You Are My Arsenal

Main Menu

  • About
  • Latest News
    • General
    • Match Previews
    • Transfer Window
  • Analysis
    • Players
    • Post Match Review
  • Contact

logo

  • About
  • Latest News
    • General
    • Match Previews
    • Transfer Window
  • Analysis
    • mikel-arteta-arsenal-coach-tactical-analysis

      Tactical Analysis: What the Scotland friendlies tell us about Arsenal’s defensive tactics ...

      September 2, 2021
      0
    • arsenal-preseason-2021-analysis

      Tactical Analysis: What the Scotland Friendlies tell us about Arsenal's Style of ...

      August 12, 2021
      2
    • Defending from the front - How Arsenal has improved their defense

      March 26, 2021
      0
    • arsenal-tottenham-premier-league-2020-2021-tactical-analysis

      Arsenal's Derby Redemption

      March 15, 2021
      1
    • leicester-arsenal-premier-league-2020-2021-tactical-analysis

      How Arsenal rounded off the perfect week

      March 1, 2021
      2
    • west-brom-arsenal-premier-league-2020-2021-tactical-analysis

      How Arsenal dismantled West Brom - Tactical Analysis

      January 4, 2021
      0
    • arsenal-chelsea-premier-league-2020-2021-tactical-analysis

      How Arsenal dispatched Chelsea

      December 28, 2020
      0
    • everton-arsenal-premier-league-2020-2021-tactical-analysis

      Tactical Analysis: What went wrong for Arsenal vs Everton?

      December 21, 2020
      0
    • tottenham-arsenal-premier-league-2020-2021-tactical-analysis

      Breaking Down Arsenal's Woes vs Tottenham - Tactical Analysis

      December 8, 2020
      0
    • Players
    • Post Match Review
  • Contact
  • Fulham 0–1 Arsenal: Three Things We Learned as the Gunners Go Top

  • Riccardo Calafiori: Arsenal’s Shape-Shifting Soul

  • Arsenal’s Right-Side Blueprint: How Saka, Ødegaard, and Timber Are Driving the Attack

  • What the First Seven Matches Really Tell Us About Arsenal’s Contenders’ Credentials

  • Three Things We Learned as Arsenal Beat West Ham to Go Top of the Premier League

Post Match Review
Home›Post Match Review›A gulf in quality doomed Arsenal before the start

A gulf in quality doomed Arsenal before the start

By Michael Price
February 20, 2013
576
4
Share:

In any kind of addiction, you come to a point at the end of the road where you can begin to make significant changes – it’s called acceptance. And while many  Gunners faithful have accepted where we are now long ago, last night drove home exactly where we are right now.

Simply – we are not good enough.

Forget who is to blame for not being good enough, there is plenty of blame to go around. And while I always feel optimistic before a match as is my way of things, it has been clear to me over the course of this season that while there are certainly talented individuals on this team, there is not enough quality to actually do anything of merit – except, maybe finish fourth.

Let that sink in. Scream, do whatever it is you need to in order to get it all out. But it is the truth.

Last night we watched on the pitch a team that was efficient, mechanical and world class absolutely dismantle us. Forget the goals, there were spells of Bayern possession where every single player for Arsenal looked lost.

Arsenal looked like they had a plan to press and create mistakes but Bayern where so efficient with thei ball they hardly ever were troubled by the pressure.  They didn’t use meticulous passing and ball control to get in around the box, they used 2 to 3 effective passes to get the ball to a player who moved into space to create opportunities.

Look at the third goal, Lahm does what a full back is supposed to do and continues his run past Robben (who also exploited open space) whom he has just passed to, in order to get into space. Arsenal don’t track effectively he has a clear path for a good low cross and it sets up the 3rd goal. Effective.

What was maddening still is even with the goal we hardly ever looked like we were in it. The gulf in quality is so wide.

Now on one level there is no harm losing to a team like Bayern. This is a team that has been in the Champion’s League final 2 out of the last 3 times and won one of them. This is a team that has steam rolled its opposition. I don’t think there are many teams right now, with the exception of Barcelona that could hold court with these guys.  On that level, I’ve got no issues.

