Thứ Sáu, 14 tháng 10, 2016

Long read: Should Arsenal be worried about Hector Bellerin?

There are three things that always occur at this time of year in the world of football; International fixtures suck the life out of everyone, illuminous yellow balls are used in games for no good reason whatsoever, and reports start emanating from Barcelona that state that they’re interested in signing an Arsenal player. Again.

We’ve been here before with our Catalan friends, they’re like the one guy who your friend brings to a house party that you’re hosting, and all they do all night is ask you where you bought your furniture. Except, in Barca’s case, they also think you’re obliged to sell them whatever they take their fancy to.
That antique table that looks so nice in the living room? The one that you spent weeks mending and restoring to bring it back to full glory? The one that everyone looks at in envy? Yep, Barca are that guy who offers you half its market value whilst telling you that it’s wasted in your house anyway. No tact, no shame, nothing, all whilst trying to pass off acting as a ‘gentleman’. It’s Bargain Hunt, except with one letter changed in the second word.
We’ve become used to this charade though. If it wasn’t Marc Overmars that they wanted, it was Patrick Vieira. If it wasn’t Thierry Henry they wanted, it was Cesc Fabregas. Over the last decade and a half, Barcelona have viewed Arsenal as a London branch of a budget supermarket where most of the produce is fine, some of it is brilliant and some of it is of no use to anyone (sorry, Alex Song). As soon as something good appears at the Emirates, they appear out of the woodwork as if they were Spurs fans after winning a game in October: predictable, and just as annoying.
With all of this in mind, Barcelona are once again casting an envious eye over one of our players, but this time, it’s not as clear cut a situation as Arsenal having a world-class player and Barcelona wanting him. This time, it is Barca that negotiating from a position of weakness, not Arsenal.
In Hector Bellerin, Arsenal have the best young right-back in the world. If you need a right-back who has to do his own running and Lionel Messi’s on the right wing, and you have infinite money to spend like Barca do, the list of viable candidates isn’t a long one. Real Madrid won’t sell them Dani Carvajal for obvious reasons, Dani Alves just left Barca, Serge Aurier is a headcase. They bought Aleix Vidal from Sevilla last season as he played right-back as a contingency measure and looked good, but he’s been a disaster at the Nou Camp. They’ve had to resort to playing Sergi Roberto, a central midfielder, at right back. It’s a total mess at the moment.
For all the talk of La Masia being a production line of quality players for Barca, the conveyor belt has been empty for a while now. Gerald Pique, Sergio Busquets and Andres Iniesta are still performing at a high level, but the clock is ticking on replacing them. Home grown player restrictions affect Barca just like they affect Arsenal, you need eight players that are either developed at the club or from the country you play in, in any 25-man Champions League squad.
With Barca’s squad becoming more and more un-Catalan as the years go by, the lack of an in-house successor to the likes of Xavi, (unlucky, Cesc) Puyol and Dani Alves means that whenever a chance comes to fill a position of need with a Spanish player, they have to take it, just so it means they can cast a wider net to fill other positions.
As a result, Hector Bellerin isn’t just some vanity signing to be targeted in order to placate fans who want to boast about the size of there club. Bellerin is as near a must-sign player as there is for Barca right now. It was never a case of if Barca came in for him, but when.
So, should Arsenal fear the worst again, just as they have when Barca have poked their head in the door before? No. Not in the slightest. For once, they are in a total no-lose scenario.
If Bellerin, a lad who by every interview he’s given seems to be having the time of his life whilst living in London, decides that he wants to stay around, then the best young right-back in the world will wear red and white for a while to come.
And if he decides that he wants to leave?
Well, when we thought about Thierry Henry leaving, we knew that Arsenal wouldn’t be competing for the league title the next season. It was the same when Cesc Fabregas left. Without the team’s best player and captain, it was going to be an enormous job finding someone to replace them.
Bellerin, as promising a player as he is, will never be as integral to Arsenal’s hopes of competing for silverware as a 30 goals a season striker or a 20 assists a season midfielder. He’s a really good right-back, but he’s only a right-back.
Go through Arsenal’s squad right now and tell me how players you wouldn’t want to lose ahead of Bellerin, and you’ll see why Barca’s interest in signing him is comparatively unimportant. If it were Mesut Özil or Alexis Sanchez being targeted, it would be a problem. Laurent Koscielny, too. Maybe Aaron Ramsey as well. I would even go as far as to say that Alex Iwobi may be more valuable to Arsenal than Bellerin right now, such is the going price for competent attacking midfielders at the moment.
Hector Bellerin might turn out to be the best right-back in the world in three years, and seeing that happen whilst he’s at another club would be far from ideal. But you don’t need world-class fullbacks to be successful, just someone who’s consistently solid week in and week out is more than fine. Think Nacho Montreal or Bacary Sagna. Good, but not world-class. That’s more than enough as long as the quality is there in the centre of the field.
Arsenal don’t have a problem with Hector Bellerin, Barcelona do. And the bigger that problem becomes, the more expensive his replacement will be at the Emirates.

