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Next eight games will tell us plenty about the centre of the defence

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One of the features of the first two games is the fact that Unai Emery has been brave with his team selections. I think picking an extremely inexperienced 19 year old midfielder against Man City could certainly be put into that bracket, although as with any decision like that it skirts along the line of foolish too.

Thankfully, Matteo Guendouzi more or less repaid his faith. Errors in the first game were not present in the second, and while it’s still very, very early days for him, there are promising signs. I’ve written about the Spaniard’s substitutions, taking players off when he feels they’re not playing well enough, and again it’s too early to know if this is a feature of his management style or down to other factors like injury, disciplinary worries, or simply him finding his feet with this group of players.

He has the scope to make changes up front and in midfield, but at the back he’s a little more restricted. I’ve seen plenty suggest that Stephan Lichtsteiner could come in for Hector Bellerin at the weekend, and if he makes that decision then fair enough. He contributed well in the attacking third at Chelsea, but could have done better defensively a few times, and there’s an experienced player there to provide competition so why not use him?

Where I think he’s a little stuck is at centre-half. He obviously sees Shkodran Mustafi and Sokratis Papastathopoulos as his first choice, and while the pair have had issues in our first two games, I suspect he’ll feel that playing City and then Chelsea isn’t really enough time for them to bed in together and form any kind of partnership.

If you’ve listened to the Arsecast Extra this week, you’ll know I have serious reservations about the German and his concentration, but the fact that the only alternatives to him are Rob Holding and Konstantinos Mavropanos mean he’s likely to stick with what he’s got for the next few games at least.

Mustafi, based on the stats from the Chelsea games, is a key part of building from the back – involved in our top 3 passing combinations on the day (Cech > Mustafi : Guendouzi > Mustafi : Mustafi > Bellerin). On the ball he is a decent passer, he’s pretty calm under pressure, and that part of his game is useful to the way that Emery wants to play.

What we have with Mustafi though is two years of his performances on which to judge him as a defender, and it’s hard not to have some concerns based on that. We don’t have that with Sokratis yet, but stylistically I worry a bit that they’re a bit similar. Aggressive, front-foot defenders who want to win the ball in the first challenge, and it puts me in mind a bit of Laurent Koscielny and Thomas Vermaelen whose characteristics made them basically incompatible.

When the Frenchman was paired with Per Mertesacker, someone whose reading of the game and positioning complemented his dynamic defending, we had a partnership that actually worked. And perhaps nowhere else on the pitch is this partnership as important as centre-half. You could, in the past, point to the midfield two as equally important, but the game has changed in that sense and the iconic duos that used to be a feature of teams are not really the way it works anymore.

It’s still true at the back though, especially when you play a back four, and my suspicion is that over the coming weeks when the games are a bit less challenging than our opening two fixtures, Emery will attempt to make this particular partnership work. I wrote the other day about how we’d know a bit more about the new manager at the end of this run of eight Premier League games, and we’ll definitely be able to tell if Sokstafi is a viable thing at that point too.

The question of what to do if it’s not is an interesting one, because underneath them we’ve got Holding, a player of some promise but one who still has much to learn, and a 20 year old about whom we can tell very little based on three games last season. He was sent off in one, and the other two came at the end of the campaign when there was no pressure to produce in the Premier League anymore, we knew Arsene Wenger was going and whatever happened we weren’t going to finish any higher or lower than sixth.

He could be a great find, ready to take his chance when it’s given to him, and I very much hope that’s the case. But more than likely he’s a young defender with limited experience who will, as most young defenders do, learn on the job which almost always comes at the expense of defensive solidity.

People have been encouraged by the work of our recruitment team this summer, doing deals quickly and efficiently so we avoided the end of window scramble that has for too long been a feature of our transfer business. Yet if their remit is to give the manager the tools/players to succeed, it’s hard not to worry they’ve left him a bit short of quality and depth in a key position.

Glass half-full: Mustafi and Sokratis click, we remain somewhat vulnerable but better with more midfield protection, and the attacking side of our game makes up for defensive weakness. The young defenders do well in the Europa League/Carabao Cup and keep the senior men on their toes.

Glass half-empty: Inherent flaws in our defenders give us an unstable platform on which to build our game, thus hindering the ability to control and attack. The young defenders lose confidence as they’re exposed too often.

Which glass are you this morning? I prefer the former, I fear the latter, but time will tell as we go into this run of winnable games (on paper at least).

Right, that’s just about that from me. I’ll be back tomorrow with an Arsecast in which I chat with former Gunner Alan Smith – and if you’re around tonight, he’s launching his new book at The Tollington from 5.30pm. Get on down, grabbed a copy, get it signed, and have a sneaky Thursday evening pint.

Have a good one.


Alan Smith book competition + extract

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Thanks to Little, Brown Book Group we have 10 signed copies of Alan Smith’s brand new book: Heads Up – My Life Story to give away.

It’s launching this evening in the Tollington, so if you’re in the area get down there and pick one up, but if you’d like to enter the competition, simply answer the following question.

From whom did Arsenal sign Alan Smith in 1987?

Was it a) Lincoln City b) Birmingham City c) Leicester City

Answers to competition@arseblog.com before midnight on Sunday, and we’ll announce the winners on Monday’s blog.

In the meantime, here’s an extract from the book as Alan reflects on one of his most famous goals.

EXTRACT

I hadn’t experienced anything like this: a European final, a different story altogether from domestic triumphs. To come good on this stage added something valuable to your CV, confirming you as a player capable of adjusting to and thriving against a different style of football. In short, it meant a great deal.

We had to win first, though, otherwise, in years to come, my goal would be reduced to a tiny footnote. And the prospects of victory began to look bleak when Parma continued where they had left off. In other words, throwing everything at it. Zola was at the forefront, first going close with a free-kick before forcing Dave Seaman to pull off his best save of the night.

After that, there were several nervy moments that could have gone the other way – offside decisions and last-ditch tackles. Lee Dixon, for instance, can’t help laughing when remembering a scything challenge in the box that poleaxed his man. Somehow, the ref waved play on. In the end, then, a combination of acute defensive nous, sheer determination and a bit of luck saw our heroic back four emerge unscathed. Against all the odds, we had come out on top. When the final whistle blew, the Arsenal flags waved, the fans went ballistic and the players jumped around, struggling to believe we had actually done it.

My emotions were a jumble as teammates rushed across to say well done. Of course, I was happy, but at the same time something held me back. This couldn’t compensate for the lack of enjoyment over the last few seasons. I would have swapped this moment in a flash for scoring fifteen to twenty goals in each of those campaigns, for returning to the confident figure of years gone by. I looked up to the stand, trying to pick out Penny, just as I had at Anfield in 1989. In moments like this, you desperately want to see loved ones that have lived through the tough times as well as the good. Penny had been my sounding board, someone willing to listen. Among all the faces, I couldn’t pick her out.

The trophy handed over, a scrum of photographers yelled for me to hold it aloft. OK by me, for a short time anyway, but after a bit I felt uncomfortable, standing there taking the glory.

Back in the dressing room, I slumped down next to Bouldy. ‘You’ve done it all now, Smudge,’ he grinned. ‘A goal at Anfield, two Golden Boots and now this.’ I looked across at my mate, happy to just smile. In the short time since the final whistle, I hadn’t given a thought to the broader context – for all of us really, not just me. Since the majority came together in 1988, this group had won every domestic honour going. This felt like the icing on the cake, only Arsenal’s second European trophy in history.

The short flight home was filled with champagne and song, including a chant to salute my contribution. Much to my embarrassment, ‘Walking in a Smudger Wonderland!’ rang out several times. Being the centre of attention has never sat right. Mind you, more was to come. After walking through customs at Stansted in the early hours, Tony Adams, the boss and I stood posing for photos with the shiny trophy, looking a little dishevelled in our Arsenal blazers.

Agent of Change

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It’s a confusing time to be an Arsenal fan. The change most of us thirsted after is here and yet, we exist in a kind of limbo. Behind the scenes and in the playing squad, the last 12 months or so has seen a total staffing revolution. New manager, new assistant, new recruitment and retention staff, new academy and development staff, new high performance staff and, soon, a new CEO.

Meanwhile, Stan Kroenke has hoovered up the last tasty morsels of Arsenal’s shareholding. On the playing side, Wojciech Szczesny, Kieran Gibbs, Gabriel, Alexis Sanchez, Lucas Perez, Jack Wilshere, Olivier Giroud, David Ospina, Theo Walcott, Alex Oxlade Chamberlain, Santi Cazorla, Calum Chambers, Joel Campbell and Francis Coquelin have all departed since last summer.

That’s quite the turnover. Yet organisational change is more slow-cooker than microwave oven. All of that churn takes a little while to become baked into cultural change. So while Arsenal is barely recognisable compared to 18 months ago, things are still a little samey. We’re ravenous for signs of revolution, but bar a little bit of playing out from the back and a pinch of high pressing, the software is still updating.

A quirk of the fixture list has seen the Gunners handed two of their toughest assignments of the season whilst in this state of semi-chrysalis. Ordinarily, Arsenal fans have become accustomed to results like these in big games and our spleens are plenty well-rehearsed at venting themselves in response.

