Debate: Is Loyalty In Football ‘Dead’?

James Constable kissing the Oxford United badge

You’ve been hearing from almost every Arsenal fan for the past week or so that loyalty ‘is dead’. But the truth is, we’re in a new age of football – Player power. The new Sky-sponsored Premier League has got as much to do with this supposed lack of loyalty in modern football as Jean-Marc Bosman’s predicament.

English football may not want to admit it, but its players are bigger than the clubs they represent. And bigger even than the national sides they are picked for. But the question is, does this problem originate solely from football? Or is it bigger than that? Is this a problem more so with modern society? Are people dropping their morals as more and more of us reject religion? But that’s another question for another time.

It’s all well and good if a player is winning trophies, but as soon as that success stops, or is not achieved in a certain amount of time, the player will always want to move (Matt Le Tissier, Steve Bull and Lloyd Doyley aside). And we’ve seen this with Robin Van Persie. It’s been 7 years since Arsenal last won a trophy of any kind. 7 years! The reason he’s moving isn’t financial, although he won’t be too unhappy with his reported £200,000-a-week wages.

The reason he’s moving is the same reason Fernando Torres moved to Chelsea, and countless others over the last few years. He can see the end of his career rapidly approaching, and at 29 this is his last chance to move to a club that will be challenging for silverware.

Arsenal will challenge for silverware, but not for a few more years, and Van Persie clearly sees that as time he doesn’t have. And it will leave a bitter taste in the mouth for Arsenal fans that they stuck with him despite his injuries for the previous eight years, but such is life. Things change. People move.

Last January, I witnessed an interesting case of how loyalty is still very much alive in football. We have to go to the fourth tier of English football, and to a club that play at the Kassam Stadium. Oxford United. My club. Anyone who knows a little about Football League rivalries will know the feeling of hatred between Oxford United and Swindon Town. The inventively named ‘A420 derby’.

James Constable, Oxford’s number 9, is a modern icon at the Kassam Stadium after his goalscoring feats of the last four years. In fact his goalscoring feats are not too dissimilar to a certain former-Arsenal player. And it was these goals that attracted Swindon Town and Paolo Di Canio, who were sat at the top of League 2, to place a bid.

A reported £300,000 was accepted by the Oxford United board. When a football club accept a bid for a player, there is usually only one potential outcome – that player is leaving. But, Constable had other ideas. Not only did he reject Swindon’s contract that would have tripled his wages, but he didn’t even travel up to Swindon to discuss the move.

So loyalty. Dead in football? Only at the top level, it seems.

 

Written by Youcef El Barhadi

Follow me on Twitter @yelbarhadi

Please like O-Posts on Facebook

Follow the site on Twitter @OPosts

Manchester City: Why did City sell Adam Johnson?

Adam Johnson- Sunderland's latest signing

 

Adam Johnson this week sealed a move to Sunderland. The 25 year old winger was often cited as the closest England have to Ryan Giggs and how he was the answer to England’s left wing woes. However, Johnson has often failed to live up to that promise.

25 is still young definitely, but at 25 Ryan Giggs was an important figure in Manchester United’s treble winning campaign of 1999, whereas Johnson in Manchester City’s dramatic title winning campaign was just seen as an impact substitute who often played more games off the bench than he did starting on it.

Mainly, Johnson started against the “weaker teams” such as against Wolverhampton Wanderers, Aston Villa or Blackburn Rovers. Roberto Mancini never had enough faith to play Johnson in the bigger games, especially at the tail end of last season, where Johnson didn’t even make the substitute bench, never mind the starting XI.

Yet everyone outside of Manchester City Football Club still sees Johnson as this amazing winger. Why then did Mancini then have so little faith in Johnson?

Mancini often said of Johnson that he; “did one or two or three things then decided that was enough, he needs to keep going” – which is another way of calling Johnson lazy. As a Manchester City fan myself I understand why Adam aggravated Mancini. When started, Johnson often went missing for long periods, failed to help out defensively and generally was quite lazy. When he picked up the ball, Johnson often tried to take on defenders – did so – and then either ran into a dead end, lost the ball or delivers a cross to no one.

