All posts by h79snht.top

Losing My Arsenal Religion

I’m feeling depressed today. I’m seriously wondering if I can bring myself to splash out next week to renew my season ticket. I said I wouldn’t engage in public naval contemplation about me and Arsenal this time last year but I just can’t help myself.

Some of my depression and sullen aspect is to do with Arsenal. I’m still very angry about the ticket price rises. We don’t need them and it takes the pressure off the club delivering improved commercial income which is where new money needs to come from. I certainly will struggle to find the additional £130 by next Thursday with all the other calls on my declining income. The board just isn’t justified in imposing the increases in a time of economic hardship. I’ve clearly mistaken them for people who care.

The mega-money struggle for the club’s future is also getting right on my wick. Alisher Usmanov has now upped the ante on Stan Kroenke, offering £14,000 a share to Stan Kroenke’s offer of £11,750 a pop. Sorry, mine’s still not for sale. There is a worrying trickle of the eight percent or so of shares to Usmanov now that can be seen by looking at the PLUS Markets website. Usmanov now has to instantly notify each additional share purchased during the period of Stan Kroenke’s offer which is mandated by City takeover rules. I hope any shareholder who wants or needs to sell offers their share to Arsenal Fanshare first.

I’ll be honest. I wish I’d never heard of either Kroenke or Usmanov. The fact that I have is directly the responsibility of the board and former board members David Dein, Lady Nina Bracewell-Smith and the late Danny Fiszman. I said when the board created 9.9% of new shares in the club and sold them to Granada TV (now ITV plc) that there was a danger that they’d created a Trojan Horse in the ownership structure. I take no pleasure in saying that I turned out to be right.

The board had the opportunity to do something special. Something uniquely Arsenal. Instead they chose to enrich themselves. This hasn’t benefitted the club by one penny. They did what so many others have done at big English clubs. They cashed in. We’re now in the ironic position of relying on an Uzbek naturalised Russian multi-billionaire to keep the club public and stop an American billionaire Stan Kroenke from taking the club down the path already trodden by Manchester United and Liverpool. As long as Usmanov hangs on to his 27.37% and slowly rising stake then Kroenke can’t take the club private and do what he will with it financially.

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There is a chance though that Usmanov’s further purchases may dry up the remaining available shares to such an extent that public trading on the PLUS market is no longer viable due to a lack of shares. That wouldn’t mean that Arsenal Fanshare couldn’t continue. It would mean that this would be by the grace and favour of Messrs Usmanov and/or Kroenke. Not a position I want us to be in.

My preferred option for Arsenal Fanshare was always to buy new equity in the club. This would mean my and every other AFS member’s contributions going directly into the club’s working capital rather than to existing shareholders. That hasn’t come to pass yet. I hope that it does.

In the meanwhile we reliant on billionaires who live in Moscow and Missouri thousands of miles and many time-zones away for the future direction of the club. This is good because? There are those who believe that Usmanov is the man for Arsenal because of his tens of billions. Not me. I want Arsenal to build on strong sustainable financial foundations. Not the whims and caprices of men with no previous connection with Arsenal. Usmanov constantly protests that he loves Arsenal. I suppose it’s conceivable but frankly I doubt it. It strikes me more as an ego-driven trophy purchase, just like many rich men take beautiful trophy wives whom they trust so much they insist on detailed legal pre-nuptial agreements.

Usmanov was given a pardon for alleged offences for which he was imprisoned, serving six years of an eight year sentence on charges of fraud and embezzlement when Uzbekistan was a constituent republic of the old Soviet Union. The pardon was issued by the newly independent Uzbek government which has literally boiled opponents alive. Usmanov may or may not have been guilty of the offences for which he was imprisoned. I wouldn’t take the word of a politically directed Soviet court that he was guilty. Neither would I take the word of the Uzbek government that he was innocent and worthy of pardon however. We’ll likely never know the truth.

