Monday, November 29, 2010

Wenger - It's still a young Carling Cup side

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Arsène Wenger insists his Carling Cup team is as youthful as ever, it’s just not as obvious as before.

The manager’s policy of giving youngsters the opportunity to cut their teeth in previous seasons seems to have been overlooked on the surface this time around, though look a little deeper and you can see Wenger’s point.

Jack Wilshere, Kieran Gibbs, Craig Eastmond and Wojciech Szczesny have all played their part this season alongside relative ‘old timers’ Theo Walcott, 21, and Denilson and Nicklas Bendtner, both 22. Hardly a team of veterans.

Wenger says the experience of his youthful side is testament to players who initially made their name in the competition and have now made the cut at the highest level.

“You will be surprised if you look at the age of the Carling Cup team,” said Wenger.
“People are used to seeing them in the Premier League so it doesn’t look as exclusively a Carling Cup team anymore.

“I have many players who are top level and I have many players who are young as well.
“When I speak about the young players, the young players are still in the squad but they are still very young.

“We need games for young players so that explains why we have less ‘super’ young players playing. However, the team who plays in the Carling Cup is still very young."

Eboue back ahead of schedule for Wigan

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Emmanuel Eboue has made a remarkable recovery from injury and will be named in the squad for the Carling Cup tie against Wigan at Emirates Stadium.

The Ivorian was stretchered off at Braga last Tuesday with a medial knee ligament strain. At the time, Wenger said: “It can be four weeks, can be six weeks or can be eight weeks. But I think it will be four weeks minimum.”

It turned out to be one week.

“Emmanuel Eboue is back in the squad much quicker than planned,” Wenger told TV Online on Monday afternoon. “When we made a scan his knee was swollen but the ligament was intact so we decided to push him back as quickly as possible and the tests were successful.” 

The prognosis for the other casualty from Portugal remains the same and there will be one omission from the 4-2 win at Aston Villa.

“Cesc is still out,” said Wenger. “He has ten more days or two weeks maximum. Sebastien Squillaci has a knee problem from Saturday. He is out, everyone else is available.” 

Wenger indicated that his side for Tuesday’s Carling Cup Quarter-Final will be similar in strength to the ones that won at Tottenham and Newcastle in previous rounds. The manager confirmed that Robin van Persie, Theo Walcott and Nicklas Bendtner will be in the squad but, aside from that, he wanted to keep his counsel.

“I don’t want to give the team today,” said the Frenchman. “The only thing I promise is that we will take the tie seriously.

 “I have to consider how many games my players play. For six weeks we have played every three days with Champions League and internationals. I will consider who needs to play and who needs to rest.”

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Aston Villa 2 - 4 Arsenal - Match Report


Arsenal went top of the table early on Saturday afternoon thanks to a nail-biting 4-2 win at Aston Villa.

After a tough, tough week, Arsène Wenger’s side needed a win of any kind to restore their confidence. They made heavy weather of the three points here today but it was still thoroughly deserved.

Results later on Saturday will probably see them knocked off the summit of the Premier League. But the ability to be there suggests Arsenal’s problems are being overplayed right now.

The visitors bossed the first half but had to wait until 39 minutes until Andrey Arshavin fired home. On the whistle a corner from the Russian, excellent on the day, was volleyed in by Samir Nasri.

Ciaran Clark fired Villa a lifeline six minutes after the restart but Marouane Chamakh replied almost immediately to restore the visitors' two-goal cushion.

Clark headed home with 20 minutes to go but, despite the odd scare, Arsenal were untroubled.

In the final seconds, Chamakh set up Jack Wilshere to head home at the far post.

This win does not answer all the questions posed at Arsenal this week. But it is a blessed relief in current circumstances.

Wenger’s men have had a hard seven days but they are still capable of having a great season.

The Frenchman made seven changes from the side beaten 2-0 at Braga in midweek.

From the back four only Sebastien Squillaci survived. Kieran Gibbs and Johan Djourou dropped to the bench. Emmanuel Eboue (knee) was injured. Bacary Sagna, Laurent Koscielny and Gael Clichy came in.

Alex Song, Tomas Rosicky and Andrey Arshavin came into midfield. Denilson and Theo Walcott started as substitutes while Cesc Fabregas (hamstring) was sidelined. Chamakh came in for Nicklas Bendtner up front.

Villa had John Carew and James Collins back from injury. Meanwhile Robert Pires was making his first start in English football since Arsenal’s 4-2 win over Wigan in May 2006 – the ‘final salute’ to Highbury.

It was a bitterly cold November afternoon and both sides needed a victory. Arsenal’s travails had been headlines all week but Villa were struggling too. They were used to being a top eight side but they went into this game in the bottom eight. Their side were laudably young but they had been paying for it with points.

And, as it turned out, this afternoon would be expensive.

The visitors might have been ahead within seconds. Arshavin angled a pass to Chamakh eight yards out. Brad Friedel half-blocked his shot, Richard Dunne deflected the ball goalwards and Collins booted the ball of the line.

The Moroccan had scored after 38 seconds at Wolves. This would have been even quicker.

A couple of minutes later Wilshere fed Rosicky and the midfielder drove a snap shot wide of the far post.

In the 14th minute, Chamakh’s back-header fell to the feet of the Czech midfielder just inside the area. He elected to shoot with the outside of his right foot and his effort rolled weakly in to the hands of Friedel.

It was all Arsenal. The visitors had taken the game to Villa and were completely on top. They simply needed a goal.

Chamakh, Arshavin and Nasri all had efforts blocked as Arsenal lined up to shoot.

But there was always the nagging of a breakaway chance.

It came in the 25th minute.

Stewart Downing crossed from the right, Clark flicked it on and Ashley Young popped up at the far post to steer a shot over the bar. In the context of this game, it was a massive miss.

However, it did nothing to turn the tide. Just after the half-hour, Nasri crossed low into the six-yard area and Dunne sliced the ball over his own bar.

Then Arshavin’s trickery left Pires on his backside. The Russian’s cross eventually found Nasri just outside the area. His fierce goal-bound drive hit Chamakh.

To this point, Villa had been pretty abject and the goal they conceded in the 39th minute had as much to do with them as Arsenal.

Two defenders attacked, and then left, a lofted clearance. Arshavin raced on to the ball, cut in from the left and fired into the far corner. The Russian had been afforded too much space and Friedel got a hand on the ball. But it did not matter.

It was Arshavin’s first goal since the trip to Partizan Belgrade on September 28 and utterly deserved.

Seconds later, it should have been 2-0. Arshavin fed Nasri who skipped past Friedel but could only flick the ball into the sidenetting.

In injury time, Friedel produced a stunning save to deny Chamakh’s bullet header. Arshavin thumped the corner to Nasri on the far post and the Frenchman fired home on the volley from the edge of the area.

The goal meant the score finally reflected the game.

Villa mustered a response at the start of the second half. Sagna cleared hurriedly from Ashley Young’s cross and Nathan Delfouneso had a shot charged down.

In the 53rd minute, Squillaci’s clearing header flew high to Clark just outside the area. He was given too much space and thumped a shot into the top left-hand corner of the net. Replays suggested that Carew, who was standing in an offside position, had impaired the view of Fabianski.

It was all horribly reminiscent of last Saturday. But then, three minutes later, Arsenal veered from the script.

Rosicky fed a perceptive pass to the sliding Chamakh, who beat Friedel to the ball and poked home.

