this happened, is it sensible for a back up dancer to be on more than the player starting ahead of him?

Have a good Thursday.

Keenos

Arsenal’s left-wing problem

No, you have not stumbled across a political blog. I am not going into a rant about the left-wing politics in the UK and our clubs association with Jeremy Corbyn. This is all about Arsenal’s left hand side.

The Martinelli problem

We are are only two games in, so do not think that this is a pile-on. Gabriel Martinelli was poor last season and he has not started 2024/25 in great form.

Mikel Arteta keeps moving Arsenal forward by buying better players that what he has. And right now the left wing is a position you look at and think “we can do better”. And I say that with a heavy heart.

Martinelli is a fantastic player. I love his story and he can be very proud as to how far he has come in football in a very short amount of time. But he has not kicked on from an excellent 2022/23 season.

With 15 goals and 5 assists in the 2022/23 Premier League season, Martinelli was an exciting young talent who looked ready to become a global superstar. But instead of kicking on in 2023/24, he scored just 6 goals and got 4 assists.

Now it is not all his fault.

Arsenal are extremely right hand side dominant, with much of our attacking play coming down the right flank with that Martin Odegaard and Bukayo Saka double up.

With Granit Xhaka gone, and Oleksandr Zinchenko playing an inverted role, Martinelli is often isolated on the left hand side.

He does not have a full back wrapping around the outside, nor does he have a midfielder to play quick one twos off. That leaves Martinelli having to do everything himself, and often not having a quick “get out pass” that Saka has.

Whenever Saka is on the ball, he always has easy passes on with either Ben White or Odegaard. If he finds himself down a blind alley, he can easily recycle the ball, retain possession and restart play. Martinelli often does not have that option which results in him either losing possession or trying to play a difficult pass.

But the change of tactics can not be an excuse for Martinelli. He needs to adapt or die.

On that left hand side, we need someone who is a “one on one merchant”. Someone who is comfortable being the only attacker, often in plenty of space, who will look to take his fullback on for fun. It feels like Martinelli has gone backwards when it comes to taking on an opponent.

Martinelli still has the potential and ability to step up and remain as Arsenal’s first choice midfielder, but he needs to up his level in the same way Saka did a couple of years ago.

Turning 24 at the end of next season, if he continues his current level he might have to accept being a squad player at Arsenal rather than a starter.

What about Trossard?

The lack of celebration after his opener against Aston Villa was apparently Leandro Trossard making it clear that he was unhappy on the bench.

Players should be upset about being on the bench. They should use this as motivation and work harder in training, forcing their way into the team. But also Trossard has to understand football is a squad game, that we are two games into the new season, and there are plenty of minutes to go around.

Last season, Martinelli started 24 league games, Trossard started 18. The Belgium playing around 300 minutes less over the season than the Brazilian. So he really should not be too upset about a lack of playing time.

After the goal, the usual “Trossard must start next game” was said by many. But it is not something I agree with.

Trossard always looks best when coming off the bench. He thrives when games are less structured. When he can play off his natural instincts rather than to a game plan.

He looks an inferior player when he starts games, with our structured play often breaking down or slowing up when the ball gets to him. He is so much better doing what he did on Saturday – finding space around the edge of the box and getting a shot off.

Not blessed with a lot of space, Trossard takes advantage of tired minds. When he starts, when defenders are both sharp in body and mind, he is not as effective.

So short term, Martinelli should still be our main starter, with Trossard acting as a super sub.

A new left winger

All summer we have been linked with Nico Williams. And I would not be upset if we signed him this summer.

Williams is the sort of one on one merchant that would excel in Arsenal’s current way of playing. He will destroy his full back for fun throughout and create so many opportunities for himself and others. But if he is not available, then we need to stick with Martinelli for another year.

Any winger that comes in needs to be better than Martinelli. They need to come into our first XI and be able to make an impact. And if that means another year with Martinelli whilst we scout his long term replacement, then so be it. It also gives Martinelli the chance to make that next step forward.

But what for Martinelli

This summer a lot of fans have spoken about getting in cover for Bukayo Saka. I do not agree with that.

We have been linked with Ademola Lookman, and I do not think he is better than Saka, Martinelli or Trossard. The new winger needs to be better than Martinelli.

Signing a Nico Williams level player would then see Martinelli relegated to the bench. But as we have seen with Trossard, there is plenty of game time to go around.

I can certainly forsee a situation where Williams plays 65 minutes, and then Martinelli comes on for the last half an hour. His freshness and pressing will destroy a tired full back.

Martinelli would also become Saka’s cover. So in one transfer, we would have improved our starting XI, and strengthened our squad depth.

I also think that we will see Gabriel Jesus depart in 12 months.

Right now Jesus plays a trio of roles for Arsenal – he is cover for Kai Havertz, and provides an option on the left and right hand side.

Either this summer or next a new striker will come in, and with Jesus and Eddie Nketiah gone, Martinelli will be the 3rd choice striker, as well as 2nd choice on both wings.

And Trossard?

Maybe the reason for Trossard’s lack of celebration is that we are on the verge of signing a new left winger this summer. And that man incoming will relegate Trossard to 4th choice on the wings.

If Trossard is unhappy being a squad player, then I have no issue us cashing in on him if his sacrifice means we get a Nico Williams. But I would prefer it if he stayed.

Trossard would be a good option on either wing, and still be a super-sub option. He would also have a role to play more centrally.

You can see a situation where after 70 minutes we are struggling to break down our opponents. On comes Martinelli replacing the left winger, and on come Leandro Trossard replacing Mikel Merino (or whoever is playing in that left hand side attacking position).

Trossard could also be Martin Odegaard’s cover on the right side of midfield, whilst covering Saka as another option.

He turns 30 in December, but as someone who has never relied on electric pace will still have a few years left at the top. Trossard is the player some think Emile Smith Rowe is. He is also a superior player to Fabio Vieira.

Sign a new starting left winger, Trossard will still get plenty of game time.


When fans talk about us needing a new striker, I often change the narrative to us needing a new attacker.

For me, there are more wide forwards that would improve us than strikers – I am thinking Nico Williams, Rafael Leao and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia. All three would be an upgrade on Martinelli and are more gettable than Victor Oshmein. They would also be better value and improve us more than the likes of Ivan Toney or Viktor Gykokeres.

Over the next two summers, I expect us to sign a new left winger and new striker. Depending on what order we sign them now depends on Gabriel Jesus’s latest injury, and who is out on the market.

A final thought: Whilst Jesus’s injury might lead us to go sign a striker, it would need to be the right man. I would actually prefer us to go and get Williams, and Martinelli becomes Havertz cover (until Jesus is fit).

Keenos