Sunday, February 27, 2011

Jack Wilshere urges Arsenal to win League Cup for injured duo Cesc Fabregas & Theo Walcott

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Arsenal teenager Jack Wilshere has urged the Gunners to end their trophy drought and win the League Cup on behalf of their injured captain Cesc Fabregas and fellow Englishman Theo Walcott.

The influential duo were both injured in the midweek win over Stoke City and will miss Sunday’s clash against Birmingham City but Wilshere wants to see the Spaniard lifting the trophy for Arsenal at Wembley.

"Cesc Fabregas is a great leader and if we win it, there will only be one person to go up and lift the trophy," he told Arsenal TV Online.

"In a way we can do it for him and Theo Walcott too, he has been a massive player for us in the League Cup and scored two goals against Newcastle.

"We will miss them, but we need to go and do the job without them."

The 19-year-old has enjoyed a stellar couple of months, making his full England debut as well as starring in the Champions League against Barcelona and the midfielder admitted Sunday’s game would be yet another highlight.

"At the moment, this has been the best season I could have asked for. I have played for England and now am about to represent my club in a cup final, which is massive," he said.

"I am really looking forward to Sunday, it will be the biggest game of my life so far.

"If we can win, it will give us confidence for the rest of the season.

"It has been five years since Arsenal won anything and this team is too good not to win things."

Yet the England man also warned that favourites Arsenal would be under pressure to prevail against Alex McLeish’s side but claimed he was confident the north Londoners would emerge victorious.

"Every game brings pressure when you are at a big club like Arsenal," he said. "The cup final is a one-off game and anything can happen, so we have to be ready.

"We just have to play our own game, because on our day, we can beat anyone. Hopefully we can do it for the fans and then bring more at the end of the season."

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Bacary Sagna: Arsenal are now playing without fear

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Bacary Sagna insists Arsenal no longer play with fear or the burden of expectation and maintains the club are now ready to win their first trophy in six years.

Arsenal last tasted success in 2005 after winning the FA Cup but since then, Arsene Wenger’s side have failed to add build on that.

Despite the expectancy, Sagna feels Arsenal are ready to triumph over Birmingham City after having learned from their previous mistakes.

"We were scared, but we are not any more," Sagna told the club’s official website.

"We have been close to winning something but we got scared, we stopped playing and were waiting for the result to happen.

"During the past we have been a bit unlucky as well with injuries and had problems to deal with that.

"But we have learned from our mistakes and all the problems we had, now we are ready to win everything.

"We have not won anything for six years so it will be massive for the players, the fans and the club as well.

Despite their sustained Premier League title challenge every season, Sagna has admitted the lack of a tangible reward has been difficult to accept as an Arsenal player.

"Every year we have been really disappointed and it is hard to start the season knowing you could have won something in the past,” said the 28-year-old.

"But we have grown up as a team, we are wiser and now in the final. It has taken time, but we are on a good way to being successful.

"This is not the good way, you have to look forwards and to act. I hope Sunday will be a good way to show people we can win and go on to even more, to show we are very hungry."

Sagna has admitted he is now targeting trophies but has expressed his caution ahead of the tie against Alex McLeish’s side.

"This progression has come naturally because as a professional you always want to win something and be successful.

"Also, at the end of your career you want to be able to look back on your achievements. At the moment, there is not that much."

"Unfortunately, we have been so close to winning something but we didn't.

"Now we have the opportunity to win on Sunday, but it will not be easy because Birmingham want it as much as we do.

"Wembley is one of the most amazing stadiums in Europe and now we have the opportunity to show what we can do, that we can win trophies."

Arsene Wenger insists Arsenal's sustained Premier League run is more challenging than Carling Cup

Arsene Wenger



Arsene Wenger insists winning the Carling Cup would be another progressive step forward for Arsenal but the Frenchman believes his side’s consistency in the Premier League is a more difficult feat.

Only Arsenal and Manchester United have finished in the top four each season for the past 12 years, although the overwhelming majority have pointed to Wenger’s side’s distinct lack of trophies – their last being an FA Cup win in 2005 – as a critical point.

But Wenger maintains a sustained place in the Premier League’s elite should be considered an achievement, regardless of the fact there may be no tangible rewards.

"Winning the Carling Cup will be like beating Chelsea, like beating Barcelona - another step forward," said Wenger.

"It is always very difficult to say whether it is harder to finish always in the top four, or to win the Carling Cup.

"The most difficult is consistency at the top, and the proof of that is that only two clubs have been able to finish in the top four for each of the last 12 years, us and Manchester United.

"It is true that winning the Carling Cup will mean we don't have to answer that question any more about whether we can win trophies.

Wenger, however, has pointed out the potential end of the club’s six-year-trophy drought will raise belief within the squad and has dismissed the status of the Carling Cup being an important factor.

"It will be important for the confidence of the team for the rest of the season."

"We have a young squad and this will do much for their confidence.

"Because people are so much after us about trophies, we want to win one, but mainly because to win it would give us a lift.

"There is a weight on the team - we have to deliver trophies because we have not won any.

"The players say: 'okay, we want to win a trophy to show you we can win one'."

"How big the trophy is everyone will rate differently. I am confident that we've been, up to now, the most consistent team because we're still in everything. So it will convince the team they can deliver more."

Arsenal will be without their captain Cesc Fabregas after the midfielder aggravated his hamstring in their 1-0 win over Stoke City and Wenger has reiterated the importance of the Spaniard in the club’s other competitions.

"Cesc is disappointed, but his disappointment is diminished by the fact that we have other main targets after this game, like the championship, the Champions League and the FA Cup," said Wenger.

"If he was playing, he could damage his participation in all the other targets after that.

"Of course, he accepts it with disappointment, but our job isn't just about good things. It's also about disappointments."

"Could Cesc play with the injury he has? Certainly not at 100 per cent - and he could make the damage much worse, then be out for three, four, five weeks maybe."

Wenger has also dismissed the idea of getting distracted over the amount of medals he has won during his time at Arsenal.

"I am a futurist, not nostalgic. I have given some [medals] away, some must be in a cupboard, somewhere. Frankly, I am not collecting at all,” he said.

Carling Cup : Arsenal Vs Birmingham City - Match Preview

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If Arsenal win the Carling Cup on Sunday, Arsène Wenger will leave Wembley with a satisfied smile on his face. But despite having ended that famous six-year spell without a trophy, developed a young vibrant side and silenced a few critics, the Frenchman’s demeanor may have changed by the time he gets home.

By then his thoughts will be on opening up the Leyton Orient defence rather than open-top buses and his winner’s medal may well have left his possession for good.

Make no mistake, the Birmingham game is massive for Wenger and his team. But the manager wants this to be the first of many prizes – hopefully this season – and the Carling Cup is only the springboard.

“To win this trophy would give us a lift,” said the Frenchman at his press conference on Friday.

“There is a weight on the team at the moment. We have to deliver trophies because we have not won any.

“I’m not the only one for whom that is important. There’s the players’ feelings too. They say: ‘Ok, we want to win a trophy to show you we can win one’. And I believe to win would give us a lift for the rest of the season.

“We have a good bond, a good confidence level and are highly determined to do well on all fronts. What will be vital for our success is that we focus well on the next game and give it the biggest importance. That’s the final game in the Carling Cup and will give everything to be successful.

“We are on a very strong run now. If you look at the start of the season, we are well above the predictions of the specialists.

“What is important is not what happened in the last six years but what we can do from now on.”

It is typical Wenger. The Frenchman has always shunned the sunshine of success. He’d prefer to watch a Belgian Second Division game on his giant TV than toast a triumph with backslappers. But his philosophy goes much deeper than mere modesty.

“I’m a futurist,” he said. “I’m not nostalgic. I don’t collect anything. I don’t know where my medals are. I’ve given some away, some must be in a cupboard somewhere. Frankly, I’m not a collector at all.

“This job turns you forward. When you go to bed at night, do you look back at the good moments you’ve had in your life, or do you look forward at what you want to do in the future? I’m more about what’s happening tomorrow.

“So on Monday morning we will come in and practice to win against Leyton Orient.”

On Thursday, Wenger had told TV Online that the hamstring injury picked up by Cesc Fabregas would cost him a place in the final. Media reports the following morning suggested the captain might make it so Wenger had to re-iterate the point at his pre-match press conference.

The Spaniard will be out for “one or two” games. Theo Walcott’s sprained ankle will sideline him for “two to three weeks”.

Robin van Persie, Laurent Koscielny and Abou Diaby are all available. The Dutchman will captain the side in the absence of Fabregas.

This is Arsenal’s seventh League Cup Final and they are going for their third victory. They reached Wembley the hard way by beating Tottenham, Newcastle and Wigan before coming from behind to see off Ipswich in the Semi-Final. For their part, Birmingham got past Rochdale, Brentford, MK Dons, Aston Villa and then West Ham.