That should have killed the game but Arsenal kept on going forward. Chamakh and Arshavin had half-chances for a fourth but the visitors attacking intent allowed space for Villa to exploit.

In the 70th minute, Sagna’s clearance fell to the feet of Clark, who thumped his snap-shot into the sidenetting.

Two minutes later the Villa midfielder did find the net once more. Squillaci nodded the ball out for a corner, Ashley Young fired it to the near post and Clark’s header hit the underside of the bar and bounced down over the line.

The game was in the balance once again – and Villa had now got their game together after a poor first half.

Wenger brought on Denilson and Gibbs to shore up the result. Their introduction came just after Arshavin sent Chamakh through only for a combination of Collins and Friedel to clear the danger.

Arsenal shut up shop in the final stages and Wilshere’s goal finally killed the game.

Some of the players threw their shirts into the visiting fans at the end.

The supporters deserved that as much as their team deserved three points this afternoon.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Ramsey joins Nottingham Forest on loan

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Aaron Ramsey has joined Nottingham Forest on loan until January 3, 2011.

Ramsey recently made his long awaited comeback since suffering a broken leg in February, successfully coming through 45 minutes for the Reserves against Wolves on Tuesday. He is joining Billy Davies’ side on loan to gain match fitness and sharpness.

The 19-year-old midfielder joined Arsenal in June 2008 from Cardiff City, having been the youngest player ever to represent the Bluebirds at 16 years and 124 days. He has made a total of 51 appearances for the Gunners, scoring five times.

Already a key figure in the Welsh national team, for whom he has made 11 international appearances, Ramsey signed a new long-term contract with Arsenal in the summer.

Everyone at Arsenal Football Club wishes Aaron the best of luck during his time with Nottingham Forest and we all look forward to seeing him once again in an Arsenal shirt in the New Year.

Wenger - I won’t take captaincy off Cesc


Arsène Wenger insists he has no intention of taking away the captain’s armband to ease the pressure on Cesc Fabregas.

It’s fair to say this season has so far been a frustrating one for the Arsenal skipper. After picking up a hamstring injury against Sunderland in September he has struggled to find full fitness and since then has admitted to not being at his fluent best. A frustration compounded when he limped off against Braga in midweek.

The role of captain brings added responsibility to lead by example, something that would be hard for any player not at 100 per cent let alone a World Cup winner who barely had any rest over the summer.

Wenger has admitted he may give the midfielder extra time to recover from his latest setback, but releasing him of his captaincy duties? That is out of the question.

“For me he's a fantastic leader,” said Wenger. “In every big game he takes the ball and plays and is not scared. That's what you want from a leader.

“When you take the captaincy away from someone you put more pressure on that person. You tell them that he's not good enough to be captain.

“I think he will develop more [as captain]. He had a period where he had problems with his hamstring - but the more you make a case of it the more it becomes a problem.”

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Ramsey - I've been waiting for this day

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Ramsey featured for 45 minutes for the Gunners' reserve side on Tuesday for the first time since he suffered a compound fracture of his right leg sustained against Stoke in February.

The Wales international now has his sights on building up his fitness before pushing for a comeback on the first-team stage.

"I have been waiting for this a long time, and I couldn't wait to get out onto the pitch," Ramsey told Arsenal TV Online.

"Obviously it is great to be back playing my first game and I felt it went quite well.

"I was blowing a bit after about 20 minutes, so I have got some work to do in that department, but I feel very good about myself."

The 19-year-old, who joined Arsenal from Cardiff in 2008, continued: "The only way you can get match fitness is by playing games.

"In training, I felt I was as fit as all the rest, but being out there proved I was a bit behind.

"That is to be expected and the more games I play, the more match fit I am going to get.

"After you have been out for nine months, your muscles are still adapting to the hard training and games, so for some players they can get injuries which set them back for a few weeks, but hopefully I can stay injury free.

"I have another few reserve games planned, with 60 minutes and then a full game - then I can try to fight for my place again.

"I am not going to jump back in, it is going to take a bit of time.

"But as soon as I feel I am match fit, I am going to try to get back into the starting XI."

Fabregas facing two weeks out

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Arsenal will be without Cesc Fabregas and Emmanuel Eboue for two weeks and four weeks respectively.

Both midfielders suffered their injuries during the defeat at Braga on Tuesday. The Spaniard hurt his hamstring while the Ivorian was stretchered off with a knee ligament problem.

Both players are still being assessed. But when Arsène Wenger spoke to TV Online before training on Thursday, he gave us the best estimate possible.

 “Eboue has a medial knee ligament strain,” he said. “It can be four weeks, can be six weeks or can be eight weeks. But I think it will be four weeks minimum. 

“Fabregas will be assessed today with a scan. After that we can tell you how long he will be out, but I count two weeks.

It is a big blow because it will question how cautious we have to be in the future with him. Cesc has played 50 games a year since a young age.We may have to be more cautious with him, especially in the next two months.” 

On the upside, there were no other injuries from Tuesday while, on the same day, Aaron Ramsey and Manuel Almunia started their comebacks in the Reserves. However both may have to wait for first-team action.

“We have a lot of bumps and bruises but everyone else should be available,” said Wenger. “Almunia should be capable to play but I will see how he reacts.  

“Ramsey needs competitive games. He played 45 minutes and he did well. We need to get him slowly and progressively into competition mode.”

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Braga 2 - 0 Arsenal - Match Report

Arsenal must now beat Partizan Belgrade in the final game of Group H in order to be sure of qualification to the Knockout Stages of the Champions League.

Arsène Wenger's side are left playing brinkmanship after they slipped to defeat at Braga on Tuesday night.
Matheus sealed Arsenal's fate. With seven minutes remaining, the Brazilan broke through and kept his nerve to steer a shot beyond Lukasz Fabianski. With the final kick of the game, he held off two challenges to add a second.

The visitors were down to 10 men at the time - Emmanuel Eboue had been stretchered off and Wenger had used all his substitutes. In addition they had just been denied a seemingly clear penalty when Carlos Vela was tripped in the area.

After that thought-provoking defeat to Tottenham on Saturday, this was the last thing Arsenal needed.
There is comfort in the fact Belgrade have lost all their Group H games but it would appear that top spot is now gone given that Shakhtar only need a point at home to Braga.

It was another tough, tough night for Wenger's men.

The manager's team selection tapped into the slate-wiping mood that had followed the weekend defeat. He made seven changes in all.

Only Fabianski, Denilson, Sebastien Squillaci and Cesc Fabregas remained from Saturday's side. Five of the seven omitted went to the bench meanwhile Gael Clichy (back) and Andrey Arshavin (rested) missed out entirely. Robin van Persie was left in London to work on his fitness.

The scene inside the Estadio Municipal de Braga was slightly surreal. This two-sided ground is carved into a quarry with a sheer rock face behind one goal and a grassy hill behind the other.

Coupled with that, the home side were playing in red shirts and white sleeves - a look taken from a former President's trip to Highbury in the 1920s. Meanwhile Arsenal were in yellow.

All very odd.
Kieran Gibbs was the main attacking threat for the visitors in the first 15 minutes. In the opening seconds he reached the left-hand byline before crossing in the hope of finding Nicklas Bendtner at the far post. Moises cleared the danger.

In the eighth minute the Braga defender would head over the bar from Luis Aguiar's free-kick.

However Gibbs was still the focus. Aguiar headed another of his crosses clear and the full back forced Braga to scramble the ball away on a number of other occasions.

