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Friday 12 September 2014

Wenger not inspiring Welbeck, Man City (h) preview

The main man tomorrow?


Arsene Wenger has caused a storm with his comments on Danny Welbeck's signing yesterday. I've read plenty of people explaining what Wenger is supposed to have meant with what he said, but one part of the statement made is utterly unequivocal:

"If I'd stayed at home he wouldn't be here now"

You can "interpret" most of what Wenger came out with yesterday any way you want, but there is no interpretation to be had over that quote. I've read plenty today from certain bloggers and commentators who may be considered as "friendly" or "sympathetic" to Arsenal's media department. Frankly I've rarely seen quite so much drivel. The fact is that Wenger admitted Arsenal would not have signed Welbeck had he been here to stop it. That means Arsenal would have done no business had Wenger been around. This merely proves once and for all that Wenger is the biggest obstacle in the way of Arsenal signing players. Each of the five players that have arrived this transfer window have done so while Wenger has not been in England. 
What exactly does such a quote do for Welbeck's confidence? We should be thankful that Louis Van Gaal slagged the boy off as he now has something to prove in an Arsenal shirt, regardless of anything Arsene Wenger comes out with.
At the same time we should be congratulating Ivan Gazidis and his team for getting Welbeck in as an Arsenal player. They clearly went the extra mile to persuade Manchester United to sell him when a loan deal was taken out of the equation, and rightly so - I don't like us loaning players in as it's not the way the top clubs should be going about their business (you might make an exception for someone with the quality of Falcao, but not many others). The more Gazidis and co can keep Arsene Wenger away from transfer negotiations the better from now on. Wenger should identify the players, of course, and he should talk to the players about the team, but he should no longer have any role whatsoever in the nuts and bolts of the deal.


Cheer up Alexis - we've got a big game this weekend


So it's Manchester City at home tomorrow afternoon in the early kick-off. This is the first real test of the season against one of the sides with an aim to actually win the Premier League. The injuries to Fernando and Jovetic are a boost for Arsenal, but we could do with Aguero pulling up lame early on as well. City have an abundance of attackers as we all know. We also know that defending is our weak area, regardless of the quality of Mertesacker and Koscielny as a pairing. We certainly can't be caught out early like we were too often last season in the big games.
For Arsenal just about everyone of note is available tomorrow. My preference would be for a midfield of Arteta, Flamini and Wilshere (there's no point in playing a half-fit Ramsey, though if he's 100% he will obviously get the nod) with Alexis and Cazorla out wide, supporting Welbeck. One of our biggest problems against City is the lack of physicality in our midfield against City's strong men, and that's why I think not playing Flamini would be an error - he was excellent in the corresponding game last season and was rewarded with our equaliser. We certainly can't afford to play Mesut Ozil on the left tomorrow as Zabaleta will not only put him in his pocket but he'll also keep running past him to make an extra attacker up against either Gibbs or Monreal.
The big hope has to be that Arsenal can hit the ground running after the international break. There is no excuse for fatigue with the games all being played early in the week, leaving plenty of time for recovery. There will be a lot of focus on Danny Welbeck's debut and you can be sure he won't be any worse than Yaya Sanogo was at Leicester. I really hope the fact that he has been brought up through the ranks at Man Utd gives him the necessary desire to put one over on City. He will have his work cut out against Kompany, but if we can get proper support around him then City can be got at. I was impressed by Joe Hart for England on Monday so I hope he's back to making mistakes tomorrow - Arsenal must apply pressure and keep shooting low to his left as Hart has a serious, seemingly unseen, weakness there.
I'm looking forward to tomorrow. The Charity Shield thrashing meant nothing really, but tomorrow will show if we have a chance to go for it this season. Lose at home and the Premier League challenge is really all over before it's even begun. Win at home and it's game on. It's fair to say Arsenal haven't yet played well in the Premier League this season. They will have to play well tomorrow if they want to be contenders.
I'll be posting stuff to the new Instagram account tomorrow, hopefully before the match (internet and 4G connection permitting), but certainly at some point during the day. Hopefully there will then be a match review here tomorrow night.

14 comments:

  1. Frankly I've rarely seen quite so much drivel.

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    1. Thanks for that. Which part of the blog isn't based on facts?

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  2. Ah, the Wenger lovers are out and about those evening.

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  3. No, just those that understand the plain meaning of words in the English language. Wenger traveled to Rome Or possibly just to the airport with the agent who was dealing with Welbeck's agent (his brother), on the club's behalf. Also, Wenger was referring to the fact that he got up earlier than usual due to his travel plans and thus was made aware early on of Wlebeck's availability.

    When Wenger says, "“At the start, the player was only available on loan, but after he became available to buy, I agreed" -- how does that back up your farcical claim that Wenger would have blocked the deal had he been at London Colney or The Emirates?

    It's clear his inital sentence(s) were meant to raise eyebrows and "yank the chains" of the reporters, before he more fully explained what he was talking about.

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    1. Writing about a failure to understand plain English while putting together such awful spelling and grammar is beyond funny. Welbeck would not be an Arsenal player if Wenger had been in England. Straight from the horses mouth. Everything else you've read and heard by way of explanation is what has been briefed by Arsenal's press office, having realised the shit storm the Manager had just caused.

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    2. Ok, sure, you're right. A couple of typos in a comments section of a blogand my spelling is bad, well all righty then.

      The quote I provided from Wenger came immediately following his statement around which you have framed your entire argument. This statement didn't come days later at the behest of the Arsenal media folks. Wenger said it immediately following the remarks you find so damning. It directly contradicts the point you are trying to make, straight from the horse's mouth.

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  4. HA! HA!

    I overlooked this gem of logic earlier: "This merely proves once and for all that Wenger is the biggest obstacle in the way of Arsenal signing players. Each of the five players that have arrived this transfer window have done so while Wenger has not been in England."

    HAHAHAHAHAHA!!! Thanks for the chuckles. I'm going to stop by for a laugh more often. Cheers!

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    1. But that's entirely true - all five were signed while he was away. Try and dispute that fact. You can't.
      I'm going to watch The Arsenal tomorrow. Are you?

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    2. How about how the part where you say "it merely proves once and for all that Wenger is the biggest obstacle to Arsenal signing players"?

      Fact? More like maniacal ravings.

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    3. You'd have to admit that it's a bit of a coincidence. But then you appear to be a Wenger worshipper so you'll admit nothing that might put your God in a bad light.
      You also haven't answered my question so I'll assume you won't be at the match today. Time to jog on.

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  5. As I live 5 time zones away that'd be a mighty long trip. I did watch the match however. Not a Wenger worshipper; I'm just not a nutty conspiracy theorist who lashes out about idiotic non-issues.

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