Arsenal have beaten Alex McLeish’s side home and away this season but 6ft 7ins striker Nikola Zigic did put them ahead at Emirates Stadium back in October and in the January transfer window they brought in the powerful Obafemi Martins to partner him.

While Arsenal’s wait for silverware has been long, Birmingham have lifted just one trophy in their 136-year history – this one in 1963. However this season, you can argue that McLeish's men are a cup side. They have won eight out of nine knockout ties and, aside from Sunday, are in the FA Cup Quarter-Final. In the League they have won six out of 26 and are three points off the relegation places. However Wenger is fully expecting them to ease away from the dropzone before long.

“Birmingham are a team I respect a lot because they have always consistent behaviour in their motivational level,” said the Frenchman.

“They have stabilised the club in the Premier League and they are now in the Carling Cup Final. We will respect that.

“We know we will face a Birmingham team that is highly determined to do well. We expect them to be at their best and that means a big performance from our side will be requested.”

Wenger has always had an interesting relationship with the Carling Cup. His decision to play a very young side initially drew derision from the wider football world but it is now copied by many major sides. In turn, the Club supported that with cheaper seats that were not necessarily part of the season ticket package thus widening the fan base.

The youthful teams thrived and the home games sold out. So, in many ways, it will be highly fitting if this new generation team lift the Carling Cup as their first trophy. Most of the team will have made their debut in the competition while many fans watching at home and in the stadium will have been properly introduced to Arsenal via this event.

Yet, it remains a side-dish not a meaty main course for a greedy manager.

“The most important trophies are the Premier and the Champions League,” said Wenger. “After that you have the FA Cup and, after that, the Carling Cup.

“But for us it’s a trophy. How big the trophy is everyone will rate differently. We will just try to win it.

“I’m confident that we’ve been the most consistent team up to now,” he concluded, “because we’re still in everything.

“So it will convince the team they can deliver more.”

Sunday could close one six-year chapter in Arsenal’s history and open another much greater one.

Let the story unfold.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Fabregas ruled out of Carling Cup Final



Cesc Fabregas is out of the Carling Cup Final.

The Arsenal captain hobbled off in the early stages of the win over Stoke on Wednesday night with a hamstring problem and, immediately, fears were raised about his involvement in Sunday’s showpiece.

Speaking exclusively to TV Online on Thursday evening, Arsène Wenger confirmed the bad news. But, thankfully, his absence is not expected to be long.

“It is a very small injury but certainly Cesc will be out for Sunday,” said the Frenchman. “For how long [beyond that] I don’t know but for Sunday he will be short.

“He is [disappointed]. We all feel sorry and sad for him. The only way we help him now is to win the Carling Cup as he contributed a lot in this competition.”

While the manager was clear on the captain’s involvement this weekend, He would not be drawn on the chances of Fabregas being fit for Barcelona on March 8.

“It is very difficult to give a deadline,” said Wenger. “It is impossible.”

As we already knew, Theo Walcott will also miss the Carling Cup Final after being stretchered off in the same game. Again, the problem may be relatively short term.

“I saw him this morning,” said Wenger. “He has a classic ankle sprain. We don’t think there is any more damage to it. But it is still a sprain. We are sad for him too. He is out for Sunday and maybe one or two more weeks.”

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Arsenal 1 - 0 Stoke City - Match Report




Arsenal edged their way to within a point of leaders Manchester United with a hard-fought 1-0 win over Stoke on Wednesday night.

But the victory may have come at a price.

Sebastien Squillaci’s eighth-minute header was enough to secure all three points. However, Cesc Fabregas hobbled off shortly afterwards with a hamstring injury. In the second half, Theo Walcott was stretchered off with a concerned look on his face having been brought down on the edge of the area.

After the game, Arsène Wenger confirmed that the winger would miss the Carling Cup Final with a sprained ankle. The prognosis on Fabregas will have to wait a little longer.

It is testament to Arsenal that they shook off these problems to secure a crucial victory on the night.

Stoke were Stoke – organised, robust, committed – but Arsenal matched them in those areas and made their class count when it mattered.

These sorts of ground-out 1-0s are said to win you titles. Time will tell there.

But this result is further evidence that Arsenal are the real deal this season.

This was the first of five games in 14 days – a spell that includes Sunday’s showpiece and ends with the game at Barcelona. It is a massive time for Arsenal and, as expected, Wenger brought back the bulk of the side that had been rested at Leyton Orient on Sunday.

In all there were seven changes. Only Alex Song, Bacary Sagna, Squillaci and Nicklas Bendtner retained their places. Wojciech Szczesny, Fabregas, Samir Nasri, Walcott, Jack Wilshere, Gael Clichy and Johan Djourou all came in.

Manchester United were otherwise engaged in the Champions League this evening but will play twice in the Premier League before Wenger’s men run out again in the same competition.

The Frenchman does not like to label any game as ‘must-win’ but this one was about as close as you could get if Arsenal wanted to retain control of their own destiny in the title race.

And the home side began as if they were fully aware of the magnitude of the fixture.

In the opening four and half minutes, Walcott would have three opportunities - one crystal-clear and two half-chances.

The best came first.

With less than 70 seconds on the clock, Wilshere found Fabregas on the edge of the area. Perceptive as ever, he spotted Walcott on the right. The skipper threaded a pass through to leave the Englishman clear but needing to beat Asmir Begovic from an acute angle.

He did so. But his cross-shot bounced off the inside of the far post, back across goal and into the hands of the keeper. Fist-gnawing stuff.

A couple minutes later, Walcott volleyed over when off-balance. Then he seemed to be beating a couple of Stoke defenders for pace but was caught as he shaped to shoot and sidefooted tamely into the hands of the keeper.

Stoke replied with a couple of Rory Delap throw-ins but, in the eighth minute, Arsenal grabbed the lead they deserved.

Wilshere fired over a corner from the right. It was touched on to Bendtner at the far post. He returned the ball into the midst of the six-yard box for Squillaci to nod home from close-range. It was the Frenchman’s second goal of the season and he celebrated like it meant something.

It was everything Arsenal needed but, five minutes later, they would suffer a crucial blow – they lost their captain.

Fabregas pulled up holding his knee and was soon replaced by Arshavin. The Russian took up the role on the left of midfield with Nasri moving into the middle.

The goal and the injury seemed to affect Arsenal. The home side were in complete control - on the half-hour the statistics said they had enjoyed an incredible 74 per cent possession – however their build-up play lead to nothing concrete.

In the 37th minute, they were nearly caught. In a rare foray forward Jonathan Walters nodded the ball back to John Carew 25 yards out. The Norwegian fired a thunderous volley toward the far corner but Szczesny threw himself to his right and made the block. It was a wonderful stop given he had been underemployed thus far.

At the break, Stoke needed to do something. Almost like Orient as the weekend, they seemed happy to cede territory and get men behind the ball. It was a risky ploy given the attacking options Arsenal had at their disposal.

Therefore the visitors were understandably more expansive in the second half. In the opening minutes, they nearly drew level from a move that started with a Delap throw-in - but not in the way you might think.

This one was tossed down the line for Jermaine Pennant. His cross was nodded goalwards by Ryan Shawcross at the near post but, fortunately for Arsenal, deflected wide.

Just before the hour, a more traditional Delap fling saw Robert Huth climb highest and nod over. A glorious chance.

The switch in style had put Arsenal back on their heels and it took them time to recover.

But, gradually, recover they did.

Wilshere thumped a long-range shot into the chest of Begovic then Arshavin skipped past the sliding Shawcross on the left-hand byline before cutting the ball back invitingly for Walcott. He tried to finish first-time but miscued.

It would be the last act from the Englishman. With 20 minutes left, he was hauled down by Dean Whitehead on the edge of the area and did not get up. He was stretchered off and Denilson came on.

Despite another change, matters were still tight and even. Shawcross miscued a volley at one end, Bendtner headed over at the other.

As the game entered its final phase, both sides brought on strikers – Marouane Chamakh for Arsenal, Ricardo Fuller for Stoke.

Stoke still pushed forward where possible but theirs was a blunt weapon. The closest they came to breaking the deadlock was when Pennant rippled the sidenetting from a free-kick.

The finale was nervy but controlled. The finesse went from Arsenal and the fight took over.

But in the end they had the three points they wanted.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Samir Nasri: I don't intend to leave Arsenal without winning anything

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Arsenal midfielder Samir Nasri insists that he intends to win something before he makes a move to further his career away from the club.

The 23-year-old has put in strong performances this campaign, and has been linked with a move to Barcelona. And it appears that he intends to first fulfil his dream of winning the title with the Gunners before considering his options.

