Tag Archives: She Wore

Arsenal’s captainless ship hits troubled waters

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The season has not even started yet and Arsenal are already in the midst of a crisis.

Per Mertesacker picked up an injury nearly 3 weeks ago which ruled him out until 2017. With Laurent Koscielny only just back in training, Mertesacker’s injury left us with just one senior centre back to start the season. Accident prone Gabriel.

And it was all a little bit predictable wasn’t it. In the 91st minute of the final friendly, Gabriel go’s into a nothing challenge, studs get caught in the turf, and reports indicate his season is over before it has even begun.36FAE85100000578-3728319-Gabriel_s_injury_took_the_shine_off_a_fine_second_half_performan-a-3_1470599916171

It leaves us in a situation where against Liverpool we are either going to have to start with youngster Calum Chambers and new boy Rob Holding, or play Nacho Monreal or want away right back Mathieu Debuchy at centre back.

Some might say we have been unlucky to get injuries in two senior centre backs. That is correct, we are unlucky, but we are also negligent.

Before the window opened, centre back is a place we all agreed needed improvement.

Per Mertesacker can not defend from the halfway line, and Gabriel simply can not defend.

My thoughts were simple. Buy a partner for Laurent Koscielny. Per Mertesacker becomes 3rd choice. Gabriel get’s shipped out. And either Rob Holding or (more likely) Calum Chambers go’s online to a Premier League side to play 38 games.

That way we have a senior centre back partnership. A 100-capped international backing them up, and a youngster gaining experience and developing. Obviously with Per’s injury, the part where Gabriel is sold does not happen. He stays as 3rd choice.

With Mertesacker’s contract set to expire in 2017, it would then see us have the new centre back, Koscielny, Chambers and Holding as our options. It is so simple on paper.

But we have not moved for a centre back. Even with Mertesacker out till 2017, there was no movement in the market. It was almost like we were happy with an inadequate Gabriel and an injury prone and not yet in training Koscielny to see us through the season.

Now of course, we could have signed someone like Mustafi and he could have gone over against Manchester City and be out for the year. Injuries happen. But then at least then we still would have had Gabriel who could then partner one of the junior guys.

To be in the situation we are less than a week before our 1st game of the season and we do not have a single senior centre back to call on is an utter disgrace. And it highlights the lack of leadership top down currently within the club.

Starting at the very top, Stan Kroenke has been a hands off owner at Arsenal, unless it is time to put the hand in the cookie jar.

I actually have no issue with an owner not getting too involved. We have seen numerous times throughout history an owner being too hands on with a club, and more often that not in ends in tears.

Players being bought by an owner who the manager does not want. Owners going into dressing rooms to take team talks. Even owners dictating to the manager who should play. If you are not an expect in a certain industry, you should not get involved, even if you are the owner.

The owners job is to put the right person in charge of running that business. For Arsenal, that man is Ivan Gazidis.

Gazidis is another who seems to lack leadership. It is worrying that he is Arsene Wenger’s “boss” but it is Wenger who was involved in appointing him. Does Wenger report to Gazidis? Or does Gazidis report to Wenger?

Whilst David Dein is certainly someone I do not want involved in Arsenal anymore (if you think he is the messiah, learn your Arsenal history), there has certainly been a lack of leadership since he and Keith Edleman left the board.

Dein and Edleman got the job done. They pushed Arsene Wenger. Demanded the best from him. Gazidis does not do that.

It should be Gazdis’s job to force the hand of Arsene Wenger. Tell him that we need to be buying the best. Let him know recent performances in transfer windows have been unacceptable.

Our recent transfer dealings have been embarrassing. Both in terms of getting players in, and attempts to get players in.

The negotiating team are clearly not doing their job. The manager not picking his targets. And both of these report to Gazidis. He needs to be leading the club over the summer transfer window, but he seems to disappear.

Maybe he is scared to challenge Wenger? Scared that the man below him who hired him could fire him.

And then we come to Arsene Wenger himself. We all know, deep down, he, not Gazidis, runs Arsenal Football Club. The buck stops with Wenger.

His leadership of the club over the last decade or so has been underrated by many. He led the ship through the choppy waters or a financial crisis which saw the club unable to compete to keep its best players, let alone compete for top ones.

But that ended 3 or 4 years ago. And he has not changed his ways.

Arsenal are no longer poor. But Arsene Wenger acts like we are. He is like your lottery winner who still buys Tesco Value noodles.

He seems to settle for mediocrity. Settle for just getting by doing the minimum possible. And that filters down to the players. Players who celebrate finish 4th. It is not good enough.

Finally we come down to the players.

There is actually a good handful of leaders in the playing squad. Sanchez, Cech and the new boy Xhaka have all captained club and / or country at points in their career.

So to be sitting here, less than a week before the season starts, and not have a club captain is an utter disgrace.

13 Premier League starts by Arsenal’s captain in the last 3 seasons. It really is an amazing stat.

And once again there are question marks over who should be captain.

At one point it looked like Per Mertesacker would be given the armband, after all he was Mikel Arteta’s vice-captain.

But with a question mark over his place in the first XI, it would once more be a case of the club captain not starting.

His injury ruled him out of the running.

Next in line seems to be Laurent Koscielny. But is he a leader? He has never been a captain, and is not the most vocal on the pitch. You feel he would be getting the armband due his longevity at Arsenal, not due to his leadership ability.

The net result is Arsenal do not currently have a club captain.

