2012/13 Build-Up – The Barclays Premier League: Arsenal

29 07 2012

2011/12 Campaign (3rd in the Premier League)

Last season looked as if it could spell the end of Arsene Wenger’s more glorious than not reign at the North London side early on, as the Gunners slumped to an 8-2 defeat at the hands of eventual runners-up Manchester United, which saw Wenger’s team sit in 17th place after three games. However, although the defeat and shoddy start to the opening of the campaign triggered an uncharacteristic flurry of transfer activity from Wenger, in terms of money and men, the Frenchman remained at the helm and guided Arsenal to yet another Champions League qualification spot finish – something which he has thus far never failed to do since his 1996 appointment.

Preseason

Arsenal’s late splurge of cash to bring in 28-year old Andre Santos, 29-year old Mikel Arteta and 31-year old Yossi Benayoun on deadline day last year was unconventional: simply put, Wenger has always bought young and sold old. Yet, he can be forgiven for his unexpected behaviour as it addressed an urgent need for stability and reassurance, following a loss of both, which had been overlooked in the past two years as a core of key players departed the Emirates in the shape of Samir Nasri, Gael Clichy and Cesc Fabregas.

This year, although the solution seemingly matched the problem as Arsenal went on to finish only behind the Manchester duopoly, the same actions cannot be expected – nor tolerated. They do, however, point towards a bright future for Arsenal, at least on a financial front, whether their flying Dutchman departs or not.

If Robin van Persie is indeed sold it is nothing short of Arsene Wenger’s best economic practice – he usually flogs his midfielders and strikers at the 28-year old mark: Marc Overmars was sold for £25m aged 27, Emmanuel Petit left for £7m aged 29, Patrick Vieira was sold to Juventus aged 29 for £14m and Thierry Henry was sold for £16m aged 29. van Persie is 28-years old and the price tag on his head is £20m. It’s the done thing at Arsenal and not one of the players mentioned above went on to replicate the form they did whilst under Wenger’s tutelage at any of their clubs after.

Furthermore, the problems that would be left behind by his departure have already been answered this summer transfer window, through the £19.5m combined acquisitions of international strikers Lukas Podolski, German, and Olivier Giroud, French, whilst the parallels to last time Arsenal’s leading man left are uncanny.

Much like when Wenger unearthed Juventus’ reserve left winger Theirry Henry and converted him into a centre forward, the French manager did the same with van Persie and similarly, in the way that Giroud and Podolski have been purchased to compete with each other and potentially replace the latter, van Persie and Reyes were bought when Henry was first linked with moves away from Arsenal in 2004, before eventually leaving in 2007. van Persie succeeded where Reyes was less proficient – Wenger has taken the same security again in signing both Giroud and Podolski.

To further convince any believers that life after van Persie is not all doom and gloom, take this comparison appraisal: to say Arsenal made a profit of £5.5m on Thierry Henry when they sold him to FC Barcelona for £16m eight years after purchasing him for £10.5m is wrong – considering the inflation in transfer fees, the net present value of Henry’s £10.5m 1999 acquisition was roughly £20m in 2007, thus meaning Arsenal made a loss of £4m in real terms. Still, a small price to pay for the club’s all-time top goalscorer. In contrast, Robin van Persie was purchased for £2.75m in 2004, which, as a current transfer fee purchase price, converts to roughly £6.44m. (To explain, if they bought the 20-year old RVP tomorrow, he would cost £6.44m) Therefore, if they sell him for circa. £20m, they are up on their money to the tune of just under £14m. Not bad, considering RVP’s goals to game ratio is 0.47 to Henry’s 0.61.

So far Arsenal’s only transfer activity has circulated round Robin van Persie and his likely departure – fortunately, they are prepared for it. However, aside from Giroud and Podolski, Arsenal are yet to make any other purchases and a defensive fragility must be addressed between now and the closing of the window at the end of August. With just over a month to go before deadline day is upon us, Wenger has plenty of time to make his moves: however, with the Premier League kick-off under 20 days away, there is less time for his squad to be fully assembled in time for their season opener against Sunderland.

