It’s amazing how concerned Arsenal fans get with all this…

Sometimes it’s worth taking a few steps back and asking at which point did we become more than sports fans? At which point did the internal workings of a football clubs begin to weigh so heavy on the minds of supporters? This is central to Arsenal and I’m not talking about the destructive nature of other clubs in England or the rest of Europe.

It was interesting to observe the reaction following the announcement of Theo Walcott’s contract extension on the weekend. All the positives can be spoken about Jack Wilshere, and the midfielder is arguably Arsenal’s best player—but Walcott is the club’s most important at this time.

It would have been far more devastating for the morale from top to bottom at Arsenal had Walcott been allowed to leave, and it’s very difficult to envisage any positives that could have been created from it. But some of the reactions to the makeup of his contract has been a little perplexing.

Maybe it’s the financial information of football clubs that is so readily available; the nature of Twitter and the involvement of many journalists also helps to enhance or complement on some details included in newspaper stories. But why are there such damning conclusions about Walcott’s contract, rumoured to be just shy of £100,000 per week?

I get it, the information available to us means everyone can draw an opinion on what is suitable wages and what exceeds the value of a player. But really, why do so many care? And once again, I’ll point to the fact that I am strictly talking about Arsenal, not the actions of others in the past.

Arsenal are heavily criticised for their wage structure, which should take the shape of a pyramid but which is far more even throughout. The best players should be paid more (and does that include the team’s most valuable, regardless of quality in comparison to others—for me, yes).

It was interesting that I came across a viewpoint that a top striker in a top league—so a player who has the potential or current ability to score 20 league goals—is always going to warrant or command wages exceeding £100,000 per week. So again, with Theo Walcott and what we’ve seen, where is the problem?

[post_link url=”https://www.footballfancast.com/premiership/arsenal/arsene-wenger-slams-officials-after-defeat,https://www.footballfancast.com/premiership/arsenal/arsenal-to-rival-newcastle-in-yanga-mbiwa-pursuit,https://www.footballfancast.com/premiership/arsenal/a-much-better-arsenal-signing-than-is-given-credit-for” target=”_blank” type=”tower”]

An extension of this argument against the concern over club finances stretches to aspects that do directly affect supporters. The rise in ticket prices, notably. With high wages comes high ticket prices, as Arsene Wenger recently said. But with ticket prices unlikely to get any higher, doesn’t this apparent restructuring or new approach make for better reading? Walcott is one of the faces of Arsenal, is one of the leading names in that group of British youngsters, so why shouldn’t he be paid in the top bracket?

The point is, there is plenty of concern for what he is going to earn over the next three seasons, but how much more would have been said if Arsenal didn’t offer him top wages to stay at the club? Did that play a part in Robin van Persie leaving Arsenal? We’ll never know, however a lot of what’s been said suggests the Dutchman always had eyes to leave north London.

Another major point is that Arsenal are not about to crumble by offering Walcott big wages. I don’t believe handing out one or two big contracts is a bad move for a club who perceive themselves to be one of Europe’s elite. I don’t stand by the idea that a lack of Champions League income will cripple Arsenal beyond repair. And I also don’t believe Champions League football is close to impossible to reclaim once it’s been lost for a season or two. Many will use Liverpool as the prime example to counter that stance, but where’s the bigger picture? Where’s the nod to the mismanagement of that club? Where’s the nod to excessive transfer fees being spent on players who are actually worth less than half?

A lot of Arsenal’s transfers in the years leading up to and following the move to the Emirates were small spend in comparison to others. It’s the view of most supporters that the club won’t spend £30 million for a player anytime soon. For that, why not concentrate the finances on retaining the club’s best players and paying the market rate for those who merit those wages?

And I really don’t want to get too far into the idea of who deserves or merits £100,000 per week. This is football, a business that works well beyond the parameters of normality and what most of us are used to. There’s absolutely no use getting into the debate about why people and some youngsters deserve to be paid so much for kicking a ball.

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For Arsenal, the club are investing that big pay packet for much more than just Walcott’s abilities on the pitch. I also believe Wenger and the board were backed into a corner and felt they had to extend the player’s contract because of the team’s position and the frustration among fans.

Some hold the view that Wenger lives in a different era of the game, wanting to use the values and an approach that was held 10-plus years ago. Now that the club have appeared to take a step to break out of that ideal, the questions have emerged.

Yes the fans pay big money, but that was something in place prior to this contract being offered and signed. So why worry? Why not just accept football for what it is? The biggest talking point is that Arsenal have secured one of their best talents when something far more damaging looked increasingly likely.