Thứ Ba, 16 tháng 8, 2016

Barcelona: The Champions League connection



The Blaugrana have a long list of names who used to represent the club as a player or coach that will take part in the competition during the coming season.

The Champions League gets underway on Tuesday for the 2016/17 season in which numerous former Barcelona employees seek to join the group stages of Europe's premier competition.
Full focus will be on the National Arena in Bucharest where Pep Guardiola's Manchester City face Steaua Bucharest, with Nolito set to be part of the starting line-up. "We will try to score goals and convince the players how important and nice it is to play in the Champions League," Guardiola said, "We will try to win [the competition]."
The former Barça coach - who won a historic treble in his debut season at the helm - has taken a 21-man squad to Romania but hasn't included Yaya Toure, who was also together with Guardiola during his time at the Camp Nou.
Luis Enrique and Phillip Cocu are of course already in the group-stages with Barça and PSV Eindhoven respectively but they could be joined by a further three former Blaugrana players in Guardiola, Oscar Garcia and Thomas Christiansen.
Garcia's Red Bull Salzburg face Dinamo Zagreb while Christiansen's APOEL Nicosia face off against FC Copenhagen.
Former Barça players Jonathan dos Santos and Dani Olmo - who represent Villarreal and Dynamo Zabreb respectively - are also aiming to join the group stages as well as Thomas Vermaelen who is currently on loan to AS Roma.
Thiago Alcantara (Bayern Munich), Grimaldo (Benfica), Thiago Motta and Maxwell (Paris Saint-Germain), Marc Bartra (Borussia Dortmund), Hector Bellerin and Alexis Sanchez (Arsenal), Pepe Reina (Napoli) and Adriano and Quaresma (Besiktas) are already in the group stages.

Chủ Nhật, 3 tháng 7, 2016

Hector Bellerin: Should he stay or should he leave Arsenal?

Written by Edward Ware
Over the past season, Hector Bellerin has emerged as the undisputed number one right-back for Arsenal.
The Spanish fullback played 36 of out of 38 Premier League games last season, contributing with one goal and five assists.
At 21 years of age, there is no doubt that the young Spaniard has huge potential.
With Dani Alves having left Barcelona for Juventus, Alexi Vidal is the only recognised senior first team player at right back. With this in mind, Bellerin has been touted as Alves’ potential successor.
The former La Masia academy player, has been very strongly linked with the Catalonian team in a £40 million deal.
Sergi Roberto, who predominantly plays in centre midfield, can also play at fullback but he lacks the experience to make the position his own.
So should he stay or should he go?
Since 2008, Arsenal have long been considered a feeder club for Barcelona. Thierry Henry, Alexander Hleb, Cesc Fabregas and Alex Song have all left for one of Europe’s biggest clubs in recent years.
So it would be no surprise to see Bellerin return to the club where he started his career.