We are leaderless. From the top down. The boardroom, the training ground and on the pitch.

Keenos

Ps: Today the blog (this form) is 3 years old. In that time we have had over 2,000,000 hits. A big thank you to every contributor, and every reader.

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The Arsenal and Me – Chris’s Story

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I have been a Gooner for 25 years.

My dad wasn’t a big football fan and didn’t really have a team, so one wasn’t passed down to me. After moving a few times because of my dads work, our family settled in the delightful county of Essex. I went to a private school in Old Harlow and sitting next to me was David Seaman’s son, Daniel.

We became friends and it was the talk of the school that an Arsenal and England footballers kid went to that school and I sat next him every day. Daniel invited me to a birthday party at his house, naturally it was a football party and I wanted to wear an Arsenal shirt. So my parents bought me one. I have been a die hard Gooner ever since

Just for the record at the party we had a penalty shootout. David was in goal… I gave him the eyes, he went left, I went right and the rest is history. Some say he let me score, others (me) say he didn’t.

My dad and I fell in love with the club and going to games. I was a Junior Gunner from then on and was a season ticket holder for 11 years. In 2008 I moved to New York where I discovered there are something called, supporters clubs. Going to Highbury and the Emirates every week you don’t really think about the millions of fans around the world that can’t be there. I was blown away by the amount of supporters that showed up to the pub for every game. They knew every song and it was like being in the Tollington to watch games.

In 2011 I got married and moved to my wife’s home city of Miami, FL (horrible I know). I looked for a supporters club like the one in New York but there was nothing, so along with a friend in 2013 decided to start the Miami Arsenal Supporters Club (MASC). I got on paintbrush and created a logo (below) and contacted Arsenal America and became an official branch. I started on social media trying to recruit Gooner’s in Miami having no idea whether there were any.

Miami is a big football city given it’s Latin influence. So there are a lot of Real Madrid, Barcelona, Boca Juniors etc fans. The first game for the MASC was the opening game of the 2013/2014 season. Our pub was a British pub called Elwoods owned by a Chelsea fan and 35 people showed up. I was astounded. We lost 3-1 at home to Aston Villa so not a great start but MASC was off and running. 3 years later we have over 500 members and are the biggest supporters club in Miami.

We have a huge following on social media and have been featured on many media outlets including; NBC, ESPN, Bleacher Report, TalkSport Radio, Arsenal’s facebook page and even the official Arsenal website.

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It is hard being away from the Arsenal and not being able to go to games, but this is the next best thing.
And that’s my story.
Thanks!
Chris N. Allan
Founder & President
Miami Arsenal Supporters Club

If you would like to tell your Arsenal story, click here

The Arsenal and Me – Joe’s Story

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“That wasn’t fair Dad. We should’ve won that. We’ll win it next year” My first Arsenal cup final defeat that I’d seen set the tone for the rest of my Arsenal supporting life. Its May 2001. Arsenal have just somehow managed to lose to Liverpool in the FA Cup final, a mixture of missed chances, fantastic goalkeeping (from Stephan Henchoz) and Michael Owen’s finest ten minutes had seemingly absolutely destroyed my seven year old life.

A year on, Ray Parlour and Freddie Ljungberg set me on my way to four years of absolute ecstasy. I grew up watching the best team in the world at the time, and even though we were conned out of another title in 2003, by 2004 I was a fan of the Invincible Arsenal. Everything that team and stood for was the Arsenal; flair, passion, strong at the back and entertaining going forward. All of this taking place in the best stadium in the world, our Highbury. By 2005, with the team still superb, but in a steady decline, I had started to manage to get hold of tickets on the north bank.

The final season at Highbury brought about the most painful memory I have as a fan, and one of the most painful in my life in general! Our heroes lost their only European Cup final 2-1 to Barcelona, in the rain in Paris. Up until then, every setback we’d had, I had the attitude that “we’ll be back.” That tonight, there was something different. It seemed like our one and only major chance to be the best in Europe (officially) had gone. I remember sitting on my sofa, crying my eyes out, absolutely desperate to avoid school the following day. My Mum wasn’t having any of the “I feel a bit sick” lie at 8am the next day…

Now, I go regularly in the clock end. I have grown up, through my teenage years, through university, and am now a teacher in a secondary school, defending myself against teenagers who ridicule me for supporting a team that “never win the league” like a real life version of Fever Pitch. I’ve gone full circle. The FA Cup wins had galvanised me again, and I was sure this year was the year. Obviously that didn’t go to plan, but I think we’ll win it next year.

It’s this sort of blind faith that only comes about from supporting a football club. The sort of faith that makes you think differently about somebody who appears a nice bloke, only to reveal they are a Spurs fan. The sort of faith that makes you treat anybody that scores a goal for the Arsenal like a next of kin, and the sort of faith that makes you wish them nothing but misery once they join a new side for more money.

We’re not the most vocal fans in the world, mainly because a lot of atmosphere has been forced out of our controversially sterile, corporate bowl. But you try getting a ticket for an away game. Good luck. From Hull to Zagreb, every Arsenal away section is a sell-out. We’re blessed with more blind faith than others. Whether you’re Wenger In or Wenger Out, of all the banners I have read, one hits home more than others – “Support The Team, Not The Regime.”

Managers, players, greedy American and dodgy Uzbek owners come and go, but one thing remains the same. These fans are for me, of course slightly biased, the best in the world.

Up The Arsenal.

Joe

If you would like to tell your Arsenal story, click here