Category Archives: Arsenal

THE GOOD, THE BAD & THE UGLY of Arsenal signing Martin Ødegaard

The Good

Martin Ødegaard (herewith known as Martin Odergaard) is a talented youngster.

Still just 22-years-old, it seems a life time ago that Real Madrid signed the Norwegian midfielder who made his league debut at just 15-years-old.

He went off the radar for a bit whilst he grew from boy to man, loaned out to Heerenveen and Vitesse in Holland.

Last season was a break through season for him as he was one of Real Sociedad’s best players (on loan again) as the Spanish side finished 6th – their highest finish since 2013.

A technically gifted 10, he will provide Arsenal with some extra creativity.

“Do not want to see Willian and Pepe on the pitch together again” was tweeted by many following Arsenal’s limp display as we exited the FA Cup against Southampton.

The signing of Odergaard should ensure that happens.

Whilst we can argue whether Mikel Arteta should have rested Emile Smith Rowe and Bukayo Saka for the FA Cup game or tomorrow nights league game against the same opposition, there should be no argument that the young pair need to be protected.

The issue for Arteta is once the decision is made to rest both, he had very few options beyond playing Pepe and Willian together – especially after Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang’s late withdrawal for personal reasons.

With Reiss Nelson injured again (it is time to give up on him), it left Arteta with the choice of Gabriel Martinelli, Willian, Pepe, Joe Willock and Ainsley Maitland-Niles.

‘In hindsight, he should have gone with Willock and Maitland-Niles. But that would have signalled the end of Willian and Pepe’s career at Arsenal.

With Smith Rowe’s development and Martinelli’s return to fitness, Odergaard joining should push Pepe and Willian down to 6th and 7th choice behind: Aubameyang, Odergaard, Saka, Martinelli & Smith Rowe.

The Bad

With no option to buy, Odergaard is yet another short term recruit.

We have wasted a lot of money in the last couple of years on short term recruits.

It started with the signing of Stephan Lichtsteiner for free in 2018. The Swiss right back was followed by Denis Suarez on loan the next January.

Summer 2019 saw us make the shock move for David Luiz, with Dani Ceballos also joining on loan.

This summer saw Willian join the club.

Whilst the likes of Pablo Mari and Cedric Soares also joined on loan; they both joined with agreements in place to make their stay long term.

Lichtsteiner, Suarez, Luiz, Ceballos and Willian were always short term recruits. Whether with the next 6 months or next 2 years in mind. None were signed with an eye on the long term.

A couple of individual performances by Luiz and Ceballos aside, Arsenal would be no worse off had we not signed the 5.

The concern with Odergaard is by the time he has caught up to the pace of English football and got match fit (he has not started a game since 1st December), his loan will be over.

Hopefully I am proven wrong, he hits the ground running and Arsenal sign him permanently in the summer. But for now it feels like another sticking plaster. Another short term option to a long term problem.

The Ugly

Nicolas Pepe cost the club £72million. Willian signed a 3 year deal on a repored £200,000 a week.

Pepe’s transfer fee and Willian’s wages will cost the club over £100million. Can chuck in another £30million in Pepe’s wages.

The pair are costing us around £40million a year in amortised transfer fee and wages. And are now 6th and 7th choice.

From Pepe to Willian, Luiz, Lichtsteiner & Suarez. Mesut Ozil’s new deal, swapping Alexis Sanchez for Mkhitaryan. Not getting a fee for Aaron Ramsey, Danny Welbeck or Jack Wilshere. Raising about £15million for Wojech Szczesny and Serge Gnabry

It is digusting to think about how much money we have wasted in poor signings and contracts, how much money we have lost in losing players on a free and underselling players.

£15million and Mkhitaryan for Ozil, Sanchez, Ramsey, Welbeck, Wilshire, Szczesny, Gnabry and Mkhitaryan. Ugly.

Keenos

Balogun has to commit to stay if he wants to play

Misguided, immature, lacking respect are just 3 things that came to mind after Folarin Balogun posted up a video of one of his goals for the U23s as Arsenal were struggling to break down Southampton in the FA Cup.

Balogun is yet to sign a new deal with Arsenal and will be free to leave in the summer. Already his representatives can begin negoatiating with foreign clubs.

Reports are that Balogun’s reluctance to sign are due to a concern about playing time. Other reports say he wants pay parity to the likes of Bukayo Saka.The reality is, Balogun is a 19-year-old talented young footballer who is 5th choice striker at Arsenal and not yet done anything to prove that he can perform at Saka’s level.

If Balogun wants to play, if he wants to earn the big bucks at Arsenal, then he should sign the deal on the table. He should trust the coaches and management at Arsenal to guide his career rather than his agents.

Sign the new deal now, go out on loan for the rest of the season. Score a bucketfull of a goals.

Come the summer, his performances on loan could lead to Arsenal cashing in on Eddie Nketiah. It is likely Alexandre Lacazette will also leave as he will have just one year left on his contract.