Yet the removal of Arsene Wenger gives us nowhere to throw our rotten tomatoes. Unai Emery is still sizing up the job, like a baby impala still absorbing the concept of the food chain. So instead, we are left to swallow back the bilious lumps in our throats and shrug. Arsenal brought in some new faces this summer, but as yet most of them have failed to provide any discussion points.

Bernd Leno must bide his time on the sub’s bench, Lucas Torreira has been integrated slowly, we’ve had a fleeting glimpse of Stephan Lichtsteiner. Sokratis is 30 and there are enough Dortmund literate types to give us verse and chapter on his qualities and flaws. Aubemeyang and Lacazette have yet to score this season, Ramsey has only managed around half of the team’s 180 minutes as he manages a calf strain (plus ça change!) and Mesut Özil’s frown is starting to develop a frown of its own.

Arsenal had some bright spells against City and Chelsea which demonstrate promise, but ultimately the team were undone by careless, sloppy defending. All of which is to say precisely nothing has changed yet. Most of us suspected this would be the case as Emery seeks to redecorate the early 2000s décor of the previous resident.

The one thing that has demonstratively changed is the wiry, mop haired figure of Matteo Guendouzi. He is a very visible type of player and not simply because of Weird Al Yankovich hairdo (a reference for our millennial readers, there). After a season of Diet Wilshere and “IS GRANIT XHAKA ACTUALLY ANY GOOD?!” the puppyish stylings of Guendouzi have caught the collective eye in midfield.

Lucas Torreira was the man billed as the agent of change in Arsenal’s midfield, but Guendouzi has photobombed the promotional poster, his tongue hanging out wildly and his fingers giving the devil horn salute. Guendouzi has air guitared his way through the opening two games.

As well as looking like a tantalising prospect, Guendouzi has served another important function- he has given Arsenal fans something else to talk about while we wait for more identifiable signs of change. There is only so much conversation one can tolerate about “playing out from the back”, after all.

It’s noticeable that Matteo has been trusted quite a bit more than most of Arsenal’s summer recruits thus far. Some of this will be due to a staggered summer of preparation after this summer’s World Cup. Guendouzi was an ever present during pre-season- as was Sokratis, so it stands to reason they’ve played every minute of the opening two games.

The Frenchman was the last of Arsenal’s summer signings and, reportedly, Emery is a long-time admirer. In fact, Emery apparently personally put the finishing touches on the transfer to secure the 19-year old’s signature from Lorient.

Arsenal are still settling into their new recruitment strategy, with Sven Mislintat driving that particular vehicle. This summer was always likely to be a bumpy one in that respect, Arsenal’s recruitment team were established prior to Emery’s appointment. The club, understandably, seemed to make the call to not stand on ceremony for the new man and make their moves in the market early.

Given how efficiently Arsenal’s business was conducted, it’s fair to observe a little overlap. I don’t imagine that Emery ran the rule over Lichtsteiner, Sokratis and Leno in anything other than a cursory fashion. Guendouzi arrived a little later, having spent some time in the academy of Emery’s previous club. Again, we can only speculate, but there is reason to believe that the signing has, if not Emery’s paw prints all over it, then his authorising signature.

Guendouzi could be a very interesting addition. Arsenal’s midfield seems to be a collection of 4s and 10s. Xhaka and Torreira are most comfortable in a deeper role picking the ball up off the defence. Ramsey and Özil have operated more as part of Arsenal’s forward line than the midfield in the opening matches.

Guendouzi is interesting because he looks a bit more comfortable in the “connector” role and the Gunners haven’t had that sort of player since Santi Cazorla’s achilles died and went to heaven. He seems to have an interesting mix of attributes; tackling, passing and generally running around a bit don’t appear to present him with any issues.

 

An all-rounder is an interesting cat to place amongst a flock of specialist pigeons. The Frenchman is still rough around the edges and the fact that we still know so little about him allows us to project our hopes and dreams onto him. These crushes don’t always last- this time last year Arsenal fans took to Kolasinac because his Hulkish frame was so distinct from Wenger’s more svelte prototypes.

Emmanuel Frimpong was sent off on his Arsenal debut and received a standing ovation at the Emirates, because his careless, bull in a china shop approach was something to cling to during a summer of chaos. It remains to be seen how Guendouzi develops- especially once Lucas Torreira is fully up to speed.

By December, we might all be sick of the sight of him. His flaws might become familiar tropes that come to characterise him. His hair might even begin to annoy people in the strange way that Hector Bellerin’s does. But for now, Guendouzi is serving an important purpose, as a palate cleansing mouthwash while we await the more overpowering notes of change.

Follow me on Twitter @Stillberto– Or like my page on Facebook.

Renowned Arsenal historians Andy Kelly and Mark Andrews and I have written a book about the tumultuous early years of Arsenal Football Club covering the period 1886 – 1893. ‘Royal Arsenal- Champions of the South’ is available to order here.

Episode 489 – Alan Smith

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Welcome to another episode of the Arsecast – the Arsenal podcast.

On this week’s show I chat with former Gunner Alan Smith as he celebrates the release of his new book ‘Heads up – My life story’. We discuss how the book came to be, the fact he wrote it himself without a ghostwriter, his path into professional football, joining Arsenal from Leicester, his relationship with George Graham, scoring goals – important goals, moving into punditry, the challenges of that job and lots more.

There’s also some brief waffle about the West Ham game this weekend – and if you want to win a copy of Alan’s book, check out the competition on the site here.

You’ll find all the download and subscription links below, and you can always subscribe in your favourite podcasting app by searching for ‘arseblog’ or ‘arsecast’. All our archives are found on site or via our Acast page.

If you are a regular listener via iTunes, if you would be so kind as to leave a review/rating that would be greatly appreciated.

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More tactical insight from Emery as Laurent Koscielny looks to be ahead of schedule

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Morning all, happy Friday and we head into a Premier League weekend where we’re looking for our first points of the season. We’ll preview the match fully before tomorrow’s novelty 3pm kick-off on a Saturday (it’ll never catch on), but yesterday Unai Emery met the press ahead of the West Ham game.

There’s nothing new in terms of injuries, but quite how he sets up his team this weekend is going to be interesting. In a few months time we’ll be better placed to make guesses about what he’s going to do with his team selection, based on opposition, location, form etc, but right now the amount of info we have to work with is so small that it’s pretty difficult.

There are players who haven’t really performed in the opening two games, which might put their place in the team on the line, but then you have to ask if matches against Man City and Chelsea away are the right ones to make proper assessments of them. Or at least for the boss to do that. If we’re sort of willing to write those results off because of the context of them – the start of the season etc – will Emery feel like giving that kind of leeway to some of them?

We’ll see tomorrow obviously, but he did speak about his system, and how he views the team’s tactical approach. He does seem more willing to expand on his ideas than the previous manager, but I wonder if, as his English improves, he might become a bit more circumspect. I hope not, and speaking about them yesterday, he said:

We are working on different situations tactically. In the first we are playing with four at the back, then we have two and one, and one and two. With two and one, it is like a 4-2-3-1 and one, two, is for a 4-1-4-1 or a 4-3-3. We have players who train in this system. The moment on the pitch is different. I think with two systems, we can continue to progress and think about winning the next match.

Whether these systems are designed to be used against particular opposition, to switch mid-game, or whether they’re on the ball v off the ball is not clear to us just yet, but no doubt the Spaniard is making his players aware of what he wants and when he wants it. He was also asked about the idea of playing two up front, pairing Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Alexandre Lacazette, but that’s not something he’s considering right now:

At the moment, no. At the moment, I think we need to have the control with the possession, with the positioning on the pitch, with more players inside. And after this possession, to do the attacking moments and defending moments with this balance. But, it is one possibility to continue in our progress and in one moment to try also to play with two scorers. In the last match of the pre-season, against Lazio, I did it with Lacazette and Nketiah. But also, this position also for the players, they know that in one moment we can do that. But at the moment, no.

I’m going to keep my guess of the team until tomorrow’s game, but I think Aubameyang will get the nod up front again – Emery is backing him to tuck away the chances if we continue to create them, and I think despite the misses against Chelsea, it’s the decision I’d make. Anyway, more on the West Ham in the preview post tomorrow.

Meanwhile, Laurent Koscielny returned to training yesterday – light training and running, I should point out – and that’s a very welcome sight. The Frenchman suffered a terrible injury in Madrid in May, so to see him start his rehab in earnest so soon is very encouraging, although Emery was unsure of when he might be back in action, saying:

It’s difficult to know. You look at this morning, he’s running, he’s working on the pitch. The progress is very good progress. We need to be patient with him because the injury was an important injury.

I know he had his struggles last season, and when you consider he’ll be 33 on his next birthday (Sept 10th) he’s not in the absolute prime of his career, but I can tell you I’d feel a lot better about the centre of our defence with a fit Laurent Koscielny in it. Let’s hope he continues to make good progress and that his recovery is trouble free. I don’t think anyone is in any doubt as to the seriousness of the injury, particularly when it happens at this stage of a player’s career, but some are quick healers and more resilient than others.

When you consider the update from the Arsenal medical team that was released yesterday had this to say about the skipper – “Right Achilles tendon repair. Aiming to return to training in November.” – then we can perhaps allow ourselves a little optimism that he can get back sooner. Whatever happens though, when you read about how player fitness is being managed these days, he won’t be rushed back before he’s ready. Anyway, it’s good to see him back, and fingers crossed we can cope without him in the meantime.