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Aston Villa star reaps the reward of hard work

Aston Villa winger Charles N’Zogbia admits his hard graft has allowed him to reach his best form to help the Premier League strugglers.

The Frenchman has experienced troubles trying to impress at Villa Park, since his arrival from Wigan back in summer 2011 after a £9.5 million move.

However, the 26 year-old seems to have found the rhythm under Paul Lambert’s management and tells The Sun that thanks to hard work in training his performances in the last few games have finally made an impact.

“You can have a gift but if you don’t work on it you can do nothing with it. If I’ve improved it’s because of the way I am training,

“Every day I’m here I’m working hard because if I want to stay in the team that’s what I have to do. I’m even doing a bit of extra work after training and it is helping me”, he recognised.

Aston Villa host the current league champions Manchester City in tonight’s Monday night football, with Lambert’s squad in need of points to jump out of the relegation positions.

N’Zogbia is aware the poor level the team have shown during the season, but believes every project need time to achieve the best results.

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“It’s hard for any new team to get it right from the start. Even Barcelona weren’t put together in a season”.

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Top FIVE replacements for Everton chiefs to consider

David Moyes took over at Everton in 2002, and after spending a few years flirting with relegation, the Scot has propelled the Toffees to the rather more enjoyable end of the Premier League table, and stabilised them as a top six club.

But what makes Moyes’ feat so impressive is that it has all been done on a shoestring – with finance, resources and youth talent being incredibly limited at Goodison Park. But having knocked on the door of the Champions League for the last five years or so, with no success, it appears the Scottish boss has taken the Toffees as far as they can go, with many of his astute signings now reaching their peak years.

The Everton boss is expected to depart in the summer for pastures new, as he still refuses to discuss a contract extension until the end of the season.

But who will fill the huge void left behind at Goodison Park should Moyes depart in the summer? We’ve created a top five list of candidates for your own consideration.

Click on Neil Lennon to reveal the Top Five replacements for David Moyes at Everton

Joey Barton pinpoints the reason for QPR’s problems

Football’s resident bad boy Joey Barton, on a season-long loan at Marseille, has pinpointed former boss Mark Hughes for the state that QPR are in.

The comments came after their 3-2 defeat  at Craven Cottage on Easter Monday, a defeat that leaves the Hoops teetering on the edge of relegation. The result means that Redknapp’s side are seven points from safety with just seven matches left to play this season.

Barton, 30, tweeted: “Realistically that’s it. Too much to do for QPR.

“Feel it’s unfair to blame board, they’ve backed the managers. Can’t look any further than what Hughes and his cronies did in the summer.

“Redknapp was given a very difficult task. Can’t blame him for spending.”

Redknapp, who took over from Hughes in November, invested heavily in his squad in January having signed former Blackburn defender Christopher Samba from Russian side Anzhi Makhachkala.

The Congolese born defender was signed for a massive £12.5 million during the window, with Samba said to be on a whopping £100,000 a week plus bonus add-ons.

It’s a signing that has come under scrutiny from QPR fans, especially after his poor show against Fulham last Monday.

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The defender had a shocking game and essentially handed Fulham the win, much to Harry Redknapp’s disappointment.

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Wigan rocked by Alcaraz blow

Antolin Alcaraz could miss the rest of the season after Wigan boss Roberto Martinez revealed he has suffered a hamstring injury.

The defender picked up the injury during last Saturday’s defeat at West Ham and is now expected to miss crucial games as Latics battle to beat the drop, while the FA Cup Final will also be touch and go.

Alcaraz has been a key figure at the back for Wigan since returning from a serious groin injury and boss Roberto Martinez blamed the defeat at Upton Park on the absence of the player.

Martinez says they will give the player the best possible chance of returning before the end of the season but the Spaniard does not sound that optimistic.

“We’ll treat him and see how quickly he responds to treatment,” Martinez revealed. “But obviously soft-tissue injuries of that type would usually take the best part of three weeks to heal.

“Antolin knows his body really well and we are fortunate he managed to get off the field before he did himself some serious damage. Hopefully we can use this time to work on other aspects of his fitness to make sure he can return before the end of the season.”

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Should Arsenal simply scrap him this summer?

