Tag Archives: Arsenal

The Arsenal 2020/21 Season Preview

Arsenal kick off their 2020/21 Premier League season with a trip to Craven Cottage to face newly promoted Fulham on Saturday.

Having secured another trophy after beating Liverpool on penalties in the Community Shield, Mikel Arteta and his Arsenal side will be brimming with confidence ahead of the new campaign.

Read on below for our season preview and predictions ahead of Arsenal’s opener.

The domestic fixture list has handed the Gunners some tricky games from the off – with trips to Liverpool, Manchester City and Manchester United in their first seven matches – but this is something Arteta and his players should relish, following their march to FA Cup glory to end last season. Indeed, Arteta has set up the team to counter-attack with pace and precision when his side see less of the ball, meaning this tough run of away fixtures could end up playing into Arsenal’s hands.

Arsenal have also recruited smartly given the current climate of the transfer market. Willian has arrived on a free transfer from Chelsea and another loan deal for Dani Ceballos has been agreed with Real Madrid. However, the biggest acquisition in north London is that of Gabriel Magalhaes, who sealed a £27m switch from Lille earlier this month. After weeks of speculation, the Brazilian chose Emirates Stadium over Napoli and Manchester United, his arrival representing a major coup for the Gunners.

Gabriel’s presence alongside 19-year-old William Saliba, who is now officially an Arsenal player have completed a season-long loan with Saint-Etienne, could form a familiar partnership at the back for many years to come. With two young players filling a position of need, the club look to have addressed an area that has been their downfall for far too long.

The purchase of Willian will increase Arsenal’s creative threat. His quality ball control and dribbling make him the ideal player to operate in the half-spaces of midfield, where he can help break down deep defensive blocks, something Arsenal struggled to do last term. His proven Premier League experience will also help the development of a number of youngsters in the first-team squad.

On the subject of youth, the development of academy players under his guidance has been one of the biggest positives of Arteta’s time in charge of Arsenal. Bukayo Saka has been nominated for the PFA Young Player of the Year, whilst fellow Hale End graduates

Ainsley Maitland-Niles, Reiss Nelson, Eddie Nketiah and Joe Willock have all impressed Arteta and his coaching staff. Add in Emile Smith-Rowe, who is poised for first-team action after a successful loan spell at Huddersfield, and the future looks to be bright for Arsenal’s young guns.

Although Arsenal’s youth prospects indicate promise, there are a plethora of fundamentals issues on the pitch that must be fixed if Arsenal want to achieve Champions League qualification. Arteta’s men conceded more goals from set-pieces than any other team in the league last season, so greater defensive communication from dead-ball situations must be instilled. Despite the world-class finishing ability of talisman Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang – who must sign a new contract for Arsenal to progress – the Gunners recorded their lowest goals total since 1995-96 last term, scoring a paltry 57 times in 38 league games, averaging a mere 1.47 goals per game.

An issue that threatens the cohesiveness of Arteta’s Arsenal squad is the deadline of the summer transfer window, which is not until 5 October. This could be problematic because any new signings Arsenal make could have missed up to a month of Premier League action by the time they arrive in north London, potentially making it harder for them to be integrated into the squad. However, this could also help Arteta move on players should their value be met, such as Hector Bellerin, Matteo Guendouzi, Lucas Torreira and Emiliano Martinez. This would also help Arteta raise the funds he requires to strengthen in other areas, with Arsenal maintaining interest in midfield duo Thomas Partey and Houssem Aouar.

It will be an intriguing season for Arsenal fans to see how the team fares in Arteta’s first full season at the helm. An improvement on 56 points and an eight-place finish is to be expected but with Liverpool and Manchester City streets ahead and Chelsea splashing £250m on new signings, it makes it difficult to see the Gunners finishing any higher than fourth. Although Arsenal have developed a newfound steel and resolve under Arteta, this side is still some way off of being serial challengers for Champions League football.

Premier League predictions:

Zac: 5th
Keenos: 3rd
GC: 3rd
AM: 4th

Zac Campbell

Mohamed Elneny still has role to play at Arsenal

Mohamed Elneny could remain at Arsenal for the upcoming season, and I for one am not overly annoyed.

Formation

It is looking like Mikel Arteta will favour 433 once he has all the pieces of the puzzle in place.

That means Arsenal will need 6 central midfielders to cover the 3 positions – and a mixture of out and defensive, box to box and more creative players.

At the club we currently have:

Granit Xhaka (Defensive)
Dani Ceballos (Box to box / Creative)
Lucas Torreira (Box 2 box / Defensive)
Matteo Guendouzi (Box to box)
Mohamed Elneny (Defensive / Box to Box)
Joe Willock (Box to box)

So 6 into 3 goes well – although that 6 does lack creativity.

We are then heavily linked with Thomas Partey (box to box / defensive) and Houssem Aouar (creative).

Partey would be a “like for like “ swap with Lucas Torreira, whilst Houssem Aouar would offer Arteta a more creative option  over Matteo Guendouzi.

That would then see us with:

Granit Xhaka (Defensive)
Dani Ceballos (Box to box / Creative)
Thomas Partey (Box 2 box / Defensive)
Houssem Aouar (Creative)
Mohamed Elneny (Defensive / Box to Box)
Joe Willock (Box to box)
Willian can also play deeper, but he is also more of a creative outlet rather than being defensive or box to box.