"All I can say is that I am enjoying my time at Arsenal and in London, and I feel there’s still a lot for me to contribute," Nasri told Sport magazine.

"One of the reasons I came to Arsenal was to win titles, and I’m not expecting to leave this club without one."

With only 16 months left on his current contract with the club, the former Marseille man admitted that talks concerning a new deal are set to take place during the summer.

"We promised each other to speak about this subject after the season ends," he said. "For now all my focus is on winning the league title and also getting as far as possible in the Champions League."

Robin van Persie and Laurent Koscielny ruled out of Arsenal's Premier League clash with Stoke

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Striker Robin van Persie and defender Laurent Koscielny will both sit out Arsenal's midweek Premier League match with Stoke.

Arsene Wenger was expected to ring the changes after seeing his side stumble to a draw at Leyton Orient in the FA Cup on Sunday, and the duo were both expected to figure in a game that Arsenal must win to keep up the pressure on Manchester United at the top of the table.

However, the Dutchman's hamstring issue and the Frenchman's back problem are not deemed likely to rule them out of Sunday's League Cup final against Birmingham, and both are expected to be fully fit for the second leg of their Champions League tie with Barcelona.

Wenger told Arsenal TV Online: "We don't have Van Persie, Diaby and Koscielny available. Everybody else is fit.

"Diaby is suspended. Van Persie has a hamstring problem and Koscielny a back problem. Both are short-term and they have a chance for the game on Sunday."

Meanwhile for Stoke, boss Tony Pulis will not be able to call upon winger Matthew Etherington, who has succumbed to a back injury, but should recall former Arsenal target Asmir Begovic to the starting line-up after resting him in the FA Cup win over Brighton at the weekend.

Wenger - Possession imperative against Stoke

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Arsène Wenger’s masterplan to counter Stoke’s direct style of play is simple - just don’t let Tony Pulis’ side have the ball.

Since their promotion to the Premier League in 2008, the Potters have enjoyed significant success from set-pieces and Rory Delap’s now infamous long throw.

Many of the top flight’s best defences, including Arsenal’s, have struggled to cope with the Irish international’s unique weapon. But Wenger knows that, as long as Arsenal have the ball, Stoke can’t cause a threat.
 
“What is important for us against Stoke is we [make sure] we have the ball,” said the manager. “The more we have the ball, the less they will be dangerous in the air.

“We will try to dominate the game, as long as we have the ball they cannot be dangerous.

“We know we are in a strong position in the Premier League, the players know that at home our results will have a vital importance on our chances of winning the Premier League. The focus will be natural, this team wants to win every single game.”

Saturday, February 19, 2011

FA Cup : Leyton Orient Vs Arsenal - Match Preview





Barcelona to Brisbane Road. With every respect to Leyton Orient, it is one hell of a leap.

Arsenal have to travel precisely 5.7 miles across London on Sunday for this feisty-looking FA Cup Fifth Round tie. If their minds are still full of Xavi, Iniesta and Messi rather than McGleish, Revell and Dawson then much of that good work in midweek will be left tainted.

Cup shocks are a two-headed coin – complacency on one side, commitment on the other - and certainly the ingredients are all there this weekend.

Arsène Wenger has never lost to lower League opposition in 25 ties over 15 years at Arsenal. Part of the secret is respect for and research on your opponent. He was knee-deep in the latter when he spoke to the media on Friday lunchtime.

"We always try to prepare properly,” he said. “That gives you a guarantee to be at a certain level but, of course, it does not guarantee that you qualify.

"This is the charm of the game. To be successful in the end, you need to go through in these kinds of matches. It is a mental test of how much we want to win. If you want to win, you have to play well at Orient.

“We have had reports of their games and we watched them a little bit against MK Dons. They have a good left back and they have a striker who looks dangerous, Alex Revell. So you see we always look after our opponent.

“To be fair I have had no time [since Barcelona to find out about Orient]. We watched 30 minutes of the first half against MK Dons and I will watch the rest this afternoon.”

Incredibly, Johan Djourou was ruled out on Thursday but will now start if fit. Sebastien Squillaci will certainly return, Bacary Sagna is back from his ban but Abou Diaby’s suspension continues.

"Djourou has a test on Saturday,” said Wenger. “I will play Squillaci and then will see about whether to play Laurent Koscielny or Johan Djourou. Koscielny finished quite exhausted so if I have the choice I will choose Djourou."

With a crucial Premier League game on Wednesday and the Carling Cup Final next Sunday, the manager added that he would certainly shuffle his side. The question is, to what extent.

Arsenal have just started a spell of five games inside 17 crucial days. If they draw against Orient the replay will make it six.

By the end of that period, they could have won their first trophy in six years and pulled off arguably their greatest ever European victory. There are also a couple of Premier League games too – drop anything significant in those and Manchester United may be out of reach.

It is the most significant phase of the season since… well… the last really significant one. That is not to be flippant about the next fortnight or so but, in reality, we hope it is merely a gateway to greater things.

On Friday, Wenger too rallied against the hyperbola.

“It is an important period but, no matter what happens in the next two weeks, we can only think about the next game,” he said. “That is the best way to approach it because we want to win all four games.

“I am never looking backwards and never too far forward. The result of the next game can influence things. If you have a big disappointment, it will affect all the other games. You gain confidence slowly but lose it quickly. So to keep it high it is important to take care of the next game."

Leyton Orient have hovered just above the dropzone in League One for most of this season but their 2011 form has lifted them within sight of the Play-Offs. Russell Slade’s side are unbeaten in their last 11 games and have not lost at Brisbane Road since September. They won at Norwich in the Third Round and at Swansea in the Fourth Round to reach the last 16 for the first time in 29 years.

Though near neighbours, the teams have met just ten times. Orient’s last victories came in 1913 and 1915, the last meeting came in the FA Cup Semi-Final of 1978 when a brace from Malcolm MacDonald helped secure a 3-0 win for Terry Neill’s team.

“I have been to Orient,” recalled Wenger. “We played a friendly with Arsenal there in a pre-season game. Currently they have Ben Chorley, a former Arsenal player and Jason Crowe who played here when I arrived first.

“They have a side on a good run at the moment so they are dangerous for us. Believe me, I have no doubt they will be up for it.

"There is history in England no matter where you go. No matter what happened before we will want to go there and win the game. We are on a very strong run and everybody will watch the game with a lot of interest. We will see how much Leyton Orient can do against us.”

Surely that depends on what Arsenal do themselves.

Wenger - We can win all four trophies

Arsene Wenger Arsene Wenger manager of Arsenal looks on prior to the UEFA Champions League Group H match between Arsenal and FK Partizan Belgrade at the Emirates Stadium on December 8, 2010 in London, England.


Arsène Wenger still believes Arsenal can win all four competitions.

The Gunners remain the only English side still capable of winning the Premier League, Champions League, FA Cup and League Cup and Wenger sees no reason why they shouldn’t target an unprecedented quartet.

However, with the games coming think and fast, Wenger knows his ambition could be extinguished very quickly.

Arsenal continue a run of four fixtures in four different competitions when they travel to Leyton Orient on Sunday in the FA Cup Fifth Round and then next week face Stoke in the Premier League and Birmingham in the League Cup Final.

“We want to go for every single competition, I have said that many times,” reiterated Wenger.

“How far will we go? I personally believe we can go in every competition to the end. But we can as well stop very quickly.

“It’s just down to how much we believe and how much commitment we show. What I am convinced of [is] we have the hunger, we have some talent and we are committed to going as far as we can.

“I can't tell you that we do not want to do it. We are in all the competitions so we will do our best. My job is to get the team as far as it can.

“You do not choose at the moment to drop any competition, it would be silly. How far we will be capable to go, I don't know. My job is to take the team as far as we can.”

Thursday, February 17, 2011

We have beaten ‘the best side in football history’ - Arsenal captain Cesc Fabregas hails win over Barcelona



Cesc Fabregas believes that Arsenal have beaten the greatest team in the history of football, following their 2-1 win over Barcelona at the Emirates Stadium.

The two sides met in the first leg of the last 16 of the Champions League on Wednesday night, and the Gunners went behind to a David Villa goal in the first half before sensationally coming from behind to snatch a victory.

Robin van Persie scored from a tight angle after 78 minutes to put the game back on level terms, while substitute Andrey Arshavin - who had come on for Alex Song - scored the winner five minutes later.

And despite the victory, the 23-year-old midfielder is keeping his feet on the ground, insisting that the tie is not over yet.

"They don’t lose many games," Fabregas said, according to The Mirror.

"They are the best side in football history, in my opinion.

"But we have only played half of this tie. It’s a nice compliment to us, but that’s all. We have closed the gap on them from last year. We are one year older, we have less injured players."

