Changing the English Philosophy




England’s national team continues to divide opinion when it comes to how the team should be run, whether it is a managerial appointment, tactical decision or squad selection. However by taking a step back and analysing the entire situation, it will be easier to clarify what the problems are and how to resolve them. Pre Euro 2012, the appointment of Roy Hodgson took many by surprise; Harry Redknapp was the media and bookies favourite to take the vacant England position by leaving Tottenham Hotspur come the close season. However once the appointment had been made, “experts” had already began a tirade of analysis which, some were true, but largely were false and had no substance. The media wanted an England team to replicate European style football, possession based with fluid forward movement but with English grit and determination, Hodgson knew this wasn’t feasible. 
During the selection process, Hodgson had many unfortunate setbacks, one was Kyle Walker and Gareth Barry injuries, as well as Michael Carrick and Micah Richards not wanting to be squad players, I do feel however that Frank Lampard’s injury was a blessing in disguise, for his inclusion would have meant a total tactical restructuring of a team that would need to be built around a player who is too one dimensional in my opinion. 
Wayne Rooney’s suspension gave more emphasis on who will be selected to deputise during the two games in which Rooney was ineligible. Once the final squad was taken to Poland/Ukraine, on inspection the squad was “bottom heavy”, not in numbers but in the characteristics of the players. 

The squad is as follows:
3 Goalkeepers/8 Defenders/8 Midfielders/4 Strikers

Of the 8 defenders, Hodgson was relying on the versatility of Phil Jones and Phil Jagielka in order to compensate for only including 3 players who would end up playing defensive midfield (Gerrard, Parker and Henderson) in a system which utilised 2 at a time, 4-2-3-1. 
Of the 8 midfielders, as previously mentioned, 3 would be defensive and 5 wingers but had plenty of versatility, Young would be played behind the striker during Rooney’s absence to good effect, Chamberlain's ability to play across the attacking line was also a plus and the squad contained a “defensive winger” in Milner. Among the strikers, upon Rooney’s return, he was deployed mainly a withdrawn role behind an out and out striker, this pushing Young into a more accustomed to wide role. The saying “players make the formation” was not relevant to this team, in this team the formation made the players. In midfield, Gerrard, at club level, is not used a defensive midfielder; his ability allows him to get forward and have a greater influence in an attacking sense. Young and Milner do not play in teams that soak up pressure and employ a counter attacking game, both their respective teams are proactive in their approach rather than reactive. The philosophy that Hodgson had imposed on the England team had changed the mind set of players from being attacking and forward thinking, to defensive and drawn towards reactive football.
During the tournament, in which England gained a respectable draw to France, won a surprisingly entertaining match with Sweden and a close fought encounter with Ukraine which secured first position in the group. 
At this point in time Hodgson had achieved his greatest accomplishment, he convinced the nation that playing defensive football is the most effective way to play with the current generation of England players and the media were more than happy to agree as long as England were in the tournament, however everyone got a reality check when Italy came knocking. 
The match was dominated from the first minute to the last minute of extra time by Italy, England couldn’t keep the ball for prolonged periods and looked predictable in their build up, this led them to become tired later in the match due to having to chase the ball and it showed during the penalty shootout. Straight after England were knocked out, the media, fans and ex-players jumped on the bandwagon which stated that England need to change their approach and learn how to keep the ball better. 

At grassroots level, physicality dominates a coaches thinking rather than the technical ability of a player, as Gareth Southgate declared after the Italy match, “Imagining Pirlo's report as young player - can't run, can't tackle, poor in the air. Ah, the importance of focussing on what kids CAN do”. 

This statement can be reflected in many players who are small and slight but have incredible technical abilities, unfortunately they are overlooked by players who have a much better build and use their physical power to perform rather than what they can do with the ball at their feet. It’s a common occurrence that central defenders be tall and physical in their approach, central midfielders should be athletic and powerful due to the amount of running they’ll need to do, wingers should be quick and direct, and strikers should be powerful; smaller strikers are rare but need to be quick if they are to play. None of these characteristics help in playing possession based football but rather counter attacking direct football. 
In order for England’s national team to progress, the model English player needs to be changed, the characteristics that coaches look for in their selection need to be change and the style of football needs to change. By educating coaches and showing them how much one coach can change, will enable them to make braver decisions and take more notice of players who may not have developed physically yet but have control over the football. 