Although little can be read into the preseason results, Arsenal have only recorded one 90-minute match win – a 2-1 triumph over a Malaysia XI. Aside from that, Arsenal have: won the annual triangular Markus Liebherr Memorial Cup tournament hosted by Premier League newcomers Southampton F.C, in which they beat Anderlecht 1-0 over 45-minutes, before losing in a penalty shootout to the hosts after a 1-1 draw; lost 2-0 to Premier League Champions Manchester City; and drew two a piece with Kitchee FC. Their next scheduled friendly is against new boy Lukas Podolski’s old side FC Cologne.

Prediction for 2012/13

Arsenal’s success should not hinge on whether Robin van Persie stays or goes – his departure looks imminent and undoubted anyway. Rather, how well they do may come down to what Wenger does between now and September in regards to defensive reinforcements. In Laurent Koscielny, who recently signed a new five-year deal despite interest from FC Barcelona, and Thomas Vermaelen, Arsenal have a solid centre-back partnership which can flourish with the correct level of playing time that has thus far been hindered by injuries to both.

Considering Bacary Sagna is still injured and Andre Santos spent much of last season injured himself, perhaps wing backs are where Arsenal can reassert a dominance in a potential title challenge, with Kieran Gibbs and Carl Jenkinson possibly still too young and/or inexperienced to handle the weekly rigours of defensive duties at the very top, whilst also being the victims of rotation in their position. For Arsenal to be serious contenders for a top four finish, consistency will be vital at the back.

Prediction: 3rd

Written by Jordan Florit for www.maycauseoffence.com/ For more articles visit my website or my Twitter @JordanFlorit





Lessons learned from Wednesday’s Premier League games

22 03 2012

Manchester City 2-1 Chelsea

Having conceded the lead in the race for the title the weekend before last and witnessing their rivals Manchester United pull away at the weekend, with a 5-0 hammering of a dilapidated Wolves side, Manchester City had it all to do tonight. It was made all the more harder by their opposition – a rejuvenated Chelsea team, who, since firing Andre Villas-Boas, have had their fortunes turned; firstly turning round a two goal deficit from their last sixteen first leg away tie against Napoli and then strengthened further by Sunday’s cup result against Leicester, 5-2, that was made all the more memorable with two Fernando Torres goals.

The first half saw David Silva and Samir Nasri both waste chances in front of goal, yet Chelsea couldn’t put them to the sword and punish them for their mistakes before half-time. One victim from the first half was Mario Balotelli, however: having acted as a passenger for much of the first half, including a squandered shot one-on-one with Petr Cech, the enigmatic Italian was whipped off at half-time and Match of the Day pundit Alan Hansen denounced the forward, stating that he “won’t start again this season.”

The second half didn’t get off to the best of starts for the home side, who had only conceded six at The Etihad all season, when Gary Cahill’s half volley, feeding off of the ball made loose by the pushing presence of Brazilian centre back David Luiz, was deflected past a wrong-footed Joe Hart by Yaya Toure.

Yet, Carlos Tevez’ introduction to the game, his first since his controversial exploits in 2011, following the goal, acted as the catalyst for City’s comeback. Firstly Sergio Aguero converted a penalty, earned by Pablo Zabaleta, to equalise the tie with twelve minutes left, before Carlos Tevez was involved with a neat one-two with Nasri, who finished with aplomb past an oncoming Cech to complete the turnaround.

Lessons learned:

  1. Manchester City have the fighting spirit to push United all the way.
  2. But, Balotelli is unlikely to be the hero.
  3. Time is a healer for Carlitos.

QPR 3-2 Liverpool

With a Wembley semi-final place confirmed at the weekend, having already made the trip once this season to beat Cardiff to the League Cup trophy on penalties, Liverpool returned to their Premier League campaign with confidence running high, European football confirmed next season (irrelevant of their league finish) and Luis Suarez’ returning to his best in a Liverpool shirt.