Wenger : 'It was a special night for Arsenal'



On the result…
I am highly delighted because it was a special football match. The game promised a lot and absolutely fulfilled the promises between two exceptional football teams who always try to play. We were not only strong on the physical side but on the mental side, we kept resilient. We took advantage of one special piece of skill from Van Persie and the goal for the second was after some good build-up play. It was a special night. When we suffered, the fans were still very positive.

On the second leg at the Nou Camp...
Tonight's result gives us a chance to go to Barcelona with belief. We know it will be a very difficult game but we will prepare well. We will be highly focused and we go to win our game. It is a special lift for my team. Our players have shown exceptional strength tonight and togetherness. This will enforce that.

On taking off Alex Song…
It was a mixture of the yellow card [he received] and because I wanted to go for it. We finished with Wilshere, Fabregas, Nasri, Bendtner and Van Persie - we needed to score two goals. We took a gamble and it could have backfired and we could have lost 2-0 or 3-0 to them. It worked.

On Jack Wilshere…
He was outstanding tonight. He was not fazed by the occasion in difficult periods. He took the ball and got out of the pressure.

On whether Arsenal are favourites…
We are not favourites. We believe we have a chance. Barcelona are still favourites and we know tonight that we can beat them - which we did not know last year. From now on, it is important we put the game out of our mind. We have an FA Cup match on Sunday. We have to be focused.

On Barcelona's possession…
The problem with their possession if that if you are a fraction late, you can be in trouble. We were prepared mentally to live with that. We normally have the ball more than the opponent but we knew tonight that they would have the ball for 60 per cent.

On what it means to the Club…
I am proud for Arsenal Football Club. Everyone urged us to play differently to our nature so it is good. I believe that it can strengthen the belief in our philosophy. We are 23 years old - our average - the average age is very, very young. It is very promising for the future. Our target is to keep these players together.

On Samir Nasri's return…
He became stronger and stronger. He did not look like a player who has not played for such a long time. He started hesitantly and became more confident.
On good results for England in the Champions League…
It is difficult to know that and difficult to compare. Tonight, we played against the best team in the world in my opinion and we beat them. But that does not take away any quality. They are still an exceptional side. Last night was a different game [between Tottenham and Milan]. But the English Premier League is strong.

On Laurent Koscielny's performance…
For me, he was outstanding. He is improving.

On the prospect of facing Lionel Messi again…
Who doesn't worry about Messi? That will be a task to keep him quiet but we take some encouragement from tonight. The team has a great togetherness and a great mental belief. We have to be faithful in what we try to do and that is score goals.

Arsenal 2 - 1 Barcelona - Match Report




You must beat the best to be the best - and Arsenal are right on course.

Two goals within five minutes deep into the second half of this exhilarating Champions League encounter turned the tide towards Arsène Wenger's side on Wednesday night.

Barcelona were brilliant in the first half. David Villa prodded them in front and throughout the 45 minutes they wove a wonderful tapestry of passes. As in the Quarter-Final first leg 12 months ago, Arsenal looked lost.

Little really changed in the second half until, 12 minutes from time, Robin van Persie crashed home a cross-shot from an incredible angle. In the 83rd minute, Samir Nasri set up substitute Andrey Arshavin to slot home the winner.

It was a stunning comeback and almost certainly Arsenal’s greatest victory at Emirates Stadium.

Remember Barcelona's record-breaking run of 16 straight wins in Liga had only ended at the weekend. And this was only their second meaningful defeat of the season. Barcelona were reputed to be the best team in the world and they were bang in form.

Wenger’s men still have a mammoth task on their hands at the Nou Camp in three weeks time. But they now know they can battle with the best and win.

If they can complete the job in Barcelona, then who knows what they can do.

All eyes were on Arsenal’s No 8 pre-match. When the team-sheets came out Samir Nasri was listed in the team and not on the bench. It was his first appearance since limping off with a hamstring injury against Huddersfield on January 30.

The only other change was enforced. Bacary Sagna was suspended after his dismissal in the final minute of the final group game back in December. Emmanuel Eboue took up the right back role.

Emirates Stadium was a sea of flags as the two teams came out. The Club had put one on every seat and, as usual, the crowd responded wonderfully.

Arsenal may have played Barcelona in last season’s Quarter-Final but the novelty, nor the excitement, had worn off.

This was simply massive.

The early moments were more frantic than finessed. Everyone expected a reprise of that toe-to-toe slugfest last season – except this time the hope was that Arsenal would not take all the early punches squarely on the chin.

And they did not. In fact, they bossed the opening 10 minutes.

Theo Walcott was the spearhead. He sprinted through the midfield in the fourth minute before trying to set up Van Persie on the right of the area. The Dutchman was wrongly called offside.

Then the winger cut in from the right and a Fabregas chip found Van Persie momentarily free at the far post. The Dutchman hooked his shot goalward but Victor Valdes blocked.

Barcelona had been quiet until now. But having dampened Arsenal’s early spark they started to press and hold a higher defensive line.

It soon produced a clear chance. In the 15th minute, Lionel Messi was released by Villa to go one-on-one with Wojciech Szczesny. The little maestro clipped his shot past the keeper but it drifted inches past the far post.

The chance was a reminder of Barcelona’s quicksilver capabilities – like anyone needed one.

By now the visitors had snatched control. Villa whipped in a dangerous cross from the right, Messi chipped a shot into the hands of Szczesny. Arsenal were giving the ball away and struggling to hold them off.

The home side needed a release – and, in the 25th minute, Walcott found them one.

After a Barcelona attack broke down, he sprinted clear and, with the visitors stretched, found Fabregas on the right of the area. His cross seemed destined for the head of the unmarked Van Persie at the far post only for Eric Abidal to nod the ball clear at the last second.

It was Arsenal’s best chance but it did not stem the tide. Quite the opposite in fact.

In the 26th minute, Messi scuttled past Alex Song in midfield and split the Arsenal defence to release Villa. The striker tucked away a simple shot through the keeper’s legs.

Arsenal had been picked apart.

The striker nearly grabbed an immediate second when Daniel Alves found him at the near post. Somehow Arsenal smuggled the ball away.

But Barcelona’s high line did leave them liable to the counter-attack when, on the rare occasion, they lost the ball. There was one example on the half-hour when Jack Wilshere, Arsenal’s best player on the night, strode forward to set up Van Persie. The Dutchman slashed his shot wide.

However these were snatched opportunities. Barcelona were bullying Arsenal with their passing, pressing and movement.

Seven minutes from the whistle, Messi bundled home a close-range header from Pedro’s pass. Thankfully he was flagged offside.

At half-time, there was a strange comparison to make with last season’s game.
Arsenal had been more over-run 12 months ago but this time they were trailing and, on the balance of play, it might have been worse.

Wenger clearly roused his side at the interval because they were better immediately after the restart. Wilshere had an effort saved by Valdes and Van Persie fired over. Territorially Arsenal were on top but they were not creating too much.

This time, it was Barcelona who were playing on the break. In the 56th minute, Pedro went clear and tumbled under the challenge of Koscielny. If it was a penalty then it was a red card too and, probably, game over.

Replays fully justified the referee’s decision to wave play on. Like Wilshere, the Frenchman had an immaculate night.

Nasri’s low cross towards Van Persie at the near post was slid away from danger at the last second.

However, we reached the midway point of the second half, Barcelona were once again turning the screw. Messi danced through only to see his shot blocked. Eboue returned the ball immediately to Andreas Iniesta who slid the Argentinean into space on the left of the area. He could only find the sidenetting.

In the 68th minute, Wenger withdrew Song for Arshavin. It was an attacking move but the Cameroonian had been on a knife-edge since receiving a yellow card in the first five minutes and Arsenal were struggling with 11 men let alone 10.

Nicklas Bendtner came on for Walcott 10 minutes later.

The game seemed to be drifting to its conclusion now. Barcelona were happy enough with 1-0 and Arsenal were struggling create anything close to a clear-cut chance.

Then lightning struck.

Gael Clichy clipped a nonchalant ball to Van Persie on the left-hand byline. The angle was impossibly acute and Gerard Pique was on patrol. However Vales had drifted away from his post and the Dutcman let fly. The ball kissed the near post and flew just inside the far. Stunning.

Like last year, an Arsenal goal suddenly belittled Barcelona. The home side flew into their task and, five minutes later, lighting struck again.

Nasri flew down the right and, with Barcelona undermanned, he showed sufficient poise to settle himself and pick out Arshavin at the far post.

Cool as you like, the Russian found the far corner.

Bendtner saw an angled shot batted away by Valdes. Szczesny saved similarly from Pedro at the other end.

The home held their nerve for a famous win. Barcelona were the more beautiful side on the night but Arsenal had the victory.

This was a turnaround in every sense.