Right, a couple of small things. Alan Smith is the guest on this week’s Arsecast (listen below) but if you fancy winning a signed copy of his book, check out the competition and get your entry in before Sunday night.

For some extra reading this morning, here’s Tim Stillman on Matteo Guendouzi and how his emergence is the prism through which we’re viewing change at the moment. And if you’re interested in stats and their application in football, there’s a really interesting glossary of terms from Scott (@oh_that_crab) who has taken over the stats posts on Arseblog News.

I’ll leave you with the podcast, till tomorrow.

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West Ham preview: time to get some points on the board

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It’s West Ham today at the Emirates, a team who, like us, have suffered two defeats to start the season – also under a new manager. We’re above them in the table on goal difference, but both sides have a big 0 beside their name and that’s got to change today.

Unai Emery’s first two games have been well documented, and there’s generally been plenty of patience and understanding of the results based on the difficulties of said fixtures. Today is different though, this is a game in which there’s an expectation we can take three points, and failure to do so will not be met with the same measured response as the Chelsea and Man City games.

That’s not to say there’ll be banners and protests or anything like that, just that this is kinda like the start of our season again, and we need to get some points on the board. Considering the opposition and the calibre of players we have, it would be disappointing if we didn’t get the win today.

In terms of the team, as I said yesterday it’s hard to predict. On the basis of the last game, you could make a good case for Lucas Torreira to come in to replace Granit Xhaka in midfield, while if Emery has enough faith in Matteo Guendouzi to face City and Chelsea, that must surely apply to West Ham too.

Both Mesut Ozil and Aaron Ramsey have been sub-par in the first two games and it was interesting read the new boss suggest the Welshman should concentrate on football and ignore the ongoing and increasingly distracting saga of his contractual situation. He said:

I spoke with him last week. I said: ‘I want you focused only on training and only on the match, you show us the capacity to help the team.’ The contract is another thing for his agent and the club but we want and I need his focus only on training, only on the match and on his performance each day.

Here’s the thing though, while it’s an issue for us, I can’t imagine Ramsey is going around London Colney pining for a new contract, not concentrating on his training drills, and waving a Bic biro around doing that *cough* thing when you want to draw someone’s attention to something they’ve forgotten. The bigger issue is where exactly does he fit into this team in the system that Emery wants to play, something you could say about Ozil too.

Personally, I think Ramsey has all the attributes to play as one of the midfield two, but it would require a discipline to his game that we haven’t seen since he was paired with Mikel Arteta during his best ever season. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that was the best he’s played for us either, but it does mean he needs a more defensively minded partner – perhaps Torreira fits that bill, but it remains to be seen if Emery views him that way.

The third man in a midfield three would also suit him, but then I think it becomes a choice between Ramsey and Ozil. It’s hard to get both of them in the team. This is an absolute guess but I’ll have a pop at today’s starting XI: Cech, Bellerin, Mustafi, Sokratis, Monreal, Torreira, Guendouzi, Ramsey, Iwobi, Mkhitaryan, Aubameyang.

When you consider that would give you a bench including Ozil, Welbeck and Lacazette, there’s fire-power there should we need it. Of course Emery could surprise us, as he has done both weeks so far, and I wouldn’t be that shocked to see Xhaka get a start in a game that might suit his passing range, but once we come away with all three points at 5pm then I don’t really care who he picks to do the job once it gets done.

Update: I’ve just seen some suggestions on Twitter than Ozil will miss the game today due to illness. So, that removes one layer of complexity from Emery’s team selection if that is the case.

There are three former Gunners in the West Ham squad today too. We’ve heard all about Jack Wilshere this week, but Lucas Perez and Lukasz Fabianski all return to the Emirates. I wish them all well for this season, but not today chaps. They have spent a lot this summer, and they’ve got some dangerous players who you could easily see causing problems for a defence which has, it’s fair to say, been unconvincing in the opening two games. I hope we’re more parsimonious at the back in terms of the chances we allow the opposition.

You can’t take anything for granted in the Premier League, but you’d hope that all this hard work and working hard and more hard work and don’t forget the working hard because we’ve seen countless videos of that and the hard work will come to fruition today and we get a performance and a win.

As ever, you can join us for live blogging of the game. Check back for a post later on or bookmark our live blog page and updates will begin automatically. Afterwards, we’ll have a report, player ratings, stats and all the reaction over on Arseblog News.

I’ll leave you with yesterday’s Arsecast, featuring a fantastic chat with former Gunner Alan Smith, and I’ll catch you all later for the game.

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Arsenal v West Ham – live blog

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Join us this afternoon for live blog coverage of our Premier League clash with West Ham at the Emirates – kick off 15.00.

We’ve got up the second live text commentary, updates, goal clips, observations and occasionally witty asides. If you want to join the chat, register an Arseblog Live account.

To do that, go to Arseblog Live – click login on the top right, and then choose ‘sign up’ to complete the process with your username/password, or you can use your Twitter, Facebook or Google account to register.

CLICK TO LAUNCH Arsenal v West Ham – LIVE BLOG

 

Arsenal 3-1 West Ham: Plenty to work on still, but three points very welcome

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Match report Player ratings – By the numbers – Video

It wasn’t perfect by any means, but we got our first win of the season under our belts as goals from Nacho Monreal and Danny Welbeck, and an own goal, gave us a 3-1 victory over West Ham yesterday.

It’s clear that Unai Emery still has plenty to work on, not least the ease with which the opposition can find space behind our back four. I know people have various issues with the individual players, but this seems much more a collective issue – and not just one for the back four either.

West Ham had plenty of joy in this regard yesterday, runners from midfield finding little resistance and lots of green grass to to run into, and although we had plenty of the ball we were finding it hard to create. They had the best chance of the early part of the game, Arnautovic shooting into the side-netting when a square ball for Antonio would have given him a tap-in.

We had the ball in the net but it was ruled out for offside, and when Iwobi lost the ball high up the pitch, we got an illustration of how simple it is to create danger against us. They worked the ball to their left, drove towards our box, our centre-halves were at sixes and sevens, and Arnautovic drilled home a shot to make it 0-1.

It was all very, very familiar. For all the change, and talk of change, there’s a lot of work to do with these players to make the team more defensively secure and aware to danger – which I think is a big part of it. Attacking with the full backs naturally leaves them out of position, so it’s important that midfield provides cover, not something they did properly until the introduction of Lucas Torreira in the second half. Also, there are times when the central defenders need to fight their natural instinct to win the ball high up the pitch because it leaves holes which teams at this level will exploit.

However, we got a quick response and it’s no surprise that it came from the right hand side. It’s noticeable how we’re using Hector Bellerin to overlap and get dangerous low crosses in, and it was from one of those that the ball fizzed into the West Ham box, Fabianski got a slight touch which saw it skid of Iwobi’s arse and into the path of Nacho Monreal who took a touch and fired home to equalise.

I can understand frustration with Bellerin from a defensive point of view – although with the caveat that he’s clearly being asked to get forward as much as possible and it is tough work getting up and down – but so much of what we’ve created in the last two games has come through him. He ended up yesterday with two assists, setting up Danny Welbeck for the late goal that sealed the win, and while Lichtsteiner might have made us a bit more solid defensively, I’m not sure he’d have contributed as much to our attacking game – and what Bellerin gave us yesterday was fundamental to the win.

It was a scrappy game, we didn’t control it at all in the second half until after the own goal, and there were chances for the Hammers. Just before half-time Guendouzi switched off to let Snodgrass run past him and but for a hugely important save by Petr Cech we’d have been behind at the break. They also had a fantastic chance for Arnautovic, but someone somewhere was smiling on us because not only did his miskick it, he injured himself in the process and eventually had to go off.

The introduction of Alexandre Lacazette definitely had an impact from an attacking sense, and I do think Torreira gave us a midfield that was better balanced. This is an issue that Emery has to get on top of quickly, because it’s such an important area of the pitch and I’m not quite sure he knows his best combination in there yet. It’s only three games, I know, but he’s nailed his colours to the mast in terms of his centre-halves, his keeper, and midfield needs some consistency of selection too.

Lacazette was involved in the goal that put us ahead, hooking it back across goal towards the ineffective Aubameyang but it hit the defender and went in. Not especially pretty but you’d take it. After that I think we found a bit of a spark, Fabianski made good saves from Ramsey and Mustafi, the Welshman did well to create a very presentable chance for Auba but it was blocked on the way through – and perhaps there’s something to the confidence issue the boss spoke about this week.

Welbeck’s late goal put the icing on the cake, and while the scoreline doesn’t really tell the story of the way the game went, I’d much rather be sitting here this morning talking about things we have to work on with three points on the board. We are, as we keep saying, a work in progress, and every game is part of that, so it’s much better to do that work with the confidence boost of a victory than the alternative.

Afterwards, Emery said:

We are happy. Happy for the first three points. But it’s clear we need to improve and we need to improve on working to not concede many chances like today for the opposition.

He referenced ‘balance’ between attack and defence a number of times in his post-match comments, and this is where I think it’ll take him some time to get things right. He suggested the second half was better in that regard, and when we brought on Torreira his natural instinct is to shield and cover space left behind. Nevertheless, it’s something he’s going to have work on in a big way, but at least he can carry out that work this week with the pressure off a little bit, we’ve won our first game under his management, and hopefully in the weeks ahead we can improve.

