armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan

About the Author

Panda Team
I'm mostly a football (soccer) fan, but last season I started playing fantasy NFL and really enjoyed it. If there's anything football-related you want me to write about, ask. And hey - if you work for some US publication and want a soccer writer, my rates are very reasonable... :)

More By Panda Team

Premiership INSANIA!!
3 votes, 3 comments
Premiership Preview - Chelsea
5 votes, 1 comment
Premiership Preview - Manchester United
6 votes, 1 comment
View All

Other recent voters

If you like the article, vote for it.
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

Premiership Preview - Arsenal

by Panda Team
created August 09, 2008, last edited February 10, 2009
12
Vote

Arsenal’s improvement last season was powerful testament to Arsene Wenger’s heroic commitment to youth development and glorious, crisp passing football. Because of the financial burden they took on building the Emirates stadium, they’ve not been able to spend like Chelsea or United, but thanks to good scouting they’re really not far away now.

Arsenal’s youth development has been impressive and dangerous – impressive in providing a top-quality left-back like Gael Clichy (whose emergence allowed them to sell Ashley Cole for Gallas and plenty o’ cash) and dangerous in providing slightly sub-standard players who are given a chance for a couple of years, weakening the side before they’re finally disposed of (Senderos and Hoyte). Their best young talent (and this IS an extraordinarily young side) has been bought in from outside as the almost-finished-article – Fabregas, Walcott, and now Nasri and Ramsay. Forgive me while I gush for a bit: I love watching Fabregas and Walcott. Fabregas’ centre-midfield position had, until a few years ago, been the business of powerful men like Vieira, Ince, Petit and Keane, and the no-nonsense hardman was a player every manager thought was essential. Like Paul Scholes, Fabregas has shown that if a small man has fantastic touch and movement and energy, he can play the position too. Fabregas’ appreciation of movement around him and ability to weight the right pass for players on the run is exquisite, and great to watch, and he plays completely without malice or nastiness so I was pleased to see him win Euro 2008 with Spain. Walcott plays in a similarly fair spirit, but is fun to watch for a completely different reason – his UNBELIEVEABLE pace. He really is unlike any player I have ever seen for the sheer nuclear-bomb-style-explosiveness of his acceleration. Against Milan he twice closed down Paolo Maldini from about 15/20 yards away with extraordinary fighter-jet-style openings of the throttle that made me want him to get the ball a few more times just for the jaw-dropping circus-act spectacle of it. And then, when he did get the ball, he went and made another goal. His balance is incredible and his running style is silky smooth. He’s getting better at handling the physical game now, and his positioning seems to be improving, and I’m really curious to see how good he can be. His floor is being a sort of deluxe Marc Overmars (who would just push it by the full back and run every time), but his ceiling is being a unique and special player of a sort we’ve never seen. If Rooney is ever going to be a good in-the-hole player for England, then we could do worse than hope Walcott emerges to play the front man.

Emmanuel Adebayor emerged last season as a rangy, quick, physical striker of the sort Wenger’s not had at Arsenal before. He’s a bit like Rooney in that he makes wasteful decisions and his finishing is wild, but his height and exceptional spring make him a danger in the air and he generates (and is given) enough chances to be among the league’s top scorers. It’s not surprising that Milan were after him this summer, because his performance against their elderly back four last season was exhibition stuff, running them ragged with his power, pace, appetite and stamina. He’s very important to them for the first six months of the season, because Eduardo’s not fit yet and Van Persie never seems to get more than 15 games together before being injured again (and I’m not completely convinced by him, anyway – he’s talented but has too many games where he contributes absolutely nothing). He and Walcott are potentially a brilliant partnership, but then Adebayor and anybody with any talent at all is potentially dangerous because of how well he fills the power-striker role.

In the midfield, Flamini leaving is a bit of a problem (he had loads of energy and a great selfless, disciplined attitude and more quality than most players that work that hard), though Gilberto’s longstanding presence has shown that they can get by with very average talent in that position. Xabi (who they have been linked with, and who is clearly very available) would suit them brilliantly, because besides being very competent defensively (reading danger and closing down early), his passing is exceptional and Arsenal have the pace and movement to really feed off that. Walcott receiving long, precise early passes from Xabi is an appealing prospect. Around Fabregas and whoever they bring in (or, if they don’t bring in, then maybe Denilson) there’ll be the usual carousel of talented ball-players that just slot into the smooth-running slick passing style that is the Arsenal trademark. Rosicky is terrific, and was missed when he got injured last year, and if he plays the left side he’ll be an immense upgrade over Diaby - incredibly limited and one-footed on that side last year. Nasri might be a bit lightweight to explode into the Prem, but he ought to be good next year, and though I was impressed by Aaron Ramsay in the cup final (great movement, two good feet, wanted the ball even in tight areas) it’d be remarkable if he made much impact as a 17-year-old.