Roll on the return leg.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

No complaints, Arsenal in ideal condition

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Arsène Wenger believes Arsenal are in ‘ideal condition’ to face Barcelona on Wednesday.

Last season, the Frenchman had a number of injury worries going into the Champions League Quarter-Final first leg against the Spanish champions. Two of those, Andrey Arshavin and William Gallas, started the game but had gone off injured by the start of the second half. They missed the return rubber, along with Cesc Fabregas and Alex Song, and Arsenal were subsequently knocked out 6-3 on aggregate.

This year, however, the London side are in a different position. The treatment table is relatively clear, with Samir Nasri even set to return for Wednesday’s Knockout Round first leg tie at Emirates. Meanwhile confidence is high as Wenger’s men continue to gun for four trophies.

“The only thing I can say is we are in an ideal condition to face them,” said the Frenchman. “We cannot complain. We have the belief, the confidence and the players available. We are 90 per cent in February and that was not the case last year. I feel we are in an ideal position to face them.”

But despite being well-beaten over the two legs last season, Wenger baulked at the word ‘revenge’ in his pre-match press conference

“We just want to show how good we are,” he said. “We want to show the belief we have in our game, in our quality, more than looking at the past.

“We have practiced. We are determined, focused and we want to win this competition. We know we face the super-favourites of this competition but the only way to do it is to knock them out."

Nasri back in the squad, Rosicky returns too

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Samir Nasri is in the Arsenal squad for the Champions League tie with Barcelona on Wednesday - but he may not start.

The French midfielder has been missing since injuring his hamstring against Huddersfield a fortnight ago. He is back quicker than expected and trained on Tuesday afternoon. However, after the session, Arsène Wenger was still cautious about re-introducing one of his most influential players this season.

“Samir is in the squad,” said the manager. “But the starting line-up will be decided tomorrow.

"He's recovered quicker than expected. I said it will be 21 days but it will be only 17 days. Everybody's absolutely adamant that he's completely medically available. It's down to me to make the decision.

"I will take no medical risk but it's good to have him in the squad.”

Elsewhere, Wenger has one midfielder out and one back.

“Rosicky is available,” said the Frenchman. “He's in the squad. But there's no Diaby. He has a calf problem. He did it with the French national squad against Brazil.”

Bacary Sagna is suspended after his sending off in Arsenal’s final Group H game against Partizan Belgrade. Emmanuel Eboue is expected to deputise at right back.

Djourou - I'm not scared of Lionel Messi

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Johan Djourou is not scared of Lionel Messi.

The Swiss defender issued a rally cry ahead of arguably the biggest test of his career when Barcelona visit Emirates Stadium for the first leg of an eagerly-awaited Champions League tie on Wednesday night.

Messi is by common consent the world's finest footballer: he has 35 goals in 28 games this season and, in case you'd forgotten, he scored four times to dump Arsenal out of Europe last April. But Djourou won't be driven to distraction by the Argentine.

"Barcelona are a great team but it is not just about Messi," he said. 

"He has great, great service from players like Xavi and [Andres] Iniesta so we have to be focused as a group. We have to get behind the back and be together. It is how we can block the space for him to run into.

"You do not get scared [of facing Messi]. If I was scared, I wouldn't be playing tomorrow. You have to be excited not scared. It is true Messi is good one versus one but, as cover, we can be hard to beat.

"We know they are a great team going forward and we will have to defend well and be focused for 90 minutes. But do not forget we have great players as well. It will be interesting."

Djourou played no part in Arsenal's 6-3 aggregate defeat to the Catalan giants in last year's Quarter-Finals - indeed he spent virtually the entire campaign sidelined by a knee injury.

Arsène Wenger made a point of not overloading Djourou with games in the first half of this season but, since the turn of the year, the 24-year-old has been a virtual ever-present at the back. The Swiss international believes he has proved his worth.

"Everything has gone well," he said. "I was injured and it has taken time to come back. I have worked hard and have the confidence of the manager. I am working hard and am showing everyone what I can do. I am happy everyone is doing well.

"I don't think there were doubts [when I came back]. You have doubts when you are out and you don't know how long you will be out for. I had no doubt I would come back to my best.

"For me, it [playing regularly] was a good point to prove that my knee was fine and that my injury was in the past. It was a difficult time for me."

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Arsenal to demand £80m for Barcelona & Real Madrid target Cesc Fabregas

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Arsenal are believed to be demanding a mammoth £80 million for the potential sale of their skipper Cesc Fabregas.

The 23-year-old has persistently been heavily linked with a move back to Spain, after coming through the ranks at Barcelona. 

And the midfielder has in the past spoken of a desire to return to the club of his youth at some point in his career.

But recent reports have indicated an intention to bid from Real Madrid, who are also believed to be interested in acquiring the services of the World Cup winner. Barcelona, meanwhile, remain committed to trying to re-sign their youth product.

Now The Mirror reports that the Gunners are going to stick to their guns and retain the £80m price-tag on Fabregas, in an attempt to hold on to their prized asset.

Arsenal 2 - 0 Wolverhampton - Match Report

And then there were two.

It looks like Arsenal and Manchester United will fight it out for the Premier League crown after a pivotal day in the title race.

Sir Alex Ferguson’s side beat third-place Manchester City on Saturday lunchtime to pour pressure on Arsène Wenger’s outfit before they faced Wolves at Emirates Stadium.

However, Arsenal rolled up their sleeves once again and ground out a 2-0 victory.

Robin van Persie grabbed both – one in each half. The first was a cute volley from a cross by Cesc Fabregas, the second a cool finish from a breakaway inspired by the Spaniard and spurred on by Theo Walcott.

Wolves had beaten Manchester United last week and tried to be their usual dogged, resolute selves this afternoon. However, Arsenal just did not allowed that to happen.

Wenger’s men went at them from the first whistle and kept going all afternoon. It could and should have been more but a safe, assured 2-0 was just fine.

Manchester United now lead Arsenal by four points, with Manchester City another four adrift having played a game more.

It looks like Fergie v Wenger, Red Devils v Red-and-White for the title.

Let battle commence.

The early result was always going to colour this afternoon’s match with Wolves but, at his pre-match press conference, Wenger had remained resolute that the upcoming clash with Barcelona would not influence his team selection today.

As a result, Arsenal were at full strength with only one change – Alex Song for the suspended Abou Diaby in central midfield.

Of course it was Wolves who had foiled Manchester United’s unbeaten campaign last weekend. They had also overturned Chelsea and Manchester City at Molineux but were a very different proposition away from home – a weaker one.

In fairness that victory had helped Arsenal get off the hook last Saturday but, this afternoon, the earlier result had put the pressure squrely on the shoulders of Wenger’s men.

In truth they never looked like buckling this afternoon.

Emirates Stadium was hit by a short, sharp shower as the game kicked off but, by the quarter-hour, the sun was shining.

Arsenal, however, were temperate throughout.

Fabregas put the ball in the net in the opening seconds but the referee had already blown for a foul on Jack Wilshere. Van Persie thumped the resulting free-kick over the bar. The Dutchman then thrashed high from open play a few minutes later.

It was hardly the marauding stuff sometimes seen at Emirates Stadium but it was the right response to both the draw at Newcastle and the Manchester derby.

The deadlock was broken just as Arsenal were starting to settle down. The goal was out of nothing. Fabregas crossed from the right and Van Persie sent a low volley in to the far corner. It was wonderful technique from what he calls his ‘chocolate leg’ – his unfavoured right.

In the wake of the goal, Arsenal looked to take the game by the throat. Their preferred method, as always, was an iron first in a velvet glove.

Djourou looped a deflected header onto the top of the net from Andrey Arshavin’s free-kick then the Russian sidefooted wide from the subsequent corner when he should have scored.

Just after the half-hour, Arshavin fashioned a brace of better chances. He beat Ronald Zubar on the left and squared to the unmarked Walcott eight yards out. Wayne Hennessey clawed the ball out to Fabregas, whose shot was cleared off the line by the backtracking Richard Stearman.

Wolves had only mustered a little, unfocussed pressure, to this point. But they had half a shout for a penalty late on when Adam Hammill appeared to be bundled over.

But, this had been about as one-sided a half as we had seen at Emirates this season, an equaliser would have been a travesty.

And Arshavin’s penalty shout a few minutes later was probably stronger anyway.

As ever, the main complaint from an Arsenal perspective was the ratio of goals to overall dominance.

On the whistle, Song nudged a ball to Van Persie whose snapshot was blocked by Hennessey’s trailing leg. The keeper had been the stand-out performer in the first 45 minutes.

And that tells you everything you need to know.

Seconds after the restart, Wilshere waltzed through the Wolves defence and squared for Walcott, who had time and space to pick his spot but blazed wide.

Arsenal were now dominant in everything but the scoreline. In days gone by they have been vulnerable in such scenarios. But not today.

