Arsenal youth keeper actually 20 years old (and not the reported 15)

Morning! We are 8 days into our 19-day break from football. Times like this does make me wonder what those who do not like our great game do with their time? Life is so boring without it.

Due to the lack of senior football, Arsenal.com are using the time to highlight the academy and women teams, so there is a real lack of real Arsenal news floating about.

As expected, the game against Aston Villa has been moved to Sunday afternoon.

Hats off to all those who had worked out that this game would be moved, and as a result the Munich away leg would have to take place on the Wednesday. These guys got some great deals on flights by booking for a Wednesday game before UEFA had officially announced it. I am still not too upset about £230 flying via Frankfurt. Although it does bite that return flights direct to Munich are just £61 the next week!

I was surprised to read yesterday how few players we had on international duty – just 12:

Aaron Ramsdale
Bukayo Saka
David Raya
Declan Rice
Jakub Kiwior
Jorginho
Kai Havertz
Karl Hein
Leandro Trossard
Martin Odegaard
Oleksandr Zinchenko
William Saliba

Just 7 of the 12 are first team regulars following Gabriel Magalhaes withdrawal. That means the likes of Ben White, Takehiro Tomiyasu, Cedric Soares, Gabriel, Thomas Partey, Emile Smith Rowe, Fabio Vieira, Mohamed Elneny, Reiss Nelson, Gabriel Jesus and Eddie Nketiah are still at London Colney. Gabriel Martinelli and Jurrien Timber also remain at home whilst they return from injury.

To have 11 senior players training in the middle of the March international break must be a positive for Mikel Arteta and Arsenal. By the time we add in a few of the U21s, the boss will be able to run fairly normal training sessions.

One of those who has joined the senior team for training is goalkeeper Ovie Ejeheri.

I am not sure where the story has come from, but it has been reported that Ejeheri is only 15, which is clearly not true.

It shows how many Twitter accounts just copy and paste news without checking for themselves first. A quick Google of his name brings up his Arsenal.com profile which Ejeheri was born in 2003. In April he turns 21!

The Greenwich born keeper spent the first half of last season on-loan at National League South side Chelmsford City, keeping 12 clean sheets in 25 games. For the second half of the season he joined Finnish club SJK, with Ejeheri keeping nine clean sheets in 14 Veikkausliiga games.

Arsenal have quite a few young goalkeepers on the books right now including:

Karl Hein – Current 3rd choice, 21 years old
James Hilson – Current 4th choice, 1st choice U21, 23 years old
Ovie Ejeheri – 2nd choice U21, 20 years old
Arthur Okonkwo – Performing well on loan to Wrexham, 22 years old
Hubert Graczyk – Polish youth international on loan at Slough Town, 21 years old
Noah Cooper – Frist choice U18, 18 years old
Alexei Rojas – Essex born Columbian, signed from Chelsea, 18 years old
Brian Okonkwo – Arthur’s younger brother, recently joined Cheshunt on loan, 18 years old

With Aaron Ramsdale set to leave in the summer, it will be interesting if Arteta believes that Karl Hein is ready to step up as 2nd choice, and if so who from Hilson, Ejehri and Okonkwo will become 3rd choice.

My first thought is that we will probably sign an experienced number 2 to cover David Raya, with Hein remaining as number 3 for a couple more seasons.

James Hilson will probably be moved on, with Ejeheri stepping up to be 1st choice U21 keeper, backed up by Graczyk.

Okonwko (Arthur), will probably be sold on. His performances for Wrexham will probably see him fetch a fee in the region of £5m from a Championship side.

Cooper, Rojas and Okonkwo (Brian), will still all be eligiblefor the U18s next season. One will probably leave on loan to a National League side. We have history of sending the best U18 keeper out on loan so that they can gain some senior experience, so expect Noah Cooper to join someone like St Alban’s City.

It still baffles me why many are saying Ejeheri is 15. Is it a joke (and is then actually tinged with racism that footballers with African heritage look older than they are?), or is it just people not doing their own research?

Enjoy your Wednesday.

Keenos

Arsenal look to spend £138m triggering THREE release clauses this summer

I remember in the early days of the Edu / Arteta partnership, the Brazilian Director of Football was criticised for “only being able to get big deals done if there is a release clause”. This relating to Arsenal signing Thomas Partey after meeting his £45m release clause.

