Arsenal: Who should the Gunners sign before the deadline?

The week of the transfer deadline: where clubs pay over-the-odds for players they sometimes don’t need. Players names are thrown around, numerous sightings of players at airports, and it’s all covered in the hyped-up extravaganza of ‘Transfer Deadline Day’ on Sky Sports.

Onto Arsenal. It’s fair to say this season hasn’t exactly gone as well as the Emirates faithful had hoped. The Gunners lie in 6th place; 4 points behind North London rivals Spurs. This is simply unacceptable, but it isn’t the first time we’ve been here.

For example, Spurs held a double-digit points lead over Arsenal last year – only to seize it in the final few games. With Spurs looking an improved team under Andre Villas-Boas, and Arsenal lacking a certain Robin Van Persie – this doesn’t look like happening again.

So, who should Arsenal push for? Arsenal lack a domineering presence at the base of midfield. Someone to disrupt opponents counter-attacks, break up play, and be the foil for the more creative players: Jack Wilshere, Santi Cazorla etc.

Whilst I’ve long been a supporter of Francis Coquelin, it doesn’t feel as though Wenger has the same belief in the Frenchman. Someone more physically robust and more experienced, for whom Coquelin could be the understudy to would be a very good addition.

Mohamed Diamé is available for £3.5m from West Ham. He’s a player that has played brilliantly in West Ham’s decent start to the Premier League season. A huge presence in midfield, Diamé’s value and Premier League experience make it a very steady and logical investment.

Etienne Capoue is another option. The recently capped Frenchman is a very capable defensive midfielder, and should definitely be looked out – before his price continues to rise. I’m unsure as to whether Toulouse would allow him to leave only a week after losing Moussa Sissoko. One to look at though.

Despite Olivier Giroud’s steady start to his Arsenal career, it’s fair to say Arsenal require a little more firepower up front. A name being thrown about is David Villa. Simply put: he’s one the best strikers of our generation. Whether Arsene Wenger would be able to tempt Barça to selling is another matter.

Villa.... to Arsenal before deadline day?

Villa…. to Arsenal before deadline day?

 

Loïc Rémy was a player whom would have added something too, alas, he went to QPR. Stefan Jovetic is yet another top player that has been linked with Arsenal, but I just think his asking price would be far too much to entertain.

To conclude: there aren’t a wealth of the players for Arsenal to sign, but the few that are available and Arsenal are interested in would add something to the team in the pursuit for 4th place.

As a fan of the North London club – I would love us to make one last push for David Villa, whilst also adding Momo Diame for £3.5m. In the end, we’ll probably end up singing nobody.

The life of a football fan, eh?

 

Written by Frank Hobbs

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Arsenal: Wenger’s lament is holding the Gunners back

All the media billing surrounding Wilfried Zaha’s now completed transfer to the Premier League as a talented 20 year old involved Arsenal in a move that would have made perfect sense.

A player moving to a club renowned for its success in harnessing raw potential and now housing a good crop of young Englishmen went hand in hand with logic until they reached the figures. £15 million was the reported fee Manchester United eventually paid to land his belated summer services while their north London rivals slammed the briefcase closed and shuttled off to dormant austerity.

The ease with which Manchester United brushed aside Arsenal for Zaha’s signature should be of grave concern to the Gunners who still hold Andrei Arshavin as their record signing for the same £15 million fee.

It is this prudence and transfer inactivity that caused Robin Van Persie to highlight “ambition” as he moved to Old Trafford for £24 million in the summer, a move that has fired United to the top of the table with Arsenal, genuine challengers to English dominance just ten years ago, a small speck in the rear-view mirror by the margin of 19 points after 23 matches.

While Zaha was finalising his move to Manchester, Wenger was entertaining the press with an idea to limit the amount of shopping one can do in the January transfer market, evidently casting an eye to Newcastle’s scattergun de Francais as they stand on five imports and counting. It was hard not to class this two-signing idea as self-sufficing from a manager who has yet to get involved in the transfer festivities and has no intentions to unless, as in his words, “the right player becomes available”.

Wenger was doing a mighty-fine job of towing the Ivan Gazidis and Stan Kroenke party line of strict financial thrift, he was almost convincing as he said “we have the resources inside the club to do well” with limp defeats against Manchester City and Chelsea that emphasised the gulf between Arsenal’s troubles and the quality of those at the top.

Scroll back a little further and it’s the embarrassing League Cup exit to Bradford City that comes into view as an argument for a squad that urgently needs addressing before finishing outside of the top four for the first time in sixteen years becomes a starker reality.

Bayern Munich, Jupp Heynckes’s fluid runaway leaders of the Bundesliga, await with bated breath in the last 16 of the Champions League but the Emirates remains occupied with nothing but tumbleweed.

Wenger was asked about Napoli’s muscular goalscoring phenomenon Edinson Cavani last week and refused to rule out a £30 million bid for what looks more like a child’s fantasy than any realistic transfer rumour.

Increasingly burdened by the weight of austere demands from those above him, Wenger was desperately trying to placate the disillusioned fans who happen to fork out the league’s most expensive season ticket on top of having to watch a yearly fire sale of their best players.

