Buying our cast offs & persevering with trash like Xhaka....no-one's buying it
comment by Sheriff JW Pepper (U1007)
posted 1 second ago
Buying our cast offs & persevering with trash like Xhaka....no-one's buying it
----------------------------------------------------------------------
We could get started on Pepe.....£72m....jeez
comment by Sheriff JW Pepper (U1007)
posted 0 seconds ago
comment by Sheriff JW Pepper (U1007)
posted 1 second ago
Buying our cast offs & persevering with trash like Xhaka....no-one's buying it
----------------------------------------------------------------------
We could get started on Pepe.....£72m....jeez
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Mind you...Kepa cost us that
Tim Stillman also wrote articles recently where he was slating Arteta for dropping Ozil if you read between the lines / saying he should be playing for us.
I'd only bothered to read a few of his articles before then and I won't be reading anymore following that.
comment by You Can't Buy Class - IDHT2EU (U12019)
posted 1 hour, 3 minutes ago
Tim Stillman also wrote articles recently where he was slating Arteta for dropping Ozil if you read between the lines / saying he should be playing for us.
I'd only bothered to read a few of his articles before then and I won't be reading anymore following that.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
That's your prerogative if you feel so strongly about Ozil / the Ozil situation.
I feel strongly that he's an idiot for what he wrote.
This article is ridiculous. He is actually comparing Pepe’s red cards to Auba and Luiz’s. Whether they were avoidable or not is irrelevant, what Pepe did is completely different and he deserved the to be called out for it
comment by £350k Förtnite Skin (U18355)
posted 11 seconds ago
This article is ridiculous. He is actually comparing Pepe’s red cards to Auba and Luiz’s. Whether they were avoidable or not is irrelevant, what Pepe did is completely different and he deserved the to be called out for it
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Exactly what I thought.
Also interesting regarding Pepe:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MizWOmBov3E&t
I like Tim Stallman, he's normally a sage voice in an ocean of madness. But he's wrong here.
Firstly, Ozil's exclusion was hardly contentious. Everyone, maybe apart from the player - who perhaps didn't think the manager would have the balls to follow through with it - could see it coming a mile off. It's why Willian was signed.
Willian himself was no worse at Leeds than he has been for us the rest of the season. But with Pepe blowing lukewarm and cold, Lacazette's form so far in the bin, the estate of C. S. Lewis have moved to formally deny it entry to Narnia via a previously unknown portal, and Eddie being so very Nketiah, I'm not sure Arteta had much option but to include him at Leeds.
Besides, as he eludes to in the article, despite Willian's form on the pitch, I'd be surprised if he didn't show a totally professional attitude and application in training. Can any of us say that as confidently about Guendouzi, or Ozil, or even Maitland-Niles and Ceballos before the two of them had their stints on the naughty step?
Comparing the red cards of Auba and Luiz to Pepe's is daft, but I think Stallman has been a little unfortunate with the timing of his article with it being published the same day Arteta came out offering total support to Pepe.
So is Arteta any different (presumably than Wenger or Emery)? Unless Arsenal fans want to see us become another club like Chelsea/Spurs/Man U who sack their managers every 18 months, then we have to give him longer than he's had. Sure, he's going to make mistakes. All managers do, no matter what their level of experience is. But KSE have indicated they see him as being part of a long term project, rather than a quick fix.
I'm still hopeful Arteta can create as much interest for us going on on the pitch as we've had off it for the last couple of years. We just have to be patient.
I am far more concerned abt Arteta's inability to infuse any form of fluidity in our attacking play than his man management.
I always find it difficult to fully judge on issues like this, we have no idea what really happens behind the scenes, we only see what happens on the pitch and comments from the manager. The rest is speculation on what might be going on. We don’t see the training sessions, the player meetings, the team talks and so on. The manager and coaches spend majority of their time face to face with the players, and see a full picture we will never see, so it’s always a tricky one to say a manager is treating X player wrongly, when we only have such a small insight into what’s truly going on.
Arseblog/gunnerblog/Stillberto have all been mainstays of the arsenal blog scene since the days of NewsNow etc
Part of the reason they've been successful is they're spoke like real fans and had a reasoned and fair assessment of the team etc while sounding like a fan.
