
It is always interesting to me to canvass the views of regular readers of this blog. As time goes by I find myself less and less interested in vox pops from AFTV or the tabloid media or the comments section on other websites. Toxic might be too strong a word to apply to a lot of the content that gets posted about Arsenal but much is neither helpful nor constructive and represents a fairly warped view of where the club stands now. Perhaps it might seem too cosy a practice to elicit comments from regular readers but the reality is that what we have just seen in the last posting was proportionate and balanced but was nevertheless critical in some respects .
When Dave Faber set up the Goonerholic website that mindset is exactly what he was aiming to provide for an intelligent but overwhelmingly constructive readership of Arsenal fans . The areas we covered in the last mini survey were intended to provide a temperature check around the most contentious challenges facing the club at the moment.
Let us examine some of them and try to find some sort of consensus on what our situation looks like at the end of March.
Firstly , what sort of season are we having? In reality the only English team who wouldn’t swap places with us is Liverpool. While there are signs that the wheels might be coming off the Anfield jalopy they have had a dream League campaign so far and as befits a team from the city that houses the Grand National they only have to stand up to win.
We must be careful not to lose perspective. Three years go we were hugely excited by a tilt at top four that was ended by our deadly rivals, the Spuds. Two years ago we were playing in Europe’s secondary competition on Thursday evenings and casting envious glances at the glamorous ties on offer in the Champions League and the financial bonanza that represents. Progress was made three seasons ago and it has been handsomely backed up in the following two seasons to the extent that at at the start of this campaign many entrants for the GHF Predictathon would, I suspect, have put Arsenal down as prospective title winners and not just out of loyalty. There was a very strong case to believe that we would prevail this season in the title race. We still could but it would require a mega-collapse from Liverpool for that to happen. But lest we forget we are second and we finished third in the inaugural Champions League table losing only once and then in extremely unlucky circumstances to Inter Milan. We are now in the last 8 of the Champions League for the second successive year having won the away leg of our last 16 tie 7-1 ! We are welcoming Real Madrid in a tie which shows we are close to the summit of European football. How close, we will learn in mid-April. So we are not in too shabby a position as we move towards the climax of the season. We have also overseen the emergence of two of the most exciting young players that anyone can remember at Arsenal. However, it is not the trajectory that we envisaged back in August when the season began and that revised trajectory is creating the angst that appears to be the natural reaction of many modern football fans.
So where did it all go so terribly wrong as the hotel porter said to George Best lounging on a four poster with Miss World surrounded by champagne and bundles of cash?
The answer is that it looks like another season without the league title. Media expectations are a poor way to judge achievement and brook no leeway for an incredible injury toll on key players. They also take little note of a rash of bizarre red cards. The old joke says that just because you’re paranoid it doesn’t mean they aren’t out to get you and as our interviewees showed there is a huge sense of injustice and a widespread feeling that Arsenal really do get discriminatory treatment from PGMOL. Depressed Gooner’s description of ‘only us’ red cards is a very apt way of describing a litany of marginal decisions that have all gone against Arsenal and cost us a host of points.
That is not to say that Arteta has had a perfect season. Recruitment wasn’t extensive or good enough in the summer and that much anticipated striker never arrived and the wide forward who did arrive has been woefully inadequate. I think our play has been undertaken with the handbrake on for a large part of the season. A personal bugbear is that we take enormous passing risks in our own area but will transfer a cleared corner back to Raya eighty yards away if we can’t find a straightforward crossing angle.
And I think our reaction to red cards has been too supine other than at Manchester City where we were magnificent. I well remember the early years of Arsene Wenger when he was regularly criticised for the Arsenal’s disciplinary record. What was notable about that spate of games when we went down to ten men was that we rarely if ever lost, very often won and always tried to play on the front foot however unlikely the circumstances. Remember Christmas 2001 at Anfield when we won 2-1 after being reduced to ten men at 0-0? Or the 1996 game at Newcastle when Shearer dived to get his England team-mate, Tony Adams, sent off but Wrighty still helped us come away with all three points? Contrast that with this season when the only time we have been reduced to ten men and won was at Wolves where we clinched the game after they were reduced to ten men too. Our football has lacked something of the flow and panache which has characterised the last two seasons. However, our injury crisis has been deep and brutal and it has restricted our options enormously.
Arteta is a generational coach and in my view it would be absolute folly to consider jettisoning him as manager and I’m convinced that is what the owners and senior management at Arsenal think too. In the boardroom it is not even an issue. I hope that this season is extremely instructive to Arteta because it clearly hasn’t worked out completely as he has planned. But the idea that in the words of the phone-in participants, “he has taken the club as far as he can!” is ridiculous when last season he had us two points behind a Manchester City team completing a title hat-trick.