Why stay
Although Bellerin has been Arsenal’s first choice right-back this season, he has only had one full season playing at the top level.
He is obviously a fantastic player, but we have seen what big money moves can do to players early on in their careers.
At this stage of his development, most people will see him at the best place.
Arsene Wenger has a reputation for developing talented youngsters, so it might be worth staying for a few years yet.
Bellerin already has an FA Cup to his name and with Arsenal one of the favourites to claim the league next season, along with the extra investment in players the club is seeing, things are beginning to get very exciting
Not all of the Arsenal players to have crossed the border have enjoyed success in Barcelona. Neither Fabregas, Song, Hleb or Henry managed to last more than three seasons.
However, Henry did of course win the treble with the club.

Why go
Simply, it’s Barcelona.
One of the biggest clubs in the world, Bellerin would consistently be challenging for Champions Leagues and league titles, as well as playing with arguably the best strike force in the world.
There is certainly a prestige that comes with playing for Barcelona.
If Bellerin were to make the move he would be playing for his boyhood club. He was born in Barcelona and joined the academy in 2003, before leaving for Arsenal in 2011. So it would be a dream come true for the young fullback.
If Barcelona do bid for the young defender it will certainly be a huge decision.
Luckily he is still at a very early stage in his career, so if he were to stay it is very likely Barcelona would come calling again.

Chủ Nhật, 5 tháng 6, 2016

Man City boss Pep Guardiola lines up move for Arsenal’s Hector Bellerin

The new City boss is set to oversee a major overhaul at the Etihad Stadium after replacing Manuel Pellegrini.
And The Times report that Guardiola wants to bring in Bellerin in order to be his first-choice right-back.
City are in the market for reinforcements in that position with Pablo Zabaleta expected to move on this summer which would leave Bacary Sagna, a former Arsenal player himself, as the only specialist right-back in the squad.
Bellerin was part of Barcelona’s La Masia academy during Guardiola’s time in charge of the Catalan’s before he left for Arsenal as a 16-year-old in 2011.
The Times state that Bellerin is particularly attractive for City as he is classified as a home-grown player.
The Spaniard spent three successive years in England before he turned 21 and by adding him to their squad, City would move closer to UEFA’s rules for European competitions.
They state that clubs must have eight home-grown players in their 25-man Champions League squads. This season City were forced to submit a smaller squad as they only had four players who met their criteria.
Bellerin is in high demand with Barcelona also considering a move for their former youngster as a replacement for Dani Alves.
Arsenal, however, are determined to hold on to their man and would likely demand a mammoth fee for the 21-year-old, who has four years left on his contract.
This week he was rated the most valuable defender in Europe by the CIES Football Observatory, who priced him at £43.1m.
City have regularly raided Arsenal for players in recent years, signing the likes of Emmanuel Adebayor, Kolo Toure, Gael Clichy, Samir Nasri and Sagna.
Guardiola has already made one signing since taking charge of City, midfielder Ilkay Gundogan arriving from Borussia Dortmund.

