Tag Archives: She Wore

Balogun has to commit to stay if he wants to play

Misguided, immature, lacking respect are just 3 things that came to mind after Folarin Balogun posted up a video of one of his goals for the U23s as Arsenal were struggling to break down Southampton in the FA Cup.

Balogun is yet to sign a new deal with Arsenal and will be free to leave in the summer. Already his representatives can begin negoatiating with foreign clubs.

Reports are that Balogun’s reluctance to sign are due to a concern about playing time. Other reports say he wants pay parity to the likes of Bukayo Saka.The reality is, Balogun is a 19-year-old talented young footballer who is 5th choice striker at Arsenal and not yet done anything to prove that he can perform at Saka’s level.

If Balogun wants to play, if he wants to earn the big bucks at Arsenal, then he should sign the deal on the table. He should trust the coaches and management at Arsenal to guide his career rather than his agents.

Sign the new deal now, go out on loan for the rest of the season. Score a bucketfull of a goals.

Come the summer, his performances on loan could lead to Arsenal cashing in on Eddie Nketiah. It is likely Alexandre Lacazette will also leave as he will have just one year left on his contract.

That will see Arsenal’s striker options be Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Gabriel Martinelli and Folarin Balogun.

Balogun would be 3rd choice and be getting plenty of game time at 20-years-old. The task of both him and Martinelli would then be to progress enough over the next 2 seasons to show that they would be worthy of replacing Aubameyang.

This time next year, if he is putting in some good performances nd becoming a regular in the starting XI, then knock on Edu’s door again. Ask for a payrise.

The path for Balogun is clear. Everyone can see it. But he is either impatient or greedy. Neither trait is good to have for a young footballer making his way.

It is interesting to note that many of those on social media calling for Balogun to start, for Arsenal to “pay him what he wants” also demand William Saliba play week in week and. They are also those fans that have spent 8 months complaining about the treatment of Mesut Ozil. And they all have #ArtetaOut in their Twitter bio’s.

Their rating of Balogun (and Saliba) is not based on seeing him play week in week out for the U23s, following his career since he was 14. It seems to be a simple case of:

We hate Arteta for the way he treated Ozil so are going to hype up any young player he is not playing.

This has led to Balogun gaining a lot of “fan boys” despite being 19 andnot yet having started a game.

These fans are demanding him to start based on goals against Molde and Dundalk.

Let’s return to Eddie Nketiah for a bit.

Nketiah has received a lot of abuse online from these so called “fans” due to being given the chnce.

Eddie deserves his chance this season.

Everything Balogun is currently doing – scoring goals at youth level and nicking a couple against inferior opposition in Europe – Nketiah has also done.

Eddie also went to Leeds on loan and has waited patiently.

You feel those abusing Nketiah and hyping Balogun would be doing it the other way if Arteta had sold the senior man in the summer and promoted Balogun.

If Arsenal had have given Balogun a big contract, they would probably be criticising the club for giving a youngster so much money without doing much.

These fans view things in a biased manner. They will contradict themselves.

What Balogun needs to do is stay away from social media. Ignore those fans hyping him up. He is not yet a Nicolas Anelka or Thierry Henry. At the same age as Saka, he is levels below.

You feel the social media echo chamber is influencing him though.

Fans tweeting him every day telling him how great he is. That he should be starting ahead of Nketiah. That he is right to demand to play before signing a new deal.

What he does not realise is this menatality is not the mentality of someone Arteta will want to keep.

He ends up coming across as devisive, willing to trample over a colleague for a promotion.

An employee who thinks he is better than senior employees, despite having never proven anything. It does not make for a good workplace.

what people (and Balogun) fail to recognise is that it is not just Nketiah ahead of him,

Arsenal have two senior strikers in Aubameyang and Lacazette. Both are proven goal scorers.

Even if Eddie left tomorrow, Balogun would struggle to get much game time – Nketiah has played just 319 Premier League minutes.

And it is not just Nketiah who is ahead of Balogun; there is also Gabriel Martinelli.

Martinelli is just 3 weeks older than Balogun and is levels ahead.

It is only injury that has limited the Brazilian’s game time this season. And there is a school of thought that had he not picked up that injury, Arsenal would have sold Lacazette last summer with Martinelli providing cover for Aubameyang.

Does anyone out there think that Balogun is better than Martinelli?

So even if Nketiah left, Balogun would still not be getting that game time as it would be going to a fit-again Martinelli.

