The end of the season is usually a time for reflection, but
I wondered this year how much I really wanted to reflect on what had just come
to pass.
Let’s be honest, this season was a bit rubbish. Yes, we
again won the top-four trophy, and, yes, again, we humiliated Spurs in the
process – but is this enough? I suppose it depends. It depends on what you want
from football. Do you just want to use football as an excuse to socialize,
develop friendships with people you otherwise wouldn’t meet, and sink a few pints
in the process? If so, I suppose any season would satisfy you. Don’t get me
wrong – I love all the gooners I’ve met around the world while supporting this
club. But I also want to be proud of the club I support, not just the people
with whom I support the club.
In that sense, I don’t think anyone can say this season is
going to be remembered as any sort of triumph. Smashing Spurs again was
obviously fun, and a 2-0 win against the now European champions at their home
ground is also something to be savoured, even if occurred in a match that was,
to all intent and purposes, a dead rubber.
We got to watch one of the world’s best players, Santi
Cazorla, play for our team on a weekly basis, and he provided a host of magic
moments that enlivened a multitude of otherwise dire matches. It was also nice
to see the club rediscover the art of defending, although you could argue this
was a necessity to make up for the lack of firepower at the other end of the
pitch.
Beyond that, and a few other games, like Liverpool away or
West Ham at home, it’s hard to take too many positives from this season. It
supposedly gives us the basis from which to kick on – but have we not been in
this position for some time? The stadium payments haven’t really gotten any
more or less onerous this year, even if new commercial deals, and TV revenue,
will imminently start boosting our finances.
I simply feel that, as Arsenal fans, we have been sold the
future for almost a decade. We have been told to celebrate each top four finish
in that period, as it supposedly allows the club to attract and retain the
world’s best players. Instead, we’ve lost a host of top footballers, and done
the bare minimum to paper over the cracks, and keep ourselves in the Champions
League cash-cow.
For me, this season ended the moment we sold van Persie to
our supposed rivals. The club hoisted the white flag before a ball had been
kicked in anger, and we still haven’t entirely recovered from this rank act of
cowardice. To those who say we scored more goals without van Persie this year
than with him last year – please, get a grip. If we keep van Persie, and add
Cazorla with either one or both of Podolski and Giroud, we score MUCH more than
we did last year. In fact, I think we would have had an outside chance of the
title had we kept van Persie. After all, look at how far United pulled ahead of
City simply through the addition of one world class goalscorer. Instead we sold
him, and the title, to a club that operates under some form of bizarre,
kleptocratic regime, and yet still shows more ambition than us in the transfer
market.
Our season was only saved by Arsene’s realization that we
could only get the results we needed by grinding them out. And grind them out
we did, with a series of almost unwatchable, narrow wins against the detritus
of the Premier League. Yes we did it, but surely we can expect more from a club
with our resources.
And this is what this season review ultimately comes down –
you can ask for more. Setting aside all blame for the moment, we can ask for
more from the club than we currently get. We can ask for a club that treats the
most prestigious domestic cup competition with respect. We can ask that the
club, as a bare minimum, challenges
for the title, even if it doesn’t win it. And we can certainly ask that our
best players are not sold year-in, year-out, to teams that we are supposedly
competing with for the highest honours. The failure of the club to do all that
led to this mess of a season.
And this is where we do have to start playing the blame
game. Because someone is primarily responsible for this mess. Is it Stan
Kroenke, our absent owner? A man who doesn’t seem to understand the magnitude
of responsibility that he has as owner of THE Arsenal Football Club. We are not
some two-bit franchise – we are one of the world’s most historic
social-cultural enterprises, a sporting institution that deserves an owner that
at least regularly attends matches, and pretends to understand why fans might
be a bit peeved by his refusal to say anything
to us about his intentions for the club, beyond the usual, bland corporate
statements.
Is it Ivan and his backroom team? Are they dropping the ball
when it comes to closing deals? How many other Juan Mata’s are there – deals we
should have completed, but failed to do so?
Or is it Arsene? And ultimately, it perhaps has to be
Arsene. He is the one who makes ludicrous statements about the top-four
“competition”. He is the one that chooses to let us meekly slip out of the FA
Cup, year after year, despite the fact that he must know how much this trophy means to the fans. And he is the one
who was critical to the sale of van Persie, taking a call from his former Scottish
nemesis when he should have hung up and told Robin to shut up, and get back to
work, potential transfer fee be damned.
Some fans will read this post and criticize me as negative.
Fair enough. But I simply feel that many of those fans that are deemed
“negative” are actually optimistic. They believe that Arsenal can do more. That
this club can actually compete on all four fronts each season. That we don’t
have to consistently sell our best players. That we can be more ambitious in
the transfer market without going into some Portsmouth-esque spiral - and as
side-note, even if we did, if the club came out owned by the fans, would that
be so terrible?
So Arsene gets one more season. One more season to prove
that he still has the guts to be ambitious, and the guile to change his
approach and make us competitive again. I hope he has it in him. With Chelsea,
and both Manchester clubs in flux, now is the time to go for it in the transfer
market. Because if he doesn’t, and we’re here again next season, celebrating
fourth place like a trophy – it’s time for him to go. Let’s hope that it
doesn’t come to that. But let’s also forget that no one is replaceable. Given
the number of top players sold during his tenure, Arsene surely knows that more
than anyone else.
Gb.
4 comments:
Van Persie had one year left on his deal. We had to sell him. Unfortunately that is modern football - talent is concentrated where resources are greatest. Look at Dortmund. Lewandowski has a year left on his deal. Will they sell to Bayern for 25m or will they let him leave for free next year? I think the answer is obvious. As much as we like to think of ourselves as a big club, there are clubs bigger than us. Look around Europe. Atletico have lost Falcao and Aguero in consecutive years to oil funded rivals. Milan lost Zlatan and Thiago Silva. Portto lose players every year. Basically, only a handful of clubs can afford to keep their best players. I completely agree that performances in the domestic cups have been disgraceful but with regards to challenging for trophies that actually matter, i.e. the Champions League and the Premiership, the destinations of those can be pretty easy to narrow down. Is winning the FA Cup and finishing 4th really much better than just finishing 4th? Either way, we are a long way from the pinnacle of the sport. Whilst blame can be apportioned to the manager or the board, the fact is that there are much bigger clubs than us. This is the reality.
Many of your o called " bigger clubs " are NOT bigger clubs they just have ownership with deeper pockets and a propensity to spend....3to 5 key signings and Arsene can crown his time with arsenal across the next 3to 5 years.
Now is the moment to seize the pinnacle... If w spend!
Wenger has brought Arsenal to this level.He draws heighest salary without performance. Time to save Arsenal , time to say goodbye to the infamous pair of Wenger and Gazdi.
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