Tag Archives: She Wore

Bournemouth, Booing Sanchez, Title Rivals and Everton

Bournemouth

We won, expected us to win, we did what was expected.

A bit like I expected us to lose at Stoke and Liverpool, Saturday was a routine win. Not much to get excited over.

Good post-game drink up though.

Booing Sanchez

Title Rivals

Early doors I know, but Manchester United, Manchester City and Chelsea look streaks ahead of everyone else this campaign. I expect United and City to start breaking away as their first XI’s and squads are incredible. Chelsea will fall away due to a thin squad – there last two title triumphs have been due to being able to keep a core 14 players fit.

With regards to everyone else, it is much of a muchness.

Thousands of column inches have been written about Arsenal’s crisis. And things are not great. But also a lot has been written about how great Tottenham and Liverpool are. That they are upwardly mobile, forward thinking clubs. 1 point splits the 3 clubs after the first 4 games.

It just shows how the media can spin your perspective on things. Arsenal are not as bad as many make out. Liverpool and Spurs are not as good as they make out.

Expect it to be close between all 3 for 4th place spot.

The caveat is however that Arsenal will not be in the title race this season. It is OK being like Nelson Muntz and pointing and laughing at others misfortune, but we are in a bad position. We should be talking about competing with City, United and Chelsea, not small clubs like Liverpool and Spurs.

Everton

Talking of small clubs, it seems to have gone unnoticed about how poor Everton have been this season.

The talk over the summer was about brilliant they had been. Their new majority shareholder – Arsenal’s ex share holder Farhad Moshiri – had breathed new life into the Scouse club. Attracted massive new investment and made funds available to buy in players.

And they bought in a lot of players. 14 in total. £133,100,000 spent. There was talk about how they would be a threat this season. That they were showing Arsenal how to do it. That with a top manager and funds spent, they would be challenging for the top 4.

After 4 games, they have 4 points.

Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger have both spoken in the past about buying too many players. Admittedly Arsenal did not buy enough this summer, but I laughed in August when people were demanding the club buy an additional 5 or 6 players. They pointed at Everton as a club doing it the right way.

But the fact is, Everton were like Spurs when they lost Gareth Bale. They sold their best player (Romelu Lukaku) and replaced him with a load of mid-table averageness.

4 points in 4 games and just 2 goals scored. Well done guys.

Keenos

 

The unacceptable abuse of Tony Adams

I am conflicted over the Tony Adams situation.

He is an Arsenal legend. Mr Arsenal. My first footballing hero (soon dropped for David Seaman – I had a pony tail as a kid). He, like any other ex-player, fan or pundit, has a right to an opinion.

But like any other ex-player, fan or pundit, he does not deserve abuse for his opinion.

I have seen it both ways over the years. Players abused for defending Arsene Wenger, players attacking for criticising Arsene Wenger. Neither side of the fan base covers themselves with glory. And both sides change their opinion on whether ex-players should be allowed an opinion depending on if it suits their opinion.

Adams has his opinion, and it might be a valid opinion, but he needs to be careful, as it feels like he is becoming a bit of a rent-a-quote.

He clearly feels the club owe him for his decades of service. He clearly feels like he should be working for the club still. He clearly blames Arsene Wenger for not getting a job. And whilst Wenger might have blocked him – for whatever reason – the fact is he is not working for the club, and he seems to be very bitter about it.

Adams talks about being able to do a job on the training pitch. That he feels he will be of some use. He has the experience, the knowledge, and is Arsenal through and through, but is that enough?

His coaching career to date has not exactly been sparkling.

A handful of failed managerial jobs, and some very well paid coaching roles in the Middle East and China. Has he really proved himself as a top coach? Perhaps he should not have turned down that youth role to chase the money in China?

Maybe he needs to take a step back and realise he is simply not a good coach. He lacks the charisma. The knowledge. The ability. A top player does not make a top coach. Just look at Glen Hoddle or Roy Keane (It is interesting how relationships between managers and their leader break down (Adams & Wenger, Keane and Fergie), or any number of other former world class players who struggled to transition to coach.

Perhaps he should become an ambassador of the club first of all. A similar role to that which the likes of Martin Keown and Robert Pires have held over the year?

If hosting Legend Tours is not too small for the King of Highbury – Charlie George, why not Mr Arsenal – Tony Adams – offer do get involved in that? Get a foot back in the door with the club?

Personally, it feels every time Adams has a book to sell, or wants to put himself on the market for a job, he attacks Arsenal. It is a way to get publicity. A way to get his name in the market once more.

I think back to the early 00’s. David O’Leary. His tally of 722 appearances for the club still stands as a club record. It will never be beaten. He went into management. Had some success. He really should have been first in-line to take over from Arsene Wenger. It never happened. He does not seem too bitter about it.

Other players, the likes of Ian Wright, Lee Dixon, Alan Smith, have spoken out against Wenger in the past. They have been abused by some fans for it as well. It is a disgrace how some of our fans treat legends. Treat each other.

The thing is when Wright, Dixon and Smith spoke out, it came across as an honest opinion, usually in the course of doing their job as a pundit. When Adams speaks it, it feels contrived, that he has an axe to grind, and will take an opportunity given to him to stick the knife in.

Tony Adams is an Arsenal great. He is a legend. He is Mr Arsenal. He owes us nothing. We owe him everything. He should not be abused. Ever. No matter your opinion on his opinions, or your agenda. My only wish for Adams is when he does conduct interviews, he would come across as a little less bitter.

Adams is right when he says that Wenger should have left in May (although it should have been May 2014). Where he comes across has a bitter, angry man is when he says Wenger did not teach him anything.

Wenger cleary did teach him a lot. He even wrote about it in his first book. Wenger improved Adams as a player. He extended his career. He saved his life.

It is an undeniable fact that Tony Adams helped Arsene Wenger. And that Arsene Wenger helped Tony Adams. They are both club legends.

Tony – I love you, you are still Mr Arsenal, you do not deserve any abuse. But just try a bit harder to show that you are not bitter.

Keenos

 

Arsene Wenger granted transfer window wish

Arsene Wenger has long been an advocate of closing the window before competitive action begins, and that stance is likely to have hardened after Arsenal were engaged in several last-minute deals over recent transfer windows.

The Arsenal manager was recently quoted as saying “That’s why I believe it’s important that we close [the transfer window] before the championship starts. Even in the games, you sit there before the games and even in players’ minds they have no clarity. Are they in? Are they out? Are they half in? Are they half out? Are they tapped up in the afternoon of the game by people who want to get them out?

“It’s not the way to work and it’s uncomfortable. Every single manager in the league would agree that it’s time to kick that out before the season starts and not continue to have players in the dressing room who are half out and half in.”

From next season, the window will close at 17:00 BST on the Thursday before the Premier League season begins.

Premier League clubs have voted to close next summer’s transfer window before the season starts.

Managers have complained that the ability for players to move when the season is under way causes disruption to their squads and preparations.

The vote was not unanimous and clubs will still be able to sell players until the end of the normal window.

The window across Europe runs until 31 August. The Premier League’s move means that while clubs will be able to sell until that date, buying activity will cease on 9 August for the 2018-19 season.

European leagues will still be able to buy and sell until 31 August, while the Football League’s window also remains unaltered.

Football League bosses have indicated they could follow the Premier League’s move but require further dialogue with stakeholders before a decision is made.

The number of Premier League clubs who wanted the change is not yet clear but at least 14 of the 20 must have voted for the move in order for a change to take place.

Keenos