We have seen talented young strikers at Arsenal before – Benik Afobe and Chuba Akpom in recent years. Balogun is not doing any more than these two at youth level. Neither made it at Arsenal.

Why should Arsenal give Balogun game time when he has not signed a new contract?

Those that say they stand by Balogun refusing to sign a new deal until he plays have got it the wrong way round.

A young player should prove his loyalty to a club, not the other way round.

It is the equivalent of an employee handing in his notice and then demanding he be promoted ahead of colleagues who deserve it more.

Any manager would tell that employee where to go. That they are not ready for the promotion but give it a year or 18 months and they would be ready. That he should not be holding the company to ransom by demanding a promotion otherwise he will quit.

If Balogun wants the opportunites currently being given to Nketiah, then he should sign a new contract.

He can not expect to be given that chance when he could leave in 6 months.

And ultimately, the argument should not be between Nketiah and Balogun.

With everyone fit, they are 4th and 5th choice striker.

Martinelli is the future.

Keenos

FA Cup defeat doesn’t tell us anything we did not already know

So we will not be winning back to back FA Cups again.

Taking into account a side winning back to back FA Cups has only occurred 4 times in 30 years the odds were always against The Arsenal.

Interesting to note that 3 of those 4 teams have been Arsenal.

So we are out of our trophy and it was not a huge surprise.

We were in for a hard game as soon as the team news came out that the likes of Bukayo Saka, Emile Smith Rowe, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Thomas Partey and Kieran Tierney were not playing whilst Southampton picked their strongest team.

We have struggled this year with our strongest XI, and limped to a draw against Southampton earlier this with our 1st team.

It actually annoys me when mid-table teams with no really chance of relegation play are rotated XI in the cup. It is disrespectful to fans that travel and denies them a genuine chance of winning a trophy – so fair play to Ralph HasenhĂĽttl for taking the competition seriously. There is no reason the likes of Southampton or Wolves could not go all the way to the final.

So we had a weak XI, Southampton had a strong XI and that was that.

Even with a weakened side, I still expected Arsenal to perform a lot better than what they did. But it was “same old same old” with the usual players putting in their usually poor performances.

During our poor run earlier in the season, there were 2 consistencies.

Sides taking advantage of an error at the back for Arsenal and scoring, and lack of creativity up front.

Gabriel was unlucky for the ball to bounce of him and slide under Bernd Leno. An own goal was Southampton’s only real chance of the match and it sums up our season.

It is the top of the field where it was a feeling of deja vu.

Willian and Nicholas Pepe.

The pair should simply not be in a starting XI together. Both are playing so poorly that we are losing 50% of our attacking prowess when the pair start.

Neither has performed well this season, so it was no surprise when their poor form continued.

Why Mikel Arteta continues to pick the pair in tandem I do not know.

Yes, Saka and Smith Rowe are youngsters and Arteta needs to treat them carefully, but it feels like every time Willian and Pepe start together we struggle to create and lose.

And it was not that both started, but also that both finished the game.

The free kick with 3 minutes to go sums it up.

In a good position on the edge of the box. A whipped in ball to the far post is what’s needed. Any touch is a goal.

Willian and Pepe over it, the Ivorian hits it a long way over. Not even close.

It is getting to the point where Arsenal need to just cut their losses on Pepe. If an offer of ÂŁ20m comes in for him, take it.

Whilst that will see us make a huge ÂŁ50m loss on him, it would at least allow us to reinvest some funds in someone better.

As for Willian. The decision to offer him a 3 year deal gets more and more baffling every game.

It’s taken 18 months for us to get Mesut Ozil off the books, but we now have over 2 years of Willian eating a wage.

If the side was rotated so that Arteta could see if the likes of Pepe and Willian would return to form, it all did was reinforce what most of us know. That neither are good enough.

Hopefully with the emergence of Emile Smith Rowe, the impending signing of Martin Odegaard and return to fitness of Gabriel Martinelli, we should not see Willian and Pepe in an XI together again.

The senior pair should now be 5th and 6th in the pecking order behind their junior team mates.

So it is frustrating to be out of the FA Cup, and equally as frustrating that it is the same old players putting in the same old poor performance.

Onto Tuesday when we play Southampton again.

Keenos

Arsenal to target both Brandt & Buendia despite Smith Rowe emergence

This is the 3rd blog in 3 days involving Emile Smith Rowe. I had never really written much on him before but his performances have turned the spotlight on him.