A key example of this theory is comparing the development of James Milner and Jack Wilshere; James Milner is your archetypal English player, hard-working, honest, athletic but lacks the technical abilities that would encourage possession football if there were 11 of him on the pitch. Jack Wilshere is a modern English player, small, has the typical English aggression but has quality on the ball and plays in a team where possession is the key. The question needs to be asked how many Milner’s were developed at the academy level at the expense of the one Jack Wilshere. Further analysis needs to be made into what could potentially happen if half the premier league teams each developed 1 Jack Wilshere; it is a classic case that the youth teams belonging to clubs tend to play the same way as the senior team, this is because should the players progress that far, the transition in style should be easier than if they played a different way at youth level. By using this, the teams that play football that is based on possession have an obligation towards the national team to do more in order to develop not quantity, but quality English players. 
There is a common misconception that the Premier League teams do not produce enough English players, this argument could not be more wrong - they do not produce enough quality English players. If the Premier League teams each produced 1 James Milner each, the England national team would be playing the same type of football as they do now, however if even half of them produced a player who is comfortable on the ball, has a forward thinking mentality and is tactically astute, then think about the result. 
Simply put this generation of players are not capable of this because it takes more than a few possession based coaching sessions to impose that sort of style at the elite level. England were 12th out of 16 teams at the Euros in terms of possession/pass accuracy statistics, for a team ranked 3rd in the world, that is a poor showing. 
A lot needs to happen in order for England to change their identity, and it all starts from the grassroots level and the mentality coaches have on the “model English player”.
Until the coaching at grassroots level is changed and modelled in a way which England want to use as their identity for the coming generation, asking the current crop to a play to a style in which they haven’t been brought up in is unfair. Hodgson now has a choice to make in terms of his squad selection for the World Cup qualification campaign, should he persist in the style of football that failed at the Euros or should he now take the chances to promote the best of the U-21 players who were very accomplished in their performances under Stuart Pearce. 
The coming generation of England players may not match up to other nations who have been developing for over a decade, but the process needs to start somewhere. 
The talent is there, it just needs to be given the chance.


London based Zaheer Shah is a free-lance football writer and a student of Football at the Southampton Solent University, pursuing his goal of working as a scouting and match analyst.

Robin Van Who?

by Jake Bertone

That is what was said by many Arsenal supporters following their team’s destructive performance against newly promoted side Southampton on Saturday.

Prior to the start of the season, when Arsenal had just lost van Persie (oh that’s his name!) to Manchester United and Alex Song to Barcelona, many people believed that Arsene Wenger’s time was up and that his team would not be able to perform at the standard needed to challenge and win trophies. Now 4 games into the new Premier League campaign, Arsene Wenger’s side sits 3rd on the table with 2 wins and 2 draws, conceding only 1 goal (a mistake by the keeper) and booting 8, giving them the strongest goal difference in the league. Not bad for a team that lost two of its most important players.
Gervinho celebrating 1 of his 2 goals from the weekend.

Improvement

Where has the improvement come from then? How has Arsenal started so well without those players? To me, it all comes down to balance. Last year’s Arsenal team relied on the efforts of van Persie to score each week and help it win, this year’s Arsenal team has a spread. Goals already coming from the likes of Podolski, Gervinho, Cazorla and Walcott. The Arsenal attacks of this year, primarily in the Southampton game were coming from all directions. This is because of the evenness of the front half now. There is no dominant attacker. Sure Podolski has some serious accomplishments under his belt, but that doesn’t stop players like Walcott, Chamberlain or Gervinho from doing their own thing and taking a chance at goal. Last year, it was all about passing it to van Persie, even if he wasn’t in the right position, just because it was him. Yes, he did take his chances more times than not, but to win a trophy, a team needs balance. Defence is another area that has been improved significantly, providing 3 clean-sheets in the first 4 games. A lot of the credit must go to new Assistant Coach Steve Bould, who has transformed the Arsenal defence into a very solid back 4 that is yet to miss a beat.


The Future


Moving on from the players who have left the club recently, lets talk about the players who have arrived! Lucas Podolski, Santi Cazorla and Olivier Giroud. These players have added the spark that Arsenal has so often lacked in the past. Cazorla’s breathtaking foot skills and vision sees him as one of the most dominant midfielders currently in the Premier League, adding speed and creativity to the Arsenal squad. At times last year, attacks seemed boring and predictable, but with the inclusion of Cazorla in the midfield, Arsenal’s attacks are frightening to opposition defences. Lucas Podolski adds a bit of grunt to the squad, something a team pushing for the title needs, not to mention the class and clinical finishing that has seen him net 2 goals in the last 2 games, one of which being a spectacular free-kick. He’s a menace on the left because for a man of his size, he can run, and run fast, cutting past the opposition and either crossing it with some pace and whip or taking a chance and testing the keeper. It’s exciting to watch. Now to Olivier Giroud, the new signing who is yet to really announce himself. He adds height and strength to attack, as well as clinical finishing that saw him score 25 goals for French Champions Montpellier last season. I have no doubt that he will take his chance and score very soon, he is too good not to. Hearing people compare Giroud to Chamakh after only a few games is insane, he needs time.
Giroud, Cazorla and Podolski

