Arsenal: The Miracle In Munich

March 11, 2013

It would come to be known as The Miracle In Munich: the night an unfancied, under siege Arsenal team overcame all the odds to defeat Bayern Munich on their own turf.

Trailing by three goals to one from the first leg, the Arsenal boys somehow managed a 3-1 victory of their own, forcing the game into extra time.

Then an Arsenal fourth – scored by Theo Walcott after a devastating break – booked the North London team a berth in the next round of the Champions League.

Well… maybe that’s how it will be remembered.

And right now, with a few days to go before kick-off in the Allianz Arena and every footballing outcome still a possibility, that’s how I prefer to see it turning out.

I don’t want to preview the game here (Big Raddy will do that better than anyone in the business on Wednesday morning) but my irrational feeling of optimism about the game has set me to thinking about how different supporters handle these occasions in such different ways.

On paper and on all recent evidence, we have not got a prayer of getting through to the next round.

Bayern properly thrashed us at the Emirates – leading many Arsenal fans to liken their style to that of the “old Arsenal” of the early Wenger years.

Oh what we would give for “New Arsenal” to have some of that combination of athleticism, power, skill and efficiency!

Yet despite all that, I cannot help but feel hopeful for the game. My (fantastical) reasoning goes along these lines:

  • We nick a slightly lucky goal “early doors” (a big looper over the ‘keeper off Mertesacker’s left shoulder, for example).
  • Bayern don’t want to risk anything silly happening, so they sit back to protect their aggregate lead.
  • With 15 minutes of normal time remaining, Gervinho (on for Podolski) goes on an amazing run down the left wing. He beats one, he beats two, he beats three, he goes back and beats two again for good measure then he decides to put a deadly cross into the box. Now we all know what Gerv the Swerve’s crossing is like, right? The cross spins off his boot into the top of the net. Two nil to the Arse.
  • A minute later, with Bayern still shell shocked, a Tomas Rosicky screamer puts us three up. If we can hold on for a little over 10 minutes we’re through!
  • But this is Arsenal. Bayern come out all guns blazing and score just before the final whistle.
  • We look dejected and knackered going into extra time. Bayern are all over us but the Pole in Goal is in the form of his life.
  • From one Munich attack he pulls down a top-corner bound Kroos rocket with one hand and in the same motion sends it down the right wing where Cazorla picks it up and plays it first time to Wilshere “charging through the midfield.” Jack surges past the Bayern midfield, spots Theo Walcott’s run and plays him in.
  • Theo finishes like we know he can.  Cue pandemonium.

Clearly this makes me a certain type of fan. Let’s classify my subgroup as “the Delusionals.”

The Delusionals

Our favourite quotation is from Marshall Foch, a French First World War general who said, during the First Battle of the Marne: “My center is yielding. My right is retreating. Situation excellent. I am attacking.” Now that’s what you call optimism.

We assume that the light at the end of the tunnel IS the end of the tunnel, and not an oncoming train;

We never look a gift horse in the mouth (which is why we have seldom had success betting on the gee-gees).

When the weather forecast says “rain” we think “great – don’t have to wash the car.”

Sometimes people take advantage of us.

But there are some other identifiable sub groups in Arsenal supporterdom, whose strange and particular characteristics also emerge in the run-up to a difficult game:

The Duvet Wearers

These timorous souls may share some of the hope expressed by the Delusionals, but they do not share the blind optimism.

They deal with the stress of the impending fixture by hiding from it – sometimes literally – under the duvet (hence the name).

More subtly, you might find the Duvet Wearer taking a keen interest in cricket or rugby in the days before the match. Or in gardening if they are not into other sports.

When asked “do you think we can do it in Munich?” they might typically reply “ummm, eh? I was just thinking have you seen that new Sri Lankan spinner? Wrists like a corkscrew…”

In general life, Duvet Wearers are the sort of people who put unopened bills straight in the drawer in the hope that they’ll go away.

The Private Frazers

These supporters are so called because they remind me of the great Dad’s Army character played by John Laurie. (If you’re not familiar with Dad’s Army, it was a classic, brilliant British sitcom of the 1960s and 1970s). Whatever the situation, Private Frazer could be relied upon to take account of all the circumstances, weigh them up carefully, then declare: “We’re all doomed. Doomed I tell you! We’re doomed.”

Arsenal’s Private Frazers are the ones who can’t deal with hope. They feel that if they hope too much and we end up losing, the disappointment will crush them. To protect themselves they deny the possibility of success. I know many Gooners who fall into this camp (one friend of mine – also known to Mickydidit – regularly bets on the opposition and generally predicts disaster in all our games).

Day to day, the Frazer approach to life is to expect the worst in all things. If someone approaches a Frazer in a supermarket to tell them that they are the millionth person to walk through the doors and they have won £10,000, the Frazer will suspect a scam and run away, leaving the next person (quite possibly a Delusional) to walk away with the dosh.

The Bowies

These fans, like the pop legend, swing both ways. In the days before an important tie they alternate between raging optimism (“Come on! We can do it! Remember Anfield 1989!”) and utter desperation (“Sob! We can’t even beat Bradford, what chance have we got against the best team in Europe?”).

Living with a Bowie during these times can be quite stressful because there are so many ch-ch-changes.

In normal life Bowies are entertaining to be around, but somewhat frustrating. For example you book dinner with them at a great Italian restaurant because you remember that when you last met up some months earlier they were raving about Italian cuisine. But when they turn up they look faintly offended and tell you they can’t stand the stuff.

I’m married to a Bowie.

The Steady Eddies

I would like to be a Steady Eddie. These lads (and lasses) are very measured in their attitude to the upcoming game. They’ll say things like “Look, it’s obviously a huge ask to win by three goals in Munich but you never know. Let’s just hope it’s a great game of football.”

In real life, Steady Eddies are seldom discombobulated, they are rarely surprised and when they are, they react very calmly.

They have low stress and live long lives.

Boring bastards.

If you feel you don’t fit into any of these groups (all of whom, incidentally, are just as passionate about Arsenal as each other) then perhaps you might like to suggest which ones I have missed.

Or just share your own approach to a big and difficult game.

RockyLives


Arsenal Arsenal Open Day

March 10, 2013

Good Morning “Arsenal Arsenal” Blog World.

You will all have noticed how totally insufferable it is having ten long days in an Arsenal Matchless World.

What can be done? I am not suggesting that we on this site are alone, or indeed, that a problem exists. We are all Arsenal Addicts and we like our daily fix, but I am wondering to myself what a blog is about, and is there “another way”, even if only during these dark days.

Let’s look at the facts.

Football is the arena, and Arsenal is the specialized subject.

Blogworld is International, and covers all time zones.

Even with a topic covered by a daily post, debate can quickly switch to a different subject.

Could individuals register a post/topic at any time of day or night, and how could this work?

Is a more interactive site a possibility?

Are there ideas out there that people would like to see implemented. The site gets many hits from people that don’t post, and perhaps there is a reason for this. Could potential posters be put off by the cosy nature of a small group of regulars?

Perhaps today we could throw open the doors, and invite ideas?

What would you like this site to be, for you?

Written by MickyDidIt


Mr Wenger. Read this & Win

March 9, 2013

Strange to have a winter weekend without real football. Yes, there are matches to fill the interlull, but it’s not real football, is it? Proper football is any game with Arsenal in it, the rest is just sport.

So what to do in an Interlull? I spend time in art galleries and museums (yes, I know – it doesn’t fit the Big Raddy image).  Some have to go shopping, or wash cars or take the kids to MonkeyWorld. Some will take the desperate measure of watching Liverpool/Spurs in the hope both teams will lose. Whatever it is, these are just ruses to fill in time until the next adrenalin fix, which happens to be next Weds. evening.

The lack of interest is mirrored in blogworld. All the AFC blogs are full of desperate attempts to interest the reader (as is this). Would a discussion of the defenses lapses be of interest? No – we have seen/read it all. What about a discussion about the next manager? Done it. A profile of an ex-player? Always interesting but whom? Which players to buy from Leagues we know nothing about? Yawn,

You get the idea.

Would it be better to have a post-free day? Well, AA has managed to publish a post everyday since inception and the plan is to continue in this vein.

Would a post on Joel Campbell’s progress titillate? Or Benik Afobe’s very sad ligament damage? Or Connor Henderson’s decision to leave at season’s end? If so, why don’t you write something.

Gadzooks. After all the musing, I have an idea ….. let’s discuss the dreadful cost caused by the lack of silly haircuts in the current Arsenal  team.

Since the departure of Alex Song,we have had to suffer normal everyday hair. I hoped Monreal would bring some tonsorial peculiarity but no, his barnet is dullness personified. Same with all the newboys. Corporal Jenks? Short back and sides – same with Merts, TV, Ox, Kos, Little Jack, Giroud, Theo etc. The only fellows who bring a bit of pezzazz are The Domed Mekon and Bacary’s lucky extensions.

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His Best Asset

We need more. The players are letting us down – we haven’t even got a mohican or a pony-tail or a chap with AFC shaved into his bonce.

I blame Mr Wenger. Look at his barnet. Ordinary, neat, well-barbered without a hair out of place, And what of Stevie B? A superb cut, which in my opinion is the only way a Real Man would wear his hair (though some may disagree) but ordinary.

If we are to win a trophy we need spectacle. Something to distract a defence whilst Santi scores.

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images-4Unknown

These blokes could play and my reasoning is that once they went back to having sensible haircuts they turned  into James Milner – good, efficient but lacking in va-va-voom.

Mr. Wenger. Sometimes the answer is simple- Forget diet, forget tactics, forget training. See the light.  Imaginative Hair = Imaginative Football.

Take the lads down to Michael Barnes Hairdressers in Shaftesbury Avenue and get him to sort them out.

In case you think this is just frivolous ramblings, may I point you to The Good Book and the story of Samson and Delilah.

QED


Worse than an interlull

March 8, 2013

The gap between our visit to the swamplands of N17 and our trip to the Munich is beginning to feel interminably long. Well it is….10 days with absolutely nothing to cheer us up, no meaningful transfer gossip, even the Arab led consortium bid for our club died in the gossip columns as soon as it appeared.

So what do we talk about? Actually maybe this is a good thing, maybe it’s giving us time away from the club, lets be honest to search the Internet for daily news about our club is a bit of an Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, was this what we did pre Internet? We probably picked up a daily paper, listened to the radio, but the long and short is there was nothing to really talk about between games..

Pre game day …… start to get excited.
Game day….really excited and what team will we play (easier in the days of 12 man squads)
Post game day….revel/despair at the result

Now the post match inquests last longer, the build up to the next more fraught. Strange that after most wins the jubilation lasts for shorter than the angst that follows a defeat.

I guess we all know there is not a lot to look forward to, we have accepted our fate in the Champions League as fans, lets hope the players haven’t as we could be on to an absolute hiding, and then there is the league run in.

It feels like we have accepted our season is over and this interlull’ish feeling could last until May. And then maybe we start to get a hint of what things are like for Stoke fans after January, safe from relegation and with nothing to play for….we have a long run in, and in order to find some enjoyment we may need to reconsider our motives of why we support this Grand Old Club of ours.

Written by Gooner in Exile (very hastily)


What do you think needs to change at Arsenal?

March 7, 2013

I understand that some on here are keeping their innermost, darkest thoughts to themselves, rightly so in my book, feeling that now is not the time. We have an almighty battle to win, and there can be no distractions.

However, The Arsenal is a business, and things need to be planned ahead. I would be very interested in seeing the outcome of a secret ballot where voters can hide in the shadows of anonymity.

We all know things on and off the pitch could be improved, after all we are not quite “The greatest team the world has ever seen”. Nearly, but not quite.

My view is that tweaks ought to be made in many areas, but what I’m interested to see is how people line up in the broadest of broad stroke change.

*Option 5, ‘All of the above’ refers to changing the ownership, manager and playing staff

Answer 6. is an opportunity for those who shout the loudest to come clean and could be expanded to say: I want the team I support to lose every game to force change, and I honestly couldn’t care less who owns the club, if in the short term it means we spend more money than anyone else. So long as we trophy-up, it’s irrelevant what they do with the history, standards and community of what Arsenal stands for.

I know this is very simplistic, and in almost every case there will be a fusion of ideas in most heads as to the way forward, you can tick more than one box, but try to restrict yourself to choosing the option that is closest to the way you feel.

Written by MickyDidIt89


Arsenal planning Old Trafford rescue

March 6, 2013

Last night Manchester United faced Real Madrid in a key game of their season, and the master tactician decided to leave Wayne Rooney on the bench, in his place on the pitch were the ageing Giggs, inexperienced Wellbeck and unreliable Nani.

It appears that Ferguson has forgotten what Rooney is best at, playing football, I haven’t seen many players as gifted with a football as Wayne Rooney was at 19 but it can be argued that he hasn’t progressed, at Old Trafford earlier this season Rooney was given a job to do against us, it wasn’t to be the playmaker or the goal getter, it was to make sure Mikel Arteta had no time on the ball when he had possession, every time he got the ball Rooney was in close proximity snapping to get the ball back.

Is that really what Fergie paid £30m for? A man marking midfielder, what happened?

When you see Rooney play for England with Jack Wilshere you can see he enjoys the game, pass and move, receive again, Rooney becomes once again the player I saw when he first burst on the scene, full of energy, cleverness and skill.

So if we can somehow muster a Champions League place for next season, and if the board are really going to show some ambition and willingness to spend the money, lets make Rooney our first target. I am certain he would love to come and play for Arsene, proper football, enjoy the game once more.

The second target is Ashley Young another typical Fergie purchase, paid £15-20m for him and then uses him extensively, only to spend the next season on the becnch as Fergie has acquired new toys to play with, he has already signed Zaha for 2013-14 so what chances will Ashley Young get next season with the improving Kagawa also looking for increased game time?

Come on Arsenal show some real balls in the transfer market this summer and start a campaign now to acquire two players that could bring a lot to the current squad, and more importantly make people sit up and take notice.

Written by Gooner in Exile


Reflections on a Derby Day Defeat

March 5, 2013

I hate losing to the Spuds.

Obviously I don’t like losing to anyone: not Chavs or Dippers; not Surrey Mancs or Northern Oilers; not Orcs or jumped-up Yorkshire giant killers.

But a Spud defeat always brings a special hurt in a tender place, like trying to straddle a fence and landing hard on your gentleman’s under-chassis.

However, Sunday’s loss was a curious one in that, since the dust settled, it seems to have become all things to all men (and women).

If you believed before the game that we were a mediocre team in terminal decline, there was nothing in that result and performance to change your mind.

Likewise if you felt we were a superior team and squad to the Spuds, you could point to the fact that we were the better team for most of the game and only lost through making a couple of silly mistakes.

If you thought we were a team with great creativity but no defensive nous: the performance proved your case.

If you felt that we had never adequately replaced Brave Sir Robin and, therefore, did not have the finishing power to win tight games: Bingo!

In fact supporters from just about every shade of opinion (and we have more shades than a Roy Orbison lookalike convention) could find something from the match to back up their prejudices.

And boy have we been happy to share those prejudices. The more immature among us call them FACTS, with capital letters and write about them at great length in the digital equivalent of green ink. The more considered, recognise them as opinions and present them accordingly.

I have read them all and, frankly, I feel like I’ve been on the receiving end of a barrage – like standing near the corner flag when Emmanuel Adebayor is taking shooting practice at the goal.

And I have come to the conclusion that the latest North London Derby tells us precisely nothing about where we are now as a team and what the future holds.

The only certainty is that we started the day with the possibility of being just one point behind the reprobates, but we ended it seven points adrift of them and with the task of qualifying for next year’s Champion’s League much, much harder.

Their win on Sunday is not a shift in power in North London. Even if they finish ahead of us this season (leaving poor old St T to rotate in his sepulchre) it will not constitute a shift in power. Let’s remember that last May the all-knowing scribes of Fleet Street declared that a permanent shift in power was under way in Manchester.

Sunday was just a close game that we narrowly lost.

Across the season we have played the Spuds twice, won one, lost one and scored six to their three. Over both games we were the better team for, I would say, 140 out of 180 minutes (although that includes a fair chunk of the first game where they were down to ten men).

Arsenal have been underachieving this year. It has made people angry and angry people look for scapegoats.

Our scapegoats range from the Head Goat himself, Mr A Wenger, to Per Mertesacker (too slow); Thomas Vermaelen (too error-prone); Laurent Koscielny (too own-goaly); Wojciech Szczesny (too Almunia-ish); Gervinho (too run-in-a-straight-line-ish); Olivier Giroud (too unHenry-ish) and so on.

Personally I blame Vic Akers and his tight shorts, which must surely distract even the most focused of our players.

Whether or not we get top four, it’s fair to say it will have been a particularly poor year, with embarrassing cup exits and a failure to challenge in the league.

But I don’t conclude from that that our players are rubbish or that Arsene is a busted flush. I conclude, simply, that we are having a bad year and that we can put it right next year.

Part of the reason it’s a bad year is because we had another lot of new arrivals, lost our star player (again) and you can’t expect all those new players to form an instant rapport and pick up a new system without hitches.

There have been games this season that I have enjoyed much, much less than Sunday’s defeat. Away games like Norwich, where we didn’t turn up, didn’t fight and didn’t register an attempt on goal in 90 minutes.

At least at the Swamp we fought and tried hard, even if our game was a bit off.

Some of our shortcomings are apparent (we really need a world class striker) and I expect them to be put right in the summer.

For now let’s get on and, as GiE said yesterday, try and win every game we have left and show the critics what we can do.

Sunday, after all, was just another game.

RockyLives


Caught with our pants down…..again

March 4, 2013

From the off this was never an easy fixture, and also it was not a must win fixture, but in my and many others eyes for any hope of finishing above that lot down the road it was definitely a must not lose fixture.

Fro the start there was an added edge to the play, I thought we did well in possession and moved it well enough through the midfield, in the final third Jack failed to pick passes to Giroud, Cazorla and Walcott unfortunately hardly featured. Spurs were rarely presenting a threat, apart from set pieces from silly free kicks, but they did nothing with them and our defence coped admirably.

A few tackles were flying around and Adebayor was lucky not to see red in consecutive North London Derby’s for an ill timed lunge on Wilshere. The only thing that saved him was that his leading foot was not off the ground, everything else about the challenge was red card worthy, late, out of control, studs up and endangering the safety of others. Clattenberg decided it wasn’t a red and brandished a yellow instead.

0-0 at half time would have been a fair result given the 36 minutes played so far. But then we decided (as we so often have this season) to gift an opening goal to the opposition. Sigurdsson running with the ball had all the time in the world to pick a pass to the through running Bale, who absolutely no one had decided to track. At first glance it looked to me like he was miles offside but to be fair to the linesman he was spot on, BFG had shifted back a couple of yards to track the run of Adebayor, the rest of the defence did not respond and Bale was through with just Szczesny to beat, which he duly did.

1-0 down was not too concerning, yes it had got the home fans up on their feet, but the game was still finely balanced, that was until 2 minutes later and we decided yet again to play a high line when we shouldn’t have, this time Lennon leaving Monreal in his wake and leaving Vermaelen standing still rushed on to a through ball to make it 2-0. To be honest I also felt like Szczesny got caught out of position on this one, but with the defence in front of him parting as regularly as they do I feel sorry for him and can’t be too harsh on the young man.

2-0 down and we had given ourselves a difficult task again.

We started the second half briskly and the deficit was halved by a combination of Mertesacker and Bale, I’d say it was probably a Bale own goal as Mertesacker’s flick was not really going anywhere towards goal. A bit of belief and Arsenal pushed on in search of the equaliser, unfortunately Spurs were ready for the battle and dug in for the following 40 minutes to hold on to victory.

Our players toiled hard, but it is unrealistic to expect the attack and midfield to constantly pull the defensive mistakes round to a positive result on every occasion. Its about time the defence stood up and took some responsibility for the results this season.

I’m sure you all have a lot more to say on the game so i’ll leave it up to you to fill in the blanks, now the big question remains can we qualify for Champions League, but don’t worry its not a trophy so there is no need to get too worked up if we don’t is there?

We can just cruise along to seasons end now, bar performing some miracle in Munich, we have 11 games to go (10 in the league) so we can relax and enjoy them for what they are…meaningless rubbers, and look to build for next season, blood some youngsters and see what improvements are needed throughout the squad.

Ratings

Szczesny – 7 could have done better with his positioning for the second, good handling all afternoon

Jenkinson – 7 solid from the young man, failed to offer too much support going forward because he was pressed back by Siggurdson

Mertesacker – 7 minus one for the goal against plus one for the goal, rest of his play what we have come to expect

Vermaelen – 5 culpable on both goals

Monreal – 6 undergoing a Premier League baptism of fire, he hasn’t quite found the pace yet.

Arteta – 6 went quietly about his business

Wilshere – 7 runs and works and tries to drag the team forward, maybe a case of trying too hard first half and trying to force the final ball

Ramsey – 7 thought he had a very tidy game, battled hard to win control of the midfield.

Walcott – 6 very quiet

Cazorla – 7 quiet first half, came more into the game second

Giroud – 7 led the line willingly but was well marshalled by their defence and had little support.

Subs:

Rosciky – 7 be good to get some more regular game time from the pass and move master

Podolski – 7 got involved, unlucky not to pick his way through on a number of occasions.

Written by Gooner in Exile


A One Simian Team?

March 3, 2013

Are Spurs really a one simian team? Looking at this new AVB inspired team one has to say, No.

It is true and completely normal that the Spurs team is full of miscreants, numbskulls and vermin, but some of them can actually play football, and this is becoming a problem.  There is a core developing in the murky swamplands of N17 who not only have youth and talent  but also a team ethic which is new to the Lilly-Livers.

In my opinion, the signing of AVB has transformed a comedy club into asomething slightly less funny. Of course, they will never attain the class and substance of the big club down the road, but they are improving and have a slim chance of finishing above The Arsenal for the first time since simian’s learned to stand upright.

By the way, if there are any Spurs fans still reading (which in itself is an enormous assumption – the ability to read that is), please don’t bother commenting upon the post – you will only confirm what we already know …..

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Looking for housing in the Manchester area…..

I could bore you with the qualities of the various Spurs players, but you will already have your opinions and probably more knowledge than this writer. Suffice it to say that although Spurs have a decent team, ours is better, and if Arsenal play to the best of their abilities and we don’t get chopped by today’s referee, Arsenal will win. We have better players, a better manager, and a better team.

The referee: Mark Clattenberg. His record this season is Pl 15. Y43 R6.. A sending off less than every third game. Worrying. Let’s hope the game is about the players and not the referee. What Clattenburg (who was the referee in the Chelsea racism row) is good at is punishing dives, which given the propensity of Spurs players to hit the deck when tripped by imaginary feet is of benefit to AFC.

Arsenal: Do we risk a 4-3-3 with Walcott, Giroud and Podolski or play Ramsey to bolster the midfield?  BFG/TV or Kos/TV or BFG/Kos?  The Corporal or Coquelin or 3 CB’s?  Ramsey or Rosicky? Lots of possibilities ,aren’t there?

There are fears about Jenkinson against Bale. In my opinion we have no alternative but to trust Jenks will cope, after all he is a full England International and Bale is Welsh! (sorry SH).

I believe we play better when on the front foot and having an outball to Giroud, as such my preference would be to play 4-3-3 but Mr Wenger disagrees, so this is whom I expect to play:

spuds v arse

My dislike of this line-up is that it forces Santi to play on the left of midfield rather than the middle where he is so influential.

What we lack is a man-marker. We used to have a player who could track a dangerman – but AW doesn’t think in that way; his focus is entirely upon how Arsenal play and not the  opposition. It is said that we have made no plans to cope with Monkeyboy and I believe it. Nor can we cope with set-plays where Caulker is dangerous. Hopefully, we will score more than them because I cannot see us leaving  SHL with a defensive clean sheet.

Today’s explorer:  Hennry “Boy” Kelsey (1667 – 1724). Boy Kelsey (fine name for a man) was the first European to explore the Great Plains of America. A member of the Hudson Company, he walked through Saskatchewan and the flatlands of Canada, reaching as far as the Missouri river in order to establish trade routes with the local Indian tribes (the Blackfeet & Algonquin).

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Better looking than our Kelsey & he has a Beard

Boy Kelsey was born in Greenwich, very close to Woolwich which makes him a Gooner. On his 6th journey across the Atlantic Kelsey established trade routes with the Inuit. He died peacefully back in London at the age of 57. In  Canada there was a Kelsey postage stamp.

Would a draw be a good result today? Probably. It will be a tense afternoon for both sets of supporters.

P:S: We read earlier in the week about the illness of DanDan’s Spurs supporting brother and his fervent wish to see Spurs finish above Arsenal this season. I know all who read DD’s message will be thinking of him in the unlikely event of a Spurs win, because whomever we support we are a football fraternity who experience the same highs and lows following our teams.

Should the Miscreants cheat a win, my anguish will be compensated by thinking of  DanDan’s brother’s smiling face.

COYRRG

Written by Big Raddy


Dear Mr. Wenger,

March 2, 2013

Dear Mr. Wenger,

Since our last trophy win in 2004/5 you have had to endure a great deal of criticism from both the media and, sadly, many of our supporters. I say sadly because although everybody has the right to their own opinion my belief is that it’s not always an original thought that has created the supporter dissatisfaction but more one that is fuelled by the incessant and ongoing media obsession with demeaning The Arsenal.

Over my 66 years of support I’ve witnessed every manager and team since Tom Whittaker’s team of 1947-1956 and I was very fortunate to be around to watch his team win the League trophy in1947/48 which was my first season of supporting Arsenal. He followed that up by winning the FA Cup in 1949/50 and then another League trophy in 1952/53. It felt good to be an Arsenal supporter, in those days, after all winning 3 major trophies in 6 seasons was something to be proud of and gave us those all important bragging rights.

How could we possibly have known that it would take 16 seasons and 4 different managers before we would recapture that feeling? It was a very, very difficult time to be a supporter, but like true fans do – we just toughed it out and remained solid supporters of The Arsenal.

It was not until Bertie Mee arrived on the scene that we won our next trophy, the European fairs Cup in 1969/70. Then in 1970/71 we had, up until that time, the greatest season in our entire history by winning both the League title and the FA Cup for our first double, the joy of being an Arsenal supporter was almost overwhelming, and the memory of it all is imprinted in my sub conscious.

How could we possibly have known that in the next 16 seasons we would win only one further trophy, the FA Cup in 1978/79 under the management of Terry Neil?

Again it was a very rough time for us supporters but by this time our skin had been thickened by the many barren years that we had already endured.

George Graham arrived as manager in 1986/87 and he won the League Cup in his first season. George went on to win us 2 League Titles, the FA Cup, another League Cup and a Cup Winners Cup trophy. Once again our spirits were raised and Arsenal were the talk of the town – after all 6 trophies in 8 seasons was something to be proud of – even though we had the sound of “One Nil to The Arsenal” ringing in our ears. In 1994/95 it all came crashing down, we finished a lowly 12th in the league, which was our worst finish in 19 seasons. To make it even worse George was caught with his fingers in the biscuit barrel and his time at The Arsenal was over. During the 1995/6 season and the first 8 games of 1996/7 Stuart Houston and Bruce Rioch stood in as caretaker managers.

Frankly, Mr Wenger we were all surprised when you were named as our new Manager because many of us had never heard of you – but it didn’t take very long for you to stamp your impressive mark on our team. Incredibly, in your first full season as manager you achieved what had only been accomplished once in our history, you won the League and FA Cup double, the streets of Highbury, and Arsenal fans worldwide were overjoyed.

Since then you have won another double, a further EPL title plus 2 more FA Cups.

Oops I almost neglected to mention the pinnacle of your current successes at Arsenal, how could one possibly forget 2003/4 the year of the unbeatable “Invincilbles”?

Of course there are also our 16 consecutive seasons of Champions League football where we have been privileged to be able to watch Arsenal compete against the best teams in European football.

You envisaged and created a new training ground and training techniques, moved us from Highbury to Ashburton Grove and you have treated us to the joys of “Wengerball” played by some of the most accomplished super stars who have ever pulled on the famous red and white shirt.

Mr. Wenger I could go on and on and on about the accomplishments during your tenure at The Arsenal but suffice to say you will stand proud and tall alongside Herbert Chapman as Arsenal managers whose achievements are both legendary and historic in their very nature.

Herbert Chapman Bust

Arsene Wenger Bust

Mr. Wenger in closing I would like to express my personal regret at the attitudes of the few fans that are simply short sighted glory hunters and the sports reporter’s looking to impress their editors by increasing circulation. You see most of us are not blinded by looking at only your early achievements – we are able to look at your entire career at Arsenal and those of the managers that came before you in an overall perspective and we consider ourselves privileged to have you as our manager.

I sincerely hope that you remain as our manager for many years to come and that when you do decide to retire you grace us with your presence as a Director.

Respectfully,

GunnerN5