Yesterday I spoke about how Arsenal should switch from looking to sign both Julian Brandt and Emi Buendia, and only focus on with of them. And that Smith Rowe would be sufficient competition to play in the middle for which ever one we signed.

But as I was writing, it came to me that there is still the space in the squad for 2 attacking midfield signings.

If Arteta is to continue with 4231, Arsenal need 6 players capable of playing behind a single striker.

At the moment those 6 options are: Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Bukayo Saka, Willian, Nicholas Pepe, Emile Smith Rowe and Reiss Nelson. Throwing in Gabriel Martinelli and Joe Willock makes it 8.

8 is a lot of numbers, but it lacks quality, highlighted in our struggles to create this season.

Nelson and Willock have both stagnated in the last 18 months and Arsenal should look to cash in on them. They would raise ÂŁ30-40million combined, which would finance their replacements.

In building his team for 2021/22, Arteta needs to focus on versatility and fluidity.

One of Ozil’s great attributes was his ability to drift across the pitch and find space. He did not just stay central and would be a creative outlet throughout the final 3.

When he drifted to the wide positions, it then gave space in the middle for Aaron Ramsey, Santi Cazorla or Alexis Sanchez to fill. This concept is something that Arteta needs to build on.

The 3 behind the striker should be interchangeable. All capable of playing left, right and centre. That way it creates fluidity behind the leading striker and allows us to create 2 or even 3 on ones outwide.

We have already seen the benefit when Smith Rowe drifts left, teaming up with Kieran Tierney and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang to overload that side. Likewise with Saka and Bellerin on the right.

A fluid 3 behind a striker also makes us a lot harder to defend.

Saka, for example, has very different attributes to Smith Rowe. A full back would have to switch up his game plan as the two interchange positions.

I am sure one of the reasons Willian was signed was due to his versatility behind the front man.

So we basically need 6 attacking players who can do the job behind a single striker.

In Saka, Willian and Smith Rowe, we have 3 players that have the type of versatility that Arteta desires. Lets ignore the debate over Willian’s future. With his contract, he is going no where.

So that is 3 of the 6 positions filled.

One problem for Arteta is Aubameyang does not have the versatility behind the front striker.

He is best utilised either down the middle as that main striker or on the left hand side.

We have seen often this season that our creativity down the left is stifled when he plays – with an over reliance on Tierney.

My view is Alexandre Lacazette will leave this summer with Aubameyang moving centrally. This gets rid of the problem of Aubameyang not really having that versatility behind the front man.

So with Aubameyang moved up top, we have the 3 aforementioned as well as Martinelli and Pepe.

I would prefer to see Martinelli as Aubameyang’s cover up top; but he is more than capable playing a little deeper. He would be 2nd choice striker (with either Eddie Nketiah or Folarin Balogun as 3rd choice) and one of the 6th options in attacking midfield.

Saka, Smith Rowe, Willian, Martinelli. It still feels lacking.

We then have Nicholas Pepe.

Pepe joined 18 months ago for a huge fee which should not be held against him.

Based on his performances, he has been a poor signing – regardless of whether we paid £72 million or £27million for him.

Joining from Lille, we spoke a few years back about how he would either be the new Gervinho or new Eden Hazard. He is closer in talent to his Ivorian team mate.

If Arsenal can somehow get an offer in the region of ÂŁ40million for him, we should cut our losses and move on.

Pepe does have the versatility to play across those 3 positions – he played more centrally in France – but the feeling is he does not have the quality.

So if Pepe stays, we have the space for one new signing – and the feeling is that should be Brandt. But if he leaves that could open the door for both Brandt and Buendia

Like Saka, Smith Rowe, Willian and Martinelli, Brandt and Buendia can both play across the 3 behind the striker, and would give Arteta plenty of options.

Arteta could go

Aubameyang

Saka Brandt Buendia

Aubameyang

Brandt SmithRowe Saka

Aubameyang

Martinelli Brandt Saka

Martinelli

Brandt Buendia Saka

Martinelli

Saka SmithRowe Buendia

We would have options, versatility and fluidity.

So whilst Smith Rowe’s emergence means we do not need to sign both Buendia and Brandt, the departure of others would leave the transfer of both firmly on the table.

Final note: The above would also leave the door open for Houssem Aouar who is equally adept at playing all 3 roles behind a striker.

Brandt, Aouar, Buendia. 2 out of 3 to come to Arsenal next summer?

Keenos