It was unfair criticism on Edu, with fans painting a picture of the way he conducts business based on a single transfer.

Considering that same summer we bought Gabriel Magalhães, and then a year later Ben White, Martin Odegaard, Aaron Ramsdale and Takehiro Tomiyasu, I am not really sure how the narrative became a thing.

Saying that, Arsenal could look to do our entire business this summer (David Raya aside) by triggering release clauses. And this could save the club millions.

Martin Zubimendi – £53m release clause

I have written extensively over the last 18-months about Martin Zubimendi.

In February 2023, I made it clear that if we were priced out of deals for Moises Caicedo and Declan Rice, then the Real Sociedad midfielder should be the man we go for.

Whilst we ended up with Rice, we have to assume that Thomas Partey, Jorginho and Mohamed Elneny will all leave in the summer. That opens up a squad place for a new defensive midfielder.

Zubimendi is a class act.

He is a calm presence who reads the game exceptionally. He does not need to cover a lot of ground, or rely on pace and power due to his fantastic positioning. And in his passing range and ability to create from deep and you have a Xabi Alonso regen.

I think Zubimendi would compliment the more “all-action” Rice in games where we want to play two defensive minded midfielders. He also has the talent to be the sole defensive pivot if Rice is out for any period of time.

That £53m release clause is still rumoured to be active. His recruitment would be a no brainer for me this summer. The only concern is whether he would want to leave his home town club.

Benjamin Sesko – £42m release clause

A year ago we were heavily linked with the Slovenian forward, but ultimately he took that well-travelled path from Red Bull Salzburg to RB Leipzig for £20m. It is a route that the Red Bull Group have used on numerous occasions, giving young starlets a step up into from Austria to Germany before selling them on for an even bigger profit.

Over the years, the likes of  Dayot Upamecano, Dominik Szoboszlai and Naby Keïta have all taken the journey, spending a year or two in Leipzig before getting a bigger move.

Sesko is a good, young striker who reminds me a bit of Dimitar Berbatov. He is very graceful for a big man, full of fantastic touches and flicks. But he is also lacking a bit in the goals department.

Since joining Leipzig, he has failed to become a first team regular, starting less than 50% of their Bundesliga games. Despite not playing regularly, he has scored 7 goals in 1007 minutes of Bundesliga football. That is a goal every 144 minutes.

At just 21-years-old, Sesko would be a “project player”, similar to Rasmus Hojlund. He will probably take a year to get up to speed. That would mean Mikel Arteta would still use Gabriel Jesus as our primary striker, and then spend the next 12 months (or more) moulding the Slovenian into his ideal striker.

There is a lack of top strikers around at the moment, so spending £42m on Sesko and having him as cover might be the best option on the table.

Nico Williams – £43m release clause

I have long held the view that we might only sign one attacking player this summer – that the best option would be to sign a Premier League-ready striker who can come in and have an impact straight away, and then Jesus can be the wide cover to Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Martinelli.

Whilst this option is still on the table, if we signed Sesko than Jesus would still primarily be needed up top. The result is we would then need to go out into the market for a winger.

Nico Williams is an exciting young Spanish winger who can play on either wing and centrally. Two footed, he is quick, direct and has bundles of skill.

At the moment, he does not get the final output his ability deserves, but the underlying figures behind goals and assists would show a player that could explode. A big strong boy, he would suit the Premier League.

My concern is he feels a bit “Nicolas Pepe”. A player that looks to have it all, but then struggles to play in a possession-based system. Like Pepe, Williams is at his best when running into space.

The big difference is Williams will be signed to back up Saka and Martinelli on both wings, and not as a marque signing.

He turns 22 in July, and I would say he is of a similar standard of the likes of Luis Díaz, Cody Gakpo, Mykhailo Mudryk, Jeremy Doku and Moussa Diaby, all of whom cost in and around a similar fee.

When you consider that Brennan Johnson was signed by Spurs for £45m last summer, than £43m for Nico Williams is probably the right price.


Spending £138m on Zubimendi, Sesko and Williams feels like good business. Add the £27 for David Raya and that would take our outlay for summer 2024 to £165m.