I find Arsenal’s defensive frailties this season a rather perplexing issue. While poor individual performances from Bacary Sagna and Thomas Vermaelen have been aplenty, and furthermore, the Gunners have undergone a whole season with Mikel Arteta, traditionally an attacking wideman, in defensive midfield, the Premier League’s final standings show that the North Londoners are privy to the second best defensive record in the English top flight, with their Goals Against total of 37 only beaten by Manchester City, who finish the season having  conceded on  just 34 occasions.

The impressive feat is in no small part due to Arsenal’s strong form throughout the business end of the season, having not lost since the second North London derby in early March, despite at the time many declaring that their campaign was now over, and in the process recording eight victories in their last ten domestic fixtures, along with five clean sheets – six if you include their 2-0 win over Bayern Munich in the Champions League.

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But underpinning their success over the past few months has been two key individuals at the heart of Arsenal’s defence – Laurent Koscielny and Per Mertesacker. The pair have been exceptional, striking up an understanding which appears to get the best out of both of them, tailored to their specific skills set. The Frenchman has been speedy, resilient and intelligent, recording the fifth highest ratio for ground duels won in the Premier League according to OPTA, while his German accomplice has used his height and reading of the game to be the ninth most effective centre-back in the division in the air – the most consistent out of all of the top four clubs.

The formidable partnership appears to have come at a price for the Gunners however, with club captain Thomas Vermaelen forced into taking a back seat whilst his team-mates provide some much needed consistency and simplicity to Arsenal’s formerly shaky backline. The Belgian international has made just a single 90 minute appearance since coming unstuck in Arsenal’s last defeat to Tottenham, in which he was charged by the Sky Sports punditry team as being at fault for both of Spurs’ goals. He was dropped, along with Wojceich Szczesny, for the European clash with Bayern Munich, and has ever since taken up a regular spot on Arsene Wenger’s subs bench.

It begs the question as to whether there is any need for the 27 year old at the Emirates anymore. With two years left on his current contract, this summer represents as good an opportunity as any to sell, and despite Vermaelen’s lacklustre form, there are reportedly a host of European clubs, including Barcelona, showing a fleeting interest.

Whilst in the past many praised the Arsenal defender’s capability on the ball, citing his consistent passing, contribution of goals and ability to surge forward out of the back to launch attacks,  I have been critical of Vermaelen for some time. In my opinion, his overall game has been incredibly overrated by the fact he is the kind of player to put in an all-action performance, often full of tackles, challenges in the air and bursting runs out of defence, but the fact is, a footballer who plays on the edge in the manner of the Belgian, can never be in the right place at the right time for a full 90 minutes, which after all is what centre-backs are on the pitch to do.

I have no doubt in Vermaelen’s abilities as an athlete – he possesses a great leap, good pace and considerable strength – but when it comes down to reading the game, defensive nous and concentration, the core characteristics required by even the lowest quality of non-league central defenders, I find him incredibly lacking. Per Mertesacker’s consistency, despite turning and moving at battle cruiser speed has really shown his team mate up this season, using the traditional methods of positioning, strength and height in sharp contrast to the more aesthetic style of the Belgian. Similarly, Vermaelen’s superficial nature is further shown by the fact that criticism and scrutiny surround his performances has increased dramatically from seasons previous, coinciding with the defender’s supply of goals drying up this year.

Furthermore, the Arsenal skipper has done anything but lead by example since being appointed captain in the wake of Robin Van Persie’s departure at the start of the season. His miss from the spot during a now infamous penalty shoot-out against Bradford in the Capital One Cup was not only a moment of failure for Vermaelen considering his integral role in the first team donning the arm band, but furthermore appears to be a moment in his career which he is yet to successfully recover from, with the Gunners leaking 21 goals in their next 11 fixtures until Arsene Wenger made the call to drop the 27 year old, followed by Arsenal conceding just six times in their final nine games in his absence.

It perhaps suggests that the Arsenal boss should take away his lacklustre star’s extra responsibilities as captain ahead of next season rather than feel compelled to move him on, as it appears to have overlapped with his woeful form and the two factors could well be connected. It does not necessarily mean that he is a poor quality player, but rather he does not handle the pressure of the armband well, and in the past Vermaelen has on occasion put in exceptional performances. Furthermore, it would be wrong to judge a footballer on a single season from a whole career – then again, there is an old adage that you are only as good as your last game.

On the other hand, Arsene Wenger has never been one to resist making a profit out of a player, and having bought Vermaelen four years ago at a relatively cheap price of £10million, you’d feel that his time at the Emirates has certainly added value to his market worth, considering he is now tried and tested in one of Europe’s most competitive top flights rather than being an Ajax youngster known for his potential.

