Four out, Zero in for The Arsenal on deadline day

No incomings

I have seen a few say stuff like “we still need 2 more players” and “striker and defender still needed”. Well sorry to break it to you, we are now a club that gets our business done early and will not be signing anyone on transfer deadline day.

Gone are the days of the late, mad trolley dash trying to pick up anyone that is left on the cheap. Our transfer windows under Edu are not much more methodically thought out, and we secure our men early even if it costs us a little more.

On the defender, people are after “an Champions League experienced full back who can be short term cover”. So basically you want Stephan Lichtsteiner?

How many of the “short term experienced” options have actually worked out for us in the last 10 years? None.

We have White, Tomiyasu, Saliba, Holding, Gabriel, Kiwior and Zinchenko as defendisve options (excluding Thomas Partey and Jurrien Timber). Anyone that comes in would either have to be a better left back option than Kiwior, and a better centre back option than Holding.

Personally, I would rather utilise Reuell Walters if need be.

The 18-years-old right back was recently singled out by Zinchenko for praise:

“I like so much the centre-back, Reuell,” he told Rio Ferdinand’s YouTube channel. “The quality he has, he’s aggressive.

“I swear to god, once he pushed Gabriel Jesus shoulder to shoulder, it’s not easy to push Gabi, yeah. He was confident on the ball after. He kept the ball well. Wow, he impressed me the most.”

I have thought for a long time that Walters is ready to step up, and prior to signing Timber I was suggesting that Tomiyasu would be back up right back and left back, with Walters backing him up on the right side.

Likewise, White is then Saliba’s cover, with either Walters or Tomiyasu playing on the right hand side:

White Saliba Gabriel Zinchenko
Walters Holding Kiwior Tomiyasu

I do not see an ageing import, who will probably get exposed by the harder, faster Premier League, coming in.

As for the striker, we have Gabriel Jesus on the cusp of coming back. He is backed up by Eddie Nketiah (who has gone up a level this year) and further backed up by Kai Havertz.

The issue all summer for all clubs is the lack of top strikers out there. Deadline day is not going to make one suddenly materialise.

We are better off selling Folarin Balogun and keeping Eddie as number 2. Then use the next 12 months to scout someone who is better than Nketiah. There will not be any top loan strikers coming available. The best will be Danny Ings…

Anyone that is good enough for Arsenal will not be available on a loan deal this late into the window.

Four outgoings

Arsenal’s stance on my players has not changed. For many of our fringe players, the exit door is open if the right bid comes in.

Emile Smith Rowe, Nicolas Pepe, Albert Sambi Lokonga and Cedric Soares could all leave today.

Some might chuck Rob Holding onto the list, but I think considering Timber’s injury, we will keep hold of him for another 12 months. The Arsenal legend does not cost too much in wages and will not raise too much in transfer fees.

One thing to remember with exits is that whilst most transfer windows shut today, the Turkish window is still open until 15 September and the Saudi Pro League until 20 September.

Bar Smith Rowe, you can certainly see the rest of those mentioned above heading to either Saudi (Cedric & Pepe) or Turkey (all of them).

The new loan rules bought in by FIFA are not a worry for Arsenal.

Clubs can now only loan out 7 players aged 21 or over who are not club trained abroad. As it stands, Kieran Tierney is our only senior player on an international loan deal. That means the door it open for all those mentioned above to leave on loan. It does not only need to be a permanent deal.

My bet is Smith Rowe could be the transfer story of deadline day. He will certainly be one of those sitting sitting at home with an overnight bag packed and a cab waiting at his door!

Lokonga, like Tavares, will probably both end up loaned out to a Premier League club. Pepe will be Turkey or Saudi bound. Cedric will stay at the club until January.


If you are waking up this morning expecting Arsenal to make some last minute signings, you are setting yourself up to be upset. We are a much better club than we were previously and have done our business early.

If you take to social media to moan about our dealings this summer, you will be showing yourself up as someone who is never happy, who will always complain.

£200m spent, Declan Rice, Kai Havertz, Jurrien Timber and David Raya. If you are unhappy with our window, then I imagine you will be unhappy whoever we signed!

