Tag Archives: She Wore

“There is no crisis at Arsenal”

It is set to be 27c today and yet I am inside, nursing a horrendous hangover, caused due to Arsenal’s inept performance yesterday. At least I have the cricket to watch. England are fighting back well. But as I have written this, Joe Root has just got out. Great.

There is plenty wrong at Arsenal. I can see it. You can see it. Everyone can see it. Except for one man. Arsene Wenger.

It seems only the Arsenal manager can not see what is wrong with the club at the moment, He is the man not only without a plan in the transfer market but without a plan full stop.

Arsenal lost against Liverpool, Arsenal lost against Stoke. I do not really care that we lost games. It happens. We almost always lose against Liverpool and Stoke. But it is the manner of the defeats that drove me to drink.

For so long, Wenger has been criticised for a lack of tactics, and that has been shown in the recent games against Stoke and Liverpool.

The move to 3 at the back worked last season, and Wenger has continued with it this season. But you can only play a formation if you have the players that sort it, and when Arsenal are lining up with a winger at full back, a right back at left back, and 2 left backs at centre back, it is clear to all that the formation does not suit the players. Clear to everyone, of course, except for Wenger.

In the recent game against Stoke, Wenger complained about the lack of central defenders available to him, yet he had 2 on the bench that he never used.

Then we have the misuse of Rob Holding. The poor lad must not know if he is coming or going.

Holding started the first game of the season, dropped completely from the match day squad for the second game, then back in the side for the third game where he was ripped apart by the brilliant Sadio Mane and given no support. I feel for the lad.

As for Calum Chambers, a man who played nearly every game in the Premier League for Middlesbrough last season, and performed so well for England in the summer Euro U21 tournament, finds himself nowhere near the team, behind left backs playing centre back.

But of course, we can all see these problems, but Wenger can not.

And why were Alexandre Lacazette and Sead Kolasinac on the bench yesterday? It is baffling.

Last seasons transfer dealings have been exposed as truly awful. We spent a lot of summer last year, yet only one man is still in the teams plans this summer, Granit Xhaka. And he has performed awful of late.

In fact, going through Arsenal’s last 10 transfers, just two of them started yesterday against Liverpool – Holding and Xhaka.

We need players. We need players playing in the right position. We need top quality players. We can all see that, but Wenger can not.

He is becoming deluded. Or has become deluded depending on how angry you are. He does not know what he is doing. He is the captain of the Titanic telling the passengers it is only a bit of ice, that there is no concernable damage.

He is not a captain not a captain going down with a ship whilst rats leave, he is the captain taking his ship down, whilst screaming everything is alright, full steam ahead.

He should have gone after the FA Cup in 2014. 3 FA Cups in 4 years have cemented his place further as an Arsenal great. But like Brian Clough at Nottingham Forest, he has outstayed his welcome.

On Thursday the transfer window shuts. We are not signing anyone. We will sell key players. but Wenger will tell you it is all OK. He is lying to you.

Have a good Monday, Enjoy the sun. Enjoy the cricket.

Keenos

Does Arsene Wenger have a transfer plan?

The simple answer is NO.

It seemed so obvious to everyone at the beginning of the summer what The Arsenal transfer plan was. 

Get in a left back in Saed Kolasinac, sign Alexandre Lacazette. Secure a bit of magic in Thomas Lemar. And then either get in a new centre back or central midfielder. Maybe get a in a top young keeper to eventually take over from Petr Cech. 

Secure Alexis Sanchez, Mesut Ozil and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain on new deals. 

Then release the dead wood.

Szczesny, Debuchy, Jenkinson, Chambers, Gibbs, Wilshere, Campbell, Perez and Sanogo. Maybe even Walcott and Coquelin if we got the right players in. 


Instead, we sit here going into the last week of the transfer window and our transfer plan has been exposed, in that we had no transfer plan. 

Kolasinac was a good early signing. But the only other deal we have done since is for Lacazette. Taking into account the Frenchman was about to join Atletico Madrid before their transfer ban, we got lucky with that one. 

We then spent the summer failing to sign Thomas Lemar. The deal seems to be dead and there seems not be be a back up plan. Weren’t we speaking to Riyad Mahrez’s people earlier in the summer? Or Julian Draxler? It is like we put all the eggs in the Thomas Lemar basket.

Meanwhile other potential targets are joining other clubs – such as Seri to Barcelona. It is becoming increasingly obvious that our transfer deals are done. 

And then we have the outgoings.

Debuchy, Chambers, Gibbs, Wilshere, Campbell and Perez are still out the club. Whilst we could only loan out Jenkinson. 

And we have ended up selling Gabriel. Whilst he has never quite settled in the UK, surely selling him was not part of the pre-season plan?

And then over the weekend, it seems like Oxlade-Chamberlain and Mustafi are ok their way out of the club. 

This was never the plan. To lose two senior centrebacks, leaving us to rely on Mertesacker, Holding and Chambers. 

