Arsenal announce COVID19 season ticket procedure

Arsenal season ticket holders will soon receive Emails from the club detailing ticketing for the 2020/21 season.

The club have already updated the Terms and Conditions on the website.

From this we can get an early insight into what Arsenal are planning for the forthcoming season for “general admission”:

    • For any Reduced Capacity Match during the 2020/21 Season, Home Match Tickets will be issued by Ballot

    • In order to be eligible to enter the Ballots, you must have been a Gold Member for the 2019/20 season
      • The club might open a Ballot to other tiers of Membership depending on Gold Member take up
    • To enter the Ballot, fans must make an “initial payment” to the club to the sum of equivalent to the rebate you received into your Ticket Exchange and Transfer account for 2019/20
      • This initial payment will act as partial pre-payment towards the cost of a Season Ticket
      • Payment will be made “game by game” with the initial payment only used against the cost of a season ticket when full capacity returns
      • You may enter the Ballot in groups of up to 4 people
    • In the event that you are allocated a Home Mach Ticket through a Ballot, the Club shall take payment for the price of the relevant Home Match Ticket by using the payment card details that you provided to the Club
    • The club are unable to guarantee your usual seat, but will attempt to seat you as close as possible
    • Before any Home Match Ticket will be issued to you, you will be required to confirm that you will agree to comply with and adhere to any COVID-19-related guidance
    • You will be required to provide the name of who is using the ticket on a “ticket by ticket basis” when purchasing. This name must match who uses the ticket on game-day
    • Home Match Tickets for a Reduced Capacity Match are not refundable
    • Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, no Home Match Tickets will be permitted to be sold or exchanged through the “Ticket Exchange Service”
    • If you decide not to enter your season ticket into the Ballot, you will still be eligible to renew your ticket for 2021/22
    • If you log onto the Arsenal website, you will now have an option to renew your season ticket. Initial payments are from £210.14

More details will follow once the Emails have been sent out

Keenos

Arsenal need to sell 2 for every 1 player they sign

At the time of writing (Tuesday morning!) Arsenal have 30 players listed on Arsenal.com as senior players. And this is before the incoming Dani Ceballos and Gabriel. Both of which will be confirmed over the next 7 days (unless already done so by the time this is published).

Ceballos and Gabriel joining the club will take it to 32 senior players.

Regardless of Premier League squad rules, 32 senior players is too many.

But then when you take into account Premier League rules:

  • Each squad contains no more than 17 players who do not fulfil the “Home Grown Player” (HGP) criteria.
  • The rest of the squad, up to a total of 25 players, must be “Home Grown”.
  • Each club squad list is below as well as an additional list of each club’s registered Under-21 players who are eligible over and above the squad limit of 25 players.
  • A “Home-Grown Player” means a player who, irrespective of nationality or age, has been registered with any club affiliated to The Football Association or the Football Association of Wales for a period, continuous or not, of three entire seasons, or 36 months, before his 21st birthday (or the end of the season during which he turns 21).
  • For the 2020/21 campaign Under-21 players will have been born on or after 1 January 1999.

A lot of people often get the rules wrong, thinking that you have to name a minimum of 8 home grown players. You do not. You could just name 17 non-home grown players and fill the rest of your squad with U21s.

So when looking at the Arsenal squad for 2020/21, we need to take into account:

  • Who was born on or after 1 January 1999 – these players do not need to be registered
  • Who does not fulfil the HGP criteria

This is what the squad currently looks like:

So before Gabriel or Ceballos is confirmed, we have:

  • 16 non-home grown players
  • 6 home grown players
  • 8 U21 players

This means that under PL rules, we would be fine submitting the squad “as is”. Although this does not remove the issue that 30 senior players is about 5 too many.

But then you add Gabriel & Ceballos to the squad. Both of whom would be registered as non-home grown. That takes Arsenal to 18. 1 too many (and 32 first team squad members).

Straight off the bat, Arsenal would have to sell (or loan out) 1 senior player.

But that only brings the non-home grown element of the squad down to 17 – the maximum we are allowed.

Now we would still be able to buy 2 home grown players without needing to sell – but this would further increase our squad size to 34. We have also not been linked with any home grown players.

So we need to start seeing departures to offset those coming in.

Just to accommodate both Gabriel & Ceballos, we need to sell one. Then if we added Thomas Partey, Houssem Aouar or Coutinho, we would basically need to sell “like for like”. With Lucas Torreira, Mohamed Elneny or Mesut Ozil leaving to make space.

Remember, Matteo Guendouzi is U21, so selling him will not free up a squad place.

We could not go and sign Thomas Partey and Houssem Aouar and sell Lucas Torreira and Guendouzi to make space. We would have to shift someone other than Guendouzi.