But I've noticed them get a bit more edgy and controversial in recent years... Maybe a reaction tothem seeing the likes of Troopz and Robbie earning money and fame or maybe a reaction to us being shiiiit
comment by Jenius99 (U4918)
posted 57 minutes ago
I am far more concerned abt Arteta's inability to infuse any form of fluidity in our attacking play than his man management.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Yeah I agree with this. We all know Wenger used to focus the vast majority of training sessions on developing the players' ability to pass the ball around quickly, retain possession, and create changes. Our attacks were very formulaic, but over the course of a game they guaranteed we would tire out our opponents and leave spaces to create changes in the final 15 minutes. We had a clear attacking identity, that while it was too predictable, was very easy for players to get into a groove and play the attractive passing football we have become used to.
Now Arteta has sorted out the team's defensive structure, and got us properly marking spaces and pressing together across the pitch, he needs to work on what we do when we have the ball. However, he also needs to maintain the defensive structure we have built up. There's only so much time in training each week, and our team also has a lot of travelling and recovering to do with the Europa league. The most disappointing aspect of our loss to Aston Villa, and my biggest criticism of Willian, is that he was responsible for their first goal by failing to do the "non-negotiables" in working back for the team. The bare minimum for our players is to do the defensive work and ensure we stay in games, so when we finally break our goal-scoring duck it actually counts for something.
I want to see him focus on developing an attacking structure, and get our attacking midfielders moving into those spaces between defence and midfield in the middle of the pitch, ready to receive the ball and move it on quickly, to draw defenders out of position and create space for our wingers and strikers. It's why some people are so frustrated we can't pick Ozil (although I agree he should be frozen out), it's the obvious missing piece and the reason our attack is so disjointed, there is nobody demanding the ball in the middle of the pitch, so our players have to keep recycling the ball waiting for an opportunity to try a speculative through ball or cross into the box.
comment by Flamini'sShirtSleeves (U8186)
posted 0 seconds ago
comment by Jenius99 (U4918)
posted 57 minutes ago
I am far more concerned abt Arteta's inability to infuse any form of fluidity in our attacking play than his man management.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Yeah I agree with this. We all know Wenger used to focus the vast majority of training sessions on developing the players' ability to pass the ball around quickly, retain possession, and create changes. Our attacks were very formulaic, but over the course of a game they guaranteed we would tire out our opponents and leave spaces to create changes in the final 15 minutes. We had a clear attacking identity, that while it was too predictable, was very easy for players to get into a groove and play the attractive passing football we have become used to.
Now Arteta has sorted out the team's defensive structure, and got us properly marking spaces and pressing together across the pitch, he needs to work on what we do when we have the ball. However, he also needs to maintain the defensive structure we have built up. There's only so much time in training each week, and our team also has a lot of travelling and recovering to do with the Europa league. The most disappointing aspect of our loss to Aston Villa, and my biggest criticism of Willian, is that he was responsible for their first goal by failing to do the "non-negotiables" in working back for the team. The bare minimum for our players is to do the defensive work and ensure we stay in games, so when we finally break our goal-scoring duck it actually counts for something.
I want to see him focus on developing an attacking structure, and get our attacking midfielders moving into those spaces between defence and midfield in the middle of the pitch, ready to receive the ball and move it on quickly, to draw defenders out of position and create space for our wingers and strikers. It's why some people are so frustrated we can't pick Ozil (although I agree he should be frozen out), it's the obvious missing piece and the reason our attack is so disjointed, there is nobody demanding the ball in the middle of the pitch, so our players have to keep recycling the ball waiting for an opportunity to try a speculative through ball or cross into the box.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
*create chances
The problem is our lack of movement as a team. We are playing two touch football. That is, one player gets the ball and then dwells on it to look for someone to pass to. That shows a clear lack of practice of passing movements as a team. There is no one touch passing movements at all. No passing in triangles. That means we are not able to transition the ball in phases from defence to midfield to attack quickly and so there is no tempo to our game.
It doesn't matter if Ozil or in fact Maradona is playing at his pomp. All attackers are pretty much done if the passing is so slow that the opposition is allowed to form a defensive structure before the ball gets to them.
Thats why I believe fans are focussed on the wrong aspect of our problems at the moment. We shouldn't be too critical of the players until Arteta can prove he can coach more than Moyes, Fat Sam or Pulis solid positioning. Thats good enough for cups. But only good enough for mid-table mediocrity in the league and Arsenal have never been (even before Wenger) a mid-table club.
We shouldn't be too critical of the players until Arteta can prove he can coach more than Moyes, Fat Sam or Pulis solid positioning. Thats good enough for cups.