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Yet, with the coming transfer window set to be an incredibly busy one at the Emirates, with the likes of Bacary Sagna, Nicklas Bendtner, Denilson, Andrei Arshavin, Sebastien Squillaci, Johan Djourou, Andre Santos, Marouane Chamakh, Emmanuel Frimpong, Gervinho and Lukas Fabianski expected to be departing for pastures new, it would make sense to keep Vermaelen in North London to maintain a level of consistency if nothing else, and furthermore, he is more than capable in terms of ability of being a third choice centre-back, should he be happy with such a limited role. Similarly, with Arsene Wenger reportedly spending big in the summer as a means to improve the first team, adding further replacements to the mix will only complicate matters and take away from the summer budget.

Having said that, if the papertalk surrounding interest from Barcelona proves to be true, my gut feeling is that the Arsenal boss would be willing to sell his defender should the price be right. Considering Vermaelen has overall failed during a season where his club has need him most, in terms of leadership and performances amid Arsenal’s current malaise, it may well be for the best for the player and the club to politely part company on good terms, rather than the 27 year old becoming yet another expensive piece of deadwood at the Emirates.

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Di Canio wants Sunderland to get nasty

Sunderland manager Paolo Di Canio has blasted his players for lacking desire for the club after another defeat on Saturday, as reported by Sky Sports.

The energetic Italian saw his side slump to another loss yesterday as West Brom scored three to keep the Black Cats bottom of the Premier League.

Di Canio approached the travelling Sunderland fans after the game to apologise and urge them to keep their heads up but the fans were less than appreciative after another lacklustre performance.

The former West Ham and Celtic star is under real pressure to keep his job and the North East club have a history of losing patience quickly with managers.

However, Di Canio has claimed that the lack of leaders in the dressing room is to blame for their poor start.

“It’s obvious that we’re still not gelled together.

“We don’t have many leaders in terms of desire. There’s no desire to play with a premier style because it’s difficult.

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“We need to be more nasty.”

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It is better to have sacked when lost, than never to have sacked at all

Godwin’s Law states that the longer a discussion goes on, the higher the chances become of a comparison involving Adolf Hitler. The purpose of this inevitable Reductio ad Hitlerum is, of course, to win the argument.

If your chosen stance is exactly the kind of attitude/wallpaper/ice cream Hitler would’ve gone for, then you’re patently only a couple of steps away from book burning and death camps, thus your opinion on felt hats of the sixteenth century are completely invalid. Nazis lose arguments.

Sir Alex Ferguson is, despite the paranoid night terrors of Roy Keane, not Adolf Hitler. But he does occupy a similar status in discussions on football management.  The longer a conversation on managerial stability goes on, so the chances of a comparison involving Ferguson become inevitable. He is the trump card in any deck of examples. The cauterizing agent in any wounded argument.

The difference (apart from all the actual Nazi stuff obviously. Fergie was dead against the Lebensraum by all accounts) is that while Godwin’s Law is seen as a weak, last ditch tactic – a verbose equivalent of shouting “You smell!” and running away – Fergie’s Law is seen as a strong, front footed one. It’s trotted out by respectable people, and Tony Cascarino. It’s often supported by the equally trusted ‘Wenger’s Accompaniment’, and if the argument is really getting stretched, perhaps even a ‘Moyes’s Mooting’

The accepted wisdom of pundits, panelists and publicans alike is that sackings like AVB’s are bad, or at least bad form. Only long-term managerial stability breeds real success. If only the power hungry, finger pyramiding villains of club Chairmanship could see it.

But is this true?

Ever since Roman Abramovich swanned onto the scene with his shiny new Chelsea Toy (manager sold separately) it’s been widely assumed that his constant petulant tinkering has been counter productive. It’s only setting them back. It’s his own time he’s wasting.

But while a case can certainly be made for the first Mourinho era, the lasting effect of a sushi conveyor belt of bosses has hardly been negligent. In fact since Claudio Ranieri was dismissed in 2004, becoming ground zero for Chelsea managerial dominos, they’ve won more than Ferguson’s longevity infused Manchester United. Less League titles (3>5) but more FA Cups and European honors.

But moneyed sides like Chelsea and City are often written off in such discussions. They don’t conform to the norm. A fallacy that fails to take into account that if the money was all-important, Abramovich would’ve clearly appointed himself by now. He’d at least be the first Chelsea boss with job security.

