Tag Archives: She Wore

Should football fans care where their owners money comes from?

Yesterday the takeover of Newcastle United finally went through.

Following a court case, a Saudi Arabian-backed consortium bought the club for £350m from Mike Ashley.

The Newcastle fans celebrated like they had one the lottery.

Part of the celebrations was due to the departure of Mike Ashley – an owner they have hated from almost the day he took over.

The other part of the celebrations is that they see the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF) takeover as a a quick route to winning the league.

Their fans have seen Chelsea, Manchester City and PSG bank rolled to success. And the wealth of the PIF blows all of their owners oit of the water.

They think being owned by PIF will see billions spent on new players and the side bankrolled to their first league title since 1927.

But at what cost would this success be bankrolled to and should fans care?

Amnesty International have urged the Premier League to review their decision and take into account the horrendous human rights issues in Saudi Arabia. They state:

“As with Formula One, elite boxing, golf or tennis, an association with top-tier football is a very attractive means of rebranding a country or person with a tarnished reputation. The Premier League needs to better understand the dynamic of sportswashing and tighten its ownership rules.”

We have mentioned sportswashing numerous times in this blog.

From day one when Roman Abramovich took over Chelsea I questioned whether someone who built his wealth in questionable circumstances should be applauded.

When Alisher Uzmanov looked to take over Arsenal, I took the stand that I did not want his kind involved in Arsenal.

I would rather win nothing than be bankrolled to success by someone with Usmanov’s questionable history.

At Manchester City, the ‘Manchester thanks you Sheikh Mansour’ banner has always left a sour taste in my mouth.

Sheikh Mansour is a member of the royal family of Abu Dhabi and deputy Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates.

The 2021 Human Rights Watch reportfor the UAE makes grim reading.

Manchester City fans turn a blind eye to what is happening in the UAE. The lack of democracy, modern slavery. These things seem to not matter when you are winning trophies.

And the same is seemingly happening at Newcastle.

Their fans seem to not care about the human rights abuses that occur on a daily basis. They just want to be bankrolled to success.

How many of their fans joined a BLM March over the last 2 years. Have pointed out corruption in the Conservative party. Have spoken up against racism and inequality in the UK.

How many of their fans have tweeted that slave owners statues in the UK should be taken down – meanwhile they celebrate slave owners buying their club.

PIF probably will bankroll Newcastle to their first trophy since 1969. It will be written as another glorious story of a sleeping giant returning to its glory days. A bit like Manchester City.

Personally, I would rather win nothing than be owned by a state with a horrendous human rights record that is basically using my club to wash over that record.

I would rather win nothing than be owned by a former KGB agent that earned his billions during the break up of the Soviet Union.

Hopefully I am not alone in this. I have my morals and they will not change regardless of my football clubs success.

But many people do not seem to care who owns their club as long as they are being bankrolled to success.

So I ask the question; should football fans care where the money comes from?

Keenos

0-0 a disappointing result but not a disaster

Are we at the point now where everytime we do not win a game we are going to see an overreaction from fans?

Saturday was a horrendous game.

Neither team played particularly well or looked like winning the game. Just 2 shots on target combined. It was a tough game to watch.

For those fans that went, they would have returned home cold, wet and demoralised.

Brighton in the sunshine is a fantastic place. In torrential rain it is one of the worst towns in Britain. And anyone that has been to their new ground will know it is one of the worst away trips going.

For those that do not know, Brighton’s ground is not actually in Brighton but in a small village outside of Brighton called Falmer.

That means when you get to Brighton, you still have to get another train to make your way to Falmer.

At the final whistle it can take up to an hour to get yourself on a train back to Brighton.

With the weather we had Saturday, being forced to either queue outside the station or standing on an exposed train platform is not a nice experience.

Add this into a limp Arsenal performance and you can understand why fans that went are calling it “one of the worst away days I have been too”.

But despite all the circumstances, the result and weather does not justify the fall out I saw after the game.

If you are going to put yourself into a pit of despair every time Arsenal do not win, then it is going to be a very long season for you..

In fact, if that is your mindset, then maybe sport is not for you – Arsenal will fail to win as much as they do win.

Then there is the weird group of Arsenal incels who seemed to get more joy from Arsenal failing to win then they did when Arsenal beat Tottenham.

These fans have spent the week being negative about the sides victory in the North London Derby. Saying we shouldn’t celebrate the win. But then there they are celebrating Arsenal not winning a game.

This is a really odd group of Arsenal anti-fans that get no joy from Arsenal winning.

I saw Arteta Out trending on Twitter after the game and it just baffles me. It is simply over-reactionary.

Brighton look a good team this season. Just a single defeat to Everton in the opening 7 games. Only Chelsea and Liverpool had conceded less.

Anyone that thought we would turn up a d role them over the as deluded.

Graham Potter has got them set up well. Hard to beat. Well organised and strong at the back.

With their back 3 turning into a back 5, they will be very hard to break down this season.

It is disappointing to not win the game, and we did not play well. Bit drawing 0-0 away to Brighton in those weather conditions is not really that bad a result.

So some advice.

If Arsenal drawing a game sends you into the pit of despair, then maybe it is time you found a new hobby.

Keenos

MATCH REPORT: Brighton 0 – 0 Arsenal

Brighton and Hove Albion (0) 0 Arsenal (0) 0

Premier League

Amex Stadium, Village Way, Brighton BN1 9BL

Saturday, 2nd October 2021. Kick-off time: 5.30pm

(4-2-3-1) Aaron Ramsdale; Takehiro Tomiyasu, Ben White, Gabriel Magalhães, Kieran Tierney; Thomas Partey, Albert Sambi Lokonga; Bukayo Saka, Martin Ødegaard, Emile Smith-Rowe; Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.

