Tag Archives: Arsène Wenger

Stoke Away and the Ramblings of an Arsenal Traveller

The head is cleared, the alcohol now out of my system, the disappointment has subsided. Up until now, I really have not had the energy to write anything and I have struggled for inspiration recently.

This lack of inspiration is not just due to the defeat to Stoke on Saturday, but my general apathy towards football at the moment. The game in my heart is slowly dying.

I can handle the poor performances on the pitch – usually – that is part of football, and something you have to accept. But the poor performances on top of the cost of ticket prices, on top of the cost of away travel, on top of awkward kick off times, and more recently, on top of not being able to get a beer at half time, I am starting to wonder why I do it.

With my general apathy to the game currently, when we do get a result like yesterday, it really does knock me for six. I have no problems with a defeat, and even of a shocking performance, but this season, more than any, poor performances have grated me.

As a fan traveling up and down the country, you put a lot in. A lot of hours traveling, a lot of money, your sell your soul to the club. You basically live and work just to spend your weekend in a crap northern town, losing your whole weekend to traveling and hangovers.

You learn to take the rough with the smooth. For every 6-0 away to Chelsea, you have a 5-2 at the same ground. For every 5-1 at Anfield, you have 1989. For every League Cup loss to Birmingham, you have victories against Hull. It is a tough existence. A rollercoaster.

Luckily we support The Arsenal, a successful side, so we do have more up’s then downs. We can quite easily go 4/5 months with seeing a defeat on the road. This however also makes losses hurt more. You are used to winning, not used to loosing.

Support Burnley? You know before leaving the home that you are likely to lose. You have not built your hopes up. It is a case of limiting the damage. Lose by the odd goal, you are happy. Score a goal but lose, not bad. Take the lead? You are ecstatic. Grab a draw? It’s party time. Win? It is the best day of your year. And win away to a big side, hell, it is better than when your kids are born.

Whereas at Arsenal, even a draw on the road is disappointing. Had we snatched the equalizer on Saturday, it would not have changed much. We should not be drawing at Stoke. They are games a fan supporting a club such as Arsenal expect to win. The failure hurts double.

But Stoke away, a defeat should have been predictable.
23 Oct 1996
Stoke City v Arsenal
Draw
1-1

01 Nov 2008
Stoke City v Arsenal
Lose
2-1

24 Jan 2010
Stoke City v Arsenal
Lose
3-1

27 Feb 2010
Stoke City v Arsenal
Win
1-3

08 May 2011
Stoke City v Arsenal
Lose
3-1

28 Apr 2012
Stoke City v Arsenal
Draw
1-1

26 Aug 2012
Stoke City v Arsenal
Draw
0-0

01 Mar 2014
Stoke City v Arsenal
Lose
1-0

06 Dec 2014
Stoke City v Arsenal
Lose
3-2

Arsene Wenger has won once from nine attempts in Stoke . It truly is a shocking record. It makes me wonder why I traveled up to the game with so much hope. It clearly is silly. They are clearly a bogey team to us.

Why so few wins? Who knows. Sometimes you just become someones bunny, a term iconised by Shane Warne who’s bunny was Darryl Cullinan. In 7 tests, Warne took the South African batsmen’s wicket 12 times. It was unprecedented.

Stoke at the weekend were actually a double bunny. In head to head between Wenger and Mark Hughes, Wenger has lost 6 and drawn 2 . He has never beaten a Mark Hughes away side.

What is odd is when you then look at the home record, it is the exact opposite.

From 8 games at the Emirates (or Highbury) Arsene Wenger has won all 8. I doubt if 2 asides in the Premier League have such contrasting home and away records.

It can be tough being an away fan. But what is for certain, next time we travel to Stoke, I will be like a Burnley fan. I will expect defeat. I will expect nothing from the game. I will go home happy if we get a draw!

Keenos

Wenger’s Future, Passenger’s and January Signings

Arsene Wenger’s Future

The future is looking bleak for Arsene Wenger. Even the most ardent Wenger Loyalist will now be struggling to defend him.

Over the years, I have had a lot of abuse thrown at me for backing Wenger. And I still believe I was correct to back him.

We faced a financial puzzle over the last 8 years, and he was the best man to steer the ship. Yes, it might not have been a trophy laden period, with more disappointments and scoreline deficits than in my living memory, but he saw us through the tricky period.

That tricky period should have come to an end this summer. With the FA Cup in the bag, we had an opportunity to start the next era of the club. We now had the financial muscle to enable us to challenge for the top players (a promise by the board to the fans to justify the move) and challenge for titles and European success.

Instead, a bright start to the transfer window left us short and deflated. And what has followed is very much ‘same again.’ Inability to beat bigger sides (Even weakened big sides such as Manchester United), disappointing results against lesser sides and about to finish 2nd in our Champions League group.

We sit in November, with top 4 now being and an FA Cup run being are only targets. It is just not good enough.

When the side went 1 down against Manchester United, you saw the fear in the players eyes. Despite dominating, and being behind with the opponents not yet having a shot on target, we looked beaten. The players lacked the self belief to come back and win. They had no ideas. The only tactic seemed to be ‘give the ball to Sanchez or Oxlade-Chamberlain and let them run’. There was no clear plan.

