Tag Archives: Chelsea

Things about to get a lot easier for The Arsenal

Unai Emery was handed a horrendous start to Arsenal’s new dawn the Premier League fixtures were drawn.

Manchester City and Chelsea. The last two champions. Winners of 4 of the last 5 Premier League seasons.

It was always going to be a thought start, and Arsenal have ended up with the results that many expected.

Two defeats from the opening two games.

Prior to the opening day game of the season, Arsenal had beaten Manchester City just once one 7 games – that FA Cup Semi-final.

Arsenal have not beaten Chelsea at Stamford Bridge since 2011 – when Robin van Persie scored a hat trick.

So anyone expecting 6 points from the opening games was deluded.

There was hope.

City and Chelsea both had a lot of players at the World Cup, and Chelsea had a crisis summer with a new manager coming in late. But the hope did not materialise as Arsenal lost both games.

Against City, Arsenal struggled; but every side is going to struggle versus the Champions.

The Chelsea game had a lot more positives about it.

Whilst we were still shaky at the back; we were electric upfront and could have scored 4 or 5 if the players realised it was not rugby and you have to put the ball under the bar.

Matteo Guendouzi continued his fine start to an Arsenal shirt. A physical presence in the midfield, he shows nice passing to get alongside defensive prowess.

The same old faces were the ones to late us down again.

Petr Cech could have done more with two of their goals. Hector Bellerin ran out of steam on the right, and Granit Xhaka was poor in the middle. The game passes Mesut Ozil by.

It is time to make a decision on Cech. He has had a rough first two games and does not look comfortable playing out of the back. With new signing Bernd Leno waiting in the wings, it is probably time for a swap.

As for Bellerin, I feel sorry for him a bit.

On another day, if the finishing was better, he would’ve come away from the game with a hat trick of assists. Instead he was horribly exposed towards the end, with Chelsea’s winner coming from his flank.

The problem is under Emery’s system he does not have the cover of a winger. He is expect to defend and attack, and it is draining.

Mauricio Pochettino up the road uses his full backs in a similar way, but he rotated them almost every game.

If Emery is to ask his full backs to bet up and down the wing every game, he is going to have to expect them to run out of gas.

In Stephan Lichsteiner Arsenal have an experienced, dependable right back who surely needs to come in for Bellerin, even if it is just for one game.

The middle of the park is a bit of a concern.

Xhaka was horrendous, but Emery played down taking him off at half time by saying:

‘It was a tactical decision because he has the yellow card also.

‘I think we don’t take risks with this yellow card and also to give the chance to another player in the match.’

On came summer signing Lucas Torreira and alongside 19-year old Guendouzi they looked an ok partnership.

The concern when playing that pair is neither is a good a passer as Xhaka, and you feel we might have trouble transitioning the ball from defence through the midfield.

I would like to see Xhaka alongside Torreira, but also think Guendouzi has done little wrong to lose his place.

It is a conundrum and it might take a few games to work out where our best pairing is.

8 of the next 9 fixtures are a lot more comfortable than the 2 we started the season with. These will go a long way to showing the progress Emery has made with this time.

I am not too concerned with the start we have made.

The truth is Man City and Chelsea was always going to be a tough first 2 games.

Had Arsenal played the likes of Fulham and Newcastle, we’d probably be top

Plenty of positives to take. Still expect us to be top 4.

Keenos

Unai Emery’s unbeaten start at Arsenal continues

With a little over a week to go before the start of the 2018/19 Premier League season, Arsenal face a good test against Chelsea – the side they face 2nd game up in two weeks time.

Arsenal put out the stronger XI, with just Bern Leno, Lucas Torreira, Granit Xhaka and Aaron Ramsey missing. Chelsea were without the likes of Eden Hazard, Thibaut Courtois, N’Golo Kante, Willian and Olivier Giroud.

Arsenal went 1-0 down to a 5th minute corner.

Unai Emery has changed defensive systems – from zonal to man marking. Both systems have their relative strengths and weaknesses, and yesterday we saw the weakness with man marking.

Emile Smith Rowe was a late replacement for Aaron Ramsey – who withdrew 5 minutes before kick off. Antonio Rudiger was “his man”.

Having been told he was playing just a couple minutes before kick off, 18-year old Smith Rowe would have simply been told to pick up Ramsey’s man – Rudiger. Chelsea exposed the miss match as the German’s greater experience, height and strength saw him easily lose the young defender before an excellent header into the bottom corner.

Having grown up at Arsenal – where the same system & tactics is used up and the youth teams – I would be surprised if Smith Rowe has ever had to man mark someone. Should Emery have shuffled who is picking up who when Ramsey hobbled off? Perhaps. But he literally had a couple of minutes between the injury and the players heading back out into the pitch to start the game.

You can not expect Unai Emery to change things defensively overnight, and the side will have to keep working on man marking.

The defence was a concern, as Chelsea continually exposed Arsenal’s high line with the excellent Callum Hudson-Odoi finding a lot of space behind Hector Bellerin. Hudson-Odoi set for a brilliant career on loan at Norwich, Hull City and Vitesse.

The performances of both Bellerin and Saed Kolasinac is a worry.

Yes, it was only pre-season, but both look poor defensively, with Chelsea getting a lot of joy in behind them. If Arsenal are going to play with Mesut Ozil and Henrikh Mkhitaryan as the inside-widemen, Bellerin and Kolasinac will not get too much cover. Both need to improve and quickly.

It was the high line that Chelsea exploited time and again – something many teams have exploited in the last few years.

