Posts filed under '2011-12 Season'

Poacher RVP benefits from Gervinho wizardry

582 comments October 24th, 2011

Arsenal 3 – 1 Stoke

Match Report | Highlights | Arsene’s reaction

Imagine, if you will, that Arsene Wenger had been dismissed following Arsenal’s defeat at Blackburn on September 17th.  It’s not beyond the realms of possibility – certainly, a large proportion of the fanbase were calling for just that to happen.  Now imagine that the new manager – some idealistic lovechild of Jose Mourinho and Pep Guardiola, conceived in a bout of passionate hate-sex, had achieved exactly the same results Arsene has in the last seven games.

It’s six wins from seven games, with 15 goals scored and just six conceded.  It’s a run that’s taken us to the top of our Champions League group, and within three points of both Liverpool and Tottenham in the Premier League.

Had these results been picked up by a new manager, divorced from the stigma that Arsene has collected in his 15 years at charge, he’d be being praised for the impressive and pragmatic turnaround.  Arsene, too, deserves that credit.  I want to stear clear of cliche and avoid claiming that we’ve turned round any corners or over any leaves, but there is an increasing confidence in this Arsenal squad – a confidence underlined by the fact that Arsene felt he would be able to start Robin van Persie on the bench yesterday.

As we know, the Dutchman eventually stepped on to the field to resume his customary role as match-winner.  He is now just one off double-figures for the season, and has a staggering 25 goals in 26 league games in the calendar year of 2011 (thanks Orbinho).  His evolution in to a central striker has been fascinating to watch.  He arrived at Arsenal as a lanky teenager who had, like another great Arsenal striker, Thierry Henry, spent most of footballing career on the left-wing.  Unlike Henry, Van Persie was not blessed with blistering pace, and so was ear-marked by many (including Arsene) as a potential successor to Dennis Bergkamp in the support-striker role.  When we made the necessary switch to 4-3-3, however, Arsene needed a centre-forward who could receive the ball with his back to goal and bring the midfield in to play.  He needed someone with an immaculate first-touch, and Van Persie was that man.

What he and others could never predicted was that the Dutchman would unearth in himself such a goalscoring instinct.  Both finishes yesterday were instant near-post strikes – real poacher’s goals.  If he somehow manages to avoid injury, he promises to have his highest scoring season to date.

For both goals yesterday he owed a huge debt of gratitude to Gervinho.  The Ivorian winger had his best game in an Arsenal shirt, scoring the opener after a lovely clipped pass from Aaron Ramsey, and then setting up the second and third with darts to the right and left byline respectively before cutting the ball back in to Robin’s path.  Whilst his first touch and finishing can be erratic, he does seem to possess that burst of pace over five yards than allows him to get past a man in the tightest of situations.  And, unlike Theo Walcott, he seems to be able to take the ball with him when he does it too, and find a pass at the end of it.  Hopefully his goal yesterday marks the start of a scoring run – we need the likes of Gervinho and Walcott to take the pressure off Van Persie.

Finally, I wanted to speak in praise once more of our centre-back pairing of Per Mertesacker and Laurent Koscielny, who (for the most part) coped admirably with Stoke’s aerial bombardment.  Stoke’s goal was the unfortunate product of a lapse on concentration – I think fans and players alike thought they’d hoofed their free-kick out of play, only to see it catch in the wind and turn out to be a perfectly clipped pass to the near post.

Koscielny has been getting a lot of praise of late, but it doesn’t take a genius to see that having the giant German alongside him is helping him enormously.   It means that Thomas Vermaelen will have a genuine battle to get back in to the side when he returns from injury, which is a luxury we couldn’t have dreamt of a few months ago.  While we’re on the defence, I also though Andre Santos and Johan Djourou performed very ably in the full-back positions.

Right, Carling Cup tomorrow, and another chance to look at Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, among others.

A toast to Arsene & other bits

58 comments October 22nd, 2011

There’s only one place to start today, and that’s with wishing a very happy birthday to Arsene Wenger. Our manager is now 62 years old, and has dedicated almost a quarter of his life to serving Arsenal Football Club.  It’s a debt of service and a body of work that leaves me in awe.  Here’s to you, Professor.

I was struck by a quip from Arsene to French TV last week.  He said:

“When I arrive at the gates of Heaven the Good Lord will ask ‘what did you do in your life?’

I will respond ‘I tried to win football matches.’ He will say: ‘Are you sure that’s all?’ But, well, that’s the story of my life.”

At a time when opinion over the manager is more divergent than ever, you cannot question his dedication to the Arsenal cause.  The quote above underlines the paradox of Arsene: he is a fiercely intelligent man, who has spent his life pursuing something as absurd as football.  At times he has transcended that, turning sport in to art.  At the moment, he goes game to game, trying to claw three points from each fixture.