Thứ Tư, 13 tháng 4, 2016

5 Players Arsenal Need to Replace this Summer

As the English Premier League season draws to a close, Arsenal have performed another capitulation and instead of winning their first title in well over a decade, the Gunners are once again embroiled in a fight for the top 4. Much of it is due to the foibles of their manager, in not addressing issues of depth, not improving on a good squad in the summer – barring the acquisition of Petr Cech – and giving contracts to some players who were well in the dusk of their careers. Here’s 5 players we think the Arsenal needs to replace if they want to have a chance at the title next season:
1. Mathieu Flamini
Re-signed in 2013, Flamini added some much needed bite to the team in his first year, but even then, his lack of agility and athleticism to perform at the top level was obvious. Since then, he has been derided quite often, and hasn’t given much to the team beyond his pointing abilities. The Gunners midfield needs an overhaul this season, and sadly there’s no place for Mathieu in it – unless his best-friend, Mesut Ozil, feels lonely in London without him and wants him to stay.
2. Mathieu Debuchy
One cannot help and feel a little sympathy for Debuchy. The Frenchmen joined Arsenal when he was the first choice right back for the France NT, and he didn’t do much wrong since he replaced Bacary Sagna. However, two long term injuries did not help his cause, and the young Spaniard Hector Bellerin took his chance with both hands and made the right back spot his own. Since then, instead of fighting for his spot in a team firmly in the title race, Debuchy has moaned continuously about his lack of playing time until finally he moved on loan in the winter transfer window. There’s no way he stays with Arsenal next season, and if they manage to recoup his 12 million pound fee, it’ll be good business for the Gunners.
3. Mikel Arteta
Once of the Gunners most underappreciated players, he did a great job in righting the flailing ship Arsenal after he was signed from Everton. However, at the age of 34, time is not on his side anymore, and injuries haven’t helped either. A classy captain, a true professional, there’s a good chance that he may join the coaching setup at City once Pep moves there. His experience and personality will be missed, but his body cannot support him at the highest level anymore.
4. Tomas Rosicky
Signed from Borussia Dortmund in 2006, the future promised great things for the Czech player. But the old bane of all Arsenal players, injuries, have peppered and hurt what was a promising footballing career. Despite that, the Little Mozart has continued to be one of the most passionate and positive players at Arsenal, providing many moments of brilliance and glee for the club and the fans, and once he departs, he will be missed by all Gooners.
5. Theo Walcott
Theo Walcott burst on the scene as a fresh teenager full of promise and hope for the future. But since then, he has failed to develop as expected and beyond his brand image and speed, he does not provide much to an Arsenal team. Injuries again have not helped his cause, but even when fit, he often seems like a one trick pony, and his reluctance to backtrack has been troublesome for the defence as well. Against a defence which sits tight, Theo does not provide much, but he could do well in a team like West Ham or perhaps even Leicester who do not dominate possession and instead look to hit teams on the counter. In an Arsenal team however, his contribution has been limited and disappointing.
So there you go, here’s whom we think Arsene and the Arsenal should replace in the summer window. Do you agree or disagree? Discuss.

Thứ Hai, 7 tháng 3, 2016

Hector Bellerin names the Arsenal teammate he thinks would make a great manager

The Spanish full-back says his compatriot Mikel Arteta is the Gunners star best equipped to go into coaching.

Mikel Arteta of Arsenal during the The Emirates FA Cup Fourth Round match between Arsenal and Burnley at Emirates Stadium on January 30, 2016 in London, England.
Hector Bellerin has told FourFourTwo that of all his current Arsenal teammates it is Mikel Arteta who would make the best manager when he hangs up his boots.
Former Everton midfielder Arteta has more than 350 appearances in English football under his belt from his time with the Toffees and the Gunners, and has been captain at the Emirates Stadium since 2014.
However, the 33-year-old has featured just 15 times in the Premier League in the last two seasons, and there is talk that he could choose to retire and move into coaching this summer, with Pep Guardiola reported to be interested in adding him to his Manchester City coaching staff.
Arteta's fellow Spaniard Bellerin believes that it is a move that would suit the midfielder perfectly, and tipped his compatriot to start leading teams from the dugout rather than the pitch.
Bellerin told FourFourTwo: "He’s very intelligent, he knows how to play football, he’s got very clear ideas and I speak with him a lot about it.
"Even though I’m a full-back and he’s a midfielder, he’s always got words of advice for me, so I think he would make a good [manager].”
"He’s the captain so he’s got the right to be [the bossiest]. But he always does it with a positive mindset, so he’ll never try and boss you in a bad way. It’s a characteristic that every captain has to have."
The former Rangers midfielder was a key player in his first three seasons in North London, but has seen his influence and playing time diminish over the last two years due to niggling injury problems and increased competition in the midfield.
He captained Arsenal to FA Cup triumph at the end of the 2013-14 season, but did not play between November 2014 and the start of the current season because of injury.
His contract, which is due to expire at the end of the season, is unlikely to be extended and he is widely tipped to move into a coaching role rather than looking to extend his playing career.
Would Arteta make a good manager?