In the 18th minute Bendtner and Walcott set up Fabregas, who fired a shot over the bar.

On the half-hour, the captain saw his free-kick tipped over the bar by Felipe after Leandro Salino had fouled Eboue just outside the area. From the corner, Johan Djourou steered a shot wide at the far post.
To be honest, in the first 30 minutes there had been little pace or pattern about the game. But Arsenal had owned all the urgency and invention on display.

The game would pick up as half-time approached.

There was the merest sniff of a spark when Fabregas fed the scampering Walcott with a defence-splitting pass. The England winger beat Felipe to the ball but the keeper's sliding challenge cleared the danger.

Play switched to the other end and Lima's long-range snapshot forced Fabianski to dive full-length even though the ball went wide.

Eboue fouled Matheus on the left-hand touchline and Aguiar's free-kick was headed into the side-netting by Bendtner.

Five minutes before the break, Walcott broke clear and fired a shot beyond Felipe and the far post.

Suddenly, it seemed we had a game on our hands.

In the dying seconds, Bendtner was fouled 25 yards out and Fabregas thumped the free-kick wide. It was the final act of a largely forgettable first half but one in which Arsenal had been clearly the better side.

The second period started the same way, only this time Walcott missed the target with his free-kick.

Matheus dragged a shot wide for Braga in response but, once again, the game was settling into its altogether lethargic first-half groove.

It seemed that only a piece of individual skill or, more likely, a mistake, could provide the opening goal.

On the hour, the latter scenario nearly came to pass. Alan curled in a cross from the right and Squillaci could only nod his clearance to Aguiar, who fired a low shot inches wide of Fabianski's left-hand post. In the context of this tight game it was a massive moment.

Wenger sensed the need for change and brought on Samir Nasri for Fabregas, whose hamstring injury had made him touch-and-go to start. Chamakh replaced Bendtner soon afterwards.

Arsenal were still lively. Wilshere nearly dribbled his way through the entire Braga defence and Moises slid in to stop Rosicky's right-wing cross finding Bendtner at the near post.

But as the game went into the final 15 minutes, neither keeper had made a serious save.

That should have changed in the 78th minute when substitute Vela appeared to be tripped by Alberto Rodriguez in the area. But referee Viktor Kassai booked the Arsenal striker for simulation.

It got worse for Arsenal when Eboue was carried off with an injury and Arsenal were left a man short.

And then it got worse again.

The visitors pushed for the equaliser but were caught on the break with seven minutes left when Matheus broke through and steered his shot beyond Fabianski and into the far corner.

Wenger's men looked to find a way back but Matheus added a sparkling second on the break.

It was not a fair reflection on the game but matters are conspiring against Arsenal right now.

They need to turn the tide and quickly.


GROUP H
Pos. Team P W D L F A Pts
1. Shakhtar Donetsk 5 4 0 1 10 6 12
2. Arsenal 5 3 0 2 15 6 9
3. Braga 5 3 0 2 5 9 9
4. Partizan Belgrade 5 0 0 5 1 10 0

Arsenal Complete Signing of “New Cristiano Ronaldo”


Arsenal have completed the signing of Ryo Miyaichi, a 17-year-old Japanese wonderkid touted as being the “new Cristiano Ronaldo”.

The signing will go through in December 2010, though the youngster will not be able to make the switch until he is granted a work permit to compete in the English Premier League.

The paperwork for his work permit is reportedly completed and submitted, with Arsenal simply waiting on confirmation before bringing the player to North London.

If his work permit cannot be granted with immediate effect, Arsenal are set to agree a deal with Salamanca, whereby the player would play for the Spanish side until he fulfilled the criteria that made him eligible to compete in the Premier League.

Arsenal have a long and established loaning relationship with Salamanca, as Spanish work permits are more easily accessible for non-EU players. Having only played competitive fixtures for Japan Under-15s and Under-17s, Miyaichi is expected to be filtered through the loaning process at Salamanca.

After being impressed by the youngster in the summer of 2009, Arsene Wenger has apparently offered Miyaichi a five-year contract that he will be able to sign when he turns 18.

“For us, it’s very important that Asia is represented at our club,” Wenger stated.

“The problem we have in England at the moment is that we have difficulties to bring in the non-EU players. Before they are internationals so it makes the work for the young players very difficult but we will try to bring him in here.
”Miyaichi is currently recovering from a broken leg, but is set to return to full training in January.”

Monday, November 22, 2010

Clichy, Arshavin, Van Persie miss Braga trip

Gael Clichy has been ruled out of Tuesday's Champions League game with a back problem.

The Arsenal full back completed Saturday's North London derby but has not travelled to Braga.Kieran Gibbs is likely to deputise.

Arsène Wenger will also be without Andrey Arshavin and Robin van Persie for his team's penultimate Group H fixture. Both forwards have been rested and Van Persie will use the opportunity to work towards full fitness at the training ground.
"I left Clichy behind because he has a small back problem and we will take the opportunity to clear that out," explained Wenger before the squad flew out to Portugal on Monday.
"Arshavin [is not in the squad] because I want to give him a rest, he has played every single game recently and played for Russia on Tuesday night.
"And Van Persie [will not travel] so he can improve his fitness because he is back in the squad but is not 100 per cent fit at the moment - I mean his physical condition to fight in a top-level game.
"I think that [working hard on the training ground] is what he needs at the moment. If I take him to Braga and he is not 100 per cent and is on the bench and doesn't come on then it is a waste of time and for three days, so I leave him behind and he will take the opportunity to work."

Manuel Almunia (elbow), Abou Diaby (ankle) and Thomas Vermaelen (Achilles) are still sidelined by injuries.

Henri Lansbury joins Norwich City on loan


England Under-21 International Henri Lansburyhas joined Championship side Norwich City on loan for 28 days.

The 20-year-old midfielder enjoyed an eventful 2009/10 campaign, scoring five times in 39 appearances during a season-long loan at Watford. This impressive form earned Lansbury his England Under-21s debut in November 2009 and a first Premier League appearance for Arsenal, against Fulham on the final day of the season.
He has become a regular at Under-21 level and even starred as an emergency goalkeeper in the second half of the recent match in Germany.

The energetic, technically-gifted midfielder has continued to progress this season. He was involved in the first team’s pre-season training camp and featured in the Carling Cup Third Round win over Tottenham Hotspur, scoring his first senior goal for Arsenal when he netted the opener at White Hart Lane. He’s also been a recent regular for Neil Banfield’s Reserves.

Other highlights of his young career include an FA Youth Cup winner’s medal in 2009 which followed hot on the heels of a successful three-month loan with Scunthorpe United, then in League One.

Enfield-born Lansbury joined Arsenal at just eight years of age and this temporary move sees him return to a club whose youth set-up he was part of during the late 1990s. He signed a new long-term contract with the Gunners in January 2010.

Everyone at Arsenal Football Club wishes Henri the best of luck during his time with Paul Lambert’s team.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

'It’s difficult to understand how we lost'


On the team’s performance against Spurs…
“We could not maintain the focus nor the urgency for 90 minutes because some players dropped. I believe as well that overall we delivered a performance expected in a game like that quality wise and if you look at the stats and the numbers it’s very difficult to understand how we lost this game.

“A drop of concentration, some basic errors, some bad luck as well because the penalty spot I think was not a foul for them at the start. And on top of that, not only did we get the foul but we get the penalty where we are guilty of. But overall you are a bit speechless. To re-analyse the game, it’s a mystery how we can lose a game like that.”