My other cause of my agitation is more general. I find the empty, materialistic, self-absorbed, ego-driven lives of so many of the game’s current crop of professionals profoundly depressing. I’m no saint. I enjoy material wealth too. I’m not addicted to empty consumption however. I like to stimulate my mind as well as my bank balance. Driven on by the spivs that leach on all too many top players they constantly circumnavigate the globe in search of ever more lavish financial rewards.

I blame nobody for improving themselves financially but is it really important to be earning £160k a week rather than £100k? Does it make the players happier? I doubt it. It is a short career and players are entitled to do the very best for themselves. I’m just not so sure I want to continue contributing to people who earn millions a year and often put it to no good use for themselves or others.

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Greed has become rampant in football. I hate it. Just look at the recent news at Queen’s Park Rangers. Ticket price rises of forty to sixty percent. The club’s response to protests? Tough. If you don’t want your seat, somebody else will have it. Never mind if you were there when Rangers lost to Vauxhall Motors in the FA Cup in 2002. Never mind if you followed QPR in the old Third Division. We don’t give a monkey’s. Show us the money or piss off!

All in all, I’m tempted to become an armchair Arsenal fan and watch the odd match live when it suits me, and take in some Barnet and AFC Wimbledon games. I’m fed up with my loyalty being ruthlessly exploited for every last penny in my pocket.

Article courtesy of Vic Crescit at Arsenal Insider

Jose Enrique talks up Liverpool’s chances

Liverpool full back Jose Enrique has stated that despite Saturday’s 2-1 loss to Manchester United, the club are still in the race for Champions League qualification.

The defeat at Old Trafford means that the Merseysiders are four points adrift of Arsenal in fourth place, but the Spaniard feels that this deficit can be clawed back.

“We lost against United but the truth is that we have to win more games at home,” he told the club’s official website.

“We are still in the race to be in the Champions League next season.

“It’s hard but Chelsea and Arsenal have lost many points too. Chelsea lost this weekend and we can’t forget Newcastle.

“It’s really important that we have to play these teams at home and we’ll have another man – you play with 12 with our fans.

“It is hard to beat Manchester United at home but against teams like Blackburn and Swansea at home we need to win the points.

“There are many games left and we have to beat many teams to try and be there.

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“You never know in football – that’s why everyone likes it. But we’re still in the race,” he concluded.

By Gareth McKnight

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Fergie: Van der Sar set to retire

Sir Alex Ferguson is sure that veteran goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar will retire from the game at the end of the current Premier League campaign.

With his wife Annemarie suffering a serious brain-related illness last year, Ferguson believes he will want to spend more time in his homeland as she continues her recovery.

"I have come to accept this will be Edwin's last season," Ferguson said."It's sad but the difficulty for a goalkeeper when he gets to 40 is something which happened with Peter Shilton.

"All of a sudden, because of age, Shilton's form just collapsed and I don't think Edwin would want that. He is such a proud man and it's going to be a big loss.

"We had a chat last season about how he saw his future and he explained to me his plans, and nothing has changed from then.

"It's difficult because he has his wife's health to consider after her illness.

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"She is fine now and seems to be really good but she still has treatments to get in Holland, with physiotherapy and things like that. So for him to be here with us would be difficult."Subscribe to Football FanCast News Headlines by Email

Why the NDP would rebuild a better future

We have all sat back in shock as rioting and general anarchy continues to sweep across the country’s major cities. It makes you wonder when it is all going to end and how the Government is going to act to bring this nation back in order.

I remember being alerted late on Saturday that Tottenham was apparently ablaze as the first of these riots kicked-off. At the time I hadn’t seen any of the damage or the full extent of the troubles, but my initial thoughts was that Dan Levy and the football club have suddenly found the perfect bargaining tool to get the borough of Haringey and the likes of Boris Johnson to sanction some funds towards the NDP project. If anything the riots merely underlined why the football club have been so keen to not only build a stadium but regenerate what is arguably one, if not the poorest community and area of London.