Aside from the game, there was the story doing the rounds during the match that Mesut Ozil had had a bust-up with Emery and refused to be on the bench, something vehemently denied by the Spaniard afterwards. He said:

Maybe in English it is difficult to explain, but first, why is this information [being reported]? It isn’t true. That information needs first to be true. Who is starting to telling you or us this information? You ask me, or the doctor, or the club. He was sick yesterday, and today he was sick. It is not a problem with the player, it is not true this information. So ask the doctor and the doctor can explain better.

Of course the more cynical among you will say, ‘Well, he would say that, wouldn’t he?’, but I’d like to take him at face value this morning. The whole Ozil situation is a bit of a thing now though. This isn’t the first game he’s missed through illness, and under Arsene Wenger there’s no doubt that some of the times he was ‘sick’, usually when we had to venture north for an away game. Apparently this is his seventh reported illness since January of last year.

Maybe he’s just a very sickly man. Maybe there’s something else going on. Maybe, after the summer he had and everything that’s gone on after his statement – when he was subsequently hung out to dry by his German teammates and every Bayern Munich related mouthpiece around, there are things he’s dealing with that go beyond physical injury. The reaction to that statement was visceral and ugly in some quarters, it can take a toll and no pay-packet makes human beings immune from the kind of illnesses that everyone else has to deal with.

Boringly, he might just have had a bad cold. I understand completely that we haven’t had value for money from Ozil since he signed that deal last January. If someone can prove to me he just wants to pick up his wages and do nothing, or that he threw his toys out of the pram over yesterday’s team selection, there’s no way to defend that and no reason to defend it. Yet just this week Emery spoke about how the ‘Arsenal family‘ were there to help Ozil through what appears to be a difficult time for him, so it’s worth considering there’s more to the situation than is being made public.

Anyway, perhaps something we can tease out more in the Arsecast Extra tomorrow, in the meantime have a great Sunday.


Opposition chances a consequence of Emery’s new style? More on Ozil and where he fits.

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The win against West Ham was obviously very welcome, but so too was the honesty that came in the post-match reaction from the manager and the players. Footballers often have a tendency to look at a result and focus on that, but the Arsenal players – and Unai Emery himself – were fairly open in their assessment of what happened.

Emery: It it’s clear we need to improve and we need to improve on working to not concede many chances

Nacho Monreal: Obviously it hasn’t been our best performance and we have to improve. In the first half we conceded, but we could have conceded a few more so we need to learn about that.

Aaron Ramsey: We found it difficult in the first half and we were perhaps too open at times.

In our three Premier League games so far, we’ve allowed the opposition 44 attempts on goal. The breakdown of that is 17 v Man City; 24 v Chelsea; and West Ham had 13 on Saturday. It wasn’t really the quantity of the opportunities the Hammers had that was concerning, but the quality of them. Better finishing, better decision making, and they’d have really made life more difficult for us.

It’s clear the team are still coming to terms with the kind of football Emery wants us to play. Ramsey spelled it out, saying:

He wants us to press and press really high up the pitch, so that’s the biggest thing really and then obviously we’re trying to figure it out going forward as well, so hopefully we can combine the two next week and get another win under our belt.

This goes back to the balance that Emery referenced in his comments after the game, and it it’s going to be interesting to see how this team develops over the coming weeks and months. We talked about some players not suiting the style, some will fall by the wayside as others flourish, and we’re perhaps seeing early signs of that. But, as I keep saying, this is just three games in and it’s impossible to make definitive judgements in such a short period of time.

Overnight, there’s been a bit more on the Mesut Ozil thing with a raft of stories about how the German has got to work harder and that Emery expects more from him. When asked if he’d planned a positional change for the 29 year old, the head coach replied ‘Maybe’, which doesn’t tell us a great deal. Being on the bench is a positional change, I guess, but it’s hard to see where he fits right now.

The obvious place is ahead of the two deeper lying midfielders, in the role that Aaron Ramsey played on Saturday against West Ham. I don’t think it’s beyond his capabilities to do that job, he’s capable of doing the running, but it’s hard not to wonder if Ozil is a leopard whose spots can’t be sufficiently changed at this point in his career. He’s a player who wants to be on the ball and has had others do the fetching and carrying for him. Now, he’s expected to do some of that work himself.

It’s not a particularly unreasonable request, and again we don’t really know a great deal about Ozil’s willingness, or not, to carry it out. The next few weeks will tell us plenty about it though, and I hope he’s ready to do what the team needs. Like it or not, when you earn what he earns, there’s an expectation that you are ready to give 100% however or wherever you’re asked to play. I mean, that’s true of every player regardless of their salary but as the club’s top earner, as someone who was happy to sign that contract knowing it would bring that spotlight, you have to expect extra focus.

Aside from that though, we often saw Arsene Wenger deploy Ozil wide, in a kind of free role from the right which gave him licence to roam around the pitch to try and create. In Emery’s system which sees the full-backs get forward, midfield protection is key. It’s not the sole preserve of the wide midfielders, but they have a significant part to play, and it wouldn’t be unfair to say that Ozil is pretty weak defensively. That means right now it’s hard to see him start wide.

So, we have a situation where our ‘number 10’ is between our gifted but mercurial record signing who appears to be going through the most difficult period of his career and whose pay-packet makes him very difficult to move on should we so desire, and a player who has yet to put pen to paper on a new deal and could potentially leave on a free next summer.

In that context you have to feel for Unai Emery a bit. Those are two tricky situations to manage at the best of times, but coming into a new club that is going through seismic changes on and off the pitch, and having to deal with them while learning a new language and trying to get a group of players to understand a new style of football when they’ve been so ingrained in something else for so long makes it all the more difficult.

I wish him luck, because it’s not easy, he might have to make some decisions which will perhaps affect the team in the short-term to ensure what he’s building in the long-term has the right foundations. Anyway, let’s see what develops on this over the course of this week, and his team selection as we go away from home next weekend will give us a little more insight into what’s happening and how he’s dealing with it.

Right, that’s your lot for this morning. James and I will be recording the Arsecast Extra this morning, so if you have any questions or topics for discussion, please send them to @gunnerblog and @arseblog on Twitter with the hashtag #arsecastextra.

The final thing is our list of winners of the Alan Smith book competition. They are as follows: Milan Kriz, Adam Gresswell, Nick Ladwa, Ashley Yates, Jennifer Palmer, Tony Porter, Napoleon Selim, Raza Gaskari, Jiten Vaja, and Chris Shilling. Well done to you, I’ll be in touch at some point today to get your details, and if you didn’t win, make sure to pick up Alan’s book in the shops, and I think they have some signed copies in The Tollington too.

Cheers for now.

Arsecast Extra Episode 245 – 27.08.2018

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Welcome to another Arsecast Extra, the Arsenal podcast, with myself and James from @gunnerblog.

On this week’s show we look back at our first win of the season, beating West Ham 3-1 on Saturday. Three points are obviously very welcome, but Unai Emery and his players accept there’s a lot more to do – especially defensively. We review the game and discuss the absence of Mesut Ozil through illness. It feels like there’s something more to the situation, so we discuss the German in some depth. Then we answer listener questions about the goalkeeping position, Hector Bellerin being pushed further forward to play as an attacker, the performances of Sokratis since he joined, and lots more.

Remember, you can send us questions via which we’ll try and get to each week. Send them to either @arseblog or @Gunnerblog (or both) using the hashtag #arsecastextra. Best to send them Monday morning so they get noticed more easily.

You can subscribe to the Arsecast Extra on iTunes by clicking here. Or if you want to subscribe directly to the feed URL you can do so too (this is a much better way to do it as you don’t experience the delays from iTunes).

You can listen without leaving this page by using the player below, download the Acast app for iOS or Android, or download the MP3 directly using the link below.

Also, if you’re a fan of the show, please leave us a rating/review on iTunes, it’d be greatly appreciated.

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A horrible thing begets a hilarious thing + more on Ozil & Emery

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Good morning everyone. The first thing I’d like to say is that I do not enjoy seeing Sp*rs win at all. I don’t know any Arsenal fan who would. However, I think it’s important to make the distinction between them winning and the consequences of them winning. They are two very different things.

Last night, after they beat Man Utd 3-0 at Old Trafford, the consequence of that was some first class bollockery from Jose Mourinho. To be fair, that started before the game when he left Anthony Martial out of the squad, Alexis on the bench, and played Ander Herrera at centre-half, but nevertheless, those decisions will be forgotten in the wake of his reaction to defeat.

There was this quote to Sky:

From a strategic point of view we didn’t lose, the tactical point of view we didn’t lose, but we lost.

It’s like Alan Partridge crossed with David Brent infused with the essence of Brendan Rodgers. Then there were comments about how United fans were too clever to pay attention to the media:

All our fans don’t read papers, all our fans don’t watch television, all our fans are more intelligent than that – they answered in an absolutely amazing way.

Hmmm, seems a bit familiar that. Castigating the media as if somehow they are the enemy of the football club or trying to get one over on the common fan. Where have we heard that kind of shit before? Which isn’t to say sections of the football press aren’t grotty and reprehensible, but this isn’t about that. His clapping of the fans afterwards and what he had to say in his post-game press conference was as transparent as transparent can be.