On whether Arsenal were denied a penalty in the second half…
“I don’t know, I haven’t seen that well.”

On being in complete control in the first half…
“[We were in control] in the second as well. It was a free kick for us – goal for them. You know? We were caught on counterattack at 2-0 up. And after we were punished on the second goal. If you look at the clear-cut chances that Tottenham had today, it’s easy to see how we conceded three goals. It’s one of those games where we dominated them more than any other one but we lost it and we can only look at ourselves.”

On Harry Redknapp saying Spurs can win the title…
“There are ten teams who can win it mathematically. Tottenham is one of them.”

On whether the team lacked focus…
“No. I believe that we have focused on the game. If we had not started the game well I would say that. I felt some players who played mid-week – who played Sunday, Wednesday, today – could not maintain the pace in the game and that we dropped physically and we had some heavy legs in the second half. 

On if he would have liked to see Nasri shake hands with Gallas…

“Ideally you would prefer that everybody in the world always loves everybody, but it doesn’t always happen.”

On complacency after building the lead…
“It’s difficult to say if we dropped physically or concentration-wise. I believe what is difficult to accept is that when you are 2-0 up, you have a free kick and you are caught on a counter attack. That is very difficult to understand. Once a team comes back to 2-1 they have hope again. And we couldn’t take our third chance. We had plenty of chances to score: we had Chamakh, Koscielny, one or two shots and overall Spurs always remained dangerous on the counterattack.
On whether Arsenal were slow to react to Spurs’ changes in the second half…
“Maybe. I felt that they were more open in the second half and we had more room to play and to create chances, but I felt for example that Chamakh in the second half was clean through and came back because he had no legs. He played 70 or 80 minutes on Wednesday night. Of course after they come back and they are dead. But we had the opportunities, even in the second half to kill this game off.

If three home defeats is too many at this stage of the season…
“Yes I agree. Three home defeats are three too many. The first two games we didn’t deliver the performance and we can only say that we got what we deserved. Today we delivered the performance, but what is worrying for me is that we had an opportunity to go to the top of the league and when we have to deliver we can’t. That’s worrying because that’s part of our job.”
If Arsenal still had a chance to win after the handball…
“Yes of course. I’m convinced that we are it but there are opportunities in the championship that you want to take and today we put ourselves in the right position and we failed. We have to accept that. And that is mental more than football. If Tottenham had dominated the game and created 10 chances and they won the game, you would say, ‘okay, we have lost against the better team today.’ Today we were always in the position where we could win the game and we didn’t win it. And that is something that is difficult to swallow.

“They are tough. I believe there is a matter that exists in football as well – that is bad luck. How can you imagine that suddenly you get a free kick and then a penalty behind that when the free kick is missed? It is difficult. You cannot predict all but for me there is a mixture of fatigue in the second half and lack of cautiousness as well.”

Arsenal 2 - 3 Tottenham H - Match Report


Tottenham recorded their first victory on Arsenal territory in 17 years amid incredible scenes at Emirates Stadium on Saturday.

The home side seemed to have the game under control in the first half. Samir Nasri’s persistence paved the way for the first goal and then Marouane Chamakh slid in another from Andrey Arshavin’s cross.

However, Gareth Bale started the revival five minutes after the restart and then, just before the hour, Cesc Fabregas was adjudged to have handled from a free-kick and Rafael van der Vaart scored from the spot.

Five minutes from time, the Dutchman floated over a free-kick from the right and Younes Kaboul touched a delicate header into the far corner.

It was a stupefying comeback on a day that could have seen Arsenal go top of the table.

Wenger’s men had put themselves in that position with back-to-back away wins. However there is little home comfort for them at the moment.

This is the third defeat in their last five Premier League games at Emirates Stadium. But while the wins for West Brom and Newcastle were painful for a day or so this one will ache for a long, long time.

It was Tottenham’s first victory in Arsenal’s new home.

That is difficult enough to digest. What it did to the title ambitions of Wenger’s side can be assessed later.

Derby day is always special but this one had received a bigger build-up than most. For the first time, the visitors came with Champions League credentials. Finishing fourth last season had led some to suggest the gap between the two sides had closed. On this cold, bright North London afternoon that theory would be put to the test.

Wenger made two changes from the side that had won so well at Everton last Sunday.

Denilson replaced Jack Wilshere, just like he had at half-time at Goodison Park. Laurent Koscielny returned from suspension so Johan Djourou dropped to the bench. Given his form, the Swiss centre back could count himself unfortunate to miss out.

Last season, William Gallas had occupied that role. Today he led out a Tottenham side with higher ambition than any other in recent memory.

Both sides conjured up cheeky chances in the opening five minutes. First, Bale backflicked Van der Vaart’s corner into the hands of Lukasz Fabianski at the near post. Then Nasri shoveled a pass over two Tottenham defenders to Fabregas on the right-hand byline but Heurelho Gomes intercepted at the near post.

However the keeper would soon be found wanting. In the 10th minute, Fabregas fed a pass forward towards Nasri, who had already shown his attacking intent this afternoon. The Frenchman chased after the ball but Gomes was favourite. Inexplicably the keeper then retreated a few paces before going for the ball. That allowed Nasri to poke it clear. However there still was much more to do.

The ball raced away towards the touchline and by the time Nasri reached it, he only had a sliver of the goal to aim at. Somehow he managed to hook his foot around the ball and trickle a shot over the line. It was his eighth goal of the campaign, bringing him level with Chamakh as top scorer. Temporarily, as it turned out.

The goal injected a confidence into Arsenal’s game. Fabregas wriggled clear on the right of the area and fired beyond the far post.

Midway through the half, Kaboul sent over a dangerous cross that Bacary Sagna flicked clear of Roman Pavlyuchencko and then headed over himself as the visitors mounted a modicum of pressure. But immediately after that, Arsenal stretched their lead.

Fabregas broke through the midfield and fed Arshavin on the right. His probing cross was touched home by the stumbling Chamakh. With just 27 minutes played, Arsenal were already cruising.

Luka Modric saw a shot batted away by Fabianski but Van der Vaart’s wild, wasteful shot suggested frustration had already set in.

The visitors continued to plough forward until the break. Fabianski was forced into a little caretaking but Chamakh caused much more consternation with a couple of moments just before the break. First he saw a shot charged down in a crowded area and then he went clear for a second but the ball got stuck under his feet and Spurs smuggled the ball away.

At the break, Tottenham brought on Jermain Defoe for Aaron Lennon. The England striker had been out for months with an injury but Harry Redknapp simply needed something different in his side.

Within five minutes, Defoe helped the visitors grab a foothold in the game.

It was his high hanging header that saw the Arsenal defence back off and allow Van der Vaart to feed the overlapping Bale. The Welshman took the ball in his stride and nudged it past Fabianski. A poor, poor goal to concede.

Suddenly Arsenal were anxious. The confidence of the opening half-hour had not exactly disappeared but they were now facing a side who had rediscovered itself.

Luka Modric danced through and blasted over as Tottenham looked for immediate parity. The home side responded with pressure of their own but, in the 67th minute, Tottenham did go level.

Alex Song fouled Modric 25 yards out and Van der Vaart fired his free-kick into the wall which was standing in the penalty area. The ball definitely hit the hand of Fabregas, which had been raised. The captain claimed he was protecting his face when the referee pointed to the spot.

When the protests had died down, Van der Vaart sent Fabianski the wrong way.