I would also like to reflect on two points raised in our latest piece and touched on by Ned in the drinks and to pose a serious question about what level of personnel sacrifice we would be prepared to accept to go into next season with our best possible chance of success. Inevitably any keen fan will toy with the fantasy options available to our new Sporting Director who everyone seems to accept will be Andrea Berta who spent many years in a similar role at Atletico Madrid. Rather than try to construct a wish-list of signings I’d like to pose a question that was raised on Le Grove recently as well. Would we countenance the sale of, say, Gabriel to Saudi Arabia if it meant we could afford to buy Isak from Newcastle? We will have a high turnover of players next summer and may see the departure of Kiwior, Tierney, Zinchenko, Jorginho, Partey, Tavares, Sambi Lokonga , Vieira and Nelson. These would all be expected but none are likely to raise huge sums and will leave us needing some replacements as Sterling will leave as well, Neto will go back to Bournemouth and Gabriel Jesús will not be fit until well into next season. Max Dowman may join the first team squad but will still be only fifteen!
Who else could we countenance parting company with? Would Trossard or Martinelli be transferable if the terms were right? Going back to Gabriel, would a huge (circa £100m) bid for him or, perish the thought, a huge bid from Real Madrid for Saliba persuade us to sell either in order to strengthen other parts of the team? My own view is that if we get outstanding bids for Trossard or Martinelli (in his case circa £60m) we should certainly consider selling. But to break up the Gabriel/Saliba partnership would be folly as it is very much key to the impregnability of the Arsenal defence and Gabriel is the best goalscoring centre back in the league and terrifies so many of our opponents at corner kicks. That partnership has at least one more season to run and in many senses represents the backbone of the club.
I’d like to see a much better second keeper than we currently have although whether Garcia of Espanyol wants to move to England to understudy one of the very few Spanish keepers better than he is I personally doubt. Perhaps Karl Hein is ready to take a bigger role in goalkeeping affairs at the Arsenal. Let us debate over the summer for whom we should spend the considerable sum that should be available although ‘ITK’ journalists are already strongly suggesting that we will see Zubimendi, Williams, Sesko and Nypan wearing red and white next season.
In our recent interviews with Holics, BtM made a very cogent plea for us to develop a feeder club and several Holics backed him. I back that idea too. It would enable us to test players in a realistic first team environment and might have helped us to hold on to promising players like Cozier Duberry, Norton-Cuffy, Heaven, Sagoe Jr and Biereth while we monitor their progress. It may even have persuaded Chido Obi to stay if that represented part of a clear pathway to eventual first team football at the Arsenal. It was a point of apparent contention when Edu left. It appears that he was in favour of building a relationship with a club in South America but ‘the Arsenal’ did not want to take that step at that time. I think they should reconsider without getting into the unwieldy mess that Chelsea seem to have created with their huge roster of players. It is likely to be another item in Berta’s in-tray when (if) he arrives.
The other subject which threatens to occupy a lot of our thinking going forward is the stadium. In 1997 I received a phone call from Ken Friar at the Arsenal. We had booked a corporate box at Highbury and there had been an administrative cock-up on the Arsenal’s part. He phoned to apologise and as our conversation developed he shared his concern about taking the huge step of committing to a much bigger stadium. “Can we regularly pull crowds of 60,000?’ he asked. Wenger was beginning to weave his magic and create a following for the club that has generated untold wealth. We bit the Ashburton Grove bullet and moved to our new stadium almost a decade later.
It seems inconceivable that we could be thinking about substantially modifying the stadium only twenty years after opening it. Ned made a suggestion in the Drinks that we would actually be moving to a new stadium in the next ten years. That would be a huge decision and a massive commitment. Certainly expansion of the current stadium would require a huge improvement in the transport infrastructure if we hope to house another 20,000 spectators but moving Arsenal away from our heartland in Islington to find a site capable of housing such huge crowds, with the necessary infrastructure of transport, eateries and other businesses would be both controversial and very hard to achieve. Certainly a prolonged spell playing at Wembley or the London Stadium while a new ground is built would not be welcomed by many Gooners — and the unthinkable option of playing at the Toilet Bowl for two years would be even less popular. However, the Government’s apparent desire to help Manchester United build a new stadium at Salford might be matched by similar support for a new London super stadium if a suitable site can be found. Yet it is hard to sing ‘North London Forever‘ with any sincerity if you are playing in Shepherds Bush, Romford or Tooting!
Let us hope rereading this article in a few weeks time we will be able to have a wry smile as we celebrate a glorious title/ Champions league double at the end of the most glorious season in Arsenal’s history. It seems unlikely now that a season that has been benighted by injuries and refereeing discrimination could end so gloriously. Let us not lose sight of the bigger picture – a picture that is overwhelmingly positive and one that almost every team in Europe would love to mirror. A more spectacular trajectory would have made it even better but as this season has shown not only us, but a host of other teams, in football you cannot always have what you wish for.
Let’s hope that we can!