__________________
We have become a cup team aye
But awful examples of managers considering Arteta had already won more cups than those three combined
comment by CrouchEndGooner (U13531)
posted 55 seconds ago
We shouldn't be too critical of the players until Arteta can prove he can coach more than Moyes, Fat Sam or Pulis solid positioning. Thats good enough for cups.
__________________
We have become a cup team aye
But awful examples of managers considering Arteta had already won more cups than those three combined
----------------------------------------------------------------------
The point was thats what the fans expected as the ceiling of those managers. Take Bruce for example. If Newcastle fans won a trophy they would probably build a statue of him. Compare that to when Keegan was in charge or Bobby Robson.
I just don't want our expectations lowered. In one respect buying Partey shows that the ownership won't put up with it. Champions League should be a minimum for Arteta.
Keegan and Robson also failed to win a cup for Newcastle
You can either talk about football or trophies but one does not equal the other and it's unfair to compare Arteta to managers he's already more successful than
I don't expect us to win the Champions league or Premier League. Just challenge for it. That usually means ending up near the top. And why is it unfair to compare Arteta to accomplished managers? Thats what managing Arsenal means. If he can't do the job maybe he should quit now.
comment by CrouchEndGooner (U13531)
posted 14 minutes ago
We shouldn't be too critical of the players until Arteta can prove he can coach more than Moyes, Fat Sam or Pulis solid positioning. Thats good enough for cups.
__________________
We have become a cup team aye
But awful examples of managers considering Arteta had already won more cups than those three combined
----------------------------------------------------------------------
That's why 👆
So I'm not disagreeing with the sentiment just the detail
Stillman is hit and miss. He writes with intelligence (sometimes self-indulgently so), but this article for example is complete and utter conjecture. I mean he's got article obligations and word counts to fullfil, so I don't blame him for it.
Page 1 of 1
First
Previous
1
Next
Latest
Sign in if you want to comment
Arteta really isn't any different...
Page 1 of 1
posted on 25/11/20
Buying our cast offs & persevering with trash like Xhaka....no-one's buying it
posted on 25/11/20
comment by Sheriff JW Pepper (U1007)
posted 1 second ago
Buying our cast offs & persevering with trash like Xhaka....no-one's buying it
----------------------------------------------------------------------
We could get started on Pepe.....£72m....jeez
posted on 25/11/20
comment by Sheriff JW Pepper (U1007)
posted 0 seconds ago
comment by Sheriff JW Pepper (U1007)
posted 1 second ago
Buying our cast offs & persevering with trash like Xhaka....no-one's buying it
----------------------------------------------------------------------
We could get started on Pepe.....£72m....jeez
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Mind you...Kepa cost us that
posted on 25/11/20
Arseblog
posted on 25/11/20
Tim Stillman also wrote articles recently where he was slating Arteta for dropping Ozil if you read between the lines / saying he should be playing for us.
I'd only bothered to read a few of his articles before then and I won't be reading anymore following that.
posted on 25/11/20
comment by You Can't Buy Class - IDHT2EU (U12019)
posted 1 hour, 3 minutes ago
Tim Stillman also wrote articles recently where he was slating Arteta for dropping Ozil if you read between the lines / saying he should be playing for us.
I'd only bothered to read a few of his articles before then and I won't be reading anymore following that.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
That's your prerogative if you feel so strongly about Ozil / the Ozil situation.
posted on 25/11/20
I feel strongly that he's an idiot for what he wrote.
posted on 26/11/20
This article is ridiculous. He is actually comparing Pepe’s red cards to Auba and Luiz’s. Whether they were avoidable or not is irrelevant, what Pepe did is completely different and he deserved the to be called out for it
posted on 26/11/20
comment by £350k Förtnite Skin (U18355)
posted 11 seconds ago
This article is ridiculous. He is actually comparing Pepe’s red cards to Auba and Luiz’s. Whether they were avoidable or not is irrelevant, what Pepe did is completely different and he deserved the to be called out for it
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Exactly what I thought.
posted on 26/11/20
Also interesting regarding Pepe:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MizWOmBov3E&t
posted on 26/11/20
I like Tim Stallman, he's normally a sage voice in an ocean of madness. But he's wrong here.
Firstly, Ozil's exclusion was hardly contentious. Everyone, maybe apart from the player - who perhaps didn't think the manager would have the balls to follow through with it - could see it coming a mile off. It's why Willian was signed.