Van Persie and Alex Song departed London for a combined total of just over 30 million euros in the summer while in came Santi Cazorla, Olivier Giroud and Lukas Podolski for around the same expenditure. Break-even is the motto, avoid loss is the game, yet Wenger remains happy that his “accountant is just in the next house, he is ready when we need to spend money” .

That money could well be lumped on Steven Jovetic, Fiorentina’s 23 year old attacking midfielder who can also play out wide. The Montenegrin is the poster-boy of Fiorentina’s Serie A renaissance and his stock is high as a potent creative force and scorer eight goals this season, drawing obvious comparisons to Dejan Savicevic, Milan’s “magician” of the early 90′s.

£20 million is the reported asking price for Jovetic’s direct skill and trickery that causes havoc between the lines, and would add further potency to an already technically-gifted Arsenal frontline that has sometimes lacked cohesion in this campaign.

Jovetic.... would give Arsenal another dimenson.

Jovetic…. would give Arsenal another dimenson.

There is little doubting Jovetic, to the neutral observer, is worth it just like Zaha; he would provide Arsenal with another dimension in attack and offer a goal threat as well as the ability to provide for others, a well rounded young footballer.

Yet, consider it is £5 million in advance of the most Wenger has ever summoned from the kitty to spend on a single player and it seems mightily unlikely that the Belgrade born starlet will be swapping the art and culture of Florence for the hustle and bustle of Islington within this forthcoming week.

Or anybody else for that matter as Wenger persists to produce from within. A within that is capable of a 5-1 demolition of West Ham but lacks the steel and quality necessary to compete with Chelsea and Manchester City as the gap from the top widens into a chasm that is threatening Arsenal’s sustainability as a leading force, as possible Champions League blackout looms large on the horizon.

Once they drop out, they will find it very tough to get back in with the elite, that is unless Gazidis, Kroenke and Wenger finally cave in to the ire afforded them at every AGM and loosen the financial restrictions instead of waiting patiently until their prophesied saviour of Financial Fair Play comes into force. Until then, talk of Zaha, Cavani and Jovetic remains in the clouds.

 

Written by Adam Gray

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FA Cup Preview: Manchester United vs Fulham

Bulgarian superstar, Dimitar Berbatov returns to his old stomping ground this evening as his Fulham team take on former employers, Manchester United in an F.A Cup 4th Round tie that has the makings of a tasty encounter. It’s been 10 whole years since a Junichi Inamoto inspired Cottagers inflicted a painful loss on the Red Army. They wouldn’t mind another victory later this evening.

Fulham boss, Martin Jol holds the unenviable record of NEVER recording a win in all competitions against Sir Alex Ferguson. It hurts the Dutchman when he’s reminded of that by pressmen every time it is Manchester United he next faces. He will go all out tonight in the hope that he snatches his first win over the Red Devils and it will be even more pleasing at the Theatre of Dreams.

The likes of Giorgos Karagounis, John Arne Riise, Bryan Ruiz, Hugo Rodallega, Steve Sidwell, Brade Hangeland, and DIMITAR BERBATOV will be motivated as ever to send Manchester United out of the Cup and qualify for the 5th Round.

Easier said than done as they are aware of how daunting a task it is to beat Manchester United, talk more of doing it on their home turf.

The Red Devils, just back from their 4 day break in Doha-Qatar, are raring to go. Still reeling from the last gasp equaliser they conceded at the Lane six days ago, the team will want to put things right today vs the men from West London.

 

David De Gea was heavily criticised for being at fault for Clint Dempsey’s goal on Saturday, but will be expected to keep his place this evening except Fergie wants to reshuffle the pack with one eye on Southampton on Wednesday.

Sir Alex was absent from the trip to the far east. He stayed back to attended Celtic Legend, Sean Fallon’s Funeral and tie up the deal to bring Wilfried Zaha to Manchester United; goals he achieved with distinction. The Ivory Coast born attacker is heading to Old Trafford in July after an agreement was reached with present club, Crystal Palace on Friday.

The Red Devils have both form and history on their side as they haven’t lost in two months and sit atop the EPL table with a 5-point cushion over Manchester City. The F.A Cup is a different kettle of fish as it springs surprises season after season.

 

PROBABLE LINE UPS

MANCHESTER UNITED

SAF will be without Darren Fletcher (out for the season), Jonny Evans (hamstring) and Ashley Young (knee). Asides these, he has a full squad to choose from, but might rest one of Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic who have to be used wisely as very important fixtures come along in the next couple of weeks.

Lindegaard/DDG, Rafa/Jones, Vidic, Smalling, Buttner, Carrick, Scholes, Valencia, Nani, Kagawa/Rooney, RVP.

 

FULHAM

Dutchman, Jol will be without the services of Simon Davies (neck), Kerim Frei (groin) and Mahamadou Diarra who is still recuperating. Others have been passed fit with a clean bill of health.

Schwarzer, Riether, Hughes, Hangeland, Richardson, Duff, Karagounis, Sidwell, Kacaniklic, Ruiz, BERBATOV.

 

Written by Ohireime Eboreime

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