Depth

Now lastly, to Arsenal’s depth. Last year saw injuries to Abou Diaby and Jack Wilshere add to the departures of Samir Nasir and Cesc Fabregas, so it was worrying for Arsenal supporters to see who the replacements would be. Arteta, Park Chu Young and Mertesacker were the replacements, with only Arteta getting regular first team action. This year though, Arsenal’s bench holds a lot more quality. The weekend saw players like Walcott, Arshavin, Giroud and Ramsey on the bench waiting for their chance to shine. This creates competition for places in the team. It also means that when a player is injured or is subbed off, there is a quality replacement ready to come on and do the job. Too many times in previous seasons a quality player would be replaced with a somewhat average player, or a player with very little experience. Now, it’s balanced.

Arsenal now has all the parts that if put together correctly, create, I believe, a title challenging machine that is capable of beating anyone. Yes, anyone.

Melbourne based Jake Bertone is an aspiring football writer from Australia, pursuing his goal of becoming a sports journalist while studying at Victoria University.

The Quiet Mercenary


Next to blow go?
Arsenal are yet again confronted with another serious contractual dispute with one of their key players. With just 1 year left on his contract Arsenal and Theo Walcott are still locked in transfer talks. During the penultimate day of the transfer window it was announced that a short term agreement had been made to continue talks later, thus denying Arsenal their last real chance to sell him.
So as the situation stands if a new contract, that will leave him as
one of the squad's highest payed players if not the highest, isn't
agreed we are faced with either letting him leave in January for
peanuts or on a free next summer.
While fans have been divided on his impact since he joined from Southampton
in 2006 him leaving the club would be a big loss, as it stands he is
the club's highest scorer in the squad and one of the longest
servants. However having canvassed
fans’ opinions on twitter recently 65% would still offer him a new
contract while only 35% would let him leave on a free.
Arsenal insist that contract talks will continue and it does
appear Theo himself also wants to reach an agreement but time is running
out. If Arsenal do not sort this out before January 31st they will be resigned
to see him leave on a free next summer, something which would
be very undesirable. Therefore it is imperative that Arsenal either
sell him in January or sort out a new contract.
The major stumbling block at the moment, as it is increasingly
becoming at Arsenal, it money. For footballers money talks and I
suspect Arsenal are not near Theo’s own evaluation. You just need to
look at the transfers of Hulk and Witsel to see that, if you look
around, ridiculous salaries, doubling what others can pay, are
available. It has been widely reported that his demands are around £100k a week, a staggering figure that would surely make him one of the highest payed players in the squad, a status that I am sure we all agree he does not deserve.  This then raises the question of do we really need Theo?
Admittedly when looking at Theo’s stats last season his assists do
stand out. However for every assist you get with Theo you will see him
tripping over the ball or another disappointing cross. Theo for me is
a luxury player to have in the team. If you are a high-flying team you
can take a player like Theo along with you. He is a player that, for
large parts of a game, will have little impact. His strength is
clearly his pace and his ability to use this on the counter attack or
to get behind the opposition’s back line. However when teams sit back
with 10 men behind the ball, such as Stoke, his impact is less
productive.  His lack of strength lets him down as does his ability to
beat a player 1 on 1. It is in these games when it is clear that there
is a distinct lack of penetration from us that you need a player who
can make something happen. A winger who can beat his man or spot a
decisive pass, qualities I believe that he does not possess.
So over the next four months it seems Arsenal have a lot of key decisions
to make, the most significant of which is Theo’s future.  For me I
wouldn't mind either way which decision is taken except that this
doesn't drag on into across the season and create another bitter saga.


London based James Wareing runs a football quiz on twitter. 
Kick off is NIGHTLY at 6:30pm (GMT), check it out sometime.

This Time Last Year #1

This post has been pulled from the archive from last season, merely for hindsight, perspective and "content" purposes.

To recap, we'd started the season in panic, sold two of our best players, bought 3 new ones (familiar, yes) and were yet to splash the last minute money on Mikel and Co. Lots of people may have been thinking very differently about the Club and/or Wenger after Barton's tangle with Gervinho, Frimpong's red - but this was my take on proceedings. Make of it what you will, but during the interlull, a fresh outlook is sometimes necessary.