They blitzed Wolves early in the second half and eventually grabbed a second through sheer force of will.

Hennessey made a fine save from Stearman, his own defender, and then Arshavin's drive.
The game was now even more one-way and, in the 56th minute, Arsenal finally grabbed that second. Given their pressure it was ironic that its origins came from a Wolves attack.

A raking pass from Fabregas sent Walcott sprinting down the right. He had Van Persie in support but only one covering defender. The Englishman found the unmarked Dutchman just inside the area. He took his time and pulled the trigger. It was his 10th goal in his last seven Premier League games.

Arshavin nearly added a third by charging down Hennessey’s clearance and then Van Persie volleyed wide.

But, with 18 minutes left, Wenger felt confident enough to withdraw his main two attacking outlets this afternoon – Arshavin and Van Persie. Marouane Chamakh and Nicklas Bendtner came on.

Perhaps Wednesday was finally entering his thoughts.

To be honest, the game petered out after that. Arsenal wanted to cruise home and allowed Wolves a little joy further forward.

In the final few minutes, Walcott flashed a shot inches wide and Fabregas forced another decent save from Hennessey. But by now, maybe Barcelona was part of the equation.

It was understandable, that is a massive game in Arsenal’s season.

However, according to Wenger, the game they had just won was always more important.

Time will tell if he is right.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Arsenal Vs Wolverhampton - Match Preview

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“Barcelona will be an interesting game but, for us, the best way to be in a good position to beat them is to defeat Wolves on Saturday,” said Arsène Wenger with a stern sincerity at the end of his press conference on Friday.

"This game is as important, if not more important, than Barcelona. In my opinion it is actually more important by far.

“We have four days after this game to prepare for Barcelona. We play Saturday afternoon and Wednesday night, so there's no need [to save players]. I concede that when it's Monday, Wednesday, Saturday then you have to make decisions.

"But anyway, in August, we started to fight for every single ball to be in a position to go for the Premier League and now is the time of truth.

“This is the time for us to make an impact. We are in a strong position and so it would be absolutely stupid now not to prioritise the Premier League.

"We go for four different challenges and you only have a chance to achieve that if you can put your total focus in every single game. That's why it's so difficult and that's why it demands special mental strength and preparation.

"So mentally, getting ready for Wolves is the most important thing."

Got the message out there, everyone? Be it Barcelona on Wednesday or Brisbane Road next Sunday, Arsenal are unconcerned.

Wolves are what it is all about.

After last weekend’s four-goal fall away, the call for focus is hardly surprising. Before their visit to Newcastle, Arsenal had let in one goal in their previous five Premier League games. The quartet they would concede inside the final 22 minutes at St James’ Park seemed to draw more criticism than Manchester United’s defeat to this weekend’s opponents. It is understandable yet, looking at the table alone, Arsenal actually caught up ground.

But then football’s logic has never worked in straight lines.

“I hope the Newcastle game will have a positive effect,” said Wenger.

“Every result has a psychological impact. I am confident it will be a positive one on the players and that we got away with what happened against us without being really punished.

“Our distance with Manchester United is not bigger but shorter. So let’s take advantage of that in the next games.”

That Wolves win was widely celebrated by Arsenal fans. Not just because it tightened the table or put perspective on their profligacy earlier in the day, but because it ended the unbeaten campaign of Sir Alex Ferguson’s side.

The feat of the ‘Invincibles’ in 2004 is unprecedented in modern English football but Manchester United were starting to sniff parity. Losing that chance is a blow in itself but, when Arsenal’s 49-game run was ended in controversial fashion at Old Trafford in October 2004, they struggled to respond. This season, even dropping a few draws could cost them the title with so little to choose between the top three – and Manchester United start their recovery against cross-town rivals City on Saturday morning.

“It is very difficult psychologically to start again,” admitted  Wenger. “For us it was 49 games and we lost the 50th game under special circumstances. So the sense of injustice was even more difficult to swallow. But it’s always difficult when you are on an unbeaten run and you lose it.

“I will look at it and see how they respond. Usually, they respond well. But it is a derby so anything can happen. It is maybe a chance for Man City to come back to Man United. But it will be a very open derby, more than ever.”

Johan Djourou has been passed fit after coming off with a knee problem before the comeback at Newcastle. Alex Song (thigh) and Denilson (hamstring) should be fit after missing that the trip.

Abou Diaby is injured but started a three-game domestic suspension anyway. Tomas Rosicky misses out after picking up a groin injury on international duty. The latter should be OK for Barcelona, the former has a little chance.

Perhaps that Wolves win over Manchester United should not have been a massive surprise. They had already beaten Chelsea and Manchester City at Molineux. Those nine points represent 37 per cent of their total accumulation in the Premier League this season.

They clearly like playing against the big boys but, at the same time, their away form is clearly letting them down. They have taken four points and scored just nine goals - both Premier League lows.

Arsenal have won their last 11 straight games against Wolves but that run was nearly halted last season when Mick McCarthy’s side were beaten by the latest of last-gasp headers from Nicklas Bendtner.

Back then it kept alive Arsenal’s title bid. Depending on what happens at Old Trafford, this season's victory just might shape it, you never know. But just don’t expect the same strong-arm, organised approach from the West Midlanders.

“Wolves play in a very positive way,” said Wenger. “They have changed their approach a little bit now.

“They take care of the quality of their passes. They have a good technical midfield with Henry, Milias and O’Hara. They are very strong in the centre and so it is very important to take care of our midfield play.

“But I told you at the beginning of January that our home form will be the key for us to have a good chance to win the Premier League. Since then we have responded very well at home and every game is a real challenge for any top team.”

The next two games at Emirates Stadium could massive for Arsenal. In the knee-jerk arena of the Premier League, fans and the media are always looking for ‘defining’ moments. But only history gives us clarity.

At 5pm last Saturday, it felt like Wenger’s men had suffered a mortal blow. But, in fact, it was Manchester United who cost themselves much more a couple of hours later.

Get used to it. This title race will be goal-for-goal, point-for-point, blow-for-blow for the remainder of the season. Hero one week, zero the next.

That is why Barcelona will have to wait for now.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Arsenal's Abou Diaby: I would like to play for Barcelona or Real Madrid

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Arsenal midfielder Abou Diaby has confessed that he would like to play for either Real Madrid or Barcelona at a later stage in his career.

The French star was speaking to Don Balon about the prospect of facing Barcelona in next week’s Champions League last 16 tie, and said that he would eventually like to compete for a place at one of Spain’s big two.

He stated: “At some point I would like to play for Barcelona or Real Madrid, but I would prefer to play for Barca, because I prefer their style.”

Diaby also stated, however, that he is desperate to exact revenge on the Camp Nou giants for last year’s quarter-final defeat.

He continued: “We played them last season, and we found them at their highest degree of effectiveness, both individually and collectively. This year will be the same, so we know what to expect. Barca are a great team, and this year they are very strong.”

Finally, he understandably pinpointed Lionel Messi as the Spanish champions main man, but insisted that Arsenal could not afford to focus solely on him.

He concluded: “Messi is the best in the world. We all know that the Argentine is a great player who can make the difference at any time, but we cannot focus only on him.”

The 24-year-old midfielder last year revealed his hopes of winning the Ballon d'Or, while last week Arsenal legend Patrick Vieira hinted that he could follow in his footsteps and lead the London club and his country to glory.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Arsenal & AC Milan target Jan Vertonghen reveals he is ready to leave Ajax in summer

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Eredivisie powerhouse Ajax could lose yet another key player at the end of the season as defender Jan Vertonghen has revealed that he is ready to move to a bigger club.

The Amsterdam side lost Urby Emanuelson and Luis Suarez in the winter transfer window and now their key defensive performer looks set to move on.

"I'll be honest about the alleged interest of Milan and Arsenal – I haven't heard anything from them just yet," said Vertonghen to Het Nieuwsblad.

"They haven't approached me personally and haven't spoken to my agent or club either.

"There has been some interest in me before, but never from this kind of clubs. Obviously, I've heard Milan director Adriano Galliani talk about me me after the Champions League match in San Siro and his words were very flattering.

"This is the right moment for me to leave Ajax. It's not as if I'm desperate to move on, but I feel like I'm ready to join a bigger club. I'm a big fan of the Premier League, but you can't say no when a club like Milan come knocking."

The 23-year-old's current contract runs until the summer of 2013.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Chelsea plan £50m summer swoop for Arsenal skipper Cesc Fabregas

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Despite paying some £75m for Fernando Torres and David Luiz in January, Chelsea apparently have no intention of curbing their spending, with Blues owner Roman Abramovich planning a £50-million summer swoop for Arsenal skipper Cesc Fabregas, according to the Sun.