Squillaci’s header was ruled offside shortly afterwards then Fabregas fired a volley over the bar. Arsenal were stung.

Both sides made changes. Peter Crouch came on for Pavlyuchenko. For Arsenal, Robin van Persie, Theo Walcott and Tomas Rosicky replaced Chamakh, Arshavin and Narsi.

Wenger was clearly going for it.

Arsenal did create the better chances. Fabregas tried a curler but Gomes patted the ball beyond the far post. Then, with 15 minutes left, an unmarked Koscielny headed over the bar at the far post.

But Tottenham were still dangerous. Eight minutes from time, only Song’s strength stopped Van der Vaart pouncing after a scramble six yards out.

Then they grabbed the winner. Koscielny brought down Bale on the left and, from Van der Vaart’s expert delivery, Kaboul nudged a header into the far corner.

In the dying minutes, Arsenal mustered a response but not the chances to go with it.

This was a head-scratching afternoon for Wenger’s men who took two giant strides forward last week but took an almighty pace back this afternoon.

Winning the title will more than right this wrong but to do that they must arrest their sliding home form.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Sagna - I am not angry with Gallas

Bacary Sagna does not resent William Gallas for his move to local rivals Tottenham Hotspur.

The former Arsenal captain will return to Emirates Stadium on Saturday for the first time since his switch across north London and, although Gallas is expected to get a mixed reception from the fans, Sagna holds no grudges against his former team mate.

Gallas spent four years at the Club, making 142 appearances, and the right back feels he deserves respect for the commitment and professionalism he showed while in the red and white of Arsenal.

“I’m not angry at him because he signed for our rivals,” said Sagna.

“He was always very professional and he always gave everything [during his time here].

“Football is football, I’m not furious against him. He needed to leave to play football and that is what he loves.

“Even if the newspapers were talking about him because of his behaviour, [that] was his hunger because he wanted to win so much. Maybe he expressed it in a bad way but it was not bad at all because he wanted us to win.

“I’ve kept in touch with him. On the pitch there is a war but off the pitch we are all friends.

“He deserves a good reception because during the time he played for Arsenal he always did well.”

Ashley Young Poised To Quit Aston Villa And Join Arsenal In January

http://www2.pictures.gi.zimbio.com/Aston+Villa+v+Doncaster+Rovers+FA+Cup+4th+Uc5ezmRNRGrl.jpg

Aston Villa winger Ashley Young 
is set to sign for Premier League 
title contenders Arsenal after 
refusing to sign a new 
contract at Villa Park, according to reports.

The England international is reportedly 

looking to make the switch to the 
Emirates in the January transfer window, 
as reported by talkSPORT.

The 25-year-old insisted he would 

confer with the Midlands club regarding 
a new deal at the end of the season as he 
currently has one year left on his current contract.

However, reports suggest Arsene Wenger will snap up Young 

despite Villa manager Gerard Houllier’s desire to keep him.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Everton Vs Arsenal - Match Preview

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Beware Everton, Cesc Fabregas is back - properly.

The Arsenal midfielder has had a stop-start season so far. A mixture of World Cup fatigue and niggling injuries have affected his body.

But, ahead of Sunday’s trip to Goodison Park, Arsène Wenger claimed his captain was now 95 per cent fit physically (with the other five on the way) and paid tribute to his focus mentally.

While it is not quite true to say ‘if Cesc plays, Arsenal plays’, the Spaniard lubricates the cogs in Wenger’s machine. His team have clinked and clanked their way into title contention during the first third of the Premier League. Frankly, they will need to improve, at the very least, their consistency and their home form to overtake Chelsea.

Fortunately it is quite apparent there is headroom and his ever-improving captain is the perfect person to fill the void.

“Cesc is back,” said the Frenchman at Friday’s press conference.

“It took him a while to settle again. But I am 100 per cent convinced he is focused, motivated and determined more than ever to lead the team to victory.

"I always said that if a player plays the Final of the World Cup you will only see him completely again in November. Not before. I have experience in that with Petit and  Vieira.

“Stamina-wise, Cesc is there now. He has lost his restriction in his head and the fear of injury in his hamstring.

“He still lacks a little bit of zip in the decision-making and his acceleration in the final third. He is at 95 per cent.

“But from game to game you will see the real Cesc. Maybe in the next game on Sunday.

“And [that extra five per cent] will make a massive difference. Last year he scored 15 goals and made 18 assists. What is the difference in assist? Sometimes it is an inch.

“I felt we saw a different Cesc at Wolves – focused, motivated, wanted to give everything, no restriction. He was already a completely different player. That means in the next game he should be alright.

“And I must say as well I have been very impressed by his attitude this season. When you think he is 23 years-old, has gone through winning the World Cup plus the speculation and frustration [in the summer].

“People are quick to criticise when you are not professional but you have as well to acknowledge people when they are super professional like he is.

”Fabregas ended the midweek win at Wolves amid controversy. His late challenge on Stephen Ward brought him a booking when the Molineux crowd wanted more. Another sending off was the last thing Wenger needed but the tackle was further evidence that his current Arsenal side are now prepared to ‘mix it’ when required.

“They can [look after themselves],” said the manager.

“We are not a dirty team, you will find even people that don’t like Arsenal will not say we are a dirty team.

“It is a surprise to me that we have four red cards. We are committed and when we face a physical game we have to respond well.”

Laurent Koscielny accounts for 50 per cent of those dismissals. The French centre back sees out his suspension this weekend so Sebastien Squillaci and Johan Djourou should continue at centre back.

Wenger could add fit-again full back Kieran Gibbs to his squad and has indicated there may be changes in midfield. Otherwise expect the side that toughed it out at Wolves to roll up their sleeves again at Goodison Park.

Everton are unbeaten in seven games and been defeated in just three of their last 23. Only Manchester City and leaders Chelsea have conceded fewer goals in the Premier League this season. A repeat of last season’s 6-1 win for the visitors is not on the cards.

“If you look at the quality of mid-table, it is quite frightening,” said Wenger. “And Everton are one of those teams.

“We are happy to be where we are but we also have some regrets. We lost against West Brom and Newcastle but by adding three points, just one game, you see where we could be.

“I am convinced we have the potential and the right spirit. We showed that again against Wolves on Wednesday night. We go to Everton where we will want to show a similar commitment that we had there.”

Of course, those defeats to Newcastle and West Brom came at Emirates Stadium. Right now Arsenal have the best away record in the Premier League but are finding few comforts at home.

“There is no obvious reason,” explained Wenger. “Sometimes you go out ‘on your toes’ away from home and a lot depends on the first result you had that season. At the Emirates we feel ‘OK we will win the game’.That’s maybe the problem. But it’s the same everywhere. We struggle at home but teams like Tottenham struggle at home too.”

It is acutely annoying to see Arsenal pretty much cure a familiar malady – picking up points on tough away trips – only to struggle on their own turf. It allows the critics to re-kindle an old condemnation we thought had been seen off.

“I don’t believe there is fragility mentally,” said Wenger when the issue was brought up. “If you look at some very good teams in the middle of the table I don’t think we are too fragile.

“What we have been is a bit disappointing at home recently. Against Newcastle we did not have the adjusted commitment but we have always shown that away from home since the start of the season.

“Even when we lost against Chelsea I think it was an unlucky loss. It is at home we have dropped stupid points.”

In one sense, victory on Sunday would be cruel for Arsenal. It would mean that of the nine Premier League points on offer this week they had thrown away, on paper, the most straightforward three.