Substitutes: Bernd Leno, Alexandre Lacazette, Ainsley Maitland-Niles, Rob Holding, Cédric Soares, Nicolas Pépé, Nuno Tavares, Mohamed Elneny, Gabriel Martinelli.

Yellow Cards: Thomas Partey

Arsenal Possession Percentage: 42%

Referee: Jonathan Moss

Assistant Referees: Marc Perry, Timothy Wood

Fourth Official: John Brooks

VAR Team at Stockley Park: VAR Chris Kavanagh; AVAR James Mainwaring

Attendance: circa 30,000

As much is known, our only absentee today is midfielder Granit Xhaka, who will be missing for three months after suffering a knee ligament injury in an incident against Tottenham Hotspur last weekend, and it is looking like Albert Sambi Lokonga will be replacing him in the starting line-up at Brighton this afternoon.

As we begin proceedings off here at the Amex, the conditions are wet and treacherous with a greasy pitch; but within a minute or so of the start, Bukayo Saka keenly tested Robert Sánchez, the Brighton goalkeeper, with a clever shot. This set the pattern for a while, with Arsenal setting the pace and moving the ball around quickly and accurately, in order to attempt to break down the home side’s defence. The difference between the two teams is that we look the more confident at this point in the match, and although the Seagulls came at us several times in a “smash’n’grab” style tactic, our defenders neutralised the threat. On the twentieth minute, our hearts were in our mouths when Aaron Ramsdale allowed the ball to slip out of his hands after a deceptive ball flew in at some speed from the left, but thankfully Lewis Dunk blasted the ball over the bar and into the blue. A couple of minutes later, we almost scored the opening goal when Bukayo Saka beat Dan Burn down the right flank and crossed, under pressure, for Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang to rise above Shane Duffy for a looping header that just touched the post before the home side cleared the ball. The home side started to apply some pressure on us with several chances going wide and over the bar, but still the boys held firm. We started to lose possession constantly in the wrong half of the pitch, allowing the Brighton strikers free rein to take shots, seemingly at will, on Aaron Ramsdale’s goal. Our afternoon so far was summed up perfectly when Thomas Partey blasted an awful free-kick high up and into the stands from twenty yards in the thirty-fifth minute, and when play resumed, Brighton continued to dominate play. With five minutes left of the first half, Bukayo Saka ran on to a ball near the byline courtesy of Emile Smith-Rowe which was met by Thomas Partey but his low shot went a couple of yards wide. Just before the break, we had a period of good play which led to sustained pressure on the Brighton goal, and although Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang looked as if he was going to score the opening goal from point-blank range, Emile Smith-Rowe’s ball went by him and out of play seconds before Jonathan Moss blew the whistle for the half-time break.

With the match still there to be won, the home side kicked off the second half in the torrential rain, and with no substitutions at this point, we nearly went a goal down within four minutes when a curling shot from Jakub Moder went a few inches past Aaron Ramsdale’s left-hand post. However, a few minutes later, Albert Sambi Lokonga’s shot went high and wide from about twenty yards, and then Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang was in a one-on-one situation with Robert Sánchez, but although Shane Duffy’s sliding tackle robbed our man of his chance, he was in an offside position when he collected the ball, sadly. Thomas Partey blasted yet another shot up and over the Brighton bar soon afterwards, and the game started to oscillate from goalmouth to goalmouth with no clear chances created by either side. With twenty-eight minutes left of the match, a lacklustre Martin Ødegaard was replaced by Nicolas Pépé, and after a collision between Lewis Dunk and Robert Sánchez in the Brighton goalmouth, the match continued in the same vein, with the home side putting us under pressure. Alexandre Lacazette replaced Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang with twenty minutes of the match remaining, and almost immediately, we sprung an attack which released Emile Smith-Rowe. He carried the ball into the box, and fired a low shot that was kicked behind by Robert Sánchez. Shortly afterwards, we had a penalty shout that was denied by a VAR review, and almost immediately the home side came for us in earnest with Aaron Ramsdale making heroic saves from Leandro Trossard, Marc Cucurella and Solly March which most definitely kept us in the match. Just before injury time, Bukayo Saka was injured and being unable to continue playing, limped off, with Ainsley Maitland-Niles taking his place for the rest of the game. The only thing remembered in the three minutes’ injury time was a penalty shoiut from Brighton, which quite rightly was denied by VAR, otherwise this match limped to its sorry and unmemorable conclusion. 

This instantly forgettable match saw us struggle at times with the chances that Brighton threw at us, and in very poor conditions we held out and did the best that we possibly could away from home. We defended very well as a unit (despite the absence of Granit Xhaka), and although we didn’t score today, most importantly, we didn’t let any in either. Yes, it was disappointing, especially after last Sunday’s result, but alwaysremember, that as our first great manager Herbert Chapman used to instruct his Arsenal teams nearly a century ago, “every team goes onto the pitch with a point, and what we have we hold. Why give it away?”. We got a point here at the Amex Stadium, and going into the international break, of that we can be more than thankful tonight. We live to fight again another day.

Remember everyone, keep the faith, get behind the team and the manager, as this season is going to be crucial for our future success in all competitions. Stick with the winners. Our next match: Crystal Palace at the Emirates on Monday, 18th October at 8.00pm (Premier League). Be there, if you can. Victoria Concordia Crescit.

Steve

Too Dearly Loved To Be Forgotten: Arsenal v Racing Club de Paris 1930-1962 by Steve Ingless (Rangemore Publications, ISBN 978-1-5272-0135-4) is now available on Amazon.