Have a chilled deadline day.

Keenos

Arsenal set for £100m net spend

Back in May, the question got asked in the WhatsApp group: How much do you think Arsenal will spend this summer?

I answered in my normal annoying not answering the question way: It all depends on sales.

That was followed up with my normal, boring, over the top explanation:

I expect us to spend £100m off the bat. That could rise to £150 or £200m depending on sales.

Balogun, Xhaka, Tierney, Pepe, Mari, Trusty, Lokonga, Tavares, they could all raise us in excess of £100m. Throw in Emile Smith Rowe as well.

As it turned out, I am proven to be correct. This is not unusual.

We came out the traps fast and by July had spent £196.3m on Declan Rice, Jurrien Timber and Kai Havertz. We then added David Raya on loan that will cost us £3m. £199.3m on incomings. Let’s round it up to £200m.

Pablo Mari was already on a promise to Monza, whilst Xhaka’s move to Leverkusen went through as we closed in on Rice. Then it was American pair Auston Trusty and Matt Turner.

£42.4m in sales at the beginning of the season. I get it was clear we needed to make some more, but I was not worried.

As we went into the bank holiday weekend, the deals of Kieran Tierney (loan) and Folarin Balogun progressed. Both deemed surplus to requirements by Mikel Arteta.

Then yesterday, it was announced that Nuno Tavares was set to join Nottinghasm Forest on loan. A fee of around £2m with an option to buy of £12m.

Those 3 transfers added around a further £40m to the sales pot (Balogun fee, Tierney and Tavares loan fees).

Over £80m raised in sales before deadline day. You deduct that from the £200m we spent and you are not far from the original £100m I mentioned earlier in the blog – £117m is the approximate calculation.

With transfer deadline day looming, we can expect further exits (and not further signings), that will bring that figure much closer to the £100m I predicted.

Albert Sambi Lokonga, Rob Holding and Cedric Soares are all available for sale, if someone wants to come in for them.

If they depart on permanent deals over the next day or so, then I would expect us to dip under £100m net spend for the summer. And even if they leave on loan, the fees paid for them will get us closer to the figure.

One player that I have not mentioned yet is Nicolas Pepe.

With everything going on in Saudi, I expected him to be a transfer target for them. Maybe early in the window he turned down their advances, preferring to continue to prove re-invent himself in a relevant league.

The Saudi transfer window does not close until 20 September, so there is still time for him to make a move to the Middle East.

Overall, a good window for us. All entirely predictable. And also a sample of what to expect in the future.

We no longer need the huge squad overhaul of previous years. We have a bright, young squad. The next few years will see us mimic Manchester City’s transfer policy of 2-3 big money signings a season.

Enjoy deadline day. Do not expect any incomings. Tomorrow will be about moving on those 3 or 4 players that will not feature in the first team squad this season.

Keenos

Book Review – Revolution: The Rise of Arteta’s Arsenal

Revolution: The Rise of Arteta’s Arsenal is the story of how Mikel Arteta turned Arsenal back into the most innovative, exciting and feared teams in the Premier League.

Having cut his teeth as an assistant to Pep Guardiola, Arteta returned to Arsenal in the winter of 2019.

Through Covid, fan revolt, player bust-ups, dissapointments and an FA Cup win, Arteta’s single-mindedness revolutionised Arsenal, turning them from a dying former great club into title challengers once more.

This book, by renowned journalist Charles Watts, explores the workings of Arteta’s philosophy and how he transformed both on and off the pitch.

With chapters on his tactical innovations, in-game strategies, transfer insight and, of course, an account of the 2022/23 season, Revolution is the story the extraordinary process and the first draft of Arsenal’s new history.

Tomorrow there is an event at the Tolly where Charles Watts will be hosting a Q&A from 7pm onwards. He will be joined by James McNicolas (Gunnerblog) and Sam Dean from the Telegraph.

The Stoke Newington book shop will be at the event selling copies of the book. Alternatively, the book can be ordered here.

She Wore