Fabregas has been in Barcelona's sights since the summer,
when Gunners boss Arsene Wenger refused to sell his captain and rejected a bid from the Catalan club in the region of £29 million.

Fabregas' contract runs until 2015, and he is believed to only be interested in leaving Arsenal
in favour of a return to boyhood club Barcelona.

Barcelona are expected to try to land him again in the summer,
but they are likely to have difficulty competing with Abramovich's millions.  

Arsene Wenger: I want Serbian to replace me as manager of Arsenal

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Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has revealed that he would like Serbian Dragan Stojkovic to replace him at the Emirates once he retires from the game.


As a player, Stojkovic was on the books for Red Star Belgrade and Marseille, while he also enjoyed a long international career as captain of Yugoslavia. Now, the man nicknamed Piksi (Pixie), is managing Wenger’s former club Nagoya Grampus Eight and has impressed the Frenchman.

Wenger told Serbian paper Vecernje Novosti: “I would love Stojkovic to be my successor, there are a hundred reasons for that.

”Our ideas are the same and we both strive for perfect football. I knew he was going to have teams playing attacking football with many passes… He has done that, showing he will be a great coach. I told him that if he could transmit his football imagination to his players he would fly high.”

Stojkovic won the J-League title with Nagoya last season and also played under Wenger when he coached the Japanese side in 1995. The Frenchman revealed that the pair are very close friends: “Dragan comes to London at least once a year,” Wenger confirmed. “We meet up, chat and try to outsmart each other. It’s a great achievement for him to have won a championship. I was a coach in Japan for two years and didn’t manage it even though I had Piksi, who was the best player in the league, in my team.”

Wenger signed a new contract at the club in August, keeping him in London until 2014, although he admitted it could be his last: ”At 65 I will certainly move to some different job, unless I still feel like I feel today.”

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Newcastle United 4 - 4 Arsenal - Match Report




It was the best of games; it was the worst of games.
For 45 minutes on Saturday, Arsenal were unplayable. They led within seconds and looked out of sight after ten minutes thanks to a three-goal salvo from Theo Walcott, Johan Djourou and Robin van Persie. When the Dutchman added a fourth before the break, all bets were off.
Then it all went wrong.
Djourou hobbled off, Abou Diaby was sent off for shoving Joey Barton and Arsenal unravelled. Barton rolled in one penalty and converted a contentious second after Leon Best had struck from close range. Cheik Tiote completed the great escape and Newcastle, having chased shadows for so long, had chased down a point.
It was the ultimate ‘game of two halves’ and, at the end of it all, Arsenal had squandered a gilt-edged chance to pile the pressure on Manchester United at the top of the Premier League.
The leaders’ own slip-up at Wolves means this setback is anything but terminal but Arsène Wenger has a job on his hands to lift his players ahead of the next test – against United’s conquerors.

The major injury doubt ahead of this trip north was Alex Song. He was given a 30 per cent chance of recovering from the leg injury he sustained against Everton in midweek but failed to beat those odds. Diaby stepped up from the bench and so did Andrey Arshavin – the Russian replaced Tomas Rosicky.

There was a familiar face on the Newcastle bench – Sol Campbell – and by common consensus this was a good time to face the former Gunner’s latest club. Andy Carroll would not have been fit to face Arsenal but his £35million deadline-day departure to Liverpool had left St. James’ Park under a cloud.

Lest we forget, Carroll’s towering header won the reverse fixture at Emirates Stadium this season and, in his absence, the likes of Djourou and Laurent Koscielny were probably expecting a more comfortable afternoon.

But perhaps not as comfortable as the first half turned out.

A roar greeted the home side as Phil Dowd blew the first whistle but the black-and-white hoards were silenced within 43 seconds. That’s how long it took for Walcott to slip a low shot past Steve Harper after Arshavin’s flick had found him in his favourite position, just right of centre on the shoulder of the last defender.

Newcastle’s fans must be sick of the sight of Walcott – he scored twice here in the Carling Cup in October – but they had other players to worry about soon enough.

The first of those was Djourou. Less than three minutes had elapsed when the Swiss centre back met Arshavin’s pacy left-wing free-kick to direct a header in off the underside of the bar. It was his first goal for the Club and rich reward for his recent form.

Dazed and confused, Newcastle were there for the taking. And Arsenal twisted the knife after 10 minutes with a carbon copy of their opener at West Ham last month. Walcott picked out Van Persie from the right of the penalty area and the Dutchman fired first-time past Harper.

When this place is noisy you can’t hear the pocket of away fans high in the upper reaches of the upper tier. Now they were all you could hear. It was almost eerie.

As Newcastle tried desperately to gain a foothold in the match, Arsenal continued to carve out chances. Walcott sent a ‘pitching wedge’ over the bar from Fabregas’ pass, Arshavin just failed to pick out Wilshere’s charge into the box, Diaby volleyed wide and Harper saved well from Fabregas following a cute flick from Wilshere.

For their part, the hosts looked most dangerous when they fizzed crosses into the Arsenal box. Mike Williamson got up well to meet one but Kevin Nolan inadvertently nodded his header away from danger.

A rather more emphatic header brought the visitors their fourth goal in the 26th minute. A flurry of one-touch passes ended with Sagna in acres of space to measure a cross from the right. Van Persie arrived unmarked to flash a header past Harper.

The Dutchman admitted after his recent Wigan treble that he had come to terms with the prospect of never scoring a hat-trick. Yet he was on the cusp of another treble. Only a wayward finish and a solid Harper save denied him that pleasure before the break.

Arsenal could not have asked for a better start to the first half. They could not have had worse start to the second period.

Within three minutes of the restart Djourou hobbled down the tunnel with a knee injury. A few minutes later Diaby followed him after being shown a straight red card for shoving Barton to the ground – a reaction to a challenge from his fellow midfielder.

Suddenly, Newcastle’s tails were up. 

Szczesny saved well from Danny Simpson after the right back bundled his way into the box but the Pole had no chance with Barton’s penalty, hit low to the keeper’s right after Koscielny was adjudged to have fouled Best.

Interestingly, Nolan wrestled Szczesny to the ground as he tried to retrieve the ball after the spot-kick – much like Diaby had treated Barton. The result? A yellow card… for the Arsenal keeper.

Szczesny made another decent stop from Williamson’s header but, with 16 minutes left, he was beaten again. This time Best did well to bring down a left-wing cross and slide the ball under the keeper.

The atmosphere was much different now and Newcastle flew at Arsenal. Szczesny came into his own, saving brilliantly from substitute Nile Ranger and handling a barrage of crosses with great assurance.
 
But Newcastle sensed a miraculous comeback and Barton gave them added hope when he converted another penalty after Koscielny was again penalised – this time extremely harshly.

The great escape was complete when Tiote slammed in a shot from the edge of the area and Nolan could even have won it for Newcastle when his effort skimmed just wide in stoppage time.

It was Arsenal’s turn to be stunned. But when the dust settles on this crazy weekend, only one thing will matter.

Newcastle United Vs Arsenal - Match Preview




Arsène Wenger has been a consistent critic of the January transfer window – but it has undoubtedly worked in his favour this season.

The week began with the biggest deadline day splurge in the history of English football. Chelsea lavished £71 million on two major additions – Fernando Torres and David Luiz. Then Andy Carroll filled the gap left at Liverpool by the Spanish striker for a cool £35 million.

The last of those deals was done so late that Newcastle had no time to buy a replacement. You can easily argue that the loss of their striker and talisman will affect the mentality of Alan Pardew’s side when Arsenal visit at St James Park on Saturday – but it will have no physical impact. The England striker is injured and would not have played anyway.

However while the immediate advantage is minimal, the benefit for Arsenal is more obvious in the longer-term.

Carroll should be back when leaders Manchester United go to Anfield on March 6. Meanwhile Carlo Ancelotti’s acquisitions will have bedded-in by the time Sir Alex Ferguson’s side visit Stamford Bridge five days before that. And they will certainly be contributing for the return fixture at Old Trafford on May 7.

That game comes days after Arsenal entertain Manchester United, the only remaining game for Wenger’s men against the current top four.

The Emirates Stadium side have already fulfilled their fixtures with Chelsea and even managed to get their return game with Manchester City out of the way at the start of January before Roberto Mancini signed Edin Dzeko.

Despite the ‘telephone number’ transfer fees you cannot be sure this will make one jot of difference on the pitch of course. But it has certainly done Arsenal no harm.

And, after this week spending as much money as it cost to bring the nurtured Arsenal team together, then pulling off a confident 4-2 win at highly-rated Sunderland, Wenger argues Chelsea are back as fully-fledged title contenders.

However the Stamford Bridge side are ten points off Manchester United, double the distance of Wenger’s men. So if, as the manager asserts, the west Londoners are “serious contenders” then their counterparts in the north of the capital must be of grave concern at Old Trafford.