To play a high line you need a keep comfortable standing on the edge of the box, acting as a sweeper. Petr Cech is not comfortable there, preferring to stick to his line. That then creates too much for someone like Cesc Fabregas to play the ball in and Hudson-Odoi to run on to.

Arsenal went into half time 1-0 down. It should have been two had Alvaro Morata not had his penalty saved by Cech. It could have been 3 or with the clean cut chances Chelsea had.

Chelsea just looked sharper. Their passing neater, winning every 50/50, quicker to every second ball.

Arsenal did not look at full pace, they lack both physical and mental sharpness. Has Emery’s tough regime caught up on the players? I expect us to taper the sessions off as the season approaches.

Another factor is jet lag.

It has to be remember Arsenal have just spent a week in Singapore. They would have only landed back in the UK on Sunday afternoon, trained on Monday before flying out to Dublin on Tuesday. It would have been draining and looked like it took its toll mentally.

In the second half Arsenal did look sharper. They looked more settled at the back and created chances going forward, and we well deserved the last minute equaliser by Alexandre Lacazette. The Frenchman showing his natural goal scoring instincts being in the right place for a tap in.

Some excellent penalties saw Arsenal “win” the game.

Despite it being a fairly average pre-season showing, there were some solid performances. Most notably from Matteo Guendouzi who continued his fine form. It is incredible to think he is still just 19.

Despite being at fault for the corner, Emile Smith Rowe also had a good game. He didn’t look out of place, created some chances and was busy. The Europa League will be an exciting competition for him next year.

It is a concern that Aaron Ramsey went off injured again.

The Welshman has played over 30 league games just once in 5 years; and last year appeared in just 22 games. It is his injuries that is probably stopping the club giving him exactly what he wants.

As he looks to start the new season injured again, what will that mean for his future, his new contract?

Kolasinac leaving the ground on crutches is also a concern.

He had his injury problems at Schalke and they have continued at Arsenal. In Nacho Monreal, we have a top left back ready to step in, but at 32 years old and with 1 year left on his contract, this season will probably be the Spaniards last. A new left back will probably be on a scrap of paper in Sven Mislintat’s handbag.

Bellerin is also a concern, and you have to wonder how many chances he will be given before Emery takes him out for the experienced Stephan Lichtsteiner.

Overall the International Championship Cup has provided some tough tests for Arsenal as we faced Atlético Madrid, PSG and Chelsea.

Unbeaten so far, it is off to Stockholm next to face Lazio on Saturday. After which it will be straight back to England for a weeks training in British Summer Time before the first game of the season against Manchester City on Sunday.

In between Lazio and Manchester City we have the small matter of the transfer window closing.

I am off to Suffolk for a long weekend so will probably miss the game v Lazio, so see you on the other side.

Keenos

Premier League Top 6: Signings so far

The Transfer window shuts in less than 2 weeks time on Thursday 9th August.

This year, Premier League clubs have voted to shut the window for incoming players before the season starts, however players can still leave to Spain, France, Italy, Germany, etc.

With a little under 2 weeks to go, on a boring Saturday morning, shall we have a little look at the transfer dealings of the top 6:

Arsenal have done the most business, which should be expected considering they finished at the bottom of the pile last season.

Whilst Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City & Manchester United have all spent big on singular players, Arsenal have spread their spending across 5 players, bringing in a mixture of youth and experience.

The biggest spenders of the summer have been Liverpool with over £160million spent. It should kill off all the defending of Liverpool that they do not spend as much as those above them.

The majority of their cash has come from the sale of Coutinho in January. Keita and Fabinho coming in has to be offset by Oxlade-Chamberlain being out for 12 months and Emre Can leaving on a free.

For me, their best signing is Shaqiri. He is a brilliant back up player and game changing substitute. A steal at just £13m.

I do not really understand Manchester City‘s transfer dealings. It probably shows that they have more money than sense.

They already have Leroy Sane, Raheem Sterling, Bernado Silva, Kevin de Bruyne and Davild Silva who can play play in the 3 attacking positions behind Sergio Aguero or Gabriel Jesus. Spending £60m on Riyad Mahrez just seems excessive.

I guess the thing with Manchester City is having won the league by 19 points, losing just two games, any big money signing could have been deemed “excessive.”

It feels a bit like Chelsea ~2007 when their squad was so strong that they ended up buying players just to stop rivals signing them.

Fred could turn out to be the player that Manchester United need to get the best out of Paul Pogba. Pairing him with Nemanja Matic and the Frenchman looks like a solid central midfield.

£19million for a left back who has played not much more first team football than me seems silly, but the proof will be in the pudding.

Chelsea‘s business could be about who leaves rather than who comes in. The money seems to have dried up for the club, and they seemed to wasted a lot of time and money on removing Antonio Conte and getting in Maurizio Sarri.

Taking into account that they finished 5th, just 7 points above Arsenal, you would expect them to have bought a lot more than a central midfielder. How much money have they wasted on central midfielders since signing N’Golo Kante and letting Matic leave (Drinkwater, Bakayoko, Barkley, Jorginho)?

With the futures of Eden Hazard, Willian and Thibaut Courtois in the air, it feels like they are waiting to see who leaves before bringing anyone in. It could be a deadline day dash for them.

As for Tottenham, they have bought no one. In this game, you stand still you actually go backwards. With Arsenal and Liverpool bringing in a lot of quality players, they could quickly find themselves struggling next season.

Clearly the £1bn stadium is impacting their transfer dealings. They have signed their key players to new contracts, but their over reliance on Harry Kane, Cristian Erickson and Dele Alli remains.

I would not be surprised if they do not actually sign anyone.


What I will find interesting next year is the progress of the 4 defensive midfielders Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester United and Liverpool signed.

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Keenos