Friday 17 February 2012

Reflections on Milan and the current situation

By @SamTheGooner

I wasn’t surprised or shocked by what we all had to painfully witness on Wednesday night. It wasn’t some freak result or unlucky defeat. It was the result of an inevitable manifestation of decline on and off the pitch at Arsenal Football Club. And this didn’t happen overnight. You don’t go from being Champions (2004) to Europa League misery or mid-table mediocrity overnight. No, we haven’t reached the latter yet but we have no reasons to believe that those lows aren’t on the horizon.
 
I am not one to blame the players. You see, I don’t think we lost at the San Siro because of Squillaci. The 8-2 debacle at Old Trafford wasn’t Denilson’s fault. Nevertheless, the other night, there was absolutely no heart, passion or desire, from most of the players, to get a result. As Le Boss said, we never really got into the game. We were woeful. It was almost as if the players didn’t want the ball, were keen to get rid of it and pass the responsibility on to someone else. Time and time again we gave away the ball.
 
Most of the Arsenal players don’t understand what it means to wear that cannon or the famous colours of red and white. Why not? Why was the performance so woeful? I don’t know really, probably a combination of a few things - one of them being this modern reality that a large percentage of players are driven solely by the money (*cough* Samir Nasri *cough*). They are anyway paid thousands so why bother to try? Wenger’s duties don’t halt at just picking the team; he must also serve as the motivator. The players didn’t look too fired-up in the Italian cold the other night – another reason, in my opinion, for the no-desire attitude. The performance was utterly lethargic.
 
A bad pitch or dodgy referee has nothing do with the team’s effort. Give them a game. Show some pace, urgency, passion! Make it difficult for them! The tie is essentially over and we must turn our focus to the FA Cup and the Premier League, where it is so vital, albeit unlikely, that we finish in the top four. Doomsday is looming large.
 
Even before the game we (well, those whose heads aren’t buried in the sand) knew that this Arsenal squad is very average but the least the 5,000 travelling fans deserved (and those watching at home) was a spirited performance full of desire, urgency and hunger. But no, we were battered and outclassed all over the pitch. Where was that Frimpong-like fighting spirit in Milan? Frimpong’s not the greatest footballer but his sterling attitude, fighting spirit and love for the club is a reason he’s already established himself as a fan favourite.
 
The next day the media were singing AC Milan’s praises, but they really weren’t that brilliant. They’re not unbeatable or particularly world class. Yes, they deserve credit for taking advantage of our lacklustre performance but we made them look amazing. I watch them in Serie A as well, and trust me; they are nowhere near the level of Barcelona or Real Madrid.
 
People tell me that the players constantly let the manager down – which may be true – but these players are overpaid, underachieving and don’t pick themselves. We reward failure. Sp*rs’ wage bill is £61 million less than ours! Wenger has too much faith in some of these players who, quite frankly, aren’t good enough. It is one of Wenger’s obvious flaws: too much loyalty. Yes, believe it or not, Wenger is not flawless. His successes of yesteryear don’t make him some unquestionable mastermind.
 
We are a club in decline; on the pitch, as was evident in Milan, throughout January, at Old Trafford, Wembley etc, and off it. Problems at Arsenal are far deeper than personnel. Signing one player, selling another or making a tactical change won’t suddenly make us world beaters. Our absurdly outdated wage structure, transfer policy, ownership (Kroenke – our unpopular owner who has attended only one Arsenal game in nine months) and management are all among the issues needed addressing. But getting rid of the deadwood players would certainly be a good place to start rebuilding. Bendtner, Chamakh, Almunia, Squillaci, Diaby, Denilson, Park, Djourou et al are all underachieving and overpaid. They are passengers. It’s the club’s fault these players are tied in with long-term, highly paid, lucrative contracts no buyer will ever take on.
 
The past summer, for me, was a major turning point. They’ve been problems for a couple of seasons now (the lack of leadership, winning mentality etc) but we always knew the summer would be pivotal and the club blew it. They blew it from board to manager and while blowing it big style, gave the fans a double whammy of price increases and mediocrity. The summer was a genuine existential moment for the club, and their answer was to nickel and dime it.  What’s happened since isn’t exactly rocket science.
 
We had a dreadful end to last season, sold our two best players, made inadequate and rushed signings, were unlucky with injuries and the backroom staff remained the same. It’s quite simply the disaster formula of how a club go from finishing inside the top four to out of it.
 
Arsenal FC has become the personification of acceptance in mediocrity. The board, and some fans, have shown absolutely no ambition and are satisfied with a top four finish. This season, I’m afraid, there’s little chance we’ll get even get that.
 