It’s clear that he’s at odds with the United executives, in particular that fella Ed Woodward who has a head like someone brought a Maris Piper to life, and with his complaints about not being backed in the transfer market we have a very unhappy situation at United for him. And it’s hilarious.

Especially his post-game press conference, which you can see here, and if you can’t be arsed watching all 7 minutes or so, the last couple of minutes are a must as he reminds journalists he’s won more Premierships than all the other 19 managers combined and then walks out saying, “Respect, respect, respect man.”

R-E-S-P-E-C-T.

R – Ridiculously
E – Entertaining
S – Situation
P – Please
E – Everlastingly
C – Continue
T – This

I know we have our own issues at Arsenal right now, but seeing yet another third season meltdown from Mourinho is a wonderful thing that all football fans should enjoy. He’s spent half a billion pounds or more, his team looks like a bag of crap – especially at the back, and it now looks as if he’s doing everything he can get to fired and get paid off having just signed a massive new contract recently.

Classic Mourinho. And the best thing about it is the predictability of it. United had all the information in the world about him when they appointed him first and before the gave him a new deal, so the chief executive with a bonce like a badly washed potato might well find himself in the shit too. What larks, Pip!

Meanwhile, in some quarters the Unai Emery – Mesut Ozil thing rumbles on. On Sport Witness they have a story in which the Arsenal boss speaks to the EPSN journalist who Tweeted the information that there’d been a bust-up and that the German had refused to play after being told he’d be on the bench.

‘Totally lies’, is what the Spaniard said, and whether it’s true or not, it’s what you’d expect any manager to say in this situation. During the Arsene Wenger era there were countless incidents that never made the papers and the ones that did were pretty much always played down or covered up to some extent by the Frenchman in order to maintain the sanctity of the dressing room or the training ground.

I think that unless there has been behaviour so out of line that there’s no alternative but to address it, it’s best to ensure that the dirty laundry isn’t aired publicly. So on one hand we have a journalist saying something happened – and from what I understand this isn’t a guy prone to stirring shit just for the clicks and social media attention – and on the other the head coach as representative of the club, insisting all is fine.

It’s something we discuss at length on this week’s Arsecast Extra but with so little information and two positions we have being so diametrically opposed, all we can do is speculate. I think attempts in the press to conflate this with the Neymar situation that Emery had to deal with at PSG are verging on ludicrous. There’s just no comparison between them. The Brazilian had a direct line to the owners, his transfer fee and his status as the Kingpin of Paris ensured he was not accountable to the manager, which was a terrible position for Emery to be in.

Who is still at PSG? That tells you everything you’ll need to know. It’s different at Arsenal. Ozil may be the star player, but he can’t go running to Uncle Stan if he doesn’t like the tactics or if he’s not allowed take the penalties. Emery has the right to make the decisions he feels are best for the team, and those will be made regardless of anyone’s wages, reputation, social media following or anything else. Which, of course, is the way it should be at any normal football club.

So, the information we have to hand may be scant, but the next few weeks will tell us plenty about how it’s going for Ozil, for Emery, and between the two. Let it play out, and then we can properly assess it. My hope is that we can find a way to get something approaching Ozil’s best out of him, because the bottom line for me is that he’s a very talented, extremely creative player who can help us score goals, and if we’re going to have any chance of reaching the top four then he could play a big part in that.

Right, I’ll leave you with yesterday’s podcast which covers Ozil, Hector Bellerin and why people need to lay off him a bit, our defensive issues, the West Ham win and loads more. Listen and subscribe below, more from me tomorrow.

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Why Reiss Nelson going to Germany would be good for him and for Arsenal

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It’s sort of flown below the radar a bit, but the transfer window is open across Europe until Friday August 31st. Of course we don’t care because we can’t avail of its juicy wares, any incoming business had to be done before August 9th due to the new rules for Premier League and English clubs.

It is still possible for clubs in the Championship, and Leagues One and Two, to do loan deals, but again, this is of little interest to us so nobody’s really thought about it too much. We’ve been too busy trying to completely and utterly work out Unai Emery and his methods on the basis of three games. Even so, we might be involved in some business because we could conceivably loan some young players out between now and the deadline.

With the Europa League group stages a chance for the new boss to rotate and to give some playing time to senior players who haven’t had much of a run in the league – as well as young players who are knocking on his metaphorical door – I suspect whatever we do will be fairly limited. However, yesterday saw reports about one of our most promising young players departing.

Initially, it was feared that Reiss Nelson was about to join Hoffenheim on a permanent basis, although it was then suggested that he’d sign a new long-term deal with us before moving to the Bundesliga side on loan for the duration of the season. Hopefully it is the latter, because the 18 year old is a really exciting prospect and it would be a shame to lose him at this point of his career.

Yet he’s at something of a crossroads and you can’t blame him for considering his options. One of his best friends in football is Jadon Sancho who was touted as one of Man City’s brightest young talents but decided to leave for Borussia Dortmund. When you consider what he has ahead of him in the City squad, you can see why he’d have thought he might have a better chance of first team football elsewhere. Since moving to Germany he’s featured pretty regularly, scoring his first senior goal and providing 4 assists.

If Reiss Nelson is looking at his 18 year old mate do that for a team like Dortmund, why wouldn’t he fancy his chances of playing pretty often for Hoffenheim? Some will wonder why he wouldn’t be keen to stay, with Europa League football almost a certainty and room enough in the front three for him to at least fight for a place as the season progresses. Which is not unreasonable, but then perhaps he’s like a growing cohort of young English players who are willing to try their luck abroad because they can see how beneficial it can be.

From within the Arsenal ranks we’ve seen Chris Willock join Benfica and Marcus McGuane opt for Barcelona rather than sign on with us. Granted, both are currently with the B teams there, but I think these lads ought to be applauded for giving it a go elsewhere. They could probably earn more money staying in England, even if it wasn’t with Arsenal, and their chances of making the first team at the clubs they’re at are almost as slim as they are at home, but maybe there’s more to the decision making than people think.

Willock, for example, has yet to make an appearance for Benfica’s first team but last season played 30 times in the Portuguese second division. How much more beneficial was that to him than an occasional run-out in the Europa League with Arsenal if he’d stayed? How much more will he have learned playing properly competitive football than spending the majority of his season at U23 level? He might never break through to the Benfica first team but you can be sure he’ll have learned a huge amount in his time there.

On top of that, there’s the life experience too. Living in a new country, learning a new language, getting to know a different way of life, cultural and societal differences, all of which are fantastic ways to develop as a person too. McGuane will have it in Barcelona, and if Nelson goes to Germany you can only imagine it will provide him with similar benefits, making him (hopefully) a better player and a more rounded person. Getting outside the bubble of life as a young pro in England, the creature comforts, the status of being an Arsenal player, having to look after things yourself rather than being looked after at every turn is a really positive thing and I’ve got no issue with any young player that’s willing to take that chance.

The easy thing to do is stay, sign a contract, play a bit, maybe make an impression, but knowing you have the security of your contract and the likelihood of a move somewhere or other if it doesn’t work out. A move like this might improve Nelson’s chances of regular first team football a little bit, but it’s far more of a test as a person. So, I’m all for Arsenal giving him a new deal, it’s important that we hang onto our best academy talents and he’s clearly one of them, but in the context of this season I think it would probably be more beneficial for him to take this chance to play, to learn, to develop and on his return we’ll have a much better idea as to his readiness when it comes to playing first team football for Arsenal.

There were also stories flying around yesterday about Alexandre Lacazette considering his Arsenal future as he’s started the opening three games on the bench, but I can’t see any situation which would see us sell before the deadline on Friday. If anything, those three games – his blooper at Chelsea aside – have shown us the value of the Frenchman and he’s got to be pushing for a start this weekend. The season is long, we have a lot of football to play, and he’s going to be a big part of it, I’m sure.

Right, that’s your lot for this morning, news throughout the day on Arseblog News, and I’ll be back here tomorrow.

Win a pair of VIP tickets to see Arsenal Legends v Real Madrid legends

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Arsenal Legends are preparing for the return leg of their match against Real Madrid Legends at Emirates Stadium on Saturday 8 September (kick-off at 2pm).

We’ve teamed up with Gunners to offer a lucky reader a pair of VIP tickets to this unique game, at Emirates Stadium.

The match, which sees net proceeds from ticket sales donated to The Arsenal Foundation for a ground breaking new football project, is the second leg of this charity fixture which ended 2-1 at the Santiago Bernabéu, on Sunday 3 June 2018.

With David O’Leary, alongside Assistant Coach Pat Rice at the helm, a number of Arsenal Legends including Robert Pires, David Seaman and Fredrik Ljungberg will put on the Arsenal shirt once again for a great cause. Real Madrid Legends travelling squad will include Brazil’s World Cup winners, Ronaldo and Roberto Carlos amongst others.

For the opportunity to enjoy a day out in style at Emirates Stadium during the September international break, just answer the following question:

Which Arsenal Legend made 564 overall appearances at their time at Arsenal?

A) Robert Pires
B) David Seaman
C) Ray Parlour

Send your entries to competition@arseblog.com before Friday at midnight.