Four solid recruits who would all improve our squad and first team, and keep us moving forward.

That outlay will be set off by the departure of Thomas Partey (even if he leaves for free, his salary would pay the salary of two of those mentioned above), Reiss Nelson (recently linked with Bournemouth for £20m+), Aaron Ramsdale (£30m+), Eddie Nketiah (£20m+), Albert Sambi Lokonga (£15m+) and Kieran Tierney (£15m+).

Those sales would probably take us above £100m in incoming fees. We then have the likes of Cedric Soares and Mohamed Elneny, whose contracts are expiring. And maybe Jorginho. Further funds could be raised from Nuno Tavares, Albert Onkonwko and other youth team players out on loan.

This might seem a lot of players heading out, but many are currently on-loan away from the club or not playing a significant part.

It would basically be Zubimendi for Partey, Williams for Nelson and Sesko for Nketiah. The only first team player we would then need to replace is a second choice keeper to back up Raya.

Do not fear the release clause!

Keenos

Jurgen Klopp’s disdain for the FA Cup will not be missed

What a weekend of FA Cup football that was?

Three out of the four games were FA Cup classics. Manchester City v Newcastle the only damp squib.

The FA Cup is the greatest domestic cup competition in the world, and the weekend of football that we have just had shows why. 3 absolute thrillers that could have gone either way. Comebacks and late goals. It was simply thrilling.

And this is why I have a huge dislike for the likes of Jurgen Klopp.

Klopp, and other foreign managers, are merely visitors to this country. They plan to say for 6 or 8 years, maybe 10, and then disappear to their new challenge. But during their stay here, they will continually complain about our game and propose change. Change that they will often not still be here for.

Over the years, Klopp has shown a huge disdain for the FA Cup. He hates the competition.

In his 9 seasons in England, Liverpool have won just 1 FA Cup. That was also the only time they made the final, and the only time they made the semi-final. Yesterday was just his 2nd FA Cup quarter-final appearance in 9 years. In 6 of the 9 years Liverpool have failed to get past the 4th round.

Klopp has openly spoken out about how many games we play in England. He has been vocal against us have 2 domestic cup competitions, he has demanded a winter break and questioned the need for cup replays. He suggested the Premier League be reduced in numbers.

The simple answer is if he wants a 34 team league, just 1 cup competition and a winter break, he should have stayed in Germany. But no. He wanted to come to England, to earn the Premier League salary, and then has done everything he can to turn the English structure into the German.

Had he planned to spend his career in England ala Arsene Wenger, you could kind of understand his wish to change the game, improve it in his vision. But Klopp is disappearing after less than 9 seasons. He does not care about English football. About the FA Cup.

Jurgen Klopp and his complaints about our game will not be missed.

The FA Cup is a brilliant competition. The authorities need to protect it against managers like Klopp who only care about the 6-9 years they will be here, and not the 100-years that went before and the 100-years that will come after.

A final note on this.

With Klopp now out of the FA Cup, that leaves his honours board with Liverpool as 1 League title, 1 Champions League, 1 FA Cup, 2 League Cups. 5 trophies in 9 years (with a chance they win 2 more). I am not sure he has been the rip-roaring success some make out.

As expected with us being in the middle of nearly 3 weeks without an Arsenal game, there really is not much club news about.

We bought a 16-year-old centre back over the weekend. Braydon Clarke went straight into the U18 team that then thrashed Crystal Palace 8-3. 16-year-old Chido Obi scored 4.

I will be honest, Obi is someone I have never heard of before, but scoring 4 in a game will always lead me to research a player a bit more.

A quick Google shows he joined in 2022 and Danish U17 international. He has 8 goals in 10 games in the U18 Premier League. At 6′ 2″, it is up for debate whether he is a danger at that level because he is a big boy, or because he actually has talent. One to keep an eye on I guess.

The other thing I found out today during the research on the game is that London Colney has been renamed the Sobha Realty Training Centre. The news of the sponsorship deal completely passed me by in February.

The deal is reportedly worth £15m a year, and the luxury Dubai-based real estate company will sponsor the training ground and training kit until the end of the 2027/28 season. In simple terms, the new deal pays the transfer fee for or a new £75m player this summer.

Enjoy your Monday!

Keenos