Tag Archives: She Wore

Arsenal are back!

So what have you done in the last 21 days?

That is how long it has been since Arsenal last player a Premier League game. I imagine most of us can not even remember who it was against?

We beat Watford 3-0 at home. And tomorrow we break the 21 day fast with Stoke visiting Islington. Maybe Arsenal gave up football for lent? Happy Easter All (or Happy Chocolate Egg Day for those who complain about such things).

In that time, Arsenal have played AC Milan, a nice easy victory putting us into the Quarter Final of the Europa League. But with no FA Cup football, the Leicester game postponed due to their exploits in the FA Cup, and the international break, it has been a long time since we last had a domestic game.

You hear managers and pundits call for a winter break. If my boredom over the last 3 weeks is anything to go by, then I want more football, not less.

We have Jurgen Klopp’s agent coming out saying “English football is so hard. With no winter break it is exhausting.” Well Jurgen has just had near enough 3 weeks off without football. Was he not able to relax then? I imagine he is just looking fore excuses on what could be his 3rd season in English football, at Liverpool, without a trophy. And he spent £40m on Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and has improved him so much.

Anyway, I digress.

Games like tomorrow do worry me. It is like the first day of the season all over again.

After a long-ish rest, with some players flying around the globe to play for their countries, others trying to keep their motivation on the training ground in Colney, you never quite know the form of the players who will come back.

Stoke are often labelled one of Arsenal’s bogey teams. This is incorrect. Results between the two are massively Jekyll & Hyde.

Stoke usually win up north, Arsenal usually win in the capital.

You have to go back to 1975 for the last time Stoke beat Arsenal in North London.

Before Arsenal’s defeat earlier this season (a 1-0 defeat in which Arsenal had a perfectly legitimate equaliser ruled out), we  were on a run of 5 games without defeat against Stoke – 4 wins and a draw. Whilst no game in the Premier League is a given, it is a fairly routine game back.

I am off to the pub. Have a good day.

Keenos

Save the Gooner!

Technology is changing the world, but some things are worth saving.

Black Cabs, for example, are a London institution. Whilst technology companies have attempted to muscle in on them, cutting rates, running at losses covered by hedge funds, etc, they are something that needs to be protected. The service of a black cab is second to none.

In the same way Black Cabs have been in a war with technology giants, the way football content is absorbed has also been changed by technology.

The rise of blogging (thanks for reading), pod casts and YouTube have taken the focus away from the Fanzine.

Fanzines will always be part of me early footballing memories, alongside the peanuts man at Highbury.

Highbury High, Up Your Arse, 1-down 2-1 up, Gooner Fanzine, get your Gooner Fanzine are the cries that sit in my memory.

Sadly, with technology changes, most of these have now stopped printing, but the Gooner Fanzine has stayed strong, until now. And it needs your help.

To put it bluntly, if they do not get 1,000 subscribers, they will shut down. to put this into perspective, we have a reach on Facebook and Twitter of over 100,000 followers. The Gooner Fanzine needs just 1% of our followers to sign up. To pay £30 for a yearly subscription.

The below is from the Save the Gooner campaign on their website.


Okay people, so a good number of correspondents by email, tweeters and people I see face to face have been asking… how close are we getting to the 1,000 necessary advance subscribers for next season?

As I write, and I haven’t had time to tot up the additional ones that have come in over the weekend, we have between 650 and 700 paid up readers. Final decision will be made on the Easter Bank Holiday Monday (2nd April), the day when issue 271 – the final one this season – goes to press.

So what are we going to do between now and then to get the extra 300 odd? As well as our own efforts, we’ve had great support from both Arseblog and Arsenal Fan TV to get the message out, but now, it’s down to us.

So the next two days sees yours truly email something in the region of 10,000 plus email addresses we have collated over the years, and then sit back and see what the response is. I need to get cracking on that as in terms of bulk emailing, I need to be a bit clever to get around the gmail restrictions on sending out these things – and there is a chance that if you have already subscribed by online bank transfer or cheque you will also get this email – in which case apologies and please ignore it. Anyhow, I’ll simply reproduce the text of the email below and if you wish to commit – even better. It’s over to you good people – if enough of you want it, The Gooner will survive beyond the end of this season!

Here’s the email which you could well be getting over the next 48 hours…

Subject: Urgent– Save The Gooner Fanzine (deadline end of March)

Dear Arsenal Fan,

We are sending this email to you because we have your address from:

  1. an email to The Gooner,
  2. a payment to The Gooner at some point in recent years,
  3. you have completed the annual online Gooner survey or
  4. you have been cc’d on an Arsenal related email that we have also received.

Many apologies for filling your inbox if you are not interested, but this is a needs must situation as we try to raise enough subscribers to continue The Gooner fanzine in print form after the end of the current season.

Additionally, it is possible that you are one of the 650-700 people who have already committed to The Gooner next season by paying in advance for a subscription. If so, many apologies. We have tried to filter out those who have subscribed, but there will doubtless be a few that slipped through the net, given the number of addresses this is being sent to. This is more likely if you have paid by cheque or online bank transfer.