There is still a week to go in the transfer window, but by tomorrow we could find ourselves with 3 points from 3 games. 

We are without a plan in the transfer market. We are underprepared once more for the season. And there is just one man to blame. Dithering Wenger. 

Keenos

Where Have All the Irish Gone? The Sad Demise of Ireland’s Once Relevant Footballers

As difficult as it might be for younger generations to imagine, there was a time when footballers from the Republic of Ireland were among the leading lights in English football’s biggest and most successful clubs.

Whereas nowadays the Irish are more likely to ply their trade at clubs like Burnley, Hull City and Stoke, they once dined at the very top table in England’s top-flight; helping their sides to major domestic and European honours instead of slugging it out in mid-table or in relegation battles.

And indeed, as any Arsenal fan will know, there was a time when the Irish were the darlings of the Gunners faithful, particularly in the 70s and 80s when the likes of Liam Brady, David O’Leary and Frank Stapleton (before his move to Manchester United) often lit up Highbury with their differing skills.

In a new book, written by Irish author Kevin O’Neill, these halcyon days of the Irish are recalled with fondness. And yet, they form only part of the narrative in ‘Where Have All The Irish Gone? The Sad Demise of Ireland’s Once Relevant Footballers’, as O’Neill digs deep to produce a factual, hard-hitting account of what has happened to the Irish in top-class English football over the past 20 years.

‘As Arsenal fans will fully recognise, Irish players have played pivotal roles in the history of their club,’ said O’Neill.

‘Liam Brady, to be fair, was a genius and wonderful servant to Arsenal, both as a player and later in his role in the Academy. David O’Leary is a club legend and rightly so, having played in over 700 games, and the likes of John Devine, Frank Stapleton and Niall Quinn were very good players for the Arsenal, too. In that sense, Ireland was kind to Arsenal and vice versa,’ he added.

But, as the author rightly points out in the book, published by the UK-based Pitch Publishers, surviving at the high end of English football has become extremely difficult for the Irish since the inception of the Premier League in 1992. With more and more foreign players flooding to the country, the chances of Irish players coming through in the top clubs (not to mention the equally tough task faced by English, Scottish and Welsh players) have become few and far between. Indeed, Arsenal has not had an Irish debutant since 2005 when a then highly-rated Anthony Stokes featured in the League Cup. A short time earlier, midfielder Patrick Cregg had also debuted for the Gunners, but neither went on to fulfil their potential in north London.

‘With Liam Brady heading the Arsenal Academy for many years, it seemed like efforts were always made to get an Irish player to make the grade,’ said O’Neill.

‘I recall the likes of Graham Barrett, Stephen Bradley and Keith Fahey all joining Arsenal with high hopes but unfortunately, as with most top English clubs in the last 20 years or so, their opportunities to break in the first-team became quite limited due to the unbelievable level of competition that stood in their way once the leading clubs started signing players from right across the globe. The level of competition, for young Irish players, is now at an all-time high and you have to wonder will we ever again see the likes of Liam Brady and David O’Leary become key players at clubs like Arsenal,’ he added.

Former Arsenal youth and reserve player Shane Tracy (who has played in the League of Ireland since his release by Arsenal in 2007) is interviewed in the book about his time in north London, while there’s plenty of musings by Brady about the direction that Academy football has taken in recent times.

Other big names to be interviewed in the book include current Republic of Ireland manager Martin O’Neill and Richard Dunne, while the writer also researches what happens to young Irish footballers after they are rejected by English clubs.

‘The result, I hope, is a factual and honest account of what has happened to the Irish in top-class English football over the past 20 years. I try to find out how and why their fortunes have deteriorated so dramatically – and quickly – while also recalling better times when the Irish triumphed in England with great regularity,’ said O’Neill.

‘Through a series of face-to-face interviews with current and retired players, the book describes how young Irish teenagers fend for themselves in the cut-throat world of Academy football and considers those who have fallen by the wayside in their pursuit of fame and footballing fulfilment in England. I have also looked at the current structures in the Irish game, to see if we could do things differently, and I pose the question of whether the Irish can ever again prosper at English football’s most successful clubs. I really hope that football supported, in Ireland and England, enjoy the book and take something from it, and I’m sure the large Irish Arsenal following (the author’s seven-year-old son is a Gunner despite his father being an avid Evertonian!) will enjoy plenty of it,’ he added.

Where Have All the Irish Gone? The Sad Demise of Ireland’s Once Relevant Footballers will be released by http://www.pitchpublishing.co.ukon October 16 2017, is priced at £12.99, and will be available to purchase at Amazon, Waterstones and various other book stores and platforms to be confirmed.

The publishers say the book tells a story of dramatic decline, an ‘ultimate riches-to-rags affair’ in which Irish players have largely become irrelevant at the top English clubs. 

The author can be reached on Twitter @kevoneillwriter