If the players on the pitch are better than their opponents, and they fail to win, there is only one person you can blame. The manager. And Wenger has to take the blame for this defeat, amongst others.

It is time for Wenger to go? Yes. That is unquestionable. Where my opinion does change to many who blog here, or post on the Facebook page is the immediacy for him to go.

I personally see no worth in him leaving now. No manager worth his salt is available in November/December. To get rid of Wenger now will only make the next manager’s job harder.

Getting rid now would probably see us having to employ a caretaker manager to get us through the rest of the season. Whilst under Wenger, we will likely still achieve top 4, I do not believe that to be the case with a caretaker.

I still remember 1995 when we got rid of George Graham. In came Stewart Houston as caretaker manager. And we went on to lose 6 of the next 7 games. Could history repeat itself if Steve Bould came in? Very possibly.

A failure to get Champions League football would leave the next manager with a hard task. He would have to spend more on players to attract them, but have less to spend due to no Champions League football. It would not be a good scenario to start off the next era of Arsenal Football Club.

Wenger must go, but for me, personally, it is at the end of the season.

Too many passenger’s

At this moment in time, the current squad has too many passengers. Too many players living off either past glories, or potential. It is not an ideal situation to be in.

Having too many passenger’s was a key reason for the defeat against Manchester United.

Wojciech Szczesny and Per Mertesacker have taken a step backwards this season. Yes, they have been effected by the issues in defence, but neither has stood up to be a leader.

The midfield is concerning me. I have been a fan of Aaron Ramsey for a long time, but he seems to have got lost within himself.

Last year it was no just his goals that impressed me (although these got the headlines) but his overall midfield play. He covered a lot of distance and got through a lot of work.

In the Premier League last season he averaged 3.3 tackles a game. Currently, he averages just 1.8. Now whether this is due to the tactics which is seeing him get pushed further forward, or due to him only looking to score goals rather than get involved, it just is not good enough.

He is also attempting 10% less passes than 2013/14. I would say he needs to be dropped to shake him up, but our current lack of midfielders and with Jack Wilshire’s latest injury, that will not happen.

As for Santi Cazorla, part of me wishes the stories of him being homesick this summer and wanting to leave were true. After a brilliant 1st season, he was average last, his FA Cup free kick papering over the cracks. He has looked no better this season. He did a job for us, but we now need to be buying better. I would not be too surprised if this is his last season with us.

Outwide it is just as worrying. I am struggling to understand the hype around Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain. Yes he has talent, and yes he is still young, but his idea of playing football seems to be to get the ball, trying to take on everyone, then lose it.

It reminds me of when you play FIFA, in the mode where you only control one player. You end up calling for the ball every time, getting it and then trying to take on the world. It never works. Chamberlain needs to learn this and become more of a team player.

As for Danny Welbeck, he is starting to become a worry, and perhaps starting to show why Louis van Gaal got rid. He has scored just 2 league goals this season in 9 games and not scored in his last 6. The worry is he just does not look like scoring.

This is way to many players out of form or just not good enough to carry. And does not even include the likes of Flamini, Rosicky, Podolski, Diaby and Sanogo who should all be got rid of next season.

The squad needs an overhaul. Again.

And this leads me on to my final thoughts…

January Transfer’s

So we all agree Wenger’s time is running out. And we all agree the squad is short. The question is, do we then give Wenger money to spend in January?

We reportedly have upwards of £60m to spend, but do we give it to a manager on his last legs, to buy players who the next man might not want? Or do we limp through the season, make the change in the summer, and then add the £60m+ we currently have to the additional funds we will have next summer, giving the new manager a £150m+ ‘war chest’.

I know what I’d prefer….

Keenos

 

A brighter future without Wenger

Arsene Wenger should have left the club a winner as he bought us huge success. Last seasons FA Cup triumph was the perfect opportunity for both the board & Arsene to part company on a high. It would have left the club in a great position on and off the field. Instead he was offered 3 more years at a huge expense. Not talking money either.

Arsenal should be competing at the very top and 100% should be challenging for the top trophies. I have felt for some time that Wenger can not deliver us that.

He was once was a great manager. One that could compete. He was rightly worshiped around Highbury by many. He is now derided by most around the Emirates.

We are currently a club without leaders. We have no one that the players can look up to in the dressing room no one that commands success. The dressing room is a playground of jovial social media pictures at best.

Arsene has not changed and will not change & that there is the sole problem. His ability to adapt to modern football & its philosophy he is now tactically inept.

Arsenal is no longer a football club that commands success. We are a business that if we are lucky enough might win the Christmas raffle from time to time (Fa Cup).

Is it all Wengers doing? No

The board had the opportunity back last year to move Arsenal FC on to the next level. The failed to take it. The reasons I can think as to why they failed is that they banked on future success on the back of a fa cup win, but failed to remember the previous 8 years.

We will continue the season winning the odd game playing good football occasionally, then January will come & go with the usual hope of who can buy & then be palmed off with “we never had enough time.”

We will possibly retain the cup ( big ask ) and be knocked out the CL as usual.

Can the board ask the question to Wenger? Can they demand he does better? No.

By asking thos questions, they would be questioning themselves. Arsenal have 3 more years of ups and downs. I for one know where I stand. The future of Arsenal success will not be with Wenger at the helm.
Mr Glen Townsend