Tickets are still available, from £20 adults and £10 concessions – get yours here.

Europa League incoming: the players who can use it to make the step-up

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Tonight the final qualifying games for the Europa League take place, and tomorrow there’ll be one of those interminable UEFA draws with that insufferable baldy prick waffling on about football’s values and all that nonsense, but at the end of it we’ll find out who we’re going to play as our European campaign starts.

One of the questions we had on the Arsecast Extra this week was about how Unai Emery would approach these games – particularly in the group stages. As he’s trying to implement his new style, might it be a case that he uses these fixtures to get his ‘first team’ more attuned to what he wants, or will it be like last season under Arsene Wenger when he played youngsters and players on the fringes of the first team?

I suspect it’ll be the latter, because he needs to use his squad over the course of a long season, and he also needs to make sure that as and when he needs to make changes for the Premier League he’s got players who understand what he wants from them, and who are ready to play. He’s got to keep them involved, to give them playing time to keep them happy – because every player wants to play – and to attempt to create an environment whereby performances are taken into account when he’s picking his team.

So, if you play well in the Europa League and your weekend counterpart isn’t really doing the business, it gives the manager something to think about. Right now, if he were to pick a team for a European game, it might look something like:

Leno, Lichtsteiner, Holding, Mavropanos, AN OTHER, Elneny, Guendouzi, Ozil, Welbeck, Iwobi, Lacazette.

I include Ozil because that’s a difficult position to fill outside of him and Ramsey right now, and there’s obviously a bit of an issue at left-back. He could play Monreal, but as he’s the only senior player in that position, it’d be a bit of a risk. Whether we’ve got someone coming through the ranks to make the step up I’m not quite sure.

People would watch our central defensive pairing closely as worries about the more senior partnership abound. Of course it’s just been three games for Mustafi and Sokratis and there’s obviously scope for improvement, but if either of the younger guys starts to push them hard for a place in the side then I’m all for it.

Guendouzi and Maitland-Niles, when fit again, provide the youthful interest in midfield, while further forward it’s all on Eddie Nketiah and what he can produce given that Reiss Nelson, who would certainly have featured, looks set to join Hoffenheim on loan – as discussed yesterday. Even he’ll probably be behind Lacazette as long as the Frenchman remains on the bench for the Premier League games, but he is pushing for inclusion so that might not be an issue when our first Europa League game comes around.

Then, there’s the goalkeeper, Bernd Leno. I do wonder how he’s feeling having been one of the club’s biggest signings this summer. At £22.5m he was, for a brief period, one of the most expensive keepers of all time until Liverpool and Chelsea spent absolute fortunes on Alisson and Arrizabalaga, and he must have come to the club thinking he was likely to start as first choice.

Few clubs spend that amount of money on a player to warm the bench, and given Petr Cech’s indifferent campaign last time around, his expectation was probably widely shared among the Arsenal fanbase. However, in assessing his goalkeepers during pre-season, Emery plumped for Cech – in spite of the fact that his passing out from the back style is better suited to Leno.

In fairness to Cech, he wasn’t the only one who looked uncomfortable with it against Man City, a team who are experts in the high press, but in the two games since his distribution hasn’t really been an issue or caused us any problems. Even so, it suggests that when it comes to all the other parts of the goalkeeping job, Emery sees Cech as superior at this moment in time. Whether it’s a worry or not we can’t say right now.

Personally, I think it’s a little odd that a 26 year old goalkeeper with 300+ games under his belt and international caps for Germany might need to be – as some suggested – eased into action to spare him lest his confidence be sapped by two difficult opening games. If Emery is prepared to throw in a 19 year old midfielder with barely any top flight experience, it shows he’s willing to pick the players he thinks are best suited for the job he wants them to do, regardless of experience.

The German seems sanguine enough at the moment, ready to bide his time:

I am convinced that my change was the right decision. I’m not crazy. It may take a few weeks or months, but my time here will come.

His time will surely come in the Europa League when fixtures there begin next month, and this will be his chance to show what he can do – albeit against relatively inferior opposition. Which isn’t to say he can’t impress. David Ospina had that chance last season and didn’t do much to change his reputation, but the former Bayer Leverkeusen man will hopefully perform to a standard that sees him put pressure on Cech when it comes to the Premier League.

Anyway, we’ll find out more tomorrow about our European campaign. For today, if you fancy winning a pair of VIP tickets to Arsenal Legends v Real Madrid Legends, check out the competition here.

That’s it from me, back tomorrow with an Arsecast and much more.

Culture Club

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By common consensus, Arsenal’s squad is ‘top heavy.’ Back in June, I wrote a piece suggesting that the Jenga like structure might be so top heavy that one or two pieces are bound to topple over. For all of Arsenal’s attractive attacking options, there is little sense of balance. Arsenal have two £50m strikers in a system that only caters for one.

Aaron Ramsey and Mesut Özil in the same midfield is a little too adventurous against top sides- it calls to mind the time when Arsene Wenger concluded that Ljungberg and Pires could not operate in the same four man midfield away from home. Allied to this, Arsenal don’t have many natural wide forwards, pretty much every attacking option the squad possesses would prefer to operate centrally given the choice.

Of course, squad depth and competition for places is not a bad situation per se. But I harbour doubts that some of these players will happily sit on the bench at a transitional club like Arsenal when most of them could make a lateral move, at the very least, and expect to start regularly. In pretty much every respect, the club has undergone major regime change and no organisational change is without its high profile casualties.

There was a hint of discord when Aaron Ramsey was dropped for the Chelsea game and publicly urged to ‘focus on training, the matches and on his performance’ by Unai Emery. This weekend, Mesut Özil missed another game through illness amidst reports of a training ground contretemps with the new Head Coach, who has shown little respect for reputation so far.

I highlight this not to sensationalise or dramatise, like I said, organisational change is not a serene process, a few eggs are always broken in service of an omelette. Arsenal are leaving behind a culture of indulgence from their predecessor and I don’t mean that in a scathing way. Arsene’s indulgences created some outstanding football over the years.

At the outset of the 2014-15 season, Wenger tried to cram Wilshere, Ramsey, Cazorla and Özil into the same midfield. When asked how this affected the overall balance of the team, Wenger half joked, “I just play all of the good players.” An idealist coach, Arsene was heavily influenced by Bazil’s 1970 World Cup winning side, “When you look at the Brazil team in 1970 they had Tostão, Rivelino, Pele, Jairzinho, Gerson, Clodoaldo.

“They all played number ten in their club. They didn’t know what to do. They put them all together and they won the World Cup in a convincing way.” This rather ignores the context that side operated in. The 1970 World Cup in Mexico was played in searing heat, which favoured the slow, technical game preferred by a team full of number 10s. Brazilian players were accustomed to the temperatures and, at the time, had the best fitness coaches in world sport. There was plenty of science behind the ‘magic.’

Mesut Özil is perhaps the most obvious example of the “number 10” in world football. But football is moving away from the idea of a freelance playmaker, favouring control in deeper areas of the pitch. Manchester City play with two offensive number 8s in de Bruyne and Silva, as do Madrid with Modric and Kroos, Barca created one of the all-time great midfield duos with Xavi and Iniesta.

This explains why there was not much of a market for Mesut Özil when his contract was ticking towards its expiry date last season. Ultimately, the German signed with Arsenal because theirs was the best financial offer. Having just lost Alexis Sanchez to Manchester United, the club was somewhat forced into ceding to Özil’s demands for PR reasons.

It is still early days of course and Emery is still getting a feel for his team. His penchant for early substitutions has largely been regarded as a positive given Wenger’s reluctance to make unenforced changes before the 70th minute. Yet the frequency with which players are being hooked before the 60th minute suggests he is still not quite getting his starting line-ups right as he gets a feel for his players.

Where Mesut is concerned, Emery potentially has an issue on his hands. Unai’s teams rarely play with this kind of playmaker. Modern tactical demands suggest players in forward positions need to work hard and press from the front and, well, let’s just say that is hardly Özil’s forte. Ordinarily, Özil might be considered a prime candidate for one of Emery’s broken eggs.

Yet his contract adds a layer of difficulty. Nobody else of significance wanted to hand Mesut a £350,000 a week contract back in January and his stock has hardly risen since. Given the events of last weekend, we have some indication that Özil won’t fade quietly into the background even if Emery and Arsenal were prepared to sit him on the bench given his salary and status.

Potentially, the coach could be looking at a situation where he has an unhappy, disruptive player that he cannot use and cannot move on unless this situation is handled deftly. In footballing terms, there is a good argument that indulging Özil is a necessary evil if Arsenal want to get back into the land of Champions League milk and honey.

Even if he comes to be regarded as a bit of a square peg, Mesut is still probably the most talented player in the squad. Having spent two years in the footballing Siberia of the Europa League, the club cannot really afford (in more sense than one) to become marooned in further transition. Alienating a talent like Özil might be a case of short term pain for long term gain, but Arsenal went significantly into their ‘short term pain’ overdraft in the last two years of Wenger’s reign. Extend that overdraft much longer and we’re looking at long term debt.