So for non-home grown purchases, if we sign Gabriel, Ceballos and 2 more, we would have to sell (or loan) 3 non-home grown players to stay within the rules (or as someone pointed out, we could just not register Mesut Ozil!).

There are obvious suspects: Sokratis, Sead Kolasinac, Lucas Torreira, Mohamed Elneny.

But selling “like for like” would still leave Arsenal with close to 30 first team players. At most we need 25/26.

So on top of the 4 we would sell to make space for the 4 we would buy, we would need to sell at least another 4 to bring us down to a first team squad of 26.

Now before some smart arse says “you can only have a squad of 25”, remember, U21 do not need to be registered.

So looking at the squad, Arsenal will need to sell or loan out at least 8 players if they wish to make 4 purchases. This ensures they stay within Premier League squad rules and reduce the bloated squad.

  • Sokratis
  • Lucas Torreira
  • Mohamed Elneny
  • Matteo Guendouzi
  • Mesut Ozil
  • Alexandre Lacazette
  • Rob Holding
  • Calum Chambers

That 8 names on the lsit are fairly clear and obvious, with only Shkodran Mustafi perhaps being sold ahead, or as well as, Chambers and Holding.

That would take us down to just 4 home-grown players. But this is not an issue as you are not required to name 8 home-grown players.

Arsenal would also be watchful on 2021/22 when the likes of Joe Willock, Reiss Nelson and Eddie Nketiah have to be registered as will no longer be U21.

So expect 8 sales (or loans) to occur before the transfer window shuts on 5th October, as old players make way for new.

Keenos

Why is Arsenal “midfield saviour” now at a career crossroads?

Upon arriving from Sampdoria two summers ago, Lucas Torreira was heralded as the man to fill the void in Arsenal’s midfield as a tough tackling, tenacious ball-winner. He was the midfield saviour.

For a while, he was exactly that, excelling with five consecutive Man of the Match performances during the Gunners’ 22-game unbeaten run at the start of the 2018-19 season.

Sadly, Torreira struggled to replicate those consistent, high-quality displays after being shifted inexplicably into a more advanced role under Unai Emery. The endless tactical tinkering of Torreira’s position knocked the Uruguayan’s confidence, which he is yet to regain. 

Read on below for our breakdown of what Mikel Arteta should do with Torreira as he embarks on a rigorous rebuild at Arsenal.

Initially a regular feature in Arteta’s starting XI after the Spaniard took over at Arsenal in December, Torreira was used more and more sparingly as the season progressed. An ankle injury suffered at Portsmouth in March saw him sidelined for four months but, after working his way back to full fitness, Torreira started only one of six possible Premier League matches. 

His absence can be explained by the emergence of Dani Ceballos and Granit Xhaka as a central midfield pairing in a 3-4-3, Arteta’s preferred system throughout Project Restart. 

Ceballos, who initially struggled to settle on loan from Real Madrid, put in some instrumental performances as a deep-lying playmaker. These were most notable in the FA Cup, where he scored the winner in the quarter-final and was one of Arsenal’s key players in the final, helping the Gunners to lift the trophy for a record 14th time. 

Xhaka, after the ugly incident that saw him booed off the pitch against Crystal Palace in October, has been a revelation under Arteta. Able to control games with his accurate range of passing, the Swiss international has enjoyed a renaissance at Arsenal when it previously looked like he would never play another game for the club. 

This leaves Torreira as the lone jazz record in a collection otherwise full of opera. 

Arteta has attempted to restructure a midfield that was left in ruins following Emery’s chaotic attempt at implementing a gegenpress. This fits Xhaka and Ceballos perfectly. Both are very functional players who can be reliable and dependable in 

Arteta’s 3-4-3. 

Torreira however, is more of a wild card who can win tackles, harass opponents and shuttle energetically from box to box. This explains his aforementioned success under Emery, where Arsenal looked to counter-press opponents far more regularly. Playing in a high-tempo system, Torreira was far more effective. 

The 24-year-old would not be the ideal player to fulfil a holding role in the variant of the 

4-3-3 that Arteta oversaw with Pep Guardiola at Manchester City. His lack of positional awareness as he seeks to win back possession leaves him vulnerable at times, meaning he would be useful next to Xhaka, who could sit in front of the back four, in a 4-2-3-1. Should Arteta be willing to give this shape another chance, then Torreira could play a pivotal role in that system. 

Presently, Torreira’s chances of being a regular starter at Arsenal are slim, and he has attracted interest from multiple clubs in Italy. Arteta used a three-man defence in the recent friendly against MK Dons, and is thought to favour that system moving forward, leaving no space for the diminutive midfielder. 

However, the unfruitful attempts to secure the services of Ceballos from Real Madrid, as well as Thomas Partey from neighbours Atletico, mean that Arsenal should hold fire before sanctioning the sale of Torreira.

Zac Campbell