Where the issues lie is that even with a modicum of hope the result shouldn’t be surprising. The din post-game  of frustration and anger is loud not because of this result but because of this result combined with the previous result and the lackluster performances all season long.

And we all know why that is. I said it earlier, there is talent in this squad. But the squad overall is deficient of any sort of substantial quality. Sure,  Jack Wilshere is the only one who you could single out as truly world class (I don’t think he’s there yet, but he will get there.) Some are good, but maybe not good enough for the big stage like last night.  Some, well some simply aren’t good enough for any stage.

It’s been a downward decline that had other things happened may have been arrested. Had Eduardo not gotten injured maybe the team keeps it together and wins the league. Had Koscielny and Szczesny not had a colossal brain fart in the Carling Cup final, maybe the season doesn’t crumble and team doesn’t fall apart.

But those events didn’t happen. Winning hasn’t occurred and players have moved on for greener pastures. Some of those movements have failed, some haven’t. I love the list of honors players have won since leaving Arsenal as if they’ve gone on and been the catalyst for doing it. Right now one maybe two players have left and been the catalyst for winning for their new team – that’s happening right now with Van Persie and United. But I digress.

The fact is since those events didn’t happen and winning hasn’t occurred we’ve watched as star player after star player has left. Sure, it is likely that since they were all foreign players there is no base desire to stay committed to a club. That’s not a knock on foreign players. But one of the reasons clubs like Bayern do so well is that they are heavily built around national talent and as such it’s very hard to pry a German away from a German club.

But if we had won something in this drought, those players likely would’ve stayed because winning begets winning. And winning leads to solidifying the club core. Since winning hasn’t happened those players, the good ones from other nations, don’t feel an innate reason to stay and eventually move on.

Don’t believe me? Well, for all his professed love of Arsenal, you only need to see many of Robin Van Persie’s recent interviews and see veiled backhands at his former club.  Again, I am digressing.

As those players have left, they have hardly been replaced for like for like. While I generally like the signings of Podolski, Giroud, and Cazorla, there is still a gap in the squad. And it’s clearly because that even though we made good moves this season and some last, overall in the last years we have hardly been consistent in bringing in quality.

Again, I’m not going to sit here and lay blame at any one person’s feet. There is plenty of blame to go around and we’ve discussed it ad nauseum.  The board doesn’t provide leadership. Wenger, is showing signs that he doesn’t know how to manage the players of this new era, and the players don’t have the heart to actually show up and play on a consistent basis.

Last night confirmed what many have thought for a while – we are in dark times. There have been dark times before  – ’53 to ‘70 and ’71-’89.  We’re in another one. And sadly, I think it will only get worse before it gets better.

While I do believe the time has come to move for a new manager, I do not think we will do so. The lack of leadership from the board and majority shareholder show a marked lack of desire to do so. Even if they miss out on the Champion’s League. And even if they suddenly find that they are vertebrates and have a spine, their lack of vision and seeing beyond the bottom line only means we’ll be saddled with a new manager like Roberto Martinez.

I think top 4 is still achievable (not that it’s an achievement) but if as is often the case after runs like this, Arsenal go into a shell, all bets are off.

In the end, we were beaten by a better team. No harm in that. The Invincibles also lost to Bayern.  The harm is in the fact that this decline and malaise was avoidable.  Even when money supposedly wasn’t available.  No one ever argued for £25 million signings. But everyone has argued for quality signings.

Bayern again is the example here. While they have recently bought in a player or two over that £25 million mark the overall cost of the team we faced last night was only about £10 million more than the Arsenal squad that was on the pitch. Bayern have built a team around a core of quality German players. The players they’ve brought in aren’t major stars (with some exceptions) and don’t cost an arm and a leg (again with some exceptions) but overall they’ve reinforced where needed and have a squad that is likely to challenge Barcelona’s grip on European supremacy.  And it wasn’t done with £500,000,000. So don’t tell me it can’t be done.

I’m not angry. In fact my heart is heavy. We are a proud club. With great history and traditions. I am saddened to see supporter infighting. I am saddened to see our board effectively fleece us. I am supremely saddened to see my club ridiculed in the press and now pitied. And I am saddened that a manager whom we all once adored now seems completely lost and will only come to a dirty nasty ending with much acrimony.  But overall I am saddened that the quality in this squad is missing and there is very little to link it with the great squads of our history.