That alone would have taken them from trailing Manchester United to tail-gating Chelsea. But then all three teams have their foibles right now.

Like Fabregas, the rest of the squad have a few per cent left in the locker. Strangely enough, that is a comforting thought right now.

Walcott – Gareth Bale is an Arsenal fan!

 http://www.kabarsports.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/WalcottBaleGetty-isi.jpg

The Arsenal and England winger Theo Walcott has revealed that he used to be a room-mate of Tottenham’s Gareth Bale when they were at Southampton, and says that Bale should have come to the Emirates, because he is an Arsenal fan!

Although Bale is now thoroughly accepted as the newest star at White Hart Lane, the Spurs fans won’t be pleased to know that he would have preferred to join the Gunners with Walcott.

Walcott said: “We were room mates. We shared digs in Southampton and we actually signed the room somewhere where we were together. We wanted to make our mark! It’s probably gone now.

“I’ve played with him since under-11s at Southampton. With him being an Arsenal fan, it’s just a shame he didn’t come to us!

“We still get on really well. I watched both Inter games in the Champions League. I phoned him straight away, wanted to be the first to leave him a message. I couldn’t repeat what I said!

“I think everyone knows who Gareth Bale is now. We’ve got the qualifier against Wales as well. I haven’t been winding him up about that yet but I will after the Tottenham game!”

Both Walcott and Bale have become known for their blistering pace, so it will be interesting if they come up against each other when Spurs face Arsenal in a couple of weeks time.

“The Spurs game will be a big test for us. It’s the early kick-off, straight after the international break and I’ll be on the right and he’s on the left so it’ll be a big test for us both.” Walcott said.

“It would be a good race between me and Gareth. He would say I’m quicker than him and I would say that he’s quicker than me.

“The thing is with Gareth is that it’s so hard to stop him. When he gets motoring it’s so hard to stop him. With me, over the first ten or 20 metres I’m there.

“Gareth was a little stick when he first came to Southampton. But he’s built up, done fantastically well and I’m so pleased for him. It’s been very difficult for us both to come through and get to where we are now.

“Gareth has a different style. He looks quicker with the ball. When he sees that space, he attacks it. It’s very difficult to stop him. Bolton did very well to stop him last weekend and hopefully we can do that.”


It is alway’s a grudge match between Arsenal and Tottenham, and I wonder if the Gunners fans will try and remind Bale where his loyalties should lie………???

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Wenger - We'll try to improve our discipline


Arsène Wenger admits that his team's disciplinary record has taken a turn for the worse and he has pledged to improve it.

Arsenal have been shown four red cards in 12 Premier League games so far this season with Jack Wilshere, Alex Song and Laurent Koscielny (twice) all receiving their marching orders. Only one of those - Wilshere - was sent off for a dangerous challenge but Arsenal's behaviour is back under the microscope after Cesc Fabregas was booked for a late tackle against Wolves in midweek.

It should be noted that Arsenal are regulars at the right end of the Fair Play table and Wenger wants normal service resumed as soon as possible.

"I can’t deny we have a bad record, the only thing I can say [is] we will try to improve it," said the manager.

"If you look at our record in the last four or five years we had always a good record and we are not there [low in the Fair Play table] on purpose because we want to kick people. We will improve it.

"It’s a bit down to bad luck as well because if you look at the number of fouls we make it’s not spectacular. But we have been punished severely and we can only look at ourselves and try to improve it."

Arsenal have had some rough treatment in recent years but Wenger does not accept that his players have had to be more physical as a result.

"No I believe we want to be committed in the challenges but we do not want red cards," he said. "Physical doesn’t mean that you want red cards. I think we have to look at the situation and what we do and we want to improve our record."

‘Szczesny must prove he has the quality’


Arsène Wenger has every confidence Wojciech Szczesny has the required quality but he insists the Pole must now prove he has what it takes to be an Arsenal goalkeeper.

The 20-year-old signed a new long-term contract this week after becoming a regular fixture on the bench in the absence of Manuel Almunia.

Szczesny produced a fine display and made a number of impressive saves in the Carling Cup against Newcastle last month and Wenger believes these good performances are the only way his three contenders for the No 1 spot can distinguish themselves.

“I just told Wojciech he has the quality to be an Arsenal goalkeeper and that it is down to him to show that. The only guarantees are their performances,” said the Frenchman.

“We cannot say on one side that we are in top-level competition and also give the players guarantees. I don't give assurances to anybody for game time.”

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Funny : Here are the faces of football player whose face is similar to some of the artist ..

Want to see a footballer whose face was similar to other celebrities ??....

Here are some players that are similar to other celebrities :


      http://arsenaldebate.files.wordpress.com/2008/05/cesc-and-peter-mcknight.jpg 
http://arsenaldebate.files.wordpress.com/2008/05/dirk-and-sloth.jpg
http://arsenaldebate.files.wordpress.com/2008/05/ramsey-and-south.jpg


Arsene Wenger says Cesc Fabregas' dangerous tackle was 'accidental' in Arsenal victory over Wolves

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Arsene Wenger believes a tackle by Arsenal’s Cesc Fabregas, which left Wolves' Stephen Ward injured, was 'accidental'.

Wenger has, in the past, complained about the rough treatment handed to his players at the hands of opposition.

With the game poised at 1-0, Gunners’ captain Fabregas slid in to challenge Ward, as the Wolves player attempted to clear down the line. The challenge caught Ward on the ankle, and the defender was stretchered off, to be replaced by Stephen Fletcher.

Wenger however, drew little attention to the matter saying it was an accident on Fabregas’ part and was simply a measure of the physical nature of the game.

"I think it was accidental," he said. "He wanted to play the ball. He went to the dressing room and apologised to the player. It was completely accidental."

The Frenchman added the encounter was a good one and Wolves were unlucky not to get something from a game which they mostly dominated.

Wenger added: "Overall, it was a very committed game. Wolves were physically strong and kept a high tempo. I like the commitment of the physical game in England.

"You have to give credit to Wolves, they have a good mix and will cause anyone problems. I was impressed with them."

In a game Wenger had admitted it was vital Arsenal won, the manager was pleased with his team’s response to their recent defeat to Newcastle and their resilience against a tough Wolves team.

"The victory was so important for us and we focused on defending tonight," he said. "He [Marouane Chamakh] was not sharp on Sunday. I thought he would be sharp tonight. He has been decisive in many games this season."

In the second half, Arsenal relied heavily on goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski to keep them in the game, as the shot stopper pulled off save after save to keep the home team at bay. The Pole had been criticised for gifting Newcastle’s goal, but Wenger insisted he had faith in his player, saying tonight showed his worth.

He said: "I think he did extremely well. he made a fantastic save late on. I know that he is a great keeper."

Wolverhampton W 0 - 2 Arsenal - Match Report


Arsenal pulled off a highly-welcome win at Wolves on Wednesday night.

Marouane Chamakh scored in the opening seconds and injury time to secure victory but in between the visitors had to survive significant pressure from the home side.

Andrey Arshavin and Cesc Fabregas forced fine saves from Marcus Hahnemann in the opening half-hour but, after the break, Lukasz Fabianski topped that by foiling Kevin Doyle and Christophe Berra as Wolves pressed hard for the equaliser.

A Fabregas foul on Stephen Ward drew derision from the crowd late on but it did not affect the result.

Arsenal had toughed it out to record a significant victory.

