Talk about medals; not money

According to this mornings media, Matteo Guendouzi spent the game boasting that  earns more than any Brighton player ‘ever will’.

‘He was saying the Brighton players were s*** and that he and his team-mates earn so much more than they ever will,’ a source said. ‘He’s done it in other games as well. Arsenal are a decent club and hate that sort of behaviour.’

It is a crass attitude and one which Guendouzi either needs to sort out, or get out.

Boasting about how much money you earn is poor form. We see it on social media a lot. People claiming others are jealous of them because of how much they earn. This ignores the fact that their are much more important things in life than having a big bank account.

There is no point earning big money if you have no loved one, no friends, no family. It is a lonely existence.

In football, earning big money should not take the place of winning trophies.

Too many players these days are motivated by how much money they earn. It has seen players go to China and the Middle East in the hunt for big bucks.

In 2015/16, Leicester players would have earned less than those at Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester United and Tottenham. They won the league.

Whilst Dele Alli can look at a big bank balance, Marc Albrighton can look at his Premier League winners medal.

Someone needs to get hold of Guendouzi and explain that he should be focusing on winning games, winning trophies, and not his bank balance.

That if the Frenchmen knuckles down and puts in the consistent performances he is capable of, even bigger money than the £40,000 a week he earns will come his way.

The worry is Guendouzi’s comments are echoed amongst others in the squad.

From Mesut Ozil to Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang; Matteo Guendouzi to Bukayo Saka, have we amassed a group of players more interested in what they earn rather than what they win?

The Saka contract situation is becoming a worry.

The talk is he (or his representatives) are holding out for more money.

At 18-years-old, he is getting regular football at a top Premier League club. His career is now potentially at a crossroads.

Go and join Manchester City or Liverpool for more money, sit on the bench and become the next Scott Sinclair; or remain at Arsenal on less money, play week in week out and potentially become a superstar.

If he is as good as he thinks he is, the big money and success will come with time – whether that be at Arsenal or elsewhere. But a move now would be entirely motivated by money.

Maybe as punishment for his attitude, Guendouzi should be cleaning the changing rooms for a week. Get him scrubbing those toilets. Teach him to appreciate and respect the privileged position he is in.

If he only cares about what he earns, maybe the time has come to sell him to PSG.

Keenos

The Return of Arsenal Act II: As predictable and disappointing as Act I

Against Manchester City, Arsenal put in a predictable performance which led to a predictable result. Act II of the Return of Arsenal was equally as predictable.

The defeat against Brighton could have been a game from many over the last 5 years.

Arsenal dominated play without really creating many clear cut chances. Having finally taken the lead, the defence then switched off to concede an equaliser, and then switched off for a second time as the opponents scored a late winner. Conceding goals from the opponents only chances.

For all the technically or physically gifted players we have, the side is continually let down by players losing concentration, making mistakes and conceding goals.

Against Manchester City, it was individual errors in David Luiz that led to Arsenal demise. Against Brighton it was the lack of concentration of the collective.

Basics of defending a corner – if your opponent is setting up for a short corner, send two players out to it. This stops the opponents outnumbering you and having a free run at an easy cross.

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang went out for the short corner; but Nicolas Pepe did not.

The Ivorian was close to the edge of the box, but for some reason decided to turn his back on play and run back to the middle of the box.

Had he stayed in position, he would have been a lot closer to be able to cut out the cross.

What the incident showed is the team has a lack of leaders. A lack of natural organisers. This is not anything new.

Where was the senior figures at the club screaming at Pepe to get out to the short corner. Shouting at him when he started making his way to the middle of the box. It was just poor.

The second goal was well worked by Brighton, but again Arsenal turned off.

Some good one touch football from a throw on; but Arsenal players did not even get close to putting in a challenge.

At 4 minutes of 3 minutes injury time, were they expecting the final whistle to go? Did they completely switch off? Again; it as not good enough.

Losing concentration has long been a problem for Arsenal.

It has plagued the likes of Shkodran Mustafi and Granit Xhaka’s career.

How often have the pair been having a good game, only to make a lapse of judgement which leads to an error and in turn a goal?

From Arsene Wenger through to Unai Emery, our recruitment over the last 5 years has gone down hill.

In Wenger’s early days, recruitment was forensic. We would almost stalk a player to know everything about him, his life. Not only the type of footballer he is but also the type of character. What was between the ears.

Intelligence was key for Wenger, with many players enrolling in college and university courses at Arsenal.

That seems to have been discarded, and it has resulted in us having a collective of players that lack intelligence. Players that are unable to make decisions for themselves.

We have not had an organisers on the pitch since Per Mertesacker.

Arsenal need to ensure that leadership, organisation and intelligence is a key part of recruitment moving forward. It is why we are reportedly going to sign Pablo Mari – Arteta is highly impressed by his organisational skills on the pitch.

Saturday was frustrating.