So how have the less evil sides done without longevity? Liverpool sacked both Kenny Dalglish and Peaky the Night Owl after underwhelming short spells. A period kick started after long-term faith in Rafa Benitez had seen both their form, and him, start to unravel. They’re now doing quite well under a manager appointed 18 months ago. So to are Newcastle United since sacking Chris Hughton (a very unpopular decision back in 2010.) In fact his replacement, booed on his arrival, is now the league’s second longest serving manager. How about Swansea City? Soaring like knickers thrown at Tom Jones from League 2 obscurity to Premier League mid-table security in only six years. Surely that’s the product of good old managerial stability? Well, no. They changed their manager five times in those six years.

So what is it these clubs are missing? What wondrous, better kind of success could they enjoy if only they had faith in their managers? It’s hard to say, because Ferguson aside, even the likes of Wenger, Moyes & the mythical Dario Gradi haven’t found successful longevity a longevity of success.

You may think it a few trophies short of a cabinet to question the success of Wenger’s tenure. This, after all, is the man who took a boring, defensive side of loveable drunks and turned them into the most entertaining attacking team in the league. However, since 2004 Arsenal have gone from automatic title challengers to being perpetually scrapping for 4th. Arsene has now spent longer in the silverware wilderness than he spent in its bosom and his image has shifted from the unflappable, miraculous Professeur to a frustrated, elderly Mr. Bean, perpetually resisting metamorphosis from within his giant coat chrysalis.  It’s no longer sacrilege to ponder whether the Gunners would be better off without him. He’s (almost) lived long enough to see himself become the villain.

At United, the thinking is that David Moyes should be afforded the same faith that so benefited Ferguson. This is both admirable and fluffily reassuring in a time when managerial job security is about as stable as Syrian buckaroo. But it’s also partly based on the idea that a similar security at Everton yielded increased success. This would be a very relative idea of success. A harsh critic could say he merely didn’t fail. Much like Wenger, his early years saw most of the work, turning a side of perpetual strugglers into a side of respectable middlers. But while many will point to his lack of funds, keeping England’s fifth most successful side in the top half of the table is less the impossible dream and more the plausible expectation. David Moyes, making the possible possible since 2002.

Dario Gradi, the hallowed mythical figure of ancient managerial legend failed even to bring that much vaulted stability to his beloved Crewe Alexandra in over 400 seasons in charge (70-80 as caretaker, depending on which scrolls you believe) Despite his admirable courage under financial fire, they were relegated nearly as many times as they were promoted.

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Even Ol’ Big Head went down in the end. Though without him Forest slipped even further from the limelight, their star fading as if retreating into an actual forest. But then Brian Clough was an exceptional manager.

And so was Ferguson. Which makes him an uneasy standard bearer. Normality shouldn’t be judged by its exceptions. It also underestimates the magnitude of his task at United in the mid-1980s. Dragging a boozy boys club resting on their laurels kicking and screaming into the modern game, all while building a world-class youth set up from scratch. A manager coming into a well-run modern football club shouldn’t need four years to see progress. He shouldn’t really need more than two.

Such are our romantic associations with words like faith and trust and legacy, boosted tenfold by their current infrequency, that it seems sacrilege to dismiss them. And such are the negative connotations of the worst of fan opinion. The knee-jerk, pass the buck, sack the manager vitriol, boosted tenfold by the Internet and its soapbox for idiots that it feels dirty to encourage it.

But sometimes it might just be right. Not every manager is Alex Ferguson. Sometimes, you really should sack them if you’re not seeing instant progress. But then again, that’s exactly the kind of thing Hitler would say.

Are there really signs that Arsenal will falter?

Although Arsenal keep marching on, playing the same aesthetically football that Arsene Wenger has been a vigilant defender of all along, there is a certain reluctance to accept that they have a genuine chance at the title. The Gunners are four points clear of Chelsea at the top, and have distanced their arguably toughest opponents, Manchester City, by a gap of six points. Their defence isn’t letting in easy goals like in previous seasons, and the Arsenal midfield have finally burst to life.

And still, we are all reluctant to recognize their title credentials.

There is certain consensus that although they are looking solid at the moment, Wenger’s squad will eventually falter. Even Wayne Rooney said in a press conference that he was not too worried about the considerable gap because everyone at Manchester United have seen Arsenal be “top two until February or March and then faded away,” suggesting that the same will happen again. How genuine is this claim though?

If we look at the points gathered in 2013 alone, the gap at the top of the table is in fact bigger for Arsenal. Last season was ruined by a drop in form before new years, and Arsene Wenger’s men secured a spot in the Champions League with a late display of form. So far it seems like Rooney’s comments are either ill advised or simply meant to be an attempt on mind games – something few of us would expect him to excel at.