That process continues tomorrow against Stoke.  The team news sees Carl Jenkinson added to our injury list.  Arsene says that one of Johan Djourou or Laurent Koscielny will fill in at right-back.  I’d be inclined to choose Djourou, simply because I’d be cautious to split up the increasingly effective partnership between Koscielny and Per Mertesacker.  Arsene has been speaking about the teutonic titan:

“I brought him here for more than this type of game [Stoke] because I feel he is a good player. He is a good organiser, he understands the game, he is an intelligent player and physically he is getting sharper and sharper in every game.

He had no real preparation for the season and now you can see that we look less nervous at the back and he contributes to that.”

Arsene also says he’d like to see the German get more goals from set-pieces, but for that to happen the delivery from the likes of Mikel Arteta and Robin van Persie needs to improve dramatically.

Stoke will be a significant test, and hopefully I’ll be able to furnish you with a full preview tomorrow.  I unexpectedly have to dash, but why not spend the afternoon raising a glass to our manager, and enjoying some of his finest turns of phrase here.

Last-minute magic in Marseille

761 comments October 19th, 2011

Aaron Ramsey netting the winner against Marseille

Arsenal 1 – 0 Marseille

Match Report | Highlights | Arsene’s reaction

You know what, Chelsea?  You can keep your 5-0 romps.  Truly, there is no sweeter way to win a football match than with a solitary last-gasp goal.  More than ninety minutes of turgid entrenchment punctured by one sweet strike from substitute Aaron Ramsey.  Cue much air punching, back-slapping, and (in my house at least) spilling of tea.

To say it was an average game would probably be generous.  After a promising start, it fizzled out, which felt a little like seeing Joey Barton on fire, and then having some jobsworth health and safety officer throw water over him.  The closest we came to goalmoath action was a shout for handball at either end, with Carl Jenkinson and Souleymane Diawara the men lucky to escape censure.

Andre Santos also carlessly handled the ball having already been booked, and was probably lucky not to be sent off.  If you knew nothing of Santos, just five minutes watching him would enable you to guess he was Brazilian.  Plenty of skill and imagination on the ball, but a tendency to overplay and take some quite insane risks.  Needless to say, he is fitting in perfectly at Arsenal.

The basic problem was a lack of quality in the final third.  Marseille lacked ambition; Arsenal urgency.   Andrey Arshavin had been selected ahead of Gervinho but was having a nightmare of a game.  At least he would occasionally find himself on the ball – the same could not be said for Theo Walcott.

The second-half introductions of Johan Djourou and Gervinho for Carl Jenkinson (injured) and Theo Walcott (AWOL) threatened to bring our right-flank to life, but it looked for all intents and purposes as if Arsenal were playing out a creditable 0-0 draw.  I even began composing a blog, now thankfully discarded, which reported the result as fact.

There were positives to be drawn.  Laurent Koscielny was quite outstanding at centre-back, with Per Mertesacker equally assured alongside him.  Ahead of them, Alex Song added to what is becoming an increasingly impressive portfolio of performances this season.  He breaks up the play well, and uses the ball intelligently.  Next to him, Mikel Arteta showed more graft than craft with a number of crucial and crunchy challenges.  The advantage of signing players with Premier League experience is that they usually know how to scrap.

The frustration was that Marseille were clearly there for the taking, if only Arsenal could up their game.  In the end, the man to release the figurative handbrake was subtitute Aaron Ramsey, who collected a Johan Djourou cross, miscontrolled by Gervinho, and fired low in to the near post – the perfect way for him to prepare for a game with Stoke at the weekend.

And so it finished: 1-0 to the Arsenal, with our first clean sheet away from home in Europe since Milan ’08.

Afterwards Arsene said:

“We left it very late but we had a difficult start. We lost some balls in the first half due to the fact Marseille pressed us well.

They didn’t find their fluency but in the second half we took over and I don’t think Marseille were dangerous at all [after half-time]. Marseille defended very well but you could see in the last 15 minutes we created some chances and were rewarded because we kept going and got an important victory.”

It leaves us top of the group, and a win in the return fixture would all but guarantee our qualification to the knockout stage.

Quietly, without anyone taking much notice, Arsenal have won five of their last six games.  It’s not quite a resurgence, but it’s certainly a relief.  Long may it continue.

Vermaelen signs on as Arsenal head to the Velodrome

726 comments October 19th, 2011

On the eve of their tie with Marseille, Arsenal announced some fantastic news: Thomas Vermaelen has signed a long-term deal with the club.  Perhaps mindful of the debt he owes the club after missing the best part of a year with an assortment of injuries, he has become the first of a group of players involved in negotiations – Song, Walcott, Van Persie, Arshavin – to actually put pen to paper.

Vermaelen said:

“I am really happy to have signed a new contract with Arsenal. I always had the intention to stay here. I feel there is a big belief in me from the Club, from the boss and from the fans and that is one of the reasons why I stayed. Arsenal is a fantastic Club. We have great supporters, we’re doing well financially and we are playing with some quality young players now and they will develop, which is very good for the future.”