Like many defeats in recent years, we can point to poor referring decisions – a goal keeper injured from a challenge where the opponent had no intention of winning the ball, consistent fouling that what unpunished, an extra 90 seconds injury time found from 3 minutes.

But ultimately it was our own fault we lost. We switched off.

And you have to question why Arteta made 3 substitutions with 3 minutes to go that were for no reason whatsoever.

Keenos

Match Report: Brighton 2 – 1 Arsenal

Brighton and Hove Albion (0) 2 Arsenal (0) 1

Premier League

AMEX Stadium, Village Way, Brighton BN1 9BL

Saturday, 20th June 2020. Kick-off time: 3.00pm

(4-2-3-1) Bernd Leno; Hector Bellerin, Shkodran Mustafi, Rob Holding, Sead Kolašinac; Mattéo Guendouzi, Bukayo Saka; Dani Ceballos, Nicolas Pépé, Alexandre Lacazette; Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.

Substitutes: Emiliano Martínez, Kieran Tierney, Zak Medley, Ainsley Maitland-Niles, Joe Willock, Reiss Nelson, Mesut Özil, Eddie Nketiah, Gabriel Martinelli.

Scorers: Nicolas Pépé (68 mins)

Yellow Cards: Alexandre Lacazette

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 59%

Referee: Martin Atkinson

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

After the very forgettable match in Manchester three days ago, we need to reassert ourselves in the most positive of all ways, by winning this match on the south coast today. Nothing less than a win will do, not just for the points that we so desperately need, but for the confidence that it will give our fine bunch of fellows.

If there was any doubt in our minds about the boys’ intent for today’s match, they were surely dispelled as early as the seventh minute, when Bukayo Saka hit the Brighton crossbar with a clever shot that was worthy of a goal in anyone’s book. This match became a real slow burn quite early on, when Arsenal played the patience game very well; in fact, by the half hour mark we dominated possession and had four shots on the home side’s goal with very little to concern Bernd Leno at the other end. The game settled down quite well in our favour, as the general confidence in Arsenal grew as the minutes ticked by. Ten minutes from half time, Bernd Leno landed awkwardly on his right leg whilst neutralising a long ball, and it looked like his knee took his full weight after a highly controversial challenge from Neal Maupay; unfortunately, he was unable to continue, so Emiliano Martínez stepped up to take over the goalkeeping duties for the rest of the match. Almost immediately he was called into action when Aaron Mooy blasted a shot at the Arsenal goal, which our goalie covered extremely well. The match settled down, and in the five minutes injury time (which was added because of Bernd Leno’s injury) at the end of the first half, we were desperately unlucky not to score when Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang was tackled by Adam Webster just in front of goal after playing a lovely one-two with Alexandre Lacazette, which ultimately meant that we went into the break with the scores even.

Shortly after the restart, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang saw a weakness in the Brighton defence, and sneaked a left-footed shot in on the Brighton goal, which Mat Ryan easily pushed away. Arsenal started to push up into the Brighton penalty area more and more now, with the excellent Bukayo Saka being unlucky not to score with a left-footed shot that went narrowly wide. Although Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang did get the ball in the back of the net, it was cancelled out due to a narrow offside decision, confirmed by the the beastly and inconsistent VAR team at Stockley Park. Emiliano Martínez made a superb point-blank save from Neal Maupay, and in the following few minutes, Brighton started to put more pressure on our defence. A few moments later, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang was again unfortunate not to score with a fierce left-footed shot, and literally out of nowhere, on the sixty-eighth minute, a superb left-footed shot by Nicolas Pépé sailed past Mat Ryan into the Brighton net to put us into the lead with a truly world-class goal. As often happens, the losing side comes back with purpose, and it was no different here. Just seven minutes later, a terrible mix-up in the Arenal defence after a short corner, saw Lewis Dunk redress the balance. Now we have a game. Young Eddie Nketiah replaced Alexandre Lacazette on the seventy-eighth minute; Arsenal applied more pressure on the Brighton defence, and although we left ourselves open, the players tried desperately to score the second goal of the match. With four minutes left, Mikel Arteta brought on Kieran Tierney, Joe Willock and Reiss Nelson for Bukayo Saka, Dani Ceballos and Nicolas Pépé. With just seconds left, a horrendous turn of events on our right-hand side led to Neal Maupay flicking the ball past Emiliano Martínez to score the winner for the home side, which led to unsavoury scenes when the final whistle blew just seconds later.

How can it be? One-nil up, two-one down, a catalogue of schoolboy errors that made matters worse with no obvious leaders out there on the pitch. And with 59 per cent overall possession also. Along with all this, we also have a growing injury list that is concerning, to say the least. The attitude of some of the players has to be brought into question, and sooner rather than later, Mikel Arteta has to reshuffle this pack, and get some new players into the club. This is serious stuff now. 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, Britannia Rd, Southampton SO14 5FP, on Thursday, 25th June at 6.00pm (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.