Mediawatch: Very much featuring the Redknapps

Jamie Redknapp Harry Redknapp
Acewatch
Among the ‘PREM ACES’ that were turned away from a nightclub despite being ‘title-chasing footballers’ – according to theDaily Star’s front page – was Ben Hamer, last seen on loan at Bristol City.
Ace.
England for the EnglishThere is a great deal of joy to be found in Harry Redknapp’s latest Daily Telegraph column. Not least this line on Jamie Vardy…
‘Vardy has also been fantastic but is he a sexy enough name for one of the Big Five? They will probably go for someone from Spain, Uruguay or Argentina who we’ve never heard of.’
We can only presume from this sentence that Redknapp had ‘never heard of’ Alexis Sanchez, Diego Costa, Fernando Torres, Luis Suarez, Sergio Aguero and all those other nobodies signed by the Big Five from Spain, Uruguay or Argentina. Let’s face it, they’re no Jermain ‘top, top, top’ Defoe.
Hard timesOf course, Redknapp has not finished:
‘Leicester’s success also underlines how important recruitment is and that players in England cannot be overlooked. So many of these players, such as Vardy and Danny Drinkwater, have had to work their way up and probably suffered many knockbacks over the years.’
Probably? Is that good enough now? Danny Drinkwater actually joined Leicester directly from Manchester United, where he had been at their academy since the age of nine, the poor b***ard.
Oh and of the eight players signed by Leicester this season, only two were bought from English clubs. And only one of those was English. But yes, their success definitely underlines that players in England cannot be overlooked.
Who’s winning the title this week, Harry?
Harry Redknapp, January 4: ‘Leicester have had the most successful season of the lot up to this point when you think they were tipped to go down in August, but they will probably start to fall away and I’ve put them down to finish sixth.’
Harry Redknapp, February 28: ‘Leicester City and Tottenham are now rightly the title favourites and this felt like a potentially pivotal weekend.’
Harry Redknapp, March 1: “Tottenham have got it all on, going to Upton Park under the lights, with a tough crowd. But if Tottenham come through that they win the league I think.”
Harry Redknapp, March 6: ‘Leicester are virtually guaranteed Champions League football next season, a stunning achievement in itself, and I cannot see them slipping up for the league. It will take a massive collapse for them now but looking at their fixtures, and the games for the teams around them, they will win the league.
‘Everyone has been waiting for them to slip up but it just hasn’t happened. Every month you look at the fixtures and try to pinpoint one they could lose and they keep upsetting the odds. That win over Spurs at White Hart Lane in January now looks pivotal.’
Yes, it now looks pivotal. It didn’t look so bloody pivotal last week, did it, Harry?
A timely reminder
Harry Redknapp, March 7: ‘Whatever happens over the final nine games of the season he has been the manager of the year.’
When I was brilliant, by Harry RedknappOf course Redknapp cannot credit Claudio Ranieri without shovelling a bucketful of praise towards good old Englishman Nigel Pearson.
He says: ‘Pearson’s departure in the summer could have threatened to set them back and out of the 12 managers or so who were linked with the job, Ranieri was the one nobody expected. He could easily have come in and messed it all up, changed the style of play and said ‘no, we’re not going to do it like that’.
‘I’ve gone in at teams down at the bottom of the league and you’ve had to change things quickly to get a reaction and freshen the place up. But Leicester already had decent players and it reminds me of when I went in at Tottenham.
‘At Spurs we already had Gareth Bale, Luka Modric and Michael Dawson and it didn’t need much work doing on the squad. They just needed some direction and someone to believe in them.
‘Leicester also had a strong core in the squad, adding just a couple of new players like N’Golo Kante and Shinji Okazaki over the summer. It’s not as if Ranieri was taking over a bunch of idiots.’
So Gareth Bale, Luka Modric and Michael Dawson (that has to be the first time Dawson has been the third name in that particular triptych) just needed somebody to believe in them, Harry? Is that why you gave Bale a total of six Premier League starts that season after taking over in October 2008? Is that why you tried to send him out on loan? Is that why Dawson started just ten league games that season after you took the job?