When the club looked to move to Stratford and take up residence of the new Olympic Stadium it was widely condemned by Haringey council and MP David Lammy in particular. They felt the club were committing some sort of treacherous act, without realising that the likes of Levy had very little option given the finances that were involved in making the NDP project happen. There are only so many times that you can bang your head against a brick wall (and Spurs did a lot of banging trying to get just their plans approved, let alone attempting to get help funding it) therefore without the backing the club rightly looked to cheaper alternatives – you see building a stadium it is the easy part, the real cost lay in the club’s desire to take on the responsibility of the council and regenerate an area in desperate need of investment.

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It is all rather ironic that those who look to defend the actions of the rioters in Tottenham have cited a lack of work and facilities as a potential cause – everything the NDP project would actually provide to the community if it could be funded. Maybe the events in N17 will finally hit home with the powers that be that they can no longer penny pinch around an area of London that needs investment and signs of prosperity the most. The NDP will provide this, so let’s hope the club and the council can now find a financial solution so they can build this better future for the people of Tottenham.

Has this January transfer window myth finally been dispelled?

The January transfer window has frequently been described as a potential banana skin for Premier League managers, who have been keen to delve into the winter sales in search of new players. More often than not fresh personnel arrive with inflated price tags, and fail to make a real impact with the season already past it midway point. However, this campaign has seen the window used to great effect by a handful of managers, who have succeeded in strengthening to their squads, boosting the quality of football produced on a weekly basis.

Perhaps the finest arrival has been is Papiss Cisse, who moved at Newcastle in a £10 million deal from German outfit Freiburg. The Senegalese forward has quickly adjusted to life with Newcastle, striking up a good understanding with fellow countryman Demba Ba, and the creative Hatem Ben Arfa. As a result of this Cisse has netted a staggering 13 goals in 12 appearances, including excellent finishes against the likes of Chelsea and Liverpool.

As well as Alan Pardew’s flurry into the market, Brendan Rodgers, Roberto Martinez and David Moyes, among others, have benefited from delving into what was a relatively quite January window.

After 2011’s antics with helicopters, last minute deals and vast quantities of Roman Abramovich’s cash exchanging hands, this winter’s exploits were fairly low key, with very few of the ‘elite’ clubs daring to enter the fray. As a result a relatively small amount of cash exchanged hands, with clubs looking at snapping up cost effective squad members for the Premier League’s run-in, thanks in part to the looming threat of Financial Fair Play. Due to this ‘panic buying’ has been kept to a minimum, preventing prices from becoming overly inflated.

Managers have moved away from big names, as a result of spending cut backs, instead looking at players with proven records abroad, or through the football league set-up. As well as Cisse, Pavel Pogrebnyak and Nikica Jelavic arrived, at Fulham and Everton respectively, with impressive tallies in front of goal during spells with their previous clubs. Jelavic in particular impressed in the SPL, becoming Rangers focal point, averaging better than a goal every other game. Moyes managed to snap up the Croatian for a fee of around £5 million, due to the Glasgow club’s much publicised financial issues, freeing the forward of the burden that comes with a large price tag.

Away from centre-forwards, Swansea bagged Gylfi Sigurdsson, on loan, which has proved to be a fine piece of business. The 22-year-old Icelandic midfielder has slotted seamlessly into the Swans midfield, adding a dynamic edge to a sometimes blunt second attacking line. His displays may have shocked some, but for those who witnessed his performances at Reading, prior to a move to Germany, would have been all too aware of the outstanding quality he possesses, which is testament to the South Wales club’s scouting network.

Wigan have also benefited from the signing of Jean Beausejour, whose energy and all-round ability have allowed the club to switch formations, and employ a 3-4-3 set-up. Allied to Emerson Boyce on the opposite flank, the Chilean has become an effective performer, since his move from Birmingham, revelling in an advance wing-back role.

The deals this winter have proved that with the application of some common sense and decent scouting, the January transfer window can be a useful tool. So often it has been used as an arena for panic, with managers hoping that copious amounts of cash can turn their season around. Although sometimes this works, the majority of the time the method fails, with players not fitting the system and becoming burdened by inflated price tags.

