Wednesday 21 September 2011

So, would you prefer an Arsenal win or a defeat that proves you right?


To say it's been a difficult few months to be an Arsenal fan is like saying the sinking of the Titanic was a minor naval incident.

Last week I commented about a fellow Gooner tweeter who seemed to be so down in the dumps, so depressed about Arsenal, that I felt I had to say something, kindly meant, about cheering up or looking on the bright side - I mentioned 'getting a grip'. Thankfully he took it in the spirit in which it was meant and all was well.

Then on Saturday, during Arsenal's embarrassing 4-3 defeat to Blackburn Rovers he sent me a DM asking 'do you still think I need to get a grip - we're in deep shit etc etc'. It was almost as if he preferred the fact that Arsenal were being beaten, because it proved his point, rather than winning because that would undermine his negative outlook. When some fans are of a mind that they'd prefer a defeat so that it underlines or justifies their stance then something is going seriously wrong.

And don’t get me wrong here, I’m not criticising him. I can fully understand how he feels after months of frustration and, seemingly, mismanagement at The Emirates.
  
While I have continuously tweeted about Wenger being the best manager we've ever had and that he needs our backing now, more than ever, one can, I think, understand how some people might be beginning to see an increasing amount of evidence on the side of my depressed friend and that my own optimistic attitude is based more on hope than reality.

I have commented before that being an Arsenal fan does not come with an ‘unfollow’ button. It is a lifetime commitment and is non-negotiable. Many people have been tweeting about what it is to be a 'true fan' and supporting the club come what may and I completely agree with that.  However some people have also been saying that anyone who questions the team or the manager or the board is effectively a traitor to the cause and, therefore, an enemy who should be abused.

With all due respect, it’s not quite as simple as that.

I think that one can still be a fan and be able to point out some of the shortcomings of the club, particularly after what has happened at Arsenal in the last few months. This does not necessarily mean that they want Arsenal to lose any games or to have any bad luck – but just that they care about the ongoing success of the club – and I think that’s fair enough.

Surely if you cannot comment when your team looks like it has effectively retreated from being at the forefront of the European game* as well as being a serious contender in the ‘best league in the world’ (the Premiership), to being an ‘also ran’ in just a few short months, then when would these ‘real fans’ suggest is the appropriate time to comment? Or should one just walk away and not give a fuck?

It was obvious that last year’s Premiership was a ‘soft’ league in relative terms and that the big money clubs would be spending big this summer in order to revitalise their title hopes. It was also obvious that we would not be able to compete financially with Riyadh Rovers (Man City) or Chel$ki but that, therefore, we would need to have a good plan, be well organised, be ready to move quickly and be ready to make the necessary money available to make the plan work. Essentially, we would need to be smarter and better organised than our rivals (not all of whom have billionaire backers by the way) in order to be able to ‘push on’ in terms of the quality of the side and its ability to compete this year on all fronts.

However, looking from the outside, it seemed like there was no plan. Or if there was, the club has done an amazing job of making it look like there wasn’t.

It was also obvious that Cesc and Na$ri would go, causing a major problem in terms of quality, but their departure would bring in a considerable amount of money for replacements. Now here’s the thing: I know that they didn’t go until the end of the window but that doesn’t mean we couldn’t buy any replacements before they were sold. I’m sorry I don’t care what the club is saying about this. We are not a two-bit taxi company that has to put the last fare into the petrol tank in order to take on the next job. We are a £1.3 billion global sports brand. If we cannot forward finance a deal to buy a couple of £30 million plus, world class players in order to maintain our position at the top of the world game, then what the fuck are we doing and what is the level of our ambition?

Sadly the result of this inaction in the summer and the subsequent ‘trolley dash’ on deadline day is that we are now going from game to game, hoping to win but not really being confident because we simply do not have the ‘special’ quality that Arsenal have always had in recent years.  We have reached the ‘tipping point’ whereby every defeat convinces a few more fans that we are going in the wrong direction and adds to the manager’s problems in terms of criticism. When you’re playing great football and have fantastic players who are committed to the team and will die for the cause, the odd defeat is no big deal.

However, when you are struggling because you do not have the quality, when the (poor) performance is not about confidence or luck but about ability – then it’s a different matter. At that point it’s got to be about the quality of the team that has been assembled by the club, the board and the management. Sorry but I don’t think there is any getting away from this.

Like I say, I remain a committed fan of the club and I am not calling for anyone to go. I think we’d be mad to get rid of Wenger right now.

But I am struggling to see how the team can win enough games to keep the fans happy or how it can achieve the position in the league that the fans demand.  I personally will continue to support the team wherever it finishes in the league, but sadly, it is really starting to feel like we are only one or perhaps two embarrassing defeats away from the point where change will start to become inevitable. I am also looking on the forthcoming games we have against top sides with dread rather than excitement and optimism.

Wenger is clearly annoyed by the current situation where his performance is being questioned. This is the first time I can remember Arsenal having to wheel out the chief exec to support him. And hitting back at criticism in the media, after a win against Shrewsbury, rather than winning the league, is both unjustified and dangerous, since it gives them (the media) stored ammunition for future failures.

We have been spoiled at Arsenal over the years in comparison with most other clubs and Wenger has perhaps spoiled us the most. He is clearly a great manager, one of the most influential the game has ever seen. However, I’m increasingly doubtful that we’ll be spoiled by the current team.