And Modric just needed direction? Like telling him that “it’s difficult for him to play as one of two central midfielders, he’s got to play further forward”? Like preferring Jermaine Jenas and Wilson Palacios in central midfield and pushing Modric onto the left wing? Mediawatch is astonished that Zinedine Zidane has not tried the same tactic at Real Madrid.
Like father, like sonIn a ridiculous Daily Mail column that suggests that every Leicester player should make it into a team of the year, Jamie Redknapp ‘writes’ the following:
‘Mahrez again proved his quality with an exceptional goal at Watford and I think the best playets are the ones who perform away from home.
‘Mahrez looks like he’d be more suited to playing with the comforts of home but some of his best displays have come on the road – at Watford, Man City, Everton. He is the perfect exponent of counter-attacking football.’
So he is the perfect exponent of counter-attacking football – traditionally a tactic utilised away from home – but he looks likehe’d be more suited to playing with the comforts of home. What on earth could he mean?
The AlamoCongratulations to Garth Crooks of the BBC. Unable to think of an outstanding performance from a right-back this weekend for his team of the week (could we humbly suggest Hector Bellerin, DeAndre Yedlin or Craig Dawson?), he simply does not pick one. So a back three of Charlie Daniels, Dejan Lovren and Virgil van Dijk must hold the fort behind Aaron Ramsey, Gylfi Sigurdsson, Dimitri Payet, David Silva (‘like John Curry on ice’), Riyad Mahrez, Harry Kane and Josh King. Good luck fellas. You really don’t see enough 3-2-3-2 formations with no holding midfielders.
Knowing me, knowing you
Oh my. The Sun really are setting their man up for a fall when they dub Paul Jiggins their ‘north London know-it-all’. We are expecting big things as he ‘poses the big questions facing Tottenham and Arsenal as they battle for title glory’. Come on then, know-it-all…
‘WHAT MUST THEY DO IN THE RUN-IN?’ asks Jiggins. And this, ladies and gentlemen, is his answer in full …
‘POCHETTINO will know his side cannot continue giving teams a one-goal head start. And they must ensure they turn superior possession into goals and kill off opponents when on top.
‘Kane added: “After going 2-1 up, we should have gone on to get a third and a fourth.”
‘Arsenal must cut out the poor discipline and defensive howlers that have cost them vital points this season.
‘It was classic Arsenal at the Lane — seemingly in control before suffering another self-inflicted wound.
‘Wenger yet again talked about “regrets” after the game, but the stubborn Frenchman still tried to gloss over his side’s familiar failings.
‘He said: “It’s part of the top level, to keep control and not make a mistake at a decisive moment.
‘“But I wouldn’t make too much of a fuss about that because it would take away the fact we performed well.”
‘You did, Arsene, but you still did not get the three points!’
So thanks to Jiggins’ expertise, we discover that Tottenham need to stop conceding goals and start scoring more. And Arsenal need to stop having players sent off.
The Sun’s resident comedy Cockney may indeed know it all; he’s just chosen to keep most of it to himself.
Finishing lineThe Sun put together a Rashford v Berahino comparison for reasons unknown, with marks out of five for pace, aerial threat, attitude and finishing.
Graeme Bryce awards them both 4/5 for ‘finishing’ despite the fact that they failed to hit the target with any of their four shots in total. What the hell mark would actual goalscorer Salomon Rondon have got?
A difference of opinion
Garth Crooks, the BBC: ‘I had a big problem with referee Andre Marriner’s decision to award Christian Benteke a penalty when Marriner looked unsure. I have no problem with the referee’s opinion, I just think we are all entitled for the referee to be sure.’
Graham Poll, the Daily Mail: ‘ANDRE MARRINER was brilliantly helped by assistant referee Scott Ledger when Damien Delaney tripped Christian Benteke.’
Mediawatch is siding with the actual, you know, referee. Especially when he is ably assisted by his – and this is a key word – assistant.