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Newcastle, Swansea, Wigan and Fulham have proved that a little preparation can go a long way.

What are your thoughts? Comment or follow @Alex_Hams on Twitter to have your say

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Villa: Fabregas wants to join Barca

Barcelona striker David Villa believes Cesc Fabregas is desperate to leave Arsenal and sign for the Catalan giants.

Despite several members of the Barca squad saying throughout the summer that the 23-year-old should move to the Camp Nou, it now seems likely that Fabregas will remain at the Emirates Stadium for at least one more season.

The Gunners rejected a £25million bid for Fabregas earlier in the summer but Villa, who moved to Barcelona from Valencia before the World Cup started six weeks ago, was quoted in The Sun as saying:"I am not the Barcelona coach, nor the person responsible for reinforcements, but personally I will do the maximum to get Cesc here.

"He wants to play here and it will be quite normal if Arsenal finally do a deal.

"That would be great. A player of his ability will only increase our power and his presence will be great for all the forwards.

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"He'll help Xavi and (Andres) Iniesta, and I'll score more goals with him in the side."Subscribe to Football FanCast News Headlines by Email

Guardiola unleashes in Mourinho rant

Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola has launched a remarkable reaction to jibes from Real Madrid boss Jose Mourinho.The Spanish powerhouses will clash in the third El Clasico in as many weeks in the first leg on their Champions League semi-final Wednesday.

This time, it seems, it is personal.

In his pre-match press conference prior to their leg at the Bernabeu, the normally reserved Guardiola responded brutally to Mourinho’s claims that the Barca boss was a consistent critic of referees.

The 40-year-old former Barca defensive midfielder said he tolerated Mourinho’s loose lips during the season.

But once the whistle blew to kick-off their semi-final tie, Guardiola believed that was when the real battle will begin.

“Tomorrow … we will play a match on the field. Outside of the field, he (Mourinho) has won the entire year, the entire season and in the future. He can have his personal Champions League outside the field. Fine. Let him enjoy it, I’ll give him that,” Guardiola said.

“But this is a game. When it comes to sport, we will play and sometimes we will win, sometimes we will lose. We are happy with smaller victories, trying to get the world to admire us and we are very proud of this.”

“I can give you an immense list of things (that Barcelona could complain about) – 300,000 things. We could remember Stamford Bridge (when then-Chelsea boss Mourinho criticised referee Anders Frisk and opposition Barca boss Frank Rijkaard) and another thousand things but I do not have that many people working for me, secretaries and referees and people writing stuff. So tomorrow … we will take to the field and we will try to play football as best as possible.”

“In this room (Real Madrid’s press room), he is the chief, the f—— man. In here, he is the f—— man and I can’t compete with him. If Barcelona want someone who competes with that, then they should look for another manager. But we, as a person and an institution, don’t do that. I could talk about (Olegario) Bequerenca (the referee from Barcelona’s semi-final first leg with Inter last season), about the offside goal from Diego Milito or the penalty of (Dani) Alves, but I don’t.”

“If you think after three years, that I always moan, always make excuses and always complain, then there is nothing I can do about that.”

Mourinho – at his official press conference earlier on Wednesday – had previously baited his coaching counterpart by claiming that Guardiola criticised referees, regardless of whether they were right or wrong.

“Now there is a third group (of coaches), which is only (Guardiola), that criticises referees when they get decisions right. There is a new meaning to (football) now,” Mourinho said.

“In his first season, (Guardiola) lived the scandal of Stamford Bridge, last year he played against a 10-man Inter (Champions League semi-final). Now he is not happy with refs getting it right. I am not asking the referee to help my team. If the referee is good everyone will be happy – except Guardiola. He wants them to get it wrong.”

The bitter converse between the two team leaders will ensure the final two El Clasicos this campaign will undoubtedly be the most memorable.

Blackpool miss out on Angel Rangel

Blackpool have had a bid for Swansea City’s Spanish right-back Angel Rangel rejected by the Championship club.