“I believe it is quite open right now,” he said. “Chelsea are still in there. They have found their form back. They have had a consistent run and I look at them being serious contenders for the title.

“But for me it is down to our performances and our consistency. I am confident that we have a good chance because we have quality and talent that nobody denies. But also we have spirit, attitude and a great togetherness. You can see that when we play. There is something special in our team that is coming out from game to game. That’s why I firmly believe in our chance.”

After picking up knocks against Everton in midweek, Song is “70:30 against” for Newcastle while Theo Walcott should be OK. Wenger confirmed that Lukasz Fabianski’s season is over after undergoing surgery on the shoulder he damaged against Manchester City. Samir Nasri (hamstring) is still at least two weeks away.

Newcastle not only lost Carroll this week, Shola Ameobi fractured his cheekbone in the 1-0 defeat at Fulham and will be sidelined for six weeks. Outside the top four, the Tyneside club are the biggest scorers in the Premier League but these two have accounted for 14 of their 36 strikes.

Carroll scored the only goal in November at Emirates Stadium and celebrated his header by running straight to manager Chris Hughton, the manager who preceded him out of the St James’ Park exit in December. Pardew has kept the ship steady but the events of this week leave you with an increasingly precarious perception of Newcastle. They are both above halfway and six points off the drop zone. Like more than half of the top-flight, they are a few defeats away from the dogfight.

It is a far cry from late last year when they beat Sunderland 5-1 and, the following weekend, pulled off a wonderful 1-0 win in North London.

“They had a fantastic game against us at the Emirates, where they did very well collectively,” recalled Wenger.

“We lost the game that we will never forget to a header from Carroll. But we were a bit unlucky as well on the day because they had only one shot on target and that was their goal.

“Carroll has been injured for a long time, so it is difficult to predict whether it will be easier [without him]. Sometimes a team finds a different balance when a player goes out, so it is very hard to know.

“But certainly it is difficult to sell a striker of that calibre at 10.15pm and bring somebody in at 10.45pm. They have taken an opportunity to sell the player at a high price with the gamble of course that they might not replace him. But they have Ameobi, Best, Ranger – they have strikers still, don’t worry, and they will certainly want to invest that money later on.

“But they are still a good side, Newcastle. When they played at Fulham this week, the pitch was not the best and I think it handicapped the two teams. We expect Newcastle to be up for it against us and so we prepare ourselves to meet a good team.”

Saturday is Arsenal’s last trip outside London until they go to the Nou Camp on March 8. Much may have changed by then. The Carling Cup Final will either help or hinder their psyche while Manchester United will have gone through arguably the most treacherous run of the remaining campaign.

The last three games – Ipswich, Huddersfield and Everton – have fuelled the suspicion that this Arsenal side can constantly find a way to win.

If they map a successful path to March then this season could start to get very interesting.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Song and Walcott injured in Everton game

 http://cdn.bleacherreport.net/images_root/slides/photos/000/510/691/106612898_display_image.jpg?1290026929

The names of Alex Song and Theo Walcott have been added to Arsenal's injury list after both picked up knocks during the 2-1 win over Everton on Tuesday night.

Song was replaced by Abou Diaby at half time and although Walcott completed the game he was nursing an ankle problem after the final whistle.

"Song cannot walk," said Arsène Wenger during his post-match press conference. "I don’t know what he has got.

"He was kicked, I think it was by Koscielny, he knocks out everybody in our team! So we have to see how he responds to that in the next days, but he cannot walk at the moment."

The Arsenal boss also gave an update on Samir Nasri's fitness after the French star limped out of Sunday's FA Cup win over Huddersfield.

"For Nasri, the scan shows a hamstring strain. [He will be out for] 21 days," reported Wenger.

Arsenal 2 -1 Everton - Match Report




There are ‘moments’ in any title-winning season; history may portray this as one.

Arsenal trailed to a highly-controversial goal for 45 fraught and frantic minutes on Tuesday night before a rapid double repaired their Premier League aspirations.
Louis Saha struck midway through the first half to give Everton the lead. The Frenchman was clearly offside when Seamus Coleman chipped through a pass but the officials somehow interpreted that the ‘second phase’ had been enacted when Laurent Koscielny’s attempted clearance dropped into the path of the striker.

The decision hung over the game like a black cloud after that. The visitors’ robust, well-structured game plan only added to the frustration.

In the circumstances, it was highly ironic that Andrey Arshavin would prove to be a catalyst for the revival. The Russian has been off-form recently and therefore started this game on the bench. Eight minutes after his arrival in the middle of the second half, he would volley Arsenal level.

The goal broke Everton’s resistance and, five minutes later, Koscielny plundered a header from Robin van Persie’s corner.

With Manchester United and a resurgent Chelsea both winning this evening, victory was essential. Arsenal held their nerve and their sense of injustice sufficiently to come through unscathed.
It bodes well for the battle ahead.

Before Sunday’s FA Cup tie with Huddersfield, Wenger had predicted that he would play two different sides for back to back games in 48 hours. He was nearly right.

Only Koscielny was retained from the weekend. The returnees were entirely expected – the notables were Tomas Rosicky replacing Arshavin and Bacary Sagna coming back after suffering a head injury last week against Ipswich.

January had been a mammoth month for Arsenal and had ended with a mammoth transfer deadline day.

The passing of both represented a minor watershed in the campaign. A line had been drawn and the rest of the season started now.

However, Arsenal did not match the mood in the opening 15 minutes. The home side were lethargic and Everton made them pay. They did not create chances, only pressure, but the visitors had outplayed Arsenal at Emirates Stadium last season and were unfortunate to only get a point. Despite their lowly position, Moyes' men were of a similar calibre this term – tough, aggressive with a more than a smattering of class.

Arsenal knew what was coming but struggled to cope.

However by the quarter-hour, the home side had woken up. Van Persie’s right-wing free-kick was deflected behind by Phil Neville. Then the Dutchman backheeled a wonderful opportunity for the onrushing Fabregas, who shanked his shot wide.

In the 22nd minute, Alex Song challenged Johnny Heitinga on the edge of the area and the ball fell kindly for Walcott, whose drive cannoned off the legs of Tim Howard.

The home side had snatched control of the game so the opening goal was against the run of play in itself. The controversy surrounding it only added to the annoyance around Emirates Stadium.

Coleman tried to find Saha from midfield but miscued his attempted chip through. When the ball was played, the Frenchman was offside however Koscielny tried to clear the ball and hooked it straight into the path of Saha, who played on and scored.

The Arsenal defence stood aghast as Everton celebrated. They had fully expected a flag. After the ball had been placed back on the centre spot, the referee and his assistant consulted but, to a cacophony of boos, the original decision stood.

The home tried to rally. Djourou nudged a header wide from Van Persie’s corner then Fabregas burst through and drove beyond the far post.

But a sense of injustice remained – both on the pitch and in the crowd.

Arsenal were struggling to retain their poise while, quite understandably, Everton were looking to take advantage. Diniyar Bilyaletdinov and Marouane Fellaini drove dangerously down the left-hand channel just before the whistle.

The half-time conversations around Emirates were crammed full with indignation and interpretations of the offside law. That goal was just not going away.
Abou Diaby replaced Song for the restart. The Cameroon international had required treatment during the first half and presumably that had forced him off.

The opening 10 minutes were full of energy and endeavour by Arsenal. Van Persie hit a free-kick into the wall and then stung Howard’s hands. Inbetween Gael Clichy’s optimistic drive was deflected wide.
Tensions were running high. On the hour, Van Persie earned the sixth booking of the evening for trying to haul Mikael Arteta to his feet after a foul.
It was an indication of the frustration Arsenal were now suffering. Everton’s shape and discipline only added the problem. Arshavin came on for Rosicky, then Nicklas Bendtner replaced Jack Wilshere.

It was a throw of the dice by Wenger – a gamble.

And it paid off.

In the 70th minute, Fabregas clipped a lofted ball forward and Jack Rodwell’s miscued header dropped kindly for Arshavin, who volleyed home. It was similar to the first strike, only this time the scorer was clearly onside when the ball was played.

Meanwhile, the identity of the scorer was a massive irony. Arshavin was perhaps the only player on the pitch that needed a goal more than his team.

In the wake of the strike, Arsenal were re-born.

Bendtner bicycled kicked a shot into the arms of Howard, then Van Persie’s free-kick forced the Everton No 1 to fingertip the ball on to the roof of the net.

Shortly afterwards, Arsenal struck again. Van Persie floated a corner to the far post and Koscielny thundered home his third goal of the season.

Everton responded as best they could but, after the early goal, they had barely tested Wojciech Szczesny. It was too little too late for them.

Arsenal, however, had found their goal-scoring touch just in time tonight.