Jump to content
talkfootball365
  • Welcome to talkfootball365!

    The better place to talk football.

Recommended Posts

Posted

Knonke got to be up there with Ashley as one of the worst owners.

Sign up to remove this ad.
Posted

What a wonderful day if this goes through. Fingers crossed. He'll take them back south of the river next as he did with the Rams to LA. Woolwich Arsenal the return 

Posted
4 hours ago, Storts said:

What a wonderful day if this goes through. Fingers crossed. He'll take them back south of the river next as he did with the Rams to LA. Woolwich Arsenal the return 

Whatever happens we will still have won more than you 😉

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Even though Arsenal lost the first two matches and how some people are going mad about the losses im not worried and I actually liked the way Arsenal played and looks like a lot of promise for the season. The first match against City was always going to be tough and I dont think anyone expected a win barring a freak result. The second one was a little "easier" to get point from and I dont think Arsenal were bad at all. If only Auba, Mkhi could have finished their easy chances then there would have been a point in the bag or if Lacazette didnt pass the ball back to Chelsea player atleast which resulted in the third goal.

All in all, if the same match happened under Wenger, higher chances that the team would have folded by half time and bend over for a final result of 5-0 or something but I loved the way the team fought back and I assume this is something Emery instilled in the players. Hopefully he also improves the mentalities and quality of some players like Bellerin and makes the team much better. 

  • 1 month later...
  • 1 month later...
  • Subscriber
Posted

I hope Danny is ok and gets back quickly as I liked this guy at United, he seems to be injured a lot though since he left? 

 

Arsenal fear, forward Danny Welbeck has suffered a "very big injury" after he was carried off on a stretcher during his side's Europa League game against Sporting Lisbon on Thursday.

It ended goalless at Emirates Stadium as the Gunners secured a place in the last 32, but the match was overshadowed by the 27-year-old England international's ankle injury.

"He is at the hospital. The news is that we are going to wait, but we think it's a serious injury," said Arsenal boss Unai Emery.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/46130548

  • Subscriber
Posted (edited)
13 minutes ago, The Artful Dodger said:

Hope he's not badly hurt but is he a loss? 

As I said, he seems to have had a lot of injuries since he left United and it makes me wonder now why LVG sold him but Welbeck said at the time... 

On 9 March, Welbeck scored his tenth goal of the season in a 3–0 win at West Bromwich Albion. At the end of the season, Welbeck declared his intention to leave United to play as a striker elsewhere after what he described as his unhappiest season, stating: "I've been playing on the left for a while and it's got to the time when I want to stake a place up front"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_Welbeck

He had played up front at United and as a winger, so I don't know where the Gunners have played him when he played but he was out a lot of the time since he joined Arsenal with knee injuries so I don't think Arsenal missed him and they got by without him.  

Edited by CaaC - John
Posted

Welbeck definitely offers certain qualities others don't have coming off the bench. He isn't and never has been good enough to be a first team player but he does have attributes that are necessary in any squad searching to compete at least at national level.

It's a serious loss from our perspective.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
21 hours ago, ...Dan said:

 

Absolutely superb this, how Gerry Peyton was employed at our club for 15 years was a travesty. No wonder all our keepers turned to shite, another reason for Wenger's failings was having these useless coaches around.

Posted
41 minutes ago, Chaaay AFC said:

Absolutely superb this, how Gerry Peyton was employed at our club for 15 years was a travesty. No wonder all our keepers turned to shite, another reason for Wenger's failings was having these useless coaches around.

Power!

Mate... Taking the timeline and everything into account nobody can deny it was all about exerting power.

  • Subscriber
Posted

Unai Emery: Arsenal's boss is 'football obsessive' who 'makes or breaks you'

By Patrick Jennings

BBC Sport

30 November | Arsenal

 

At Fifa's football awards ceremony in London in September, two men met away from the red carpet and the camera flashes.

Arsene Wenger and Unai Emery shared only a brief conversation and a handshake on the sidelines, despite having so much to discuss.

This summer, Emery stepped into Wenger's shoes as manager of Arsenal, after the Frenchman moved aside following 22 years in charge.

The day before they met in London, Emery's team had beaten Everton 2-0 for a fifth consecutive victory, having started the new season with defeats by Manchester City and Chelsea.

They remain their only losses of the season so far, and the Gunners go into Sunday's north London derby with Tottenham now unbeaten in 18 matches.

In recent weeks the club's fans have been chanting: 'We've got our Arsenal back.'

But just who is the man leading this new-look Gunners side forward into their next era?

BBC Sport spoke with some of the people who know Emery best. The picture they paint is of a football obsessive, a man spurred on by his failure as a player and who lives now for just two things: family and success.