Adam Johnson rarely showed Mancini why he should be picked ahead of teammates David Silva or Samir Nasri, and of his 15 goals for Manchester City, Johnson almost exclusively scored goals in big wins such as Sunderland 5-0 at home or Norwich home and away last year, winning 5-1 and 6-1 respectively. Two of his goals though were important but both came within his first year at the club, once against Sunderland – a last minute equaliser, and once against Newcastle – a late winner.

Johnson often failed to provide that something different that we all wanted, he underwhelmed when given chances by Mancini and is certainly, in my opinion, massively overrated by every non-Manchester City fan out there.

Nevertheless, Adam Johnson moving to Sunderland is an excellent piece of business for all parties. With regular game time and tall strikers such as Steven Fletcher to aim at, Johnson is at a team where he is the star man and maybe he can improve (as Mancini always wanted Johnson to) to the potential promised by his early days at City and at Middlesbrough. Sunderland now have a winger who can cause tired opposition problems and can score goals – which is a bonus in any team.

And City have £10m and £90,000 a week wages less to pay, most of it to be spent on Swansea winger Scott Sinclair who will be a cheaper asset for City (which is important under FFP) and can offer City something different – pace – an attribute that is one that City lack going forward.

It is certainly sad how Johnson never lived up to his promise, but he never showed the City faithful how he could be “the next Ryan Giggs”. At Sunderland, Johnson may become a cult icon, but at the high standards that City set, Johnson often came up short.

 

Written by Henry Francis

Follow me on Twitter @TheHenryFrancis

Please like O-Posts on Facebook

Follow the site on Twitter @OPosts

Cheick Tioté – Is he right for Arsenal?

Newcastle's Cheick Tiote celebrating his late equalizer against the Gunners.

Cheick Tioté has been heavily linked with a move to the Emirates, since anchor man Alex Song traded life in North London for Barcelona in a deal believed to be worth £15 million. Tioté will always be remembered for his stunning left footed volley for Newcastle against the Gunners in their 4-4 draw, which saw Arsenal let a 4 goal lead slip, in February 2011. There is much, much more though to the defensive midfielder’s game.

Last season, we all know that the Arsenal defence was shaky and vulnerable, constantly making comedy errors. Alex Song helped protect the ever changing Arsenal back four last season, which helped them to a majestic 3rd place finish after a somewhat patchy start.

Arsenal need to replace Song, as he was an influential figure for the Gunners and is extremely underrated, if they don’t, then they could really struggle defensively. Before the 2012/13 season. Many pundits labeled Song as the key man if they were to succeed, as Song was the player who broke up play, but contributed in attacks, too. Tioté is a similar player to Song, in the respect of a tough tacking brand of midfielder.

However, Arsene Wenger will have to realise that, due to Tioté’s position, Cheick will be suspended now and again. Tioté has a proven track record of getting booked once every two games since joining the Toons, but I don’t think Wenger will tolerate this, so he will have to be extremely careful when and if playing for Arsenal. It is believed that Arsenal will place a bid of around £15 million within the next week, and that is an incredibly cheap deal for someone of Titoé’s quality- I wouldn’t be surprised if Newcastle boss Alan Pardew rejected the bid.

Tioté is one of those players where he could fit into virtually any side, and he will be perfect protection for the likes of Laurent Koscielny, Johan Djourou, Thomas Vermaelen and Kieran Gibbs, not to forget the error stricken and somewhat unreliable Wojciech Szczęsny.

Speculation has also been going all through the summer regarding Rennes defensive midfielder Yann M’Villa, who is an alternative to Tioté, at a much lower price, rumoured to be £10 million.

I feel, however, Tioté will work wonders at Arsenal, as their midfield is a bit weak with Welsh midfielder Aaron Ramsey, although they have just signed Santi Cazorla with Jack Wilshere making a return late October. Arsenal need to replace Song to keep up with their rivals.

 

Written by Adam May

Follow me on Twitter @Amay132

Please like O-Posts on Facebook

Follow the site on Twitter @OPosts