That will see Arsenal’s striker options be Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Gabriel Martinelli and Folarin Balogun.

Balogun would be 3rd choice and be getting plenty of game time at 20-years-old. The task of both him and Martinelli would then be to progress enough over the next 2 seasons to show that they would be worthy of replacing Aubameyang.

This time next year, if he is putting in some good performances nd becoming a regular in the starting XI, then knock on Edu’s door again. Ask for a payrise.

The path for Balogun is clear. Everyone can see it. But he is either impatient or greedy. Neither trait is good to have for a young footballer making his way.

It is interesting to note that many of those on social media calling for Balogun to start, for Arsenal to “pay him what he wants” also demand William Saliba play week in week and. They are also those fans that have spent 8 months complaining about the treatment of Mesut Ozil. And they all have #ArtetaOut in their Twitter bio’s.

Their rating of Balogun (and Saliba) is not based on seeing him play week in week out for the U23s, following his career since he was 14. It seems to be a simple case of:

We hate Arteta for the way he treated Ozil so are going to hype up any young player he is not playing.

This has led to Balogun gaining a lot of “fan boys” despite being 19 andnot yet having started a game.

These fans are demanding him to start based on goals against Molde and Dundalk.

Let’s return to Eddie Nketiah for a bit.

Nketiah has received a lot of abuse online from these so called “fans” due to being given the chnce.

Eddie deserves his chance this season.

Everything Balogun is currently doing – scoring goals at youth level and nicking a couple against inferior opposition in Europe – Nketiah has also done.

Eddie also went to Leeds on loan and has waited patiently.

You feel those abusing Nketiah and hyping Balogun would be doing it the other way if Arteta had sold the senior man in the summer and promoted Balogun.

If Arsenal had have given Balogun a big contract, they would probably be criticising the club for giving a youngster so much money without doing much.

These fans view things in a biased manner. They will contradict themselves.

What Balogun needs to do is stay away from social media. Ignore those fans hyping him up. He is not yet a Nicolas Anelka or Thierry Henry. At the same age as Saka, he is levels below.

You feel the social media echo chamber is influencing him though.

Fans tweeting him every day telling him how great he is. That he should be starting ahead of Nketiah. That he is right to demand to play before signing a new deal.

What he does not realise is this menatality is not the mentality of someone Arteta will want to keep.

He ends up coming across as devisive, willing to trample over a colleague for a promotion.

An employee who thinks he is better than senior employees, despite having never proven anything. It does not make for a good workplace.

what people (and Balogun) fail to recognise is that it is not just Nketiah ahead of him,

Arsenal have two senior strikers in Aubameyang and Lacazette. Both are proven goal scorers.

Even if Eddie left tomorrow, Balogun would struggle to get much game time – Nketiah has played just 319 Premier League minutes.

And it is not just Nketiah who is ahead of Balogun; there is also Gabriel Martinelli.

Martinelli is just 3 weeks older than Balogun and is levels ahead.

It is only injury that has limited the Brazilian’s game time this season. And there is a school of thought that had he not picked up that injury, Arsenal would have sold Lacazette last summer with Martinelli providing cover for Aubameyang.

Does anyone out there think that Balogun is better than Martinelli?

So even if Nketiah left, Balogun would still not be getting that game time as it would be going to a fit-again Martinelli.

We have seen talented young strikers at Arsenal before – Benik Afobe and Chuba Akpom in recent years. Balogun is not doing any more than these two at youth level. Neither made it at Arsenal.

Why should Arsenal give Balogun game time when he has not signed a new contract?

Those that say they stand by Balogun refusing to sign a new deal until he plays have got it the wrong way round.

A young player should prove his loyalty to a club, not the other way round.

It is the equivalent of an employee handing in his notice and then demanding he be promoted ahead of colleagues who deserve it more.

Any manager would tell that employee where to go. That they are not ready for the promotion but give it a year or 18 months and they would be ready. That he should not be holding the company to ransom by demanding a promotion otherwise he will quit.

If Balogun wants the opportunites currently being given to Nketiah, then he should sign a new contract.

He can not expect to be given that chance when he could leave in 6 months.

And ultimately, the argument should not be between Nketiah and Balogun.

With everyone fit, they are 4th and 5th choice striker.

Martinelli is the future.

Keenos

Match Report: Southampton 1 – 0 Arsenal

Southampton (1) 1 Arsenal (0) 0

FA Cup Fourth Round

St. Mary’s Stadium, Britannia Road, Southampton SO14 5FP

Saturday, 23rd January 2021. Kick-off time: 12.15pm

(4-2-3-1) Bernd Leno; Hector Bellerin, Rob Holding, Gabriel Magalhães, Cédric Soares; Mohamed Elneny, Granit Xhaka; Nicolas Pépé, Willian Borges da Silva, Gabriel Martinelli; Eddie Nketiah, 

Substitutes: Bukayo Saka, Alexandre Lacazette, Alex Rúnarsson, Ainsley Maitland-Niles, Thomas Partey, Calum Chambers, David Luiz, Joe Willock, Mat Ryan.