Willian himself was no worse at Leeds than he has been for us the rest of the season. But with Pepe blowing lukewarm and cold, Lacazette's form so far in the bin, the estate of C. S. Lewis have moved to formally deny it entry to Narnia via a previously unknown portal, and Eddie being so very Nketiah, I'm not sure Arteta had much option but to include him at Leeds.
Besides, as he eludes to in the article, despite Willian's form on the pitch, I'd be surprised if he didn't show a totally professional attitude and application in training. Can any of us say that as confidently about Guendouzi, or Ozil, or even Maitland-Niles and Ceballos before the two of them had their stints on the naughty step?
Comparing the red cards of Auba and Luiz to Pepe's is daft, but I think Stallman has been a little unfortunate with the timing of his article with it being published the same day Arteta came out offering total support to Pepe.
So is Arteta any different (presumably than Wenger or Emery)? Unless Arsenal fans want to see us become another club like Chelsea/Spurs/Man U who sack their managers every 18 months, then we have to give him longer than he's had. Sure, he's going to make mistakes. All managers do, no matter what their level of experience is. But KSE have indicated they see him as being part of a long term project, rather than a quick fix.
I'm still hopeful Arteta can create as much interest for us going on on the pitch as we've had off it for the last couple of years. We just have to be patient.
posted on 26/11/20
I am far more concerned abt Arteta's inability to infuse any form of fluidity in our attacking play than his man management.
posted on 26/11/20
I always find it difficult to fully judge on issues like this, we have no idea what really happens behind the scenes, we only see what happens on the pitch and comments from the manager. The rest is speculation on what might be going on. We don’t see the training sessions, the player meetings, the team talks and so on. The manager and coaches spend majority of their time face to face with the players, and see a full picture we will never see, so it’s always a tricky one to say a manager is treating X player wrongly, when we only have such a small insight into what’s truly going on.
posted on 26/11/20
Arseblog/gunnerblog/Stillberto have all been mainstays of the arsenal blog scene since the days of NewsNow etc
Part of the reason they've been successful is they're spoke like real fans and had a reasoned and fair assessment of the team etc while sounding like a fan.
But I've noticed them get a bit more edgy and controversial in recent years... Maybe a reaction tothem seeing the likes of Troopz and Robbie earning money and fame or maybe a reaction to us being shiiiit
posted on 26/11/20
comment by Jenius99 (U4918)
posted 57 minutes ago
I am far more concerned abt Arteta's inability to infuse any form of fluidity in our attacking play than his man management.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Yeah I agree with this. We all know Wenger used to focus the vast majority of training sessions on developing the players' ability to pass the ball around quickly, retain possession, and create changes. Our attacks were very formulaic, but over the course of a game they guaranteed we would tire out our opponents and leave spaces to create changes in the final 15 minutes. We had a clear attacking identity, that while it was too predictable, was very easy for players to get into a groove and play the attractive passing football we have become used to.
Now Arteta has sorted out the team's defensive structure, and got us properly marking spaces and pressing together across the pitch, he needs to work on what we do when we have the ball. However, he also needs to maintain the defensive structure we have built up. There's only so much time in training each week, and our team also has a lot of travelling and recovering to do with the Europa league. The most disappointing aspect of our loss to Aston Villa, and my biggest criticism of Willian, is that he was responsible for their first goal by failing to do the "non-negotiables" in working back for the team. The bare minimum for our players is to do the defensive work and ensure we stay in games, so when we finally break our goal-scoring duck it actually counts for something.
I want to see him focus on developing an attacking structure, and get our attacking midfielders moving into those spaces between defence and midfield in the middle of the pitch, ready to receive the ball and move it on quickly, to draw defenders out of position and create space for our wingers and strikers. It's why some people are so frustrated we can't pick Ozil (although I agree he should be frozen out), it's the obvious missing piece and the reason our attack is so disjointed, there is nobody demanding the ball in the middle of the pitch, so our players have to keep recycling the ball waiting for an opportunity to try a speculative through ball or cross into the box.
posted on 26/11/20
comment by Flamini'sShirtSleeves (U8186)
posted 0 seconds ago
comment by Jenius99 (U4918)
posted 57 minutes ago
I am far more concerned abt Arteta's inability to infuse any form of fluidity in our attacking play than his man management.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Yeah I agree with this. We all know Wenger used to focus the vast majority of training sessions on developing the players' ability to pass the ball around quickly, retain possession, and create changes. Our attacks were very formulaic, but over the course of a game they guaranteed we would tire out our opponents and leave spaces to create changes in the final 15 minutes. We had a clear attacking identity, that while it was too predictable, was very easy for players to get into a groove and play the attractive passing football we have become used to.