If Arsenal are to take encouragement from any recent season in particular, it should, funnily enough, be that of which has defined the career of Rooney himself. When Manchester United entered the only time space in the Ferguson era that resembled a trophy draft – between 2003 and 2007 – the retired Sir Alex faced much the same accusations as Arsene Wenger has had to deal with in recent years. With a squad that was slowly maturing, and young players like Cristiano Ronaldo and Rooney growing into pillars of the team, Fergie eventually came out victorious. It sounds awfully familiar, don’t you think?

This year we have seen Aaron Ramsey in particular completely changing his game, giving possibly the best and most complete performances in the league. Now we also see Jack Wilshere realizing  his importance to the rhythm of the Gunners’ game, as well as scoring goals. Meanwhile, Kieran Gibbs and Olivier Giroud are applying themselves, giving Arsenal the most strikingly apparent cohesion in the top flight.

When Fergie’s last great United team started down the path that eventually lead them to a Champions League victory, they were relying on the talents of player’s that had long been written off. At the end of last season, none of us gave Aaron Ramsey a flicker of chance to succeed at the highest level. 13 games into the season he looks like the PFA player of the year, and possibly one of Wenger’s greatest achievements in terms of nurturing.

Another component of Manchester United’s success when they won back the title in 2007 was Ferguson’s recognition of the need to exit the starting blocks like Usain Bolt driven by nitroglycerin. Fergie saw that his old strategy of starting slowly before gaining momentum in January and February was putting his team adrift when real title race started. The 5-1 thrashing of Fulham in the opening game was a resounding confirmation of the team’s intent. Although Arsenal lost their opener to Aston Villa in August, the momentum they have built since gives a clear indication of where they intend to be when the trophies are handed out in May.

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It is about time we take Arsenal seriously in their campaign. Now that we enter the busy Christmas schedule, it is their rivals that need to sharpen their form should have any chance of closing the gap. They’ll be the bookie’s favourite by some distance when they take on Hull at the Emirates tonight, and to put their form into context they can potentially move 12 points clear of the reigning champions.

My biggest concern is this: are we prepared to deal with the size of Arsene Wenger’s French ego, should they win?

Wenger knows best says Arsenal legend

Arsenal legend Thierry Henry says that only Arsene Wenger knows whether or not the Gunners need to sign anyone in January.

Speaking at the launch of Puma’s latest evoPOWER football boots, the 36-year-old also backed his former manager to end the club’s trophy doubt and lead them to Premier League glory this season.

“I am not Wenger, I do not know best, the boss knows best,” Henry said.

“A lot of people give him a lot of stick because he has not won anything in a very long time.

“They’ve been expecting Arsenal to collapse recently but they haven’t. Why can’t they win the league? They’re in the position to.

“The future will tell us if they are good enough or not but right now I think they are.”

The New York Red Bulls striker also questioned FIFA’s decision to award the Ballon d’Or to Cristiano Ronaldo in favour of Bayern Munich ace and fellow countryman Franck Ribery, adding that the governing body “kills the spirit of football” when making these judgements.

“Yes I do [think Ribery deserved to win], not because he is French or anything, I just think he deserved it,” he added.

“I was disappointed for him and was disappointed for French football. For a very long time now we haven’t had a winner – we had Zizou and Michael Platini but that’s it.

“I really thought he was going to win, I mean as well as him being a great footballer, just look at what he has done!

“For me it kills the spirit of football because you have to be able to perform, but perform with a team that wins things.”

The Frenchman believes that this year’s World Cup may come too soon for a young French side, but that glory in the European Championships in France in 2016 could be a more realistic goal. However, after a very public falling out with the press, would his countrymen be able to handle the pressure inflicted on Les Bleus by the French media?

“I have travelled everywhere, I remember when I was back in France I thought it was going to be better somewhere else.

“Then I arrived in England and I always had a good relationship with the press. But on personal life some papers back in the day could be really bad – as we have seen now in the news.

“Then you go to Italy and realise it wasn’t that bad in France. Then you come and play for Barcelona and you eat in a restaurant and they put what you ate in the restaurant in the papers the next day!

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“It is not a French thing or Italian thing or Spanish thing – when you give joy to people you have to expect it.

“But don’t get me wrong, the French press will still tell you exactly what they think, like in 98 when they thought we wouldn’t even get past the first round!”

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