Elneny would provide good cover for Xhaka in the middle.

Value

Fact is, Arsenal do not raise much money by selling Mohamed Elneny.

I am sure the club would rather keep Lucas Torreira and sell the Egyptian, but you are looking at one player raising close to £25million, whilst the other less than £10million.

Elneny would not provide us with the cash needed to push through a deal for Partey or Auoar.

Contract

Likewise, Elneny is only on a reported £50,000 a week, which does not really pay for much these days.

Best Xhaka back up

If we sold Elneny alongside Torreira and Guendouzi; and signed the two aforementioned player, we would have 5 midfielders. That feels light.

So could we get better than Elneny for the transfer fee he would command, and the wages he is on? Probably not.

An argument could be made that Ainsley Maitland-Niles could be the 6th midfielder, but his services might be required elsewhere. Likewise some might see Willian as being the 6th midfield. But then we do not really have the defensive cover for Xhaka.

It would mean either playing Partey, Ceballos or Willock in the middle of the 3.

This would restrict both players who like to roam and press. The middle man needs to be fairly static.

Elneny between the two would be our strongest midfield if Xhaka was out

Professionalism

There has never been a hint of trouble around Elneny though out his career. He is a solid professional.

He is the exact character and ability you would want in your 2nd string.

Squad Balance

To build a squad, you need great balance – in position and ability.

There is no point having a midfield entirely made up of Xavi’s, you need a Bousquet. Likewise a midfield of Bousquet’s needs a Xavi.

You can not have a squad of 25 superstars. The ego’s will clash. You need some players who accept that they are second string, and happy to do so.

Elneny will provide the midfield with some balance, and would also understand he is a squad player, not a starter.


He might be one of those players that many have on the “sell” list, but Mo Elneny is also a player that still has a role to play in Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal.

Keenos

Arsenal’s lack of transfer movement only “frustrating” for those who profit off speculation

Morning all.

Todays blog comes from South West trains as I commute to my office for the first time since March.

I see a lot of moaning across social media this morning about Arsenal’s “lack of transfer activity”.

It seems that if you are not demanding the club spend £100m+ on new players, you get labelled as “unambitious” and “accepting mediocracy”. This is simply not the case.

The majority of fans realise the way of the world. That despite Stan Kroenke being worth $8.3b, it does not mean he has 100’s of millions in cash that he can pump into Arsenal.

Let’s remember, Kroenke has had to take out loans to complete the LA Rams stadium, KSE had to take out a loan to buy out Alisher Usmanov and further loans to then loan Arsenal money to pay off the stadium debt.

Most billionaires are not “cash rich”. Their wealth is held in property, investments, businesses, etc.

Fans also realise that we run a self-sufficient model, and that is the best way to ensure Arsenal have a short, medium and long term future. We want our kids, our grand kids, to have an Arsenal to support.

Ultimately, who actually has done a lot of business this summer?

Chelsea have spent big, but they were always going to having come off a transfer ban.

Leeds have done similar business to what the likes of Aston Villa and Fulham have done in previous years.

They have spent over a decade outside of the Premier League and have a Championship budget. Even with a lack of fans in grounds, they will see their revenue increase for 2020/21, so have money to spend.

Then comes Tottenham, who have spent £65m. But £32m of that was on Giovani Lo Celso, a deal agreed back in January. That deal was financed by the January sale of Cristian Ericksen.

Without that transfer, they would have spent just £32.4m, or just £20.1m net.

People have moaned that “Wovles have spent £40m on a teenager”.

Firstly, it is not what you spend but who you buy (I would not want Arsenal spending £40m on a player with a dozen first team games under his belt – also I imagine it is only £40m if he goes on the win the Ballon D’or).

Secondly, Wolves have received £34.5m in transfer fees this summer. So it is not a case of “their owners are investing”. They are in the same situation as almost every other club – having to sell to buy.

Every Premier League club will be looking to balance the books this summer.

Arsenal have 32 senior players. Only an idiot would think that we could bring in another 2 or 3 players without firstly having sold the likes of Lucas Torreira, Rob Holding or Matteo Guendouzi.

It is easy to sit there are say “look how much they have spent” or “why are Arsenal not more active” whilst sitting in a position of ignorance because you do not actually understand how things work.

It is also easy for fans to forget that Arsenal have signed 4 players this summer: Gabriel, Willian, Pablo Mari & Cedric Soares, whilst William Saliba has also finally joined the club for last summers transfer.

Arsenal are also being linked with less players than normal.

This probably indicates that:

  1. We know who are targets are
  2. Our targets are already public knowledge
  3. The media know linking us to other players is pointless

I imagine those getting frustrated by a perceived lack of transfer action, and very little speculation are only annoyed because they can not profit from regurgitating the same news.

Releasing your 20th blog on Thomas Partey no longer generates the hits!

Kind of linking in to transfers, there is an interesting article on the BBC about what Premier League teams have done with season tickets for 2020/21.

It is interesting to see those clubs who have already charged their fans full price for a season ticket (Burnley, Everton, Southampton, West Ham), whilst other clubs are also not giving fans the option to opt out for the season.

Those telling fans “renew or lose it” include Burnley, Crystal Palace, Everton, Leicester City, Southampton, Tottenham and West Ham.

Last bit of news if you have not already seen it, we got drawn away to Leicester in the League Cup. The winners will be whoever takes it the most serious.

Have a good Monday

Keenos