Özil’s contract has, most likely, created an issue in trying to convince Aaron Ramsey to renew. Mesut’s contract is a rising tide and Ramsey wants his boat lifted accordingly, even if he is not demanding parity with Özil per se. Arsenal set a precedent in acquiescing to Özil. Holding strong on Ramsey’s contract demands may prevent that from becoming a trend, but the Gunners are not in a strong position to turn their nose up at top class players or lose out on the transfer fees they might attract.

Emery has many tactical challenges as he seeks to sculpt the team in his own image, but his biggest challenge may be overturning the culture of indulgence that has started to blossom at the club. As supporters, we have to adapt to a new culture too. We have to accept that sometimes our favourite players aren’t going to play in their favourite positions and sometimes the apple of our eye might be hauled across the coals to the bench after 60 minutes.

In a recent edition of the Arsenal Vision Post Match Podcast @poznaninmypants described Arsenal as “a live crime scene” in their current state of flux. We’re all going to have to stand back for a little while and let people do their jobs while this overhaul takes shape. As much as we might feel like rushing into theatre to be at the side of our loved ones, we’d be better served taking a seat in the waiting room until the surgeons have finished the job at hand.

Unai Emery has a very delicate balancing act, he probably has 2-3 seasons’ worth of work to do but only one season to do it in. Arsenal used up their transition tariff under the previous manager and some disturbance in the force is inevitable and necessary. Most of us wanted change, but change isn’t straightforward and it comes at a price. Be warned, this will not be a bloodless revolution.

Follow me on Twitter @Stillberto– Or like my page on Facebook.

Renowned Arsenal historians Andy Kelly and Mark Andrews and I have written a book about the tumultuous early years of Arsenal Football Club covering the period 1886 – 1893. ‘Royal Arsenal- Champions of the South’ is available to order here.


Episode 490 – What is it with Mesut?

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Welcome to another episode of the Arsecast – the Arsenal podcast.

On this week’s show I’m joined by Andrew Allen and Tim Stillman to discuss Mesut Ozil, his time at the club in general, his recent difficulties, and what the future might hold for him under Unai Emery’s less indulgent regime. There’s also chat about Reiss Nelson’s potential move to Hoffenheim, following a trend of young English players going abroad, a look ahead to the Cardiff game, and a fair chunk of waffle involving the most hilarious story of the week – Jose Mourinho.

Follow Andrew @AAllenSport and Tim @Stillberto

You’ll find all the download and subscription links below, and you can always subscribe in your favourite podcasting app by searching for ‘arseblog’ or ‘arsecast’. All our archives are found on site or via our Acast page.

If you are a regular listener via iTunes, if you would be so kind as to leave a review/rating that would be greatly appreciated.

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Lost in space: Lucas Torreira to fill the gap against Cardiff?

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Transfer Deadline Day. But not for us. Just for everyone else. Except Italy I think. They might have closed theirs already. But Germany is today, Spain is today, and Turkey is today. If anyone can pull a transfer rabbit out of a hat, it’s Turkey. They love buying footballers so much they’re linked with every footballer alive (or dead), and barely 0.0000000000000000001% of the deals ever go through but it doesn’t matter because somewhere in the mind of a small child it has happened, and that in itself makes it a kind of reality.

Can we expect anything beyond Reiss Nelson going to Hoffenheim? I really have no idea. It feels hugely unlikely that any of the senior squad will depart, so maybe a short-term loan or two for some youngsters to the Championship or below, but that’d be about it. Even the Nelson move is complicated by the fact we appear to be waiting for him to sign his new contract before green-lighting it.

I hope he does sign, perhaps being allowed to leave on loan for regular first team football is a condition of the new deal, but what if he doesn’t put pen to paper? Where does that leave the move, and where does that leave his future with us? I guess we’ll get more clarity on that as the day progresses.

We should also hear more from Unai Emery as he meets the press ahead of the Cardiff game, looking for another win as we go into that annoying early season Interlull. It had completely passed me by that Neil Warnock was their manager, so we can expect a physical game on Sunday, and I do wonder if his team selection will reflect that.

It’s a game in which we can expect to have plenty of the ball and one, you’d hope, in which we’re not exposed as much as we were at the back in our opening three games. If there’s a lesson we need to learn quickly as a team it’s how to stop leaving those wide open spaces that even the so-called lesser clubs in the Premier League can exploit. Not because they have massive amounts of quality, but because it’s so easy any barely competent XI could do it.

We did look a bit better against West Ham when Lucas Torreira came on in midfield, and although I’m not suggesting he alone what will make this team defensively secure, I think he can play a key part in it. I understand to an extent why he’s been left on the bench early on. He came back late from the World Cup, didn’t get a proper pre-season, and it’s probably sensible to ease a player into action in those circumstances. We’ve seen it countless times before, and there is an inherent risk when you don’t give a player enough rest after a summer tournament – perhaps something Kevin de Bruyne might agree with.

Every player is different of course, but Emery’s decisions will, I’m sure, have been made with all the information from the medical team about his fitness and readiness, and I hope that for this weekend the Uruguayan is deemed fit enough to start should he be given the nod. The high pressing game the new boss wants us to play is a big reason why we see these gaps for the opposition to fill, and it’s going to take some time for them to work together in a properly coordinated manner.

In the meantime, as we come to terms with that, having a player who has a nose for danger, who can see where the spaces are and move to cover will be an important part of it, and based on what little we’ve seen of him so far, he looks the most natural fit for that role.

I can’t imagine Emery will get through his press conference without a question or two about Mesut Ozil who is well again, back in training, and in contention to return to the squad. Whether he starts him or not will be interesting. It’s a game away from home in which we’re likely to dominate possession against relatively inferior opposition so on paper it’s one that would suit him down to the ground, but how far down the road to recovery/redemption [delete where you feel appropriate] he is we’ll just have to wait and see when the team is announced.

The German is the subject of a wide-ranging discussion on today’s Arsecast [listen below], as we delve into his Arsenal career since joining in 2013, as well as his recent issues. Tim also touches on this in his latest column which you can check out here.

Beyond that not a huge amount going on, but the draw for the Carabao Cup was made last night and we have a home game against Brentford to look forward to. They have former Gunner Nico Yennaris in their ranks, and they recently brought in Josh Dasilva who turned down a new contract with us during the summer. That game takes place September 25th or 26th.

Today we’ll discover our Europa League opponents when the draw takes place this afternoon. I’m gonna make a guess here and say we’ll draw Celtic, Malmo and Akhisar Belediyespor. I base this on gut feeling and a very quick glance at the groups and the fact I closed my eyes and pointed at the screen and those were the teams I picked.

We’ll have all the news from the draw and everything else over on Arseblog News throughout the day. I’ll leave you with the podcast, till tomorrow.

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Arsenal Gentleman’s Weekly Review

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Arsenal Gentleman's Weekly Review

My dear chums, how I have missed you since my last missive, more than three months ago on May 19th. So much has happened since then I thought it was worth a recap of the comings and goings of Arsenal Football Club in the intervening period. Following the exhaustion of Mr. Windsors weeks long last hurrah I had embarked upon something of an Arsenal fast, starving myself of the constant Woolwich-related chunterings that dominate our lives as Arsenalists. A cleansing of the soul, if you will.

So I present to you now my assessment of the past three months following a binge of Arsenal newscasts gorged upon in a sordid two hour session in a darkened room at the back of the servants’ quarters normally reserved for the restorative and therapeutic slaughtering of peasants following a home loss.

JUNE

We sign 65-year-old right back STEPHEN LIGHTSTONE. We sign 14-year-old YACINE ADLI, and then we didn’t. Similarly we sign STEPHEN N’ZONZI and then we do not. We are linked with seven foot burst sofa MAROUANE FELLAINI. The Arsenal faithful organise a 27 million strong prayer session to beg and plead with every one of the 3,000 known gods to ensure that this doesn’t happen and our prayers are answered as he signs a new contract at Manchester United, a club which is collapsing in on itself with so much force that we expect it to become a black hole by October. St John Cousins heads back to Aston Villa Royal. Farewell, Hand Feet. Bernard Leonard signs as new glove butler. Luke Terrier, the Winchester Wingnut arrives on a cloud, flanked by archangels. Ramsara does not sign a new contract.

JULY

Soccer Tits, the centre-half known as Cedric Peters-Statham-Poole-Oster arrives to complete indifference. PRE-SEASON EXCITEMENT BEGINS! Everyone is very EXCITED! for the change ushered in by Mr. Emery. Things have CHANGED! For the very first time, players were running around when they trained. Gone were the days when they reclined on chaise longues and fed rum-soaked dates. The players were given BOTTLES OF WATER! To DRINK! The days of players dying from lack of water were OVER!

Spring-haired tiggerish midfield toddler Gwen McDoozy arrives. Jacques Wilshere departs to a sedate retirement at Ironworks. Ramsara does not sign a new contract. Chief Executive Ian Gaye-Seedless apparently flirts with an Italian. Sir Geoffrey of Geoffrey departs. Emile Smith-Rowe causes a commotion in our breeches. We beat the Parisian Mountebanks 5-1 with a goal from the splendid Eddie Necktie.