The vice-captain signing on will hopefully encourage some of the others to do the same, though Van Persie’s age and status mean he will want to delay any decision as long as possible.

Arsene Wenger, meanwhile, called Vermaelen a “special player” and insists the defensive side of our squad is in healthier shape than ever before:

“For me, we have a strong central defence now. Mertesacker is an outstanding player, Koscielny will be an outstanding player – he is slowly getting there – and there is Djourou, Squillaci and Vermaelen.

So this is good news for us. It closes speculation about centre back positions, we have four or five now and that should be enough.”

I can’t be alone in being eager to get Vermaelen back and alongside Per Mertesacker.  They seem to me to be a natural partnership, and one that could provide us with a solid base for years to come.  Assuming, that is, that they stay fit…

From what I understand Vermaelen has a chance of being fit in time for our game at Stamford Bridge next weekend.  Tonight, it will be Laurent Koscielny who continues alongside the big German.  Arsene has said no players will be rested tonight, so the rest of the team picks itself.  Carl Jenkinson will continue at right-back, whilst Andre Santos will come in for the injured Kieran Gibbs.  Santos made a good impact as a substitute on Sunday, so I’m not worried about bringing him in to the team.

The central trio of Song, Arteta and Ramsey should be restored with the Welshman available once again.  Ahead of that, their could be a little rotation.  Van Persie will play through the middle, but it’s possible Andrey Arshavin or Tomas Rosicky could be deployed in one of the wide roles ahead of Gervinho or Walcott.  There’s been a fair bit of talk in the French press about how Gervinho has not yet looked the player he did at Lille; hopefully returning to French soil will encourage him to accelerate his adaptation.

Marseille have had a similarly slow start to their season as us, but they’ve got some exciting players – including playmaker Lucho Gonzalez, who was the subject of a bid from Arsenal shortly before the transfer deadline.  Our group seems to be taking shape with three major players – ourselves, Marseille and Dortmund – so the outcome of tonight’s game will be crucial in determining final league positions.

You can read more of my thoughts on the Marseille game over on Arsenal.com.  Oooooh, get me.

Right, better get back to work. Come On You Gunners.

5 things we learnt from the Sunderland game

239 comments October 17th, 2011

Robin van Persie celebrates the winning goal

Match Report | Highlights | Arsene’s reaction

Arsenal are more reliant on Robin van Persie than ever…
There are two reasons we have relied quite as much on one Robin van Persie.  The first is that it hasn’t been possible, simply because he hasn’t been fit.  The second is that it hasn’t been necessary, because we’ve had a more even distribution of talent.  At the moment, especially with Jack Wilshere and Bacary Sagna injured, he is the sole world class performer in our team.  He’d grace any team in the world, and finds himself as the talisman of a struggling side.  Fortunately, he is seizing responsibility with relish, as his match-winning display yesterday demonstrated.  This Robin is, unlike his comic-book name-same, no ‘boy wonder’: he’s all grown-up.  And we desperately, desperately need him.

Robin is swiftly becoming too good for this side…
The sad truth is that as Robin’s shooting star is looking lonely in a darkening Arsenal constellation.   He has less than two years to run on his current deal, and Arsene didn’t exactly sound confident of him signing an extension any time soon:

“The ideal situation is that he extends his contract but if he doesn’t you have to respect that. You know what is important is that he plays like he plays because we are all here to see special football players and he is a special football player.”

In other words: enjoy it while you can.  As I said above, Van Persie would not look out of place at Real Madrid or Barcelona.  If he keeps playing like this, he’ll have his pick.  Perhaps his future will depend on our Champions League status.

Carl Jenkinson has one oustanding quality…
There may be question marks over his defensive positioning, but you can’t argue with the fact that he is quite possibly the finest crosser of the ball at Arsenal Football Club.  For anyone who has spent years watching our corners hit the first man that won’t be a huge surprise, but yesterday Jenkinson’s delivery of the ball was consistently excellent.  It was a solid performance from the young lad, and hopefully he’ll grow in confidence and stature as the games go by.

Andrey Arshavin can be a great impact sub…
Yesterday he was introduced for the patchy Gervinho, and made a real impact, drifting infield and showing a willingness to run at defenders and try to make things happen.  I know I have a reputation as something of an ‘Arshavin apologist’, but when you witness cameos like he produced yesterday it’s easy to see why I can be seduced by his talent before being appalled by his attitude.

Arsene does not trust Park…
Had Van Persie not spared our blushes with that sumptuous free-kick, surely questions would have been asked of his Arsene’s continued unwillingness to make use of his new striker.  Against both Spurs and Sunderland, Arsene chose to introduce Yossi Benayoun ahead of our number nine.  Perhaps it comes from an unwillingness to change our shape, but with only two years in which to make his mark at Arsenal, Park will surely be conscious of the early lack of opportunities.

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