QPR, on the other hand, have had very little to be positive about recently and going into the game, they were trying to grip at a very slippery rope. Financially, they cannot afford to get relegated – it is as simple as that. Wednesday’s performance gave Rangers fans hope that they won’t.

Although their goal was under siege for much of the game, Paddy Kenny only saw two goals go past him. The first was simply unstoppable, falling perfectly for Uruguayan defender Sebastien Coates to beautifully craft his lumbering figure into an elegant mould that succulently met the ball in the air, scissor kick-esque, to fire the ball past Kenny, combining backspin, power and control harmoniously. The second was less spectacular but typical of its scorer – Dirk Kuyt. His tireless running and constant determination saw him react quickest to a fumbled shot, poking in from close range.

Yet, for all the beauty of Liverpool’s performance in the first 75 minutes, it was the closing fifteen that could define QPR’s season. 2-0 down against Liverpool when you are facing a relegation battle is an ominous presence: however, two headers from Shaun Derry and ex-Liverpool striker Djibril Cisse, set up a grandstand finish for Jamie Mackie to steal the headlines with an acute finish from close range to steal all three points from The Reds in a fifteen minute three-goal turnaround.

Lessons learned:

  1. QPR have glimmers of hope and an unexpected three points, amidst the hardest run-in of the relegation battling sides.
  2. Liverpool’s failure to score has cost them bitterly this season, but when they do score they’ve struggled to shut up shop.

Tottenham 1-1 Stoke

Saturday’s cup game against Bolton should’ve presented the chance for Spurs to wipe the slate clean, restart a run of form and get their three consecutive league defeats out of the system. However, the unfortunate circumstances involving Fabrice Muamba, which resulted in the 23-year old being rushed to London’s Chest Hospital having suffered a cardiac arrest, meant their cup game was abandoned in the 41st minute.

Harry Redknapp told his players the best way to get over the trauma of Saturday was to play and when Stoke took the lead in a fashion typical of The Potters, it looked like the suffering would continue at White Hart Lane. Cameron Jerome had put the visitors into the lead with just fifteen minutes left and with just injury time left to play it looked as if Stoke would take all three points.

Fortunately, the diminutive Rafael Van der Vaart headed home an equaliser in the 93rd minute of the game and now Spurs can build on the momentum of their late goal, going into the weekend’s tie with Chelsea. At current, The Lilywhites have just one point from twelve – Chelsea will be tough opponents to improve that form, which has seen their blip threatening to become a trend.

Lessons learned:

  1. Tottenham continue to choke with under 10 games remaining in the Premier League.
  2. But, they’ve grabbed their first point in four games.
  3. However, their failure to win see them slip to fourth.

Everton 0-1 Arsenal

If Arsenal bettered Tottenham’s result on Wednesday night, The Gunners would leapfrog Spurs into third place and thus take the lead as the top London club – a much coveted plaudit between Arsene Wenger and Harry Redknapp.

Eight minutes into the game, Thomas Vermaelen’s bundled effort looked set to see Arsenal on course for their sixth straight league victory on the trot, with the Belgian defender putting The Gunners 1-0 up.  Arsenal had already rued one miss chance before the goal and with 82 minutes left to double their lead, they were led to rue many more.

Their failure to score another, including a rare dry 90 minutes for Robin van Persie, who this week was named as one of the Premier League’s best three, by the best Lionel Messi, nearly cost the visitors, with Everton denied a clear equaliser when Royston Drenthe’s finish from inside the box was incorrectly disallowed by an offside decision.

As aforementioned, Tottenham failed to equal Arsenal’s three points on the night and thus the red North London side leapfrogged the white North London side, with the two teams swapping places in 3rd and 4th.

Lessons learned:

  1. Arsenal have the best 6 game run in the Premier League, with 18 points from 18.
  2. Since Andrey Arshavin left Arsenal on loan, The Gunners have won seven in seven
  3. Tottenham are back in their shadow until the weekend, at least.

Written by Jordan Florit for www.maycauseoffence.com/ For more articles visit my website or my Twitter @JordanFlorit