Seasiders boss Ian Holloway is seeking to strengthen his squad ahead of their bow in the Premier League, but the Swans are in no mood to part with one of their star performers.

Manager Brendan Rodgers told the club’s official website: “An offer has come in to the chairman from Blackpool for Angel. It has not been accepted.

“The situation is under control and I am due to have a meeting with Angel. I want him to stay and there is an offer of another contract on the table for him.

“There is bound to be interest in him because he’s a quality player. Angel is 27, in the last year of his contract and desperate to play in the Premier League. But so are we.

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“We have no need to sell him financially and I think this is the place to be.”

Rangel joined City in the summer of 2007 from Terrassa FC and has since scored three times in 138 appearances in all competitions.

Will the magic of the Copa/Pokal/Coppa upstage the FA Cup Final?

The magic of the cup – one of football’s well worn clichés churned out year after year. In England, it’s often used to describe the premier domestic cup competition, that being the FA Cup.

It’s labelled by the FA as the best cup competition in the world but recent finals belie this. The semi-final line up this year theoretically will provide a good final but to eclipse its European rivals, the FA Cup Final will need to be special judging by the matchups the Copa Del Rey, the DFB-Pokal and the Coppa Italia have produced.

This year’s Copa Del Rey final for example has an intriguing matchup even though it’s not an El Clásico final. Manchester United know very well the talent which Athletic Bilbao possess, having been pressed into submission by the Basque side. Such is the tactical genius of Argentinian coach Marcelo Bielsa their opponents in the final will be well aware of the threat posed.

Barcelona may have swept all that have come before them in the last few seasons. Earlier in this campaign though, they were held 2-2 in what was an entertaining game in Bilbao as Bielsa further illustrated his tactical nous against Europe’s finest. What’s more it showed his players ability to carry out his instructions effectively, something which shouldn’t be underestimated against teams like Barça. With the free flowing nature of Spanish football mixed with the two teams competing, an entertaining final will hopefully ensue in May.

Six days prior to the Copa Del Rey final though, Barcelona will want to participate in the Champions League final in Munich. One of the tenants of the Allianz Arena, Bayern Munich, are also vying to reach that final. They too though have a cup final to look forward to though as they take on the side above them in the Bundesliga, Borussia Dortmund.

The DFB-Pokal final perhaps won’t be as effervescent as its Spanish counterpart but it nevertheless will showcase Germany’s two best teams against each other. Champions Borussia Dortmund have led the table since January and are currently unbeaten in their last 22 Bundesliga games. Bayern Munich meanwhile are closing on Jürgen Klopp’s side despite being shaky on the road. Their prior meeting this season saw Dortmund sneak past Bayern 1-0 and it wouldn’t be too surprising if there was another tight encounter at the Olympiastadion.

The Olympiastadion was a scene of great joy for Italy in 2006 when they beat France on penalties in the biggest cup final of them all – the World Cup. The final of the Coppa Italia doesn’t quite compare but like other domestic cup finals around Europe, it offers a good match up as unbeaten Juventus take on the ever entertaining Napoli. These two played out a six goal thriller earlier in the campaign with Juve maintaining their unbeaten record by coming back from 3-1 down to claim a draw.

Napoli’s flair is doubtless and as a result, they’re always a good team to watch especially with the fluid front three of Lavezzi, Hamsik and Cavani. This is countered by the Juventus defence, which is currently the best in Seriea A. Now take into account the earlier meeting between the two sides and the Coppa Italia final could well be the best of them all.

In response, the FA Cup final does “on paper” (another great cliché) offer a decent final with either Chelsea or Spurs facing Liverpool or Everton. However, predicting thrilling finals is very difficult such is the somewhat erratic nature of modern football. What’s more each fan in their respective country has their definition of what makes a brilliant game; such is the subjective nature of football. This is a must. After all, if everybody played football in the same way, the game wouldn’t be nearly as entertaining and exciting than it is currently.

