Wednesday, September 4, 2013
6 reasons Arsenal transfer window was NOT a success
6 underwhelming facts about Arsenal transfer
activity by Twig
Mesut Ozil’s arrival has expectedly lifted the spirits of
the coaching staff, players and fans of Arsenal. In
addition, we’ve finally spent above £15M and it
makes bigger deals easier for the board to swallow in
future. Finally, Arsenal FC have awoken to the reality
that we live in an inflated market and top players are
at least 20% more expensive than they are worth.
Wenger had always indicated he is ready to spend up
to £40M even, if he finds the right player, and was
true to his words with Ozil’s signing. Ozil really is
class but…
1) Arsenal still haven’t rid themselves of Bendtner
It was a transfer window that saw Wenger clear out a
large number of under-performing players, but
Wenger failed to get rid of that ONE PLAYER that
Arsenal fans MOST wanted to see out of the club –
Nicklas Bendtner. I’m sure
most fans would rather if it was Chamakh and not
Bendtner that Wenger kept as Giroud’s backup.
However, Bendtner is not a bad player at all, and
even he could thrive with Ozil, Ramsey and Cazorla
behind him! The question is a) Does he still want to
play for us? and b) Can he stay out of trouble? I
doubt it on both counts.
2) The squad is still thin
No matter how you do the maths, 4 players IN
doesn’t sufficiently replace 20 players OUT. With a
number of injuries
to first team players, Podolski, Oxlade-Chamberlain,
Arteta and Vermaelen, there’s a danger that fatigue
might prevent
Wenger’s regular eleven from reaching their
potential. An injury to any of Walcott, Giroud or
Mertesacker will leave us severely exposed. Wenger
left it too late into the window to recruit the numbers
that his squad needed.
3) One striker is not enough
With Wenger not succeeding in signing any proven
striker, Arsenal have only Giroud to depend on. The
situation is worsened by Podolski’s injury and
Sanogo’s immaturity. What does Wenger do when
Giroud suffers one of those frustrating days in front
of goal? Bring on Flamini? Methinks when the Suarez
deal wouldn’t come off, Wenger should
have moved quickly for another striker, even if he’s
not a “big name”. There are unsubstantiated
rumours that Arsenal did try to bring a striker in on
deadline day. But even if an offer was “unbelievable”
it would have left the selling club with no time to find
a replacement. In short, Wenger should have
dumped the Suarez project much earlier, unless he
was willing to make a THIRD BID, which never
happened.
4) Arsenal are lacking a left winger
Di Maria would have been perfect, but the player
apparently didn’t want to come. Other than Oxlade-
Chamberlain, no other player plays the left wing well,
and this has been going on for a long time. Cazorla is
not a left-winger, and always drifts into the middle
crowding the midfield. I think Gibbs, given his
aggressiveness, could be developed into a left-winger
to give our midfield some width. He has been the de
facto left winger whenever he plays with Podolski
anyway. But that won’t happen. As things stand now,
expect more of our goals to come from the right wing
than the left.
5) Arsenal failed to sign ANY of their main targets
I do not believe Ozil was one of Wenger’s prime
targets this Summer. Wenger might have a long-
standing interest in Ozil, and actually wanted to sign
him from Werder Bremen, but the fact remains that
the Ozil transfer was an opportunistic one that
depended 100% on Madrid’s move for Gareth Bale. If
the Gareth Bale transfer had failed, could we have
ended up only with Viviano, Sanogo and Flamini?
That would have underwhelmed even the most
optimistic Arsenal Fan. I believe Wenger’s main
targets were Luis Suarez, Luis Gustavo or Lars
Bender, Julio Cesar and Ashley Williams. We only got
Ozil due to the “domino effect” – admitted to even by
Wenger himself – that the Gareth Bale transfer
caused.
6) Why did Wenger buy Ozil?
Did Wenger buy Ozil simply because he was
available? Should he have added £10M to the £42.4M
paid for Ozil and gone
ahead and made a bid for Suarez even if Liverpool
swore that they would not sell? The central attacking
midfield is the LEAST of our problems and four
players, namely: Cazorla, Wilshere, Rosicky and
Ramsey can effectively assume that role. Not
forgetting Oxlade-chamberlain who the manager
sees to have a future in the middle. Does Ozil’s
arrival mean Cazorla will shift permanently to the
left? I don’t like that at all. Ozil definitely makes us
stronger, but despite all the bells and whistles, it
wasn’t the area that Arsenal needed strengthening.
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