Beginnings: The Basque Ryan Giggs?

"Other players would spend their free time going to the cinema, for us it was always football."

Alberto Benito is looking back on a time when he played in central midfield for Toledo in the Spanish second division. Out on the left wing was Unai Emery.

"On our days off, we'd go to see all the matches and training sessions we could, especially at the nearby Madrid clubs: Rayo Vallecano, Getafe, Atletico Madrid and Real Madrid," he adds.

"We both were obsessed by football."

Emery and Benito became great friends at Toledo, the club Emery represented most during his playing career, with 126 league appearances between 1996 and 2000.

He joined at the age of 25 from top-flight Real Sociedad, Benito says he was "a rapid left-winger like Ryan Giggs, with skill on the ball, although of course, Giggs was better..."

He adds: "Whenever we were training, running all together as a team, we'd be together at the back, talking about football, the last goals, the games we'd played, exchanging ideas.

"We were both studying for our coaching licences. It wasn't really usual for players to do that before retiring, but for us, it was another way to fill our lives with even more football."

However, Emery has always said he was a failure as a player. Despite having what many would consider a good career, 14 years in mostly the Spanish second tier, he describes his former self as "a coward"....Where he fell down most - in his own words - was the mental side of the game. He lacked confidence, lacked the desire to question himself and improve.

He is more than making up for it now. His experience as a player seems to have defined his approach to management. He refuses to let others make the same mistakes he did.

Sometimes the message can be delivered rather forcefully.

One of Emery's former players at Almeria, Laurent de Palmas, told  France Football: l: "We clashed several times. But if Unai has a problem with you he will always tell you to your face.

"He either makes you or breaks you. Most often he makes you."

Benito says: "Unai will never criticise a player in public, but in the dressing room yes he will. He can at times put a lot of pressure on them, but it is all to bring out their best. He motivates them to fulfil their full potential."

Lorca: The start of success

Benito and Emery would meet again, at Almeria, in Emery's second job in management. Benito was appointed the club's director of football on Emery's recommendation in 2007.

But Emery's career in the dugout began in remarkable circumstances, three years earlier, at a different club.

It was Christmas 2004. Emery was back in Hondarribia, in the north of Spain. His hometown is a small place in the Basque country, right on the border with France. He had just become manager of Lorca Deportiva, a team from Murcia struggling in the Spanish third division.

He got the job largely on the influence of the club's sporting director Pedro Reverte, who had signed Emery as a player the previous season.

As Reverte recalls: "The team were still 10th in the table but they weren't doing well and we decided to change the manager.

"Unai knew the team, he knew the rivals, we had a conversation and I had a good feeling about it. I told the president he seemed like the ideal person to take over.

"Unai passed from being a team-mate to being the boss. It's a difficult thing to do, but the team reacted well, and he took on the responsibilities really quickly."

Emery transformed Lorca. A modest side, they punched above their weight for the rest of the season and reached a play-off final for promotion to the second flight.

The crucial tie came against a team very close to Emery's heart: Real Union.

His grandfather Antonio, a goalkeeper, is a legend at the Irun club, having won the Spanish Cup with them two times - in 1924 and 1927. He conceded La Liga's first ever goal, in 1927.

Unai's father Juan - a goalkeeper too - also played for Real Union. Now, Lorca had to beat them over two matches to win promotion, and they had lost the first leg 2-1.

Away from home, on 26 June 2005, Juan Carlos Ramos scored the decisive goal in a 3-1 victory with an astonishing 40-yard lob in extra time.

Emery was so high on adrenaline he walked the 10 miles back to the family home in Hondarribia.

Coursing through his veins was a major success at the first time of trying. It had been built on hard work, research, tactical innovation. All of these things still define his approach to the game.

"He dedicates an enormous amount of time to prepare," Reverte says. "He likes to know exactly how every team plays. At Lorca, we spent hours driving around the country together in our free time, scouting.

"Maybe the opposition can surprise you but he's not a person who leaves anything to chance. And that hasn't changed."

The next season, Lorca pushed on again. They finished five points off the play-off places for promotion into the Spanish top flight. It was a remarkable achievement for a club that had risen from the fourth tier since their formation in 2002. They would fall back down to the fourth tier before folding altogether in 2012.

Almeria - a far bigger club in the same division - came calling.

In the 2006-07 season, his first there, Emery brought them up to the Spanish top flight. They had never reached that level before.

A maiden La Liga campaign ended in an impressive eighth, eight points off a Uefa Cup spot. At home they drew with Barcelona and beat Real Madrid 2-0.