Nevertheless, the respective cup finals in Spain, Germany and Italy seem to eclipse the spectacle which the FA Cup Final will offer. Arguably there hasn’t been a good FA Cup Final for the neutral since Wembley was rebuilt. The 2006 final in Cardiff where Liverpool defeated West Ham on penalties isn’t easy to live up to but no final has even come close to this.

This doesn’t mean that goals necessarily make for a good game. Jonathan Wilson has pointed out before that, “If goals alone were a mark of excellence, there would be thousands queuing to watch primary school football.”

It’s also hard to be definitive as the finals of course haven’t been played yet. However, take into account also the individual stories of the underdog which help to characterise cup competitions. England hasn’t lived up to those of Spain and Germany this season.

The tales of Mirandes, a team from the third tier of Spanish football and Fürth of the 2.Bundesliga have added something special to the Copa Del Rey and the DFB-Pokal respectively. Both sides reached the semi-finals, beating first division opposition on their way, before being eventually undone by Athletic Bilbao and Borussia Dortmund.

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The FA Cup this season cannot compete with this. Perhaps then in 2012, unless the FA Cup final does produce a fantastic game, the “magic of the cup” will belong to the finals in Spain, Germany and Italy.

This article was originally written at Gone With The Rhind

For more football musings on Twitter, follow @archiert1

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It’s A Three Horse Race

Being a goalkeeper is a thankless task where you are remembered for your mistakes, more often than not, rather than any outstanding saves or match-winning performances.

The position is widely seen as England’s weakest link and Capello has so far failed to settle on any one of the three wasters custodians we currently have in South Africa – none of whom he holds in particularly high regard.

The fact that as a nation we still do not know the identity our first choice ‘keeper is plain embarrassing. That there is some dispute over who to include and there is still a credible case for all three is not an indication of the huge pool of talent that Fabio has had to draw from but rather that in the absence of an outstanding candidate, he has had to make do with the best of a bad bunch. It’s all deckchairs on the Titanic.

Some would say he’s had a raw deal – Capello has been forced to take two men who were fighting relegation battles last season because England simply do not possess a decent ‘keeper in the domestic game. But, what about Joe Hart? He’s had a decent season but has played bugger all international football. That is a selection issue and Fabio should probably have taken a closer look at him in the six games between securing qualification and the start of the tournament.

This is all conjecture of course – we have one more game on Wednesday to avoid early elimination and have to ask ourselves who deserves to wear the Jersey?

Robert Green

Green has played in the majority of games for England throughout our qualifying campaign and has been reasonably consistent under Capello.

Unceremoniously dumped following his howler against the USA, Capello buckled under media pressure to punish him for his costly error. His shot-stopping had generally been flawless prior to this momentary lapse in concentration and he looks set to join the ranks of Beckham and Seamen as World Cup scapegoats.

He made a decent save in the second half and should not have been replaced for the pressing need of consistency. He unfairly bore the brunt of the criticism for what was a poor performance all round but doubts will remain over his ability to control his area.

Joe Hart

Man. City’s custodian has travelled to South Africa as a firm third choice.

He excelled during his season-long loan at Birmingham demonstrating his good reflexes and agility. He is possibly a victim of his youth and will quite rightly never dislodge James or Green (for the time being) for the simple reason of his inexperience. To choose a player at this stage of the tournament whose international career amounts to only three appearances would be extraordinary but stranger things happen at sea.

Capello has himself to blame as there were plenty of opportunities to give him a run out over the last few months. One for the future I guess.

David James

‘Calamity James’ earned his 51st cap against Algeria and was most people’s obvious choice to start the tournament due to his relative experience.

Fitness is still a concern after missing three months of Portsmouth’s campaign with a knee injury and it probably cost him his place against the USA. Nobody seriously thinks he will be dropped for our final group game but with only two appearances under his belt in the last 11 months, it will be interesting to see how he fares.

After all, he earned his unflattering sobriquet during his time at Liverpool for his unrivalled ability to concede goals in the most comical fashion.

Surely he will now be with us now until the bitter end bar a recurrence of his injury.

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Who do you think should be England’s no1?

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