Keep The Faith


After the most frustrating transfer window in living memory, Arsene Wenger finds himself in unchartered territory, immersed in a wave of discontent amongst the Arsenal faithful.
All too forgetful fans calling for the head of the most revered manager in AFC history remind me of the gun-hoe attitude of plebeians involved in the recent August riots.
We want the quick fix, biggest names NOW and we’d rather ransack teams for their massively overpriced, overrated stars than have faith in a young side that at one stage last year had people whispering about the quadruple.
His record speaks volumes, he’s never been one to splash the cash, and we all knew that, so I find it difficult to hold my tongue when Wenger’s head is called for by the fickle amongst us, especially as, much like the ongoing Fabregas saga, I see no adequate replacements.

Watching City’s sudden rise to the summit, Mancini throwing the Sheik’s seemingly endless oil funds around willy-nilly and first team Arsenal players deciding that ‘constantly-pissing-it-down-Manchester’ is the place to pick up winners’ medals, has had a direct affect on the attitude of said fans and undoubtedly the players themselves.
This time last year, it would have been unthinkable to imagine Samir Nasri directly contradicting himself regarding Man City, but as closure of his reported move draws near and with Clichy already following in the footsteps of Kolo Toure and Adebayor, it appears that money motivates players more than Arsene’s promise of a bright future ever could.
And so the rumours continue.
Nasri is not yet World Class. He’s close and will be missed, showed glimpses of brilliance in the first half of last season, but he, like so many others that waste away on City’s gold-laden benches, has started to believe his own hype, as if the emblem is of little significance in comparison with the name on the back of the shirt.
No, it wasn’t a winning start against the Toon, but with the rumour windmill spinning rampantly on and the telling pressure visible in Robin Van Persie’s body language, the point could prove crucial come the season run-in and there were plenty of positives to draw from the game.
Gervinho didn’t have the best EPL debut, but looked lively and barring the final ball, a constant threat. Considering that he WAS brought down, if the penalty HAD been given along with what should have been a second yellow for Tioté and RVP on spot-kick duty, the game takes an altogether different outlook.
If the audibly irate fans are to be believed, the years of work/faith that Arsene has put into the enviable youth set-up at the club is being overshadowed by our rivals ability to splash the cash on players that can deliver with immediate effect.
Do people not remember how £50M Fernando Torres started at Chelsea?
Remove Fabregas’ absence from the equation and I struggle to see why we’re so angry with Wenger for not spending.
The exciting prospect of Gervinho will end up costing close to £15M, Alex Ox close to £12M and with two weeks of the window remaining, Mata, Dann, Jadson, and Cahill are all still being mentioned, any of whom would be decent additions to the squad. Yes, Cesc is a legend, but he didn’t want to stay, whilst Diaby is keen to return, Vermaelen is what we’ve missed at the back and we’re still to see the best of Theo, Arshavin or a full season from Van Persie.
Turn your attention to why financial powerhouses such as Man City and Barcelona are even chasing our players. Arsene is responsible for bringing through some of the most talented players of a generation, with Chesney, Wilshere, Ramsey, Gibbs, Miyachi and Frimpong all ready to make an impact this year.

The footballing world is well aware of the legacy that Arsene will leave behind, regardless of whether it is Arsenal’s very own fans that drive him out and they will continue to inflict as much damage to the team as possible. Surely this is the time to get behind him!?!?

To touch on the twitter talk regarding Barton and Song sharing an embrace at the end of yesterday’s opener (much to my dismay), Barton’s initial shocker of a challenge is what drew an admittedly immature reaction from Song, but I believe Joey recognised this and probably saw a bit of his own character in Alex.

Along with The Forehead, Song will no doubt receive a ban, but the emergence of Emmanuel Frimpong in the holding role should be as exciting for fans as seeing Jack Wilshere waltzing into the England set-up.

Keep calm, keep the faith.

Less Break, More Content




What's going on people!
Thanks for checking us out and welcome to the BLOG!
This one's just a short intro into what #TeamWizzy are doing here.

Some of you may be more accustomed to hearing Hugh maroon on about the Arsenal on the youtube channel, so may be surprised to know that from time to time, HW will be using breaks such as the current infuriating international "interlull" (via @arseblog) to bring you as much content as possible, even in the way of a casual discussion of the nothingness that barely amounts to World Cup Qualification - more so a test of Arsene's patience. We empathise.

Spending two weeks flicking over 21 "pointless" live games, constantly fretting over the fitness of your newly hallowed, yet seldom available force of a French midfield maestro (amongst others) is literally a living nightmare.

As a taster of what to expect, we'll posting new articles from a host of guest writers, offering a fresh take on proceedings.

If you fancy yourself as a writer, feel free to drop us an email. Why not have a go? We're always open to aspiring journos contributing to the explosion of this site and are keen to support the next generation of media wizkids - contact me via any of the ever increasing mediums!