I think Wenger has to change. Has to admit that he/they fucked up this summer, ask for our understanding and support and then get on with turning the situation around. He is loved by the vast majority of Arsenal fans and if he is honest, in this way, they will back him (mostly, not sure about my twitter friend!). However if he carries on being arrogant, carries on claiming to be right about everything and that he has never made any mistakes, then frankly, in my opinion, his days are numbered because he simply has not got the quality of players to ride out the storm this year by achieving positive results.

Maybe it’s me who needs to get a grip.



*(The only team to beat Barca in the CL last year and, at the time, closer than any other team in Europe to playing the ‘total football’ that the Catalans have made famous)


Wednesday 14 September 2011

if you want the same story but a different order of words...

Then read my new blog. oh and please retweet this, so as many people who already know this stuff as possible, can be equally bored with it.

No names and no pack drill - I am not targeting or singling out any blogger, nor am I trying to cause offense but how often are you pointed in the direction of a 'new blog', particularly in the sporting field, in which you already know everything that is recorded therein?

'Big game last night' - I know.

'Difficult opposition, they were champions in their league last year' - yes I know.

'We took the lead in the first half' - yes, like everyone else who is ever likely to read this blog, I was watching/listening too.

'Would have been nice to hold on for a win' - yes that's kinda what we were aiming for I'd hazard a guess.

'But they got an equaliser near the end' - drumming fingers..yes, like I say, I was watching too.

'Still we'd probably have taken that at the start' - yes, away to the best side in our draw in the Champion's League and our players not yet on first name terms after the transfer deadline trolley dash..

'So there you have it, don't miss my next blog about where bears shit and what religion the Pope practices'

Thanks.

Sunday 4 September 2011

Lock 'em up and cut their benefits but don't then think the job's done

I have blogged elsewhere about what I described as the 'Fuck you' society (apologies for French) that we seem to live in these days. Not condoning in any way those involved in the recent, totally unacceptable riots in London, Birmingham and elsewhere, but trying to understand in a small way, their mindset. Not a popular position to take when everyone was shouting for them to be locked up and the key thrown away - as well as cutting benefits and even evicting people from their (council) homes.

Since then many have been imprisoned and some of the sentences seem to me to be very harsh, almost certainly a case of 'pour encourager les autres' (apologies, see above!). No doubt many of these sentences will be quietly reduced in the coming weeks and months as rationality regains some influence - I hope so.

One young guy who was interviewed said that 'it's all about greed' and that 'we have been told, time and time again by this society, that greed is good.' I happen to agree with him. These people were not 'stealing Trevelyan’s corn so the young might see the morn', but nicking tellies and trainers - they are not on the bread-line by any means and that, the point of this blog, is part of the problem in some ways. Please don't condemn me as a raving right-winger for that last comment, please hear me out!

Just very briefly, my contention is that the rioters have seen rich greedy people avoiding tax; greedy MPs falsifying expenses; fat cat public sector leaders making cuts to public services while taking double-digit pay increases and premier league footballers earning more in a week than highly qualified and hard-working nurses will earn in ten years. In the face of this conspicuous greed, essentially these so-called leaders of society or role models saying 'fuck you' to everyone else, I can understand some people. Misguided perhaps, returning the compliment.

There are of course criminal elements to the rioting, gang activity etc., but my concern is really about those normally law-abiding people who got involved and are now being severely punished. Yes if they committed a crime they should be punished but I humbly suggest that catching and charging these people is not the absolute solution to what is a much wider problem. Of course we cannot have lawlessness on our streets, whether people are rioting under the flag of tuition fees or social depravation and we also cannot have the police standing watching people stealing booty - that was mad. Nor should we tolerate benefits cheats and I am glad to see Cameron taking an initiative on this. But I have a serious question to ask you:

There are young girls in a town near where I live for whom 'starting a family' is seen as a genuine career option. And just to provide some sort of counterbalance to my earlier 'breadline' comment, I am on their side. Brought up on benefits by a mother who took the same option, probably when she was under age and who was also copying her own mother, these girls can, by having a child, jump the council house waiting list and secure considerable welfare benefits, without having to do a single day's work or make any contribution in taxes, National Insurance etc.

It's not illegal, it's just playing the system - a system that has become completely skewed over several parliaments to 'help' the poorest in our society - BUT IT'S NOT HELPING. 

Of course, in the short term it helps her, she can eat, keep warm in the winter, live in a dry, actually quite nice 'decent home': Evidence suggests that she can probably afford to smoke and go out for the odd drink and have Sky. If you asked her she would probably say that she 'does OK', has a reasonably nice life. She is accountable to no one, doesn't have to get up and go out to work in the morning. Doesn't have to do anything really, except have sex at the outset in order to secure her 'career'.

Outraged of Tunbridge Wells (that's not the town by the way) would say that this is disgusting. 'How can we allow this in our modern society?' The point is, it's not her fault. She's just playing the system. And if she wants to better herself by getting a job, going out to work and become a valued member of our so-called 'society' then she can of course.  

But how many girls who left school at 14 when pregnant and therefore didn't get any qualifications and who has no CV at all, no work experience, will be able to walk into a job paying more than the at least £300 a week she needs to just match the benefits she is already getting? £300 a week is £15,600 a year net, so she'd need to walk into a £20 grand job just to stand still. And why would she. What possible incentive is there for her to do this even if she could which is virtually impossibility. No pun intended but I think the word 'virtually' is redundant in that last sentence.

The bottom line is that this situation is both real (tens of thousands of our population live like this) and clearly not their fault.  The fault lies with the system that is creating an underclass and lost lives by trying to help people.  I don't have the answer, but I do know that we, collectively, have a massive problem to solve in this country.