There’s a case to be said about Wenger being thrown under the bus and that he’s a victim/hostage of his own success but we don’t really know. It was quite clear at the beginning of January that this squad weren’t good enough and our finish inside the top four was in jeopardy, so why didn’t we sign anyone to help us get over the line? A striker to help share the burden with Van Persie, a left-back to ascertain the likes of Miquel and Vermaelen weren’t forced to play in an unnatural and unfamiliar position. It was fresh madness. Were there funds available? Were those funds available to the manager? If not, why not? If there was money, why was Arsene so reluctant to spend? These are questions that need asking. The determination to muddle through rather than use money to help ourselves looks ridiculous.
 
Whatever it is, it would be nice if Gazidis, Kroenke and co would come out and tell the fans, the lifeblood of any club, the truth. It’s the least we deserve after suffering for quite a while now. I couldn’t help but admire and feel sorry for the fans that spent their hard-earned cash on an extortionate away trip to Milan to watch such a shower of crap.
 
The board have spat in the faces of us, the fans. We pay the highest ticket prices in world football, season ticket prices are increased season after season, and more and more of the core support are being priced out of the game. We pay Harrods prices while the club are searching for basement bargains in Primark. It is truly disgusting that the loyal fans are the ones suffering from the mediocrity and austerity visible on the football pitch.
 
The board will proudly boast about our self-sustaining business model and relatively healthy financial situation but bank accounts don’t score you goals or keep clean sheets. The football model must come before the business one. All you ask of your football club is that it strives to improve on the year before. Arsenal have been getting worse, each year, for too many years now.
 
It is a sad situation - a dire one – which hasn’t developed overnight. The perennial questions about Arsenal’s under investment will be raised again this summer especially with two billionaires owning the shares.
 
Yes, for the first two/three seasons at The Grove the excuse was that we were still paying off the debt but we’ve been at the stadium for almost six years now. No excuses anymore. I urge fans to show some ambition, unlike the board, and to stop applauding the mediocrity. Without the fans, the club is nothing.
 
Please give me reasons to be positive as I currently see no reason to be “positive” and keep the faith, as all I, a realist, can see in the nearby future is us reaching two new lows: finishing below Sp*rs and playing Europa League football at a half-empty Emirates next season. Channel 5 beckons. You can’t argue with the league table.
 
Robin van Persie is our captain, talisman and best player. After the humiliation in Italy he was reportedly forlorn in the dressing room. That kind of evening in Milan will not persuade him to sign that new contract in a hurry. I won’t be surprised or bewildered to see him go. If Van Persie does leave in the summer, where does that leave us? Where do we go from there?
 
We’ve never been so bad under the tenure of Arsene Wenger. The man can no longer see wood for trees. The blind, deluded, non-critical devotion to Wenger is one reason we’re in this mess. Heads up, ostriches.
 
Perhaps the board have just tied his hands behind his back and the Frenchman has performed miracles with limited squads for the last few seasons, but this time alas I can’t see it. There is a strong belief from some Gooners that our failures this term are down to the board too often rolling the dice and getting the manager to make chicken salad out of chicken shit. All this, as I say, may be true but we don’t know.
 
Wenger is either too stubborn to realise the glaring inadequacies in his side, or, he is being hindered by a board who are too incompetent to land his desired targets, or simply unwilling to pay inflated asking prices. Anyway, I personally find it hard to believe that Wenger is completely infallible and am therefore of the opinion that it’s time to wish him farewell. (I could write a whole article on Wenger. Here I’m just touching on it - it’s not my main focus in this piece.)
 
You can’t take away Wenger’s achievements but it seems to me he is dwelling on past glory. Football’s moved on but has Arsene? He is tactically inept and the way he worries about the state of Europe’s economy makes you think his next job is more likely replacing Sarkozy than Jose (via Tim Payton).  If Wenger is to part company this summer, it should be announced sooner rather than later so he leaves with the dignity he deserves. Build a statue, say thank you and move on.
 
I thought I’d end on a positive note after that rant. So, let’s all remember, we’re still a bigger club than Sp*rs. And we will be for a long time. To put things into perspective, we’ve won more league titles just under the reign of Arsene Wenger than Tottenham have in their whole history. We’ve been in the Champions League for 16 consecutive seasons, while Sp*rs have managed to reach Europe’s elite competition only once in that time. St Totteringham's Day may not occur this year but Arsenal have finished above Sp*rs every season since the 1994-95 campaign. These facts prove that there’s still no case for an argument. Forever in our shadow. Up The Arsenal!

No comments:

Post a Comment