Now Arteta has sorted out the team's defensive structure, and got us properly marking spaces and pressing together across the pitch, he needs to work on what we do when we have the ball. However, he also needs to maintain the defensive structure we have built up. There's only so much time in training each week, and our team also has a lot of travelling and recovering to do with the Europa league. The most disappointing aspect of our loss to Aston Villa, and my biggest criticism of Willian, is that he was responsible for their first goal by failing to do the "non-negotiables" in working back for the team. The bare minimum for our players is to do the defensive work and ensure we stay in games, so when we finally break our goal-scoring duck it actually counts for something.
I want to see him focus on developing an attacking structure, and get our attacking midfielders moving into those spaces between defence and midfield in the middle of the pitch, ready to receive the ball and move it on quickly, to draw defenders out of position and create space for our wingers and strikers. It's why some people are so frustrated we can't pick Ozil (although I agree he should be frozen out), it's the obvious missing piece and the reason our attack is so disjointed, there is nobody demanding the ball in the middle of the pitch, so our players have to keep recycling the ball waiting for an opportunity to try a speculative through ball or cross into the box.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
*create chances
posted on 26/11/20
The problem is our lack of movement as a team. We are playing two touch football. That is, one player gets the ball and then dwells on it to look for someone to pass to. That shows a clear lack of practice of passing movements as a team. There is no one touch passing movements at all. No passing in triangles. That means we are not able to transition the ball in phases from defence to midfield to attack quickly and so there is no tempo to our game.
It doesn't matter if Ozil or in fact Maradona is playing at his pomp. All attackers are pretty much done if the passing is so slow that the opposition is allowed to form a defensive structure before the ball gets to them.
Thats why I believe fans are focussed on the wrong aspect of our problems at the moment. We shouldn't be too critical of the players until Arteta can prove he can coach more than Moyes, Fat Sam or Pulis solid positioning. Thats good enough for cups. But only good enough for mid-table mediocrity in the league and Arsenal have never been (even before Wenger) a mid-table club.
posted on 26/11/20
We shouldn't be too critical of the players until Arteta can prove he can coach more than Moyes, Fat Sam or Pulis solid positioning. Thats good enough for cups.
__________________
We have become a cup team aye
But awful examples of managers considering Arteta had already won more cups than those three combined
posted on 26/11/20
comment by CrouchEndGooner (U13531)
posted 55 seconds ago
We shouldn't be too critical of the players until Arteta can prove he can coach more than Moyes, Fat Sam or Pulis solid positioning. Thats good enough for cups.
__________________
We have become a cup team aye
But awful examples of managers considering Arteta had already won more cups than those three combined
----------------------------------------------------------------------
The point was thats what the fans expected as the ceiling of those managers. Take Bruce for example. If Newcastle fans won a trophy they would probably build a statue of him. Compare that to when Keegan was in charge or Bobby Robson.
I just don't want our expectations lowered. In one respect buying Partey shows that the ownership won't put up with it. Champions League should be a minimum for Arteta.
posted on 26/11/20
Keegan and Robson also failed to win a cup for Newcastle
You can either talk about football or trophies but one does not equal the other and it's unfair to compare Arteta to managers he's already more successful than
posted on 26/11/20
I don't expect us to win the Champions league or Premier League. Just challenge for it. That usually means ending up near the top. And why is it unfair to compare Arteta to accomplished managers? Thats what managing Arsenal means. If he can't do the job maybe he should quit now.
posted on 26/11/20
comment by CrouchEndGooner (U13531)
posted 14 minutes ago
We shouldn't be too critical of the players until Arteta can prove he can coach more than Moyes, Fat Sam or Pulis solid positioning. Thats good enough for cups.
__________________
We have become a cup team aye
But awful examples of managers considering Arteta had already won more cups than those three combined
----------------------------------------------------------------------
That's why 👆
posted on 26/11/20
So I'm not disagreeing with the sentiment just the detail
posted on 26/11/20
Stillman is hit and miss. He writes with intelligence (sometimes self-indulgently so), but this article for example is complete and utter conjecture. I mean he's got article obligations and word counts to fullfil, so I don't blame him for it.
Page 1 of 1