My only hope is that someone gets it. But I had hope for an Arsenal win and we saw that turned out.

TagsAFCArsenalArsenal FCBayern MunichChampion's leagueMatch ReviewUEFA
Previous Article

Arsenal v Bayern Munich; Champion’s League Match ...

Next Article

Arsenal have a Hero issue

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related articles More from author

  • arsenal-west-ham-united-premier-league-2021-2022-match-preview
    Match Previews

    Match Preview: Arsenal look to stake claim in battle for top 4 as West Ham visit Emirates

    December 15, 2021
    By Michael Price
  • Nicolas-Pepe-Arsenal-Forward-Excitement-Analysis
    General

    Nicolas Pépé done. Positive fanbase next. Blimey!

    August 2, 2019
    By First Team
  • Arsenal-Women-Chelsea-Women-FAWSL-2018-19-Tactical-Analysis-Statistics
    Post Match Review

    Arsenal Women lose WSL top spot in Chelsea defeat

    January 15, 2019
    By First Team
  • General

    What is the end goal of Arsenal?

    September 3, 2011
    By Michael Price
  • Opinions

    Martin Ødegaard: Arsenal’s Most Important Player and the Misguided Criticism After the West Ham Defeat

    February 24, 2025
    By Michael Price
  • Match Previews

    Arsenal v Sunderland; Premier League Match Preview

    February 9, 2013
    By Michael Price

4 comments

  1. Kiwi 21 February, 2013 at 01:51 Log in to Reply

    Just to flesh out my assertion re Bayern Munich and its structure of internal power sharing that ensures their coach (manager equivalent) does not rule the roost in an unhealthy manner.

    Their President is Uli Hoeneß a Bayern ex-player of note who has been with the club as GM and then President since his retirement from playing (1979).

    Before Hoeneß was appointed President the club had an all time German and Bayern playing great Franz Beckenbauer

    Another all-time German and Bayern playing great Karl-Heinz Rummenigge is the club Chairman.

    Bayern has an interesting corporate structure that provides for a number of managerial and leadership roles. Having a look at its board you’ll see corporate representatives from Adidas and Audi no less. When I say representatives we’re talking the Adidas CEO and the man who was/is Audi’s CFO, CEO and Chairman.

    Add in Matthias Sammer the clubs Sporting Director and an ex German captain of real standing and a recent coach of BD and Stuttgart.

    All this to say that if Bayern Munich was in a state of slumber you can be sure that the heavy hitters (either the internal ones or the external corporate ones) would start to ask the difficult and uncomfortable questions. This is absolutely critical for the health of any large organisation.

    Contrast Arsenal. There is no footballing mind on the board whatsoever – not one. Any who is Ivan Gazidis? I mean really. A US lawyer. Why would Wenger listen to him at all, assuming he even had a contrary opinion? There isn’t a football man of standing in a meaningful role at the club. Rice and now Bould look like token cone carrying roles – hardly strategic movers and shakers with access to the top echelon of the club.

    The Bayern case also demonstrates the nonsense in the assertion that the coach/manager role has to be the point of continuity. Bayern aren’t scared to change coaches. And why would you be? Isn’t the coach/manager the role where one has to stay sharp and vibrant and on the ball? Bayern ‘stay the course’ in the corporate and managerial back room. It is here that the men of vision and ambition chart the clubs course. I think there is a very strong case to suggest that having a coach/manager for 16 years is the wrong approach. The Ferguson example is the exception to the rule not the model per se. Ferguson has proven he can reinvent himself and delegate responsibility in a way that maintains freshness and momentum. Wenger has wholly failed to do that post-2004.

    There’s a lot to reflect upon in the Bayern example and it’s not the first time I’ve mentioned them. Funny how some things come around into the popular consciousness.

    • DaAdminGooner 21 February, 2013 at 11:37 Log in to Reply

      Kiwi if you don’t mind, I may take these two posts and make one article on it. I think your model that you set as an example is a perfect example of how we should set up.

  2. Kiwi 20 February, 2013 at 22:49 Log in to Reply

    When Wenger’s teams won the idiosyncrasies in his management and coaching were set aside, after all, back then “winning was the end game, the objective”. When we won, why spend time constructing and analysing the counterfactual – surely it’s better to celebrate reality?