The defence is very sound if everyone’s fit, with LOADS of pace and just a little worry over defending the ball in the air (as a centre-back myself I like the way Gallas and Toure play the position – they’re proper athletes unafraid of taking strikers on one-on-one and they don’t go in for the niggly stuff like Terry and Vidic). Clichy and Sagna are both exceptionally good.

It’s hard to predict how much Arsenal will improve this year – I think they’re probably good enough to win a title, but to win THIS title, probably not (it’s interesting how much better teams have had to be in the last couple of years since Chelsea’s insane spending lifted the Premiership into being the world’s elite league).


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
SSreportersLegend
458 days ago
Score -3+-
Nice write-up, but Arsenal are going to the dump again....maybe they'll win the FA Cup, but it's 3rd place they go.
Permalink | Reply
RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
457 days ago
Score -2+-
Since when is 3rd place and the FA Cup known as "the dump?"


I think Arsenal will probably fall short of the League title, but they can very easily win the FA Cup. And I actually think they have a good shot at success in Europe, as well.


And SSR, your hypocrisy knows no bounds. You bitch and moan about teams like the Yankees and Red Sox having so much money and getting so much attention. You cry about how Red Sox fans are all frontrunners. Then you turn around and gloat about Manchester United, the team with the most money, and the most frontrunning, know-nothing fans in the world.
Permalink
Pittsburgh GunnyMajor Leaguer
456 days ago
Score 1+-
Experience in the central midfield has the potential to be a problem area especially since Flamini left. From what I saw agaisnt Real Madrid though I liked the pace and movement from the Gunenrs. I was thoroughly impressed with Carlos Vela the young Mexican looks like he will be the real deal in the scoring department.
Permalink
SSreportersLegend
456 days ago
Score 0+-
Know-nothing fans eh?


Since when did I moan about them having so much money? That's a Grade A example of putting words into my mouth.


Look, my version of the dump is Arsenal having high expectations year after year and they fail.


Eduardo will never be 100% again, losing Flamini and Hleb were huge and it seems like Bendtner is a nothing unless you sub him in.


Walcott has got to finish better or else it's Adebayor doing all the scoring up front.


Arsenal aren't nearly as deep as United or Chelski, and that will be their downfall.
Permalink
Pittsburgh GunnyMajor Leaguer
456 days ago
Score 0+-
I don't think the Gunners will miss Hleb as much as some people think there my good SSR. He was all about the dribble and not so much on the finish.
Permalink
Panda TeamWaterboy
455 days ago
Score 0+-
I think Hleb was very good at dribbling with his head up (meaning he could still see passes), and that's quite a rare skill. But if Nasri and/or Ramsay are what they look like, and Rosicky's fit again they should be fine for that.
Permalink | Reply
Add your Comment
ArmchairGM welcomes all comments. If you don't want to be anonymous, Register or Login. It's free
Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User Panda Team | August 9, 2008 | August 2008 | Soccer Opinions | Premiership Opinions | Arsenal Opinions | Fabregas Opinions | Walcott Opinions | Toure Opinions | Gallas Opinions

Don't Miss

Phillies World Series 2009: A Year Later, and They Still Don't Want Us
Sorry, But I'm Not Sorry
2009 NHL Preview
In Which Ricketts Wins World Series
2009 Week 3: Let’s Talk About Your Favorite NFL Team

In the News

Tim Lincecum is facing misdemeanor possession charges for marijuana.

Comments of the Day

1 Pssst! Phillies "fans"... you lost. Get over it already. ...

Take a Poll

What year did the Dodgers win there first world series in Los Angeles?
1955 1964 1959 1965

New Articles

Bad Flashbacks: An Analysis of USC v ASU
What If Brad Lidge Had Started Game One?
Week 9 Postgame: Trick or Treat?
Dear FIFA, UEFA, & Football Fans... It is time.
Make it Number 27

Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Article:Premiership_Preview_-_Arsenal"

This page was last modified 09:44, 9 August 2008. Content is available under the GFDL.

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise