Tag: Rio Ferdinand

Jack & Johann find a way back for England!

In recent years I’ve been finding international football a bit dull and uninspiring.  So yesterday afternoon I almost didn’t bother.

But in the end I was sucked back in to see how Jack, Theo and Johann got on.  Plus there was that Scott Parker who many suppose could supply some diligence and maturity to Arsenal’s midfield.  Then there were a couple of lost boys too: Ashley ‘never been the same since…etc’ Cole and Phillippe Ponderous, sorry Senderos.

England started with ten minutes of quite spirited stuff, looking quite promising, but then lost there pace and purpose.  Inler and Behrami established Swiss control over the midfield and England were on the back foot.

Then those England boys seemed to come up with the tactic of confusing the hell out of the Swiss with a startling different way of defending free-kicks.  Rather than the zone method they adopted the ozone method, as in les make big holes in it.  The Swiss will be so confused they won’t understand what they’re up against!

Two direct free-kicks later the Swiss are so confused they’re two goals up.  Two free-kicks in which no-one, attacker or defender, touched the ball on its journey over the line.  The first came from a slightly high ball into the the middle of box that neither Terry nor Ferdinand judged right.  Hart decided not to come for it, which was not necessarily the wrong decision, and was left stranded as it crept inside the far post.  Even if he had managed to reach it and parry, the two nearest players were both Swiss.

The second was from a tighter angle.  Hart set a two-man wall of Walcott and Milner to guard the near post and crouched ready.  This time the free-kick was hit low and at the wall with a Swiss player making a late run into the box.

Milner obviously decided that this was the threat and started to move, despite the fact that the ball was heading straight for the wall.  It was a bit like a snooker player concentrating so hard on where the cue ball is going to end up that they miss the pot.  So the ball sails past Walcott, who had stayed put, through the space where Milner had been positioned by Hart and in the goal at the near post.

So, two-nil down and it’s looking a bit desperate.  At this point England woke up and went back to playing football.  Jack Wilshere won the ball and went on a determined run into the box where his club team-mate Djourou obligingly brought him down for a penalty.  Frank Lampard almost messed up with poor placement but had enough pace on the shot to score. So England ended the first-half still in the game.

Much of the pre-match debate had been about how knackered Jack Wilshere must be by now, but actually it was Lampard who looked most short of pace and form.  So it wasn’t a massive surprise to see him replaced at half-time.  In the end it was a draw, after a good goal from Young. But for a lot of the time the Swiss were the better side and if they’d taken three points you wouldn’t have called them lucky.

So what of the Arsenal boys, old and new?

Jack Wilshere is looking a bit worn round the edges now and needs time on the beach, but he was one of the better England players yesterday with determination, good running and intelligent passing.

Theo didn’t get in the game as much, but did okay.  He made some good runs but didn’t get a lot of support.  He also did his bit defensively making some good covering moves when Johnson got overlapped.

Djourou had a bit of a ‘mare.  He made some strange choices positionally and could have conceded a second penalty.  Senderos was the same as ever – committed, direct, reasonable positioning but little finesse and no pace.  Ashley Cole wasn’t too bad, but not stunning.  Someone landed on his instep early on which left him limping.  For some reason Capello waited an age to replace him with Baines, so he spent half his time on the pitch looking rather half-hearted.

So what of Scott Parker?  He certainly is diligent and mature, again yesterday as ever, and there are times when Arsenal need that.  But he doesn’t have have massive skill on the ball.  For a good price he would be a good option to have, but I hope we can do better.

share save 171 16 Jack & Johann find a way back for England!

Chelsea provide Arsenal Team Talk

Arsene Wenger’s task of picking the players up off the floor was given a massive boost last night by Chelsea.  By taking three points off Manchester United they have helped put the title within reach.  All we have to do is win all our remaining games and it’s ours.  Simple!

Well I doubt its going to be quite that simple, but it’s a big boost all the same and will help put some belief back into the team.  Manchester United have a tougher run-in than we do, so we have a real chance.  With the red card late in the game they will miss both Vidic and Ferdinand against Liverpool, so there is potential for more lost points there too.

And seeing Spurs drop out of the top four is a bonus for Gooners too!  Chelsea fans in the office will be shown great respect today for as long as they resist the temptation to mention Birmingham.  Ferguson blames the referee naturally and if the leniency shown to Rooney is anything to go by he will get away with saying it.

The Arsenal players can give fans a boost as well with a straightforward win tonight against Orient.  A professional, spirited display is the least we deserve after the depression of Sunday.

The dark cloud inside these silver linings of course is the current injury list.  Van Persie and Walcott out until after Barcelona – maybe three weeks.  No Fabregas or Song until after the weekend.  Koscielny has a tight hamstring.

Yesterday I wondered whether Wenger would take the ‘business as usual’ or ‘get straight back out there’ approach after the cup final defeat.  Looks like he’s opted for business as usual and will be resting a few players tonight including Szczesny and Koscielny.  Predictably some of the papers are going for the ‘blunderers dropped’ line this morning.

So Almunia, Squillaci and Diaby are in the team tonight.  No hints at all about Ramsay in the pre-match interview.  Whoever Arsene Wenger picks ought to be good enough.  But morale will be on a knife-edge and at the moment we seem to have the habit of adjusting our level to match whoever we play – making every game close.  So I still feel anxious about tonight.

I hope that every Arsenal fan in the ground does their bit tonight by roaring the team on.

C’mon Arsenal!

share save 171 16 Chelsea provide Arsenal Team Talk

Another weird weekend of football

Arsenal
Thanks to the helpful damage control supplied by Wolves and Liverpool, Arsenal come out of this weekend with a better Premier League position than we started with – or deserve.

We are damaged though: the team will be shell-shocked by the massive reversal of fortune which also writes the half-time team-talk of any manager trying to get back into a game against us.  We have exposed our mental fragility again, shown how thinly spread our talent is in places and we wait on the assessment of Djourou’s injury.

Manchester United
Meanwhile, Manchester United’s unconvincing invincibles finally got found out after a run that seemed fuelled by more by luck and sheer willpower than than outright talent.  They too wait on crucial injury news  -on Rio Ferdinand.  United and Arsenal have been polls apart this season: one with deep reserves of willpower to cover lapses in talent, the other with the flair to win enough games to cancel out the mental lapses.

Chelsea
The world’s most expensive striker has the world getting on his back already after a quiet debut.  The criticism is very harsh for one game played in an unfamiliar line-up but there you go – most media, old and new is locked onto a habit of instantaneous, cut’n'dried assessment.  Torres has talent and will show it again, but for the moment he wears the number 50,000,000 on his back and people want some payback.  The cash that Chelsea have splashed may turn it around but they still look the most vulnerable of the tip four.

Manchester City
They had another steady weekend, demolishing West Brom without looking exciting.  They’ve played a game extra of course and they still aren’t entirely convincing.

More to come
Is this the final top four – for all its frailties?  Or can Spurs and Kenny Dalglish’s reinvigorated Liverpool batter their way in.  Is it Man Utd’s to lose?

I don’t think either issue is settled yet.  There are more twists left in this weird season!

share save 171 16 Another weird weekend of football

England give worryingly familiar display

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Last night’s game was hard work to watch.  It wasn’t so much that England found some new low, rather that they rediscovered an old one.  For ninety minutes it was as if Capello had never been there.  The familiar dilemmas had returned.  Can Lampard and Gerrard excel together?  What do you do on the left? Who should play in goal?

I haven’t added ‘who should start up front with Rooney’ because I thought Heskey played a blinder.  Yes he buried a decent chance into Howard’s midriff rather than the net, but we all expected that anyway.  He was a fantastic target man, winning every ball and laying it off for a team mate, and was good in the build-up to England’s goal.

The injuries are a worry, particularly at the back. King and Ferdinand were the ones to deal with pacey strikers.  Let’s hope King’s groin strain isn’t serious.  The decision to replace Milner with Wright-Phillips is a curious one.  If Joe Cole is only the third best option on the left, why did he make the final twenty-three?

As for the goalkeeper.  Green’s nervous blunder on his tournament debut was a nightmare. Personally I think that Capello should have picked one successor to James and stuck with him to give him the experience. Goalkeepers need a run in the team.  The choice wasn’t an easy one, there have been several similar contenders, but by making it and sticking to it the keeper chosen would have got the maximum experience.  I wouldn’t rule out sticking with Green.  Sticking with someone is the key.

Gerrard and Lampard? They are two great players, they should both play, but side by side in a flat four midfield just doesn’t seem to work. They are so similar in style that if the formation doesn’t dictate what they do, then identical instinct or indecision kick in.

There are plenty of teams that successfully play 4-1-3-1-1 or 4-4-1-1, call it what you will.  Maybe Heskey should be dropped, Gerrard sit behind Rooney, Lampard in the centre of the three and Barry, or King, in front of the back four.

Well that’s my view from the armchair, I suppose it’s just possible Capello knows a hell of a lot more than me!

Hopefully this was just a nervy start and guys will get into their stride.  None of the teams have really impressed so far and maybe we all expect too much from the eagerly awaited first games.

I still expect England to progress by winning the group.

share save 171 16 England give worryingly familiar display

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