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 62%

Referee: Peter Bankes

Assistant Referees: Neil Davies, James Mainwaring

Fourth Official: Graham Scott

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR David Coote; AVAR Stephen Child

Attendance: A maximum of 300 attendees due to UK government coronavirus restrictions

It’s funny how the fixtures fall isn’t it? We play Southampton twice in roughly eighty hours at their place on the not-so-balmy south coast, the first of which forms the next instalment of our defence of the FA Cup at fifteen minutes past noon today. Good to see Gabriel Martinelli getting a start, as well as Eddie Nketiah in the main striker role, as Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang is not available today due to a personal issue. Also on the bench, is goalkeeper Mat Ryan, on loan from Brighton and Hove Albion; the winners of this match meet Wolverhampton Wanderers at Molineux in Round Five. All to play for!. Let’s go!

The home side certainly took the match to us in the opening stages of the game, with James Ward-Prowse’s corner bouncing off our crossbar from a corner after just eight minutes, which was a close shave indeed. This has the makings of a great FA Cup match, with some breathtaking end-to-end play out there. Gabriel Martinelli and Saints old boy Cédric Soares made good, strong attempts on the Southampton goal, whilst at our end, Bernd Leno made a superb save from Danny Ings; a lesser goalkeeper may not have even attempted such an athletic operation. After twenty-four minutes, we were a goal down when James Ward-Prowse slotted a ball to Kyle Walker-Peters out on the right, who fired it low across the six-yard box which was deflected off Gabriel (whilst Bernd Leno was blindsided with the menacing presence of Che Adams) on its way into our net. This goal quite naturally fired up the home team, who applied more pressure on us, and we certainly struggled to even walk out of our own half, let alone play out of it. We managed to counter-attack about ten minutes before the break, when Gabriel Martinelli slotted the ball to Willian, who passed to Nicolas Pépé, but his shot was blocked before a clever chip towards Cédric Soares was beyond his outstretched leg. Unfortunately, from then on up until the half-time break, Southampton pressurised us, and somehow, we managed to hold out until Peter Bankes’ whistle signalled the end of the half.

The beginning of the second half appeared to be a continuum of the first, with Southampton being entirely on the front foot, with us struggling to get going. We got badly caught when Danny Ings run on from a long ball, and using his pace, left Rob Holding and Gabriel for dust, and his resulting shot hit the post, bounced off Bernd Leno and spun off behind the line. Good job he was offside, otherwise it could have been embarrassing. The Southampton forwards were all over our defence like a disease, and there does not appear to be anything we can do to address this issue at this point in time. We need to get a grip here at St. Mary’s, and quickly, too. Thomas Partey replaced an anonymous Mohamed Elneny, and Gabriel Martinelli was substituted for Bukayo Saka, just before the hour to mix things up a bit out there. Almost immediately, the changes started to make a difference. Eddie Nketiah was desperately unlucky not to score after sixty-seven minutes, when his clever shot was pushed away by Fraser Forster in the Saints’ goal, after a pinpoint pass by Nicolas Pépé. In a desperate measure to chase the game, Alexandre Lacazette replaced Hector Bellerin with twenty minutes of the match remaining, and despite the changes, we still looked decidedly lackustre out there today. With Gabriel playing up front, and the shuffle that only a substitution can give, we looked terribly exposed at the back. As the match edged towards it’s obvious conclusion, Alexandre Lacazette, Eddie Nketiah and Nicolas Pépé all had chances in the last quarter of an hour, but they all came to nothing. In fact, in the three minutes’ injury time, Eddie Nketiah bustled his way into the Saints’ penalty area after a clever flick-on from Willian. Unfortunately with a couple of Southamtpon defenders moving in on him, he sliced the shot and it went just wide of the right post and over, and along with out, went our defence of the FA Cup, on a cold and sunny afternoon on the south coast.

So disappointing, so deflated, such an anti-climax, and in some ways we were extremely fortunate not to lose by a greater margin. We may well have had the greater possession statistics, but we all know that when it comes down to it, goals win matches, not percentages. Unfortunately, Mikel Arteta gambled and lost with the seven changes on the teamsheet today, as some players looked decidedly off the pace somewhat. We looked uncomfortable, second-rate and completely adrift from this match, which to be fair, the home side showed the greater intent right from the start. Let us hope for a different result, with an alternate line-up for the Premiership match at the same stadium on Tuesday evening.

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: Southampton at St. Mary’s Stadium on Tuesday, 26th January at 8.00pm (Premier League). Victoria Concordia Crescit.

Steve

Too Dearly Loved To Be Forgotten: Arsenal v Racing Club de Paris 1930-1962 by Steve Ingless (Rangemore Publications, ISBN 978-1-5272-0135-4) is now available on Amazon.