So, what’s this all about? In brief, The Gooner fanzine – an independent unofficial magazine written by Arsenal supporters for Arsenal supporters has been publishing since 1987 and to survive, we need to change the model of how we sell the fanzine to make it viable. This means producing a 64 page magazine six times next season and securing 1,000 advance postal subscribers in the UK and abroad to do so. Previously, we could survive on sales made outside Arsenal matches home and away, but that is no longer the case for a number of reasons, not least falling attendances, the huge variety of kick off days and times meaning the matchday routine is a thing of the past for many and more fans getting their football opinion online. Wet and cold weather hasn’t helped much this season either!

However, there is a hardcore audience for The Gooner, and we hope it is big enough to allow us to continue. If you have not seen the fanzine for a while, you can download a pdf of an issue from earlier this season by clicking on this link.

If you like what you see please consider subscribing for £30 (or £42 if outside the UK) to receive six issues (with an extra 16 pages each) next season. To put this into your Arsenal-spending context, £30 would not buy you the cheapest adult priced lower tier seat to watch Arsenal play the likes of Stoke or other ‘Grade B’ opposition in the Premier League, and we are confident you will get more value for your money over the course of a season than you often will in 90 minutes.

There are a number of ways to subscribe (NB – If we do not make our target of 1,000 by Easter Sunday (April 1st) and decide not to continue, everyone who has paid £30 will be refunded in full by the end of May).

  1. With a credit or debit card through the shop section of our online store at our http://www.onlinegooner.com website.

UK orders – click here.

Orders outside UK – click here.

And there are other options on the subscriptions page that include receiving this season’s issues as well. Those can all be seen here.

  1. By post – Send a cheque for £30 (£42 for addresses outside of the UK) for a 2018/19 season subscription made payable to ‘The Gooner’ to this address –

The Gooner
12 Buxton Court
Hanbury Drive
London
E11 1GB

(You may wish to – download this Save The Gooner! pdf form and return it in your envelope of you wish to pay by cheque). NB – To save admin costs, we will only cash cheques if we do reach our target to continue next season. If we do not, we will simply destroy any cheques to save on postage costs.

  1. Via online bank transfer, making a payment of £30 (or £42 for addresses outside of the UK) to –

Account name: The Gooner
Sort Code: 20-76-90
Account Number: 03004112

Use the reference 1819 followed by your surname. Very important – please follow up the payment with an email to thegoonerfanzine@btinternet.com stating your name and address, and the reference that you used for payment (e.g. 1819Smith). Otherwise, we will not be able to match the payment to you. (If you require Iban and Bic codes for an international payment, please email us at thegoonerfanzine@btinternet.com.

  1. You can also simply make a direct PayPal payment to the email address thegoonerfanzine@btinternet.com for £30 (or £42 if outside UK). If doing this, please make your payment a ‘friends and family’ / personal gift payment – this helps keep our costs down. If you have the time to confirm you have paid this way with an email to thegoonerfanzine@btinternet.com, even better, although we will see the payment on the PayPal account with your address details.

Finally, whether we survive as a printed fanzine or not, we may in the future email you about special projects. If you do not wish to receive such emails, please unsubscribe by replying to this email with the word ‘Unsubscribe’ in the subject line and we will remove your address from our list.


We can not moan about Modern Football, that things have changed, when we have an opportunity to save an Arsenal institution and fail to do so.

Save the Gooner!

SheWore

 

What is left for Arsenal to play for?

It seems to have been the longest international break ever.

With Arsenal out of the FA Cup, causing the game against Leicester City to be postponed, it has been 17 days since our last Premier League game. By the time Stoke City comes around on Sunday 1st April, it would have been 21 days since our last Premier League game.

We are going into the business end of the season, so, with our friends at 10Bet Football, we look at what Arsenal actually have left to play for.

The Europa League is the big one. Arsenal are 11/4 second favourites behind Atletico Madrid.

With a quarter final home tie against CSKA Moscow to come next week, Arsenal could well have one foot in the semi-finals before the second leg is played. With Moscow thawing (the weather, not UK relations), a trip to Russia is not the freezing away leg it often is.

If Arsenal go all in for the Europa League, we should win it. Atletico might be favourites, but we are the better side. And with Alexandre Lacazette set to return for the CSKA game, the damage caused by odd UEFA rule that leaves Pierre Emerick-Aubameyang cup-tied is limited.

The Premier League is out of Arsenal’s reach. I have not done the math, but the inability to find odds on us winning it mean that we are probably mathematically out of it.

Man City are 1/1000 to win. Anyone want to lend me a grand so I can win a quid?

Top 4 might be worth a nibble though.

We are 13 points behind Spurs in 4th, with 24 to play for, but having collapsed out of Europe, the Spurs wheels might come off. It would not be the first time. At 125/1, it might be worth a tenner – although some will just say you are throwing a tenner away.

The reality is that our Premier League campaign might be over. There is a reason we are 125/1 to finish top 4.

We should maybe go as far as putting out the kids for the Premier League games.

Give Ainsley Maitland-Niles a run out in the middle of the park for the last 8 games of the season. Play Reiss Nelson ahead of Alex Iwobi. Rotate either Rob Holding or Calum Chambers in at the back. Give these lads a chance to get another 8 Premier League games under their belt.

And then leave the big names for the first team.

At least with the Europa League, Arsenal’s season is not yet over.

Keenos