Now the really big clubs were taking notice, and Emery stepped up again to Valencia. More success followed, despite money problems, and the sale of key players such as David Villa, Juan Mata and David Silva over his four years in charge.

In his first season, the 2008-09 campaign, Valencia finished sixth. In the next three consecutive campaigns they would finish third - only behind Real Madrid and Barcelona.

Emery's record made for impressive reading. Success, success, success. But that was about to change.

Failure in the wild east

Kim Kallstrom speaks highly of Emery. Very highly. The former Sweden midfielder played under him at Spartak Moscow, where Emery arrived in May 2012. He had left Valencia to test himself with a new challenge - in Russia.

Having played under both Emery at Spartak and Arsene Wenger at Arsenal, Kallstrom's is a unique perspective on the only period in Emery's career that can be described as a failure.

"Unai made a very good impression on me straight away," he says.

"I liked his human side very much. He took the time to sit down and talk about life, from the first day you got the feeling that he was a good man, not just a good football coach.

"I think he could have been really successful at Spartak but there was a lot of politics that made the whole thing kind of impossible, and I actually think he quickly realised that."

The biggest obstacle appears to have been the language barrier - Emery is a great communicator but lacked the tools to effectively drill his side as he wanted. At that point he did not speak much English and knew no Russian. Relying heavily on translators slowed his usual machine-gun delivery to a stuttering crawl.

Then there was the Valeri Karpin issue.

A former Spartak player, Karpin had stepped aside as manager when Emery was appointed, but he retained an influential role as sporting director. He was said to have been manoeuvring a way back into power behind the scenes, and would replace Emery when he was finally sacked.

The decision came following a 5-1 home defeat by city rivals Dynamo Moscow in November 2012, just over six months after his arrival.

Republic of Ireland winger Aiden McGeady was also at Spartak during Emery's time. He claimed the club's owner came down to the dressing room, surrounded by bodyguards, and told Emery he was fired.

"He is very different from Wenger but in one way they are similar," Kallstrom says.

"They both see their job as a labour of love. They just love being football coaches, it takes up all of their energy.

"But Unai is more active on the training field. Some coaches might just stand on the sides but Emery was always in the middle of everything, always demanding focus, and he is more into the tactical side too.

"I think his mind is more or less all the time thinking about football, problem-solving, considering what you can do better. He loves the small details, he loves to have short videos where you can improve, he was really passionate about this.

"His way of coaching is based on communication, a lot of energy and hard work. He'd come in very early every morning and would leave late every day.

"For him, it is more than a profession, it is an obsession."

Failure in Moscow would spur Emery on.

He spent two months out of the game before bouncing back at Sevilla, where in January 2013 he began his most successful period to date.

In his three seasons in Andalucia, Emery led the club to three consecutive Europa League titles. After the third, secured with a 2-1 victory over Liverpool in 2016, he stepped up again - with Paris St-Germain.

That 6-1 defeat...

It is hard to avoid the  6-1 defeat by Barcelona. In March 2017, in the Champions League last 16, an inspired Neymar helped destroy the team he would go on to join that summer in a world record £200m transfer.

For French journalist, Romain Molina, author of El Maestro, a biography of Unai Emery published in the UK in November, PSG started that match at a severe disadvantage, despite their 4-0 aggregate lead.

"After the first leg at home, PSG directors were already booking hotels in Cardiff for the final. That is why they are not prepared for success at the highest level.

"Emery was the lone voice saying it was not yet over, he was trying to make everyone realise they could not afford to relax. If we are too arrogant Barcelona will use it, he said. And in the end, that's exactly what happened."

PSG also missed out to Monaco for the Ligue 1 title in that season - Emery's first in charge of the French club. His second ended with a clean sweep of league, cup and league cup, and defeat in the Champions League quarter-finals.

Molina defines Emery's time in charge as "not worse, not better" than previous managers Carlo Ancelotti and Laurent Blanc. They too dominated the domestic game but fell down in search of the prize most coveted by the club's powerful and wealthy owners.

"If all three failed to achieve what the club is looking for in Europe then the responsibility has to lie elsewhere," Molina adds.

"But Unai left PSG with better organisation and a proper way of working. If current manager Thomas Tuchel had arrived after Laurent Blanc it would have been far, far different for him. Emery has done the groundwork.

"For example, there used to be one club employee whose job was to organise shisha pipes for the players - it's crazy. Emery put a stop to all of that.

"The other interesting factor about his time at PSG was there was a hostility towards him from the media, which is often the case with foreign coaches in France. I don't know why. One person on TV compared him to a monkey."

Perhaps it is the exuberance on the touchline? That is certainly a trait we have seen him transfer to England.