Manchester United’s point at Eastlands means Wenger’s side are still third. But tonight at Molineux, in the most trying of circumstances, Arsenal proved a point to themselves.

The manager made three changes from the side beaten by Newcastle on Sunday. Laurent Koscielny was suspended after his late dismissal in that game so Johan Djourou stepped into central defence.

Tomas Rosicky and Arshavin filled the flanks in midfield meaning Theo Walcott and Samir Nasri dropped to the bench.

These two sides came into this game on the back of very different defeats. Arsenal had been so disappointing against Newcastle while Wolves had gained creditability before falling to a last-gasp goal at Manchester United.

It felt like a crossroads game for Wenger’s side. Sunday’s defeat had left them in need of a win this evening – any colour, any kind – to get back into title race. Mathematically they would still be in the hunt but, mentally, a third straight defeat would be hard to cure.

Fortunately, the medicine was administered after exactly 38 seconds this evening.

Rosicky floated into the Wolves half and fed Alex Song on the right. His cross found Chamakh drifting between two defenders at the far post. The Moroccan slid his header past Hahnemann and into the corner. It was his seventh strike in all competitions this season.

The goal was everything Arsenal needed and they immediately pressed home their advantage.

In the sixth minute, Arshavin won the ball from Michael Mancienne in midfield and went clear for a second. He managed to get his shot away but Hahnemann stood up to make the save and the home defence mopped up the loose ball.

The Russian had been Arsenal’s most sparky player on Sunday and built upon that eye-catching cameo this evening. He probed the Wolves defence in the opening half-hour and ran the channels with eagerness.

At this stage it was all Arsenal. Rosicky saw a shot deflect wide and, in the 19th minute, Fabregas could have added a second.

Arshavin and Chamakh set up the Spaniard for a snap-shot from the edge of the area through a thicket of legs. The ball hit Hahnemann’s legs and bounced clear. Not that the keeper knew too much about it.
However, after that, Arsenal could not maintain their momentum. Wolves came back in the game and began to threaten. However the created little until the 28th minute when Stephen Hunt floated in a free-kick and the stretching Doyle drifted a header just over the bar.

Five minutes before the break, Sebastien Squillaci deflected a left-wing cross from Nenad Milijas towards the far post and Fabianski threw out his left hand to palm the ball aside from the waiting Stephen Hunt.

Arsenal were still feeling the shot across the bows as they went into the tunnel at the interval.

History nearly repeated itself at the start of the second half. Within seconds of the whistle, Jack Wilshere lost his footing and only a mad scramble at the near post stopped Milijas squeezing home the equaliser.

However three minutes later Arsenal spurned an even better chance themselves. Richard Steadman’s errant pass gave the ball to Rosicky, who instantly fed the unmarked Fabregas in the D. The skipper hooked his shot wide when he should have scored.

As we approached the hour, Wolves had enjoyed more pressure but precious few chances. In fact, at this point, Fabianski’s most important influence on the game had been saving from his own defender.

That would rapidly change. In the 57th minute, Doyle turned and sent a ferocious shot toward the top corner. Fabianski gymnastically tipped over.

The corner found Stearman at the far post and Rosicky had to hurriedly hack the ball off the line.
Seconds later, Hunt fired in a free-kick from the right and the stooping Kevin Foley sent a header on to the top of the net.

They were all credible chances and, unless the visitors broke the shackles, they would be conceding pretty soon.

In the 65th minute, Arshavin did his best to alleviate the pressure. The midfielder scurried in from the left and fired a daisy-cutter against the base of the post. Shortly afterwards the same player had a piledriver blocked in the area.  

Those chances hardly quelled Wolves’ ambitions but at least the home side’s pressure was not calling Fabianski into action any more.

And, as the game entered its latter stages, Arsenal began to assert themselves again.

Ten minutes from time, an unmarked Squillaci could not turn home a corner and Djourou’s follow-up was deflected wide. A stupefying miss.

As the seconds ticked by, Wolves chanced their arm for the final time. Doyle drove forward and fired wide and, after a Fabregas foul forced Ward to be stretchered off, they created arguably their clearest chance of the night.

The ball fell to Berra on the edge of the area and the centre back’s contact was clean. His low shot flew to Fabianski’s left but the Pole thrust out his hand and clutched on to the ball.

Chamakh’s late breakaway goal sealed the victory but, in reality, a couple of key stops from Fabianski, combined with a committed if not water-tight performance, had been enough take the points.

It had been a night for a gutsy, not a classy, Arsenal.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Unlucky Vermaelen suffers injury set-back

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Thomas Vermaelen has suffered an injury set-back.

At last Friday’s press conference, Arsène Wenger said the Belgian defender was “a question of days” from returning to the first-team squad after more than two months out. But in training on Monday, Vermaelen damaged his Achilles again and will be sent back to see specialists. At this stage, the manager is not prepared to put a timescale on his return.

In addition, midfielder Abou Diaby faces a test on his injured ankle later this week. If he passes, he will be back in contention for the first team, if he fails, the Frenchman will also require further examination.

That is the bad news on the injury front. The good news is that Samir Nasri has recovered from the calf problem that forced him off against Newcastle on Sunday. In addition, Robin van Persie has shown no ill-effects from his first appearance since the trip to Blackburn on August 28.

While both are in the squad for the game at Wolves on Wednesday, Laurent Koscielny is suspended after his dismissal at the weekend.

“From Sunday against Newcastle, we don’t lose anyone,” Wenger told TV Online on Tuesday. “Samir Nasri is OK and available.

Robin van Persie had only one training session before Sunday. He gets sharper everyday. Yesterday he had some pain because it was the first time he had played. But today he was better already. In a few days he will be alright.”

Ironically that game at Ewood Park is also the last time Thomas Vermaelen was seen in Arsenal colours.

And Wenger admitted that, at the moment, his injury had him flummoxed.

“We don’t have good news about Thomas Vermaelen,” said the manager. “He had a little set-back yesterday in training and he has to see specialists again.

“I don’t know where we go with Thomas time-wise but at the moment he can not play. I can’t give you any time scale at all. On the scan his Achilles is completely clear but as soon as he stays out for a while it tightens up and he has pain. We don’t know the source of his pain.

“Diaby is the same. He has a test Wednesday or Thursday. If he gets through that it will be very quick, if he still has pain he will have to see a specialist.”

Emmanuel Eboue: My shock when I was told I would join Arsenal

Emmanuel Eboue
Arsenal defender Emmanuel Eboue revealed what it meant for him to be chosen by Arsenal as he explained how he just couldn’t believe the Gunners were interested in his services.
Speaking to Arsenal TV Online, the Ivory Coast International explained how he was approached by Beveren representatives to tell him that he would have soon played his last game for the Club for the very simply reason that Arsene Wenger wanted him at Arsenal.
The 27-year old added how the news came as a complete surprise to him but it didn’t take long to understand that it was not a dream.
In fact, Arsene Wenger went personally to Belgium to monitor the player and ask him to join the Gunners with Eboue saying how it was incredible when at the end of the game he was approached by the Arsenal boss who personally asked him to join his team.
On joining the Gunners, Eboue said:
"I remember when they told me, ‘Manu, this is your last game for Beveren and after that you’ll go to Arsenal’. I said, ‘No no no, you can’t tell me that!’.
I was surprised but that day the boss [Arsene Wenger] was in Belgium to watch the game and when I saw him I realised it was true, that maybe he was there to buy him. I was so happy, after the game he spoke with me and asked me whether I wanted to join Arsenal.
And I said, ‘Of course, if you take me I’ll be happy’.
It was a dream."