    But those days have long gone. The trajectory for 8 perhaps 9 years is consistently downward, and we now face the prospect of a non-linear bump should we fail to qualify in the top 4 of the EPL. As mindnumbing as our recent existance has been – like sitting at the royal dining table for years without eating the food or engaging in discussion – there are real consequences to ejection. Arsenal have been existing in a twilight zone, we don’t compete with the EPL big boys, but we do cohabit theirspace. Now one of Spurs, Everton or Liverpool might sit in our place and then the fun really starts.

    I’ve stated my thoughts on Wenger’s demise and negligence. Now the Arsenal (majority) ownership and its board will suffer the consequences of their premeditated percunary decisions. They have been happy to sit back and to allow Wenger to accrue an enormous amount of power at the club and have failed to put in place a structure that can add balance and contrary thinking.

    Contrast Bayern who have become something of a media fanboy club in recent months when the reality is that Bayern have been a very serious club for many years. Have a look at their managerial structure. Look at how luminaries and iconic figures from their past hold key roles in the club’s heirachy. This isn’t merely some indulgent old boys club, it is an intentional means of ensuring that the club is bigger than any one individual – including an iconic and powerful manager. When Pep Guardiola comes, publicly he will be fetted and oo’ed and aah’ed by media and fans but Bayern Munich the football club will not be held hostage to his persona in the manner that Arsenal is to Wenger.

    It is extraordinary that Wenger is still in the chair after 8 years of miserable decline. His financial accumen has kept him there while his footballing capacity has been laid bare. He’s indulged his whims and fancies, ignored all criticism, and now looks a haggard and worn out figure. The fact he’s the best paid EPL manager just proves that the majority owner and board care firstly about stability and the financial side – not football.

    I totally disagree with Steve. It needn’t take years to set things right. The financial and infrastructural setup is first class. It’s the squad that needs a new broom. Make a good appointment to the manager’s chair and things could turn around immediately. Wenger’s arrival in 1996 is the ironic proof that immediate positive change is possible and quite common at this level. The question becomes who? Arssenal FC needs a broom to sweep away the excesses of the Wenger era. This is the sad reality that befalls many longtime figures who stay longer than they should. It’s a story that repeats again and again. Once a man tastes the heights of success, and the adulation it brings, few can step down in a timely manner. Wenger’s just further proof of this truth.

  3. highburyterracesteve 20 February, 2013 at 20:27 Log in to Reply

    Not a ton to argue with here, DAG, though I don’t remember Bayern winning the CL….

    Why the distaste for Martinez? He seems like a solid manager and very good at regrouping squads who have gone through tough matches and longer low spells (kinda like this iteration of Arsenal). I’d prefer to bring in a younger coach (with a plan) who might be in it for the long haul rather than one of the older guys cycling between the big $$ clubs and the national teams. But that’s just me….

    The big problem is that we simply cannot snap our fingers and have it be 10 or 12 or 15 years ago. Momentus as it might seem, changing the manager would be only a single, incremental step in an extended process that will take a very long time.

    In terms of quality, you’re right. Wilshere is the lone bright spot and he’s still a ways off. We were outgunned in every single position last night. It could be argued that this British core idea is similar to Bayern’s, but with the exception of Jack, I just doubt the quality is there. Add to that the fact that the rest of the squad is both aging AND not of the highest quality and it’s hard to see how the squad will be building over the next several seasons.

    Anyhow, a(nother) good moment for some navel gazing though no easy answers seem forthcoming. Hopefully the team can rebound and get back to business at the weekend.

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

  • Opinions

    BOOKMAKER HAS LIVERPOOL FAVOURITES TO DEFEAT ARSENAL ON WEDNESDAY NIGHT

  • avenell-roadcast-podcast-episode-3avenell-roadcast-podcast-episode-3
    General

    Avenell Roadcast: The One Where We’re Excited About Pepe

  • GeneralMatch Previews

    Arsenal v West Ham United, Match Preview

About Author

Michael Price

View all posts

Follow us

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
© YouAreMyArsenal. All rights reserved.
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.
You can revoke your consent any time using the revoke consent button.