The decision to end his spell at PSG was a mutual one between manager and club. When the announcement was made, in late April 2018, Wenger had already said he would be leaving Arsenal at the end of that season.

In early May, Arsenal got in touch. Emery was called over to London for an interview where he impressed then-chief executive Ivan Gazidis. He got the job.

Emery is now living a new life, but a familiar one, in a city he has not yet had time to fully discover.

He chose his new home on the outskirts of London because it is close to Arsenal's training ground, where he sometimes will eat three meals a day. He continues to arrive for work very early and leave very late. Even during the international break there is little let up - other than to visit his teenage son in Valencia.

"In every team, Emery left with it improved, and with every job he has improved too. He is not the same man who was at Valencia, Sevilla, PSG," Alberto Benito says.

"Unai listens a lot. He's not someone who surrounds himself with people who just say yes and agree with him. He wants to discuss, listen, he does not dictate.

"But his success comes from his own hard work."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/46377603

Posted
On 5 December 2018 at 08:30, True Blue said:

With their recent form, i could see Arsenal easily push for the top three spots. Just the question is, have things really changed or these results are just good form?

One can be tricked by a team that ends up winning a cup competition (not always, but certainly at times), but not in where a team finished in a long season's league table.

If it's down to just form (which in that case we certainly have to point a faithful finger at the new coach), then everything will be made evident in the end.  There's no way in hell a team can go through a whole year of domestic league football on just form without every going through a rough patch.  It's how top players grind through a rough patch and don't lose too many if any at all.

I'm almost definite this is about form fuelled by confidence which occurs after a certain amount of positive results,. Suddenly you start feeling invincible and that you can claw back even a seeming defeat by not losing a lost cause.

In both our last games (Spurs at home and Man Utd away) only 8 months ago we would've ended up losing them.  Due to what occurred in both games it would've been a typical Arsenal ending to a game where it looked at one point that all was heading to a great result and then things that occurred in the middle of the game ended up giving a final story of doom, impotence and the crybaby syndrome.  We didn't lose any of the two because of confidence and because the form was built on football nouce!  The coach knows what he's doing because he's coached the types of clubs Arsenal are at this present time in a very strong league like La Liga (Valencia and Sevilla) and managed to compete to the maximum of the capability of the player quality he had by comparison to everything else around him.

We can't challenge for winning a league title (and I'm talking about challenging, competing) because there are various sides with much more quality than us.  Infact we beat and drew against two superior sides in a matter of days.  One of those sides has a coach with a mental block everytime he sees our fixture coming along and the other coach of the northern side doesn't know how to coach a side that spent all or most of its money on expensive attacking options...  It's no wonder he consistently cries about not having the players he wants.

  • Subscriber
Posted

Arsene Wenger: Former Arsenal boss honored by League Managers Association

1 hour ago|Arsenal

Former Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger joked he now "gets a trophy every week" after being honored by the League Managers Association (LMA).

Wenger left the Gunners in May after winning three Premier League titles and seven FA Cups in a 22-year spell.

He was awarded the LMA Service to Football Award at Wembley on Thursday.

"The LMA is proud to recognise Arsene's remarkable career in football management," said LMA chief executive Richard Bevan.

"The role of the football manager has changed beyond recognition since Arsene's first match at Highbury in 1996, but his profound influence on the game over the past 22 years means he truly deserves the admiration of his fellow practitioners in football."

Wenger, 68, was presented with his award at the LMA's President's Dinner by England boss Gareth Southgate.

"Since I don't compete anymore, I get a trophy every week," Wenger joked.

"How stupid was I not to understand that earlier?"

Outgoing Football Association technical director Dan Ashworth was also presented with a special award to recognise his achievements during his time at the organisation.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/46479522

  • Subscriber
Posted

Arsenal to talk to players over nitrous oxide inhalation allegations

5 hours ago|Arsenal

Arsenal players will be "spoken to" by club chiefs after images emerged allegedly showing four members of the first team inhaling nitrous oxide.

CCTV footage obtained by the Sun shows Alexandre Lacazette, Matteo Guendouzi, Mesut Ozil and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang all inhaling from balloons allegedly containing the substance.

The players were at a private party at a London club in August.

Nitrous oxide is also known as laughing gas or 'hippy crack'.

An Arsenal spokesperson told the BBC players would be "spoken to and reminded of their responsibilities".

Nitrous oxide slows down the brain and the body's responses, giving users a feeling of euphoria and can cause hallucinations, but can also lead to headaches, dizziness and paranoia.

However, large doses can starve the body and brain of oxygen, according to government drug advice service Frank.

While it is not illegal to possess the drug, it is illegal to give away or sell.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/46480188

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

football forum
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...