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

'A great team does not lose three in a row'


Sebastien Squillaci has called on Arsenal to respond like a “great team” at Wolves on Wednesday.

The Frenchman admitted the goal that consigned his side to defeat against Newcastle at the weekend was avoidable but offered no excuses and claimed it was not “catastrophic” for their title aspirations.

Instead the 30-year-old simply placed the emphasis on Molineux in midweek.

“No [I am not worried],” he said. “We’re still third in the Premier League and top of our group in the Champions League.

“But when you play for a team like Arsenal, after two defeats you need to respond. A great team doesn’t concede three consecutive defeats. So the next game will be really important, we need to show that Arsenal are a great team. We need to respond well at Wolves on Wednesday.

“It’s too early [to talk about our title chance having gone]. We lost a game but it’s not catastrophic. The season is long but, for sure, we must not lose anymore points at home. We know that home results are very important to be champions.

“Fatigue is not an excuse. Lots of players didn’t play against Shakhtar. We just need to talk about what didn’t work and then work on it.

“We’re disappointed because we didn’t let them have too many opportunities. We didn’t play a great Newcastle. But they scored this goal, which we could have avoided.

“It is a shame because we had the opportunity to get back on Chelsea and Manchester United and also make a gap on teams behind us.”

Arsenal appeal red card for Koscielny

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On Monday afternoon, the Football Association
released the following statement:

"The FA can confirm that Arsenal FC have today
submitted a claim of wrongful dismissal, following
the dismissal of Laurent Koscielny for the denial
of an obvious goal scoring opportunity.

"Koscielny was sent off in his side’s fixture
against Newcastle United FC on 7 November.

"The claim will be heard by an Independent
Regulatory Commission tomorrow (Tuesday 9 November)."

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Arsenal 0 - 1 Newcastle United - Match Report


Arsenal missed the chance to pile pressure on leaders Chelsea by losing 1-0 to Newcastle at Emirates Stadium on Sunday.

Arsène Wenger’s side would have moved within two points of the Stamford Bridge side with victory here this afternoon. But in the end, Andy Carroll’s towering header on the stroke of half-time meant they dropped to third place in the table.

The Newcastle striker was the key figure this afternoon. He scored the goal, lead the line manfully and helped out his defence when required.

To be honest, it was required a good deal. Although Arsenal were not at their best today, they had most of the play. Newcastle scored with their first effort of the game while the home side hit the woodwork three times and Newcastle keeper Tim Krul saved wonderfully from Samir Nasri just before the goal.

Still, this is a heavy blow to Arsenal, who had Laurent Koscielny sent off in stoppage time. They have had problems in each of their last four home games in Premier League – losing two of them.

In the next week Wenger takes his side to two tough, hard-working sides – Wolves and Everton.

After today, they need to respond.

Wenger’s team selection was full of interest this afternoon. Cesc Fabregas (hamstring) and Alex Song (calf) returned from midweek absences to go straight into the starting line-up. As a result, Tomas Rosicky was among the substitutes and Craig Eastmond was omitted from the squad.

Andrey Arshavin (virus) was also back but only made the bench.

However the biggest news was the return of Robin van Persie after he had injured his ankle at Blackburn on August 28. He was among the substitutes.

Elsewhere Koscielny and Bacary Sagna replaced Johan Djourou and Emmanuel Eboue at centre half and right back respectively. Marouane Chamakh was the lone frontman so Nicklas Bendtner was pushed down to the bench.

This was a pressure game for Arsenal. Of course, they all are but this afternoon they had the opportunity to push the strain on to Chelsea.

However Newcastle came into this game in seventh place and still bubbling from that 5-1 win over Sunderland last weekend. And they started the afternoon as if they were not prepared to play the fall guys.

Shola Ameobi escaped down the left in the opening seconds and Koscielny had to nod clear his cross with Carroll lurking. The pony-tailed frontman would go on to have an eye-catching first quarter. He was a powerful and willing runner in the channels. His work gave the Arsenal defence plenty to think about.

But gradually the midfield in front of them started to take over and, as a result, the home side eased into the driving seat.

In the 15th minute, Fabricio Colocconi fouled Wilshere as he weaved through. Fabregas’ free-kick deflected off Carroll in the wall and looped on to the bar with Krul beaten. The keeper recovered to tip the rebound behind.

A few minutes later Fabregas tried to pirouette past Coloccini and Mike Williamson but the two defenders put him off and the Spaniard’s shot deflected wide off the latter. Koscielny had a shot blocked from the resulting corner and then Walcott saw his cross nodded just past his own post by Jose Enrique.

It seemed that Arsenal were going to take over. But, in fact, Newcastle fought back. They did not create much themselves but they were working hard enough to stop the home side carving them apart in trademark style.

In fact, just before half time, this game seemed to be shaping up worringly like the West Ham one a fortnight earlier. Arsenal might have won that game at the death but, for the first 88 minutes, they had looked like throwing away two frustrating points. However this rollercoaster game would have another ‘up and downer’ as the interval approached.

Six minutes before half time, Fabregas drove into the sidenetting and then set up Nasri for a first-time effort that seemed bound for the top corner before Krul stretched out his right hand and turned the ball aside. A fantastic stop.

From the corner, Carroll quickly fed Jonas Gutierrez and his probing right-wing cross was hooked out of danger by Sagna at the far post.

Still for all their efforts, as we passed the 45-minute mark, Newcastle had not registered a shot on or off target.

However, in injury time, they would score with their first.

Sagna fouled Gutierrez just inside the Arsenal half and Joey Barton pumped a long ball to the far post. Carroll beat Fabianski in the air and his header looped into the empty net.

Depending on who you supported, it was a classic centre forward’s goal or a sucker-punch.

However while Arsenal had not done that much wrong in the first half, they had not done enough right.

Their task in the second half was to alter that balance.

In fairness they started well. Walcott hit the bar twice in the opening five minutes. Firstly from a looping cross on the byline, secondly (and more dangerously) after driving into the area from Wilshere’s pass and letting fly.

Then Song fired low into the area from the right but the stretching Chamakh could not convert.

It was a lively start but once it had died away Wenger did not hesitate to make changes.

Just before the hour, Nasri and Chamakh were brought off, Arshavin and, to tumultuous cheers, Van Persie came on.

However Newcastle were organised in their defending and yet still breaking where they could. As a result, Arsenal’s opportunities started to dry up.

Indeed the visitors started to get a little joy on the break or by hitting Carroll with long balls. In the 70th minute the Newcastle striker chested down one of them and went for goal from range. The shot flew wide.

That effort prompted Wenger to make his last substitution – Bendtner for Wilshere.

With 15 minutes left, Arsenal were now 4-2-4 and gearing up for ‘Alamo’ territory.

And Arshavin was leading the charge. The little Russian weaved his way into several good positions and, with nine minutes left, supplied an inch-perfect cross for Fabregas. The captain’s header was clutched by Krul on the line.

A couple of minutes later, he helped harry the ball from Carroll and then cracked a volley wide.

As time ticked on, Arsenal were losing impetus and Newcastle had more joy on the break. In injury time, substitute Nile Ranger was hauled down by Koscielny. It was a certain foul but Squillaci disputed the decision, claiming he was a covering defender. The Frenchman had a point.

However, by that time, it seemed an irrelevant discussion.

Because Newcastle had taken three themselves.