AUGUST

Chubby Atkins departs for Greece where he adds to their substantial youth unemployment figures. Collingwood picks up a touch of knee-knack and is out for two months. Slippery fat knacker Alisher Usmanov surprises precisely nobody by announcing he is to sell his shares to Evil Stan. Kumar puzzlingly retires to Fulham. Luke Perry joins Wilshere at the Sunny Ironworks retirement home. We surprise nobody by losing two nil to the Abu Dhabi Vulgarians. Maitland Niles sustains a fractured fibula and is unable to run it off like his somewhat tougher elder brother, Maitland-Niles Major, young Tarquin would have. He is out for eight weeks.

Gwen McDoozy pledges his heart, soul and firstborn son to the club. Mr. Emery manages to find a club to take one of the worst glove butlers we’ve ever had on loan. One imagines there’s a very long list with lots of club names crossed out before he reaches ‘Napoli. We surprise nobody by losing to FC Chelsea 2003, although it seems there were signs of progress. We beat West Ham, although this seems to have been that special kind of victory that only increases the sense of unease around the team. So, in the words of Jean- Baptiste Alphonse Karr, plus ça changing room, plus c’est la même chose.

To Cardiff!

THE NEW ARRIVALS

Saturday round-up: Henrikh Mkhitaryan – Armenian sleeper agent

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Good morning to you, a quick Saturday round-up for you because I have to take the dogs to the park now that the park is accessible again.

The draw for the Europa League was made yesterday and for your delectation we’ll be facing Sporting Lisbon, Azerbaijani champions Qarabag – with their name like a ubiquitous app that hasn’t yet been invented but will become a verb like Skype or Google – and Ukrainian side Vorskla Poltava.

And people say the Europa League is the poor relation. Pffff, as if.

In truth though, it’s a chance for Unai Emery to give playing time to everyone. I expect to see plenty of youngsters, Bernd Leno in goal, perhaps Emile Smith Rowe starting with Eddie Nketiah, and there’s probably scope to include Inanimate Carbon Rod and Tyre Iron too. The new boss says he wants his team to ‘go far’ in the tournament, which is understandable because it is one with two prizes: a trophy and entry into next season’s Champions League. As uninspiring as the group stages are, once things get to the knock-out stages we have to take it seriously.

An interesting story from the draw is that Azerbaijan are at war with Armenia and they have banned all Armenian citizens from entry into the country. It was suggested that Henrikh Mkhitaryan might miss out, although he was granted a visa when playing for Borussia Dortmund. They were due to face Gabala – with their name like a dating site for mongoose aficionados – but in the end the midfielder stayed at home due to ‘security concerns’.

Interestingly, someone with an Azerbaijani IP address attempted to comment on the story on Arseblog News to suggest this was the right course of action because someone might try to hurt Mkhitaryan or, indeed, he might do likewise to citizens there. A sleeper agent of the Armenian army, playing for Arsenal in the hope he might be granted a visa for sporting reasons, could then get behind enemy lines and take a few people out. Of course. People are mental (the comment was not published).

It’s also worth pointing out that the final is taking place at the Olympic Stadium in Baku in May, so should we get that far this story might raise its head again. Hopefully that’s a bridge we can cross when we come to it.

Meanwhile, Reiss Nelson’s loan move to Hoffenheim was confirmed, and the good news is that he signed a new long-term deal before he left.  I wrote earlier in the week about why I think this is a positive thing for the player, and the club in the longer-term even if it does take away a little early-season depth, so fingers crossed it all goes well for him there.

Unai Emery explained the thinking behind the move, saying:

It’s a very big chance for him and the level there is important. We think, because he is very young, he needs to take a new level to play, a new level also to get minutes, to get experience.

While the player sounded delighted with his new deal:

I’m delighted. It’s been a long time coming now, so I’m just happy everything’s sorted out and I can sign a contract for a great club. It’s my boyhood club. From a young age, from about eight years old, I’ve been supporting the club. The likes of Thierry Henry have encouraged me as well, so ever since then I’ve just loved the club and really fallen in love with it.

Looking ahead to the Cardiff game, the Spaniard said Mesut Ozil was back in the squad, stressing the fact he was an ‘important player’, and once again playing down the stories from last weekend. He also made it clear that the German would have to fit into his style, rather than the team being built around him:

It’s about where he is better for us and also about the opposition’s style of play. I like the possibility to have the player play different positions on the pitch. It depends each match and is the same for other players too. For that, Mesut has played with me on the right wing and also as No 10 and we are going to continue to do that.

I don’t think those are demands that anyone could find unreasonable. We’ll tailor the the team to the opposition, Ozil will play where the manager thinks he can have the most effect. Right now though, there’s something interesting brewing between Mkhitaryan and Bellerin on the right hand side and it’d be strange not to let that develop further.

So, unless Emery shifts Aaron Ramsey further back in the midfield, it’s a bit of an either/or situation between Ozil and the Welshman. You could see some games where one might be better suited than the other, and while Ramsey’s contractual situation looms large and makes you wonder if we should focus more on the player who has committed to the club – whatever you think of his wages – I suspect Emery is pragmatic enough to know he’ll need what Ramsey can give us throughout the course of this campaign.

What he does tomorrow against Cardiff will be interesting, we’re still trying to work the new man out and how he thinks, and each game give us a little more insight into that.

Right, that’s it for this morning. For plenty of Ozil discussion and a good old fashioned Mourinho lambasting, get your ears around this week’s Arsecast below, and I’ll be back tomorrow for a preview of the game, and all the other bits and pieces as well. Until then.

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Cardiff out to ‘rough up’ Arsenal as Gunners seek three points on the road

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Arsenal face Cardiff today away from home, looking for a second win of the season to take us into the international break with three more points. Our away form last season was poor, in stark contrast to what we did at home which was really very good but lost in fog of Arsene Wenger’s end game and the dismal performances on the road.

Unai Emery is not thinking about that though, he says:

Now it’s not to think about the past, I prefer to think and my concentration with the players also is the next match – focus only to work, to work, to work for the next match and how we can win. It’s clear the data behind us but I want to write a new data, a new present, a new future with Arsenal, with the players. For that my focus is only how we can win this Sunday.

The boss has some decisions to make about his team today. Will he recall Mesut Ozil after his absence last week? Is it time for Torreira in midfield? Will Alexandre Lacazette get the start he’s been pushing for? In each case, somebody else would have to make way. Matteo Guendouzi for Torreira; Aaron Ramsey for Ozil; and most likely Alex Iwobi for Lacazette with Aubameyang starting out wide.

I’m not sure what he’s going to do, each team selection so far has come with a little bit of a surprise and it’s hardly a shock that a man who has been in charge for just three games is hard to predict. I suspect we might see two of those changes, with Ozil starting from the bench as Ramsey continues in the role the German most naturally fits.

I can’t see any changes at the back or in goal, so it’s all about what he does and how he feels his team need to be set-up to face what will be a physical Cardiff side today. When Wales boss Ryan Giggs expressed concern over Ramsey facing a Neil Warnock side just before the internationals, the Cardiff manager said he rated the midfielder highly but that:

I hope we can rough him up. Needs must.

And if that applies to Ramsey, you can be quite sure it applies to every single Arsenal player. Rough him up, leave one on him, let him know you’re there, the reducer – not particularly subtle code for deliberate fouling, and all we can do is hope that the foolishness of making that kind of approach public is something today’s referee, Anthony Taylor, takes note of. And that there’s nothing too nasty.

Of course there’s a physical side to football, it’s something fans and players enjoy, but there are lines you shouldn’t cross and Warnock’s comment about Ramsey is a none too subtle throwback to the ‘Arsenal don’t like it up ’em’ stuff the likes of Sam Allardyce used to peddle. Leaving aside the fact that nobody likes it up ’em, the very real consequences of that attitude – and the fact it was widely reported without any real repudiation in the mainstream media – are evidenced in the broken limbs of Eduardo, Abou Diaby and, of course, Ramsey himself who had his leg snapped by a brutal Ryan Shawcross challenge in 2010.

It is down to the officials to manage the game, and I don’t really believe there are players these days who go out to inflict serious damage on fellow professionals, but I just worry that when you’re fired up with a stop them at all costs attitude then someone might be inclined to go in a bit harder and a bit later than they normally would. Hopefully that’s not the case.

This is a game in which we’re likely to have a lot of the ball which should suit our attacking talent. There’s a lot there to cause Cardiff trouble, and today would be a good day for Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang to find his shooting boots because he’s overdue a goal based on the chances we’ve created for him so far this season.

The worry is – and it’s one that will only dissipate when we see Emery’s approach make us more defensively solid – that we’re vulnerable to counter-attacks and having lots of the ball and dominating territory means that’s probably how Cardiff can best hurt us during this game. As the players get to know the system better, as they learn to coordinate the press and how to react when it inevitably gets bypassed, we should see a side better able to cope and one which doesn’t leave wide open spaces the way we did against West Ham.

It would be good if today is a day in which we see some progress in that regard. Of course it’s still early days in the season, but fixtures like this one did us so much damage last season it’d be nice to see a solid performance and a good win today.

Remember, if you can’t see the game, we’ve got you covered with the live blog which provides up to the second live text commentary, goal clips and more. Bookmark this page and updates will begin automatically. We also push important moments, goals, cards etc via a dedicated Twitter account @arseblog_live – so follow that if fancy too.

We’ll have a report, player ratings, reaction, stats and all the rest on Arseblog News after the game too.

Right, time for some breakfast, a long walk with the dogs, and I’ll catch you later on for the match.

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