Arsenal

Jack Wilshere May Be The Future But It’s a History Lesson Arsenal Need Most

Jon Westby Jon West

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Arsenal manager Arsene WengerJack Wilshere reckons the criticism levelled at Arsene Wenger is "a joke" but for many Arsenal's demise is no laughing matter. Two wins out of seven in the Premier League have intensified discussions among those of an Emirates persuasion on the subject of whether the Frenchman has taken the Gunners as far as he can. "We haven't won anything for six years and that's not good enough," Wilshere admitted to the Evening Standard. "But the criticism we get is harsh, though, especially on the boss. He has been great for Arsenal. The criticism Arsene gets is just a joke." You would expect Wilshere to be full square behind his manager as the teenager is a real rarity at Wenger's Arsenal: a local lad deemed good enough for the first team while still a teenager. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone But inadvertently Wilshere also hit the nail on the head. Wenger has indeed been great for Arsenal but increasingly everything he has achieved is moving into the past tense. Those glory days are fading away into history, game by game, season by season. And no-one knows that more than Alex Fynn and Kevin Whitcher, whose updated version of their 2008 book Arsenal: The Making of a Modern Superclub makes pertinent reading in the era of Per Mertesacker, Carl Jenkinson and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, even though all three were signed after it had been sent off to the printers. The book as a whole is a story known to all football fans: unknown foreigner (or at least unknown on these shores) enjoys instant success with a decent but dull side he had inherited and goes on to create another that was much, much better before, slowly but surely, starting to lose his way. And it is the added chapters which outline just how far Arsenal have fallen behind their rivals, and by that we don't just mean the 12 extra points that both Manchester clubs currently possess in the Premier League table, and how much Wenger, with his insistence on doing everything himself behind the scenes and picking potential over experience on the pitch, is the reason. How many of the post-2004 personnel would have forced their way into the Invincibles side asks financial expert Fynn and fanzine editor Whitcher, who come up with the answer of Bacary Sagna (but only because Lauren wasn't that hot at right-back), Cesc Fabregas and perhaps Samir Nasri and Robin van Persie. "How in 2010-11 could the manager believe he had a potential title-winning squad which depended upon a spine of (Manuel) Almunia, (Sebastien) Squillaci and Denilson?" they ask before pointing to statistics that show that the midfielders do not score enough (reason: Wenger's insistence on a 'tippy-tappy passing game means moves are over-elaborate) and the defence lets in too many, especially from set-pieces. "Since when did an uncapped or immature goalkeeper and a less-than-world-class central defensive pairing anchor a championship-winning side?" they ask. Quite. And their prediction for the future? That Wenger will never change, and, in all probability, not be forced out any time soon either, although failure to qualify for the Champions League might just prompt another few hastily-added chapters next summer. So long as Wenger continues to keep Arsenal at the top table by not spending half as much money as their rivals then the chances are he will be allowed to carry on leading a club which has become synonymous with a brand of entertaining football similar to the Hungary side of the 1950s, the Netherlands in the 1970s and the Brazil of the 1980s. None of whom won anything either, the book duly notes... Arsenal: The Making of a Modern Superclub by Alex Fynn and Kevin Whitcher, published by Vision Sports Publishing at £8.99

 

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Emmanuel Adebayor Discovers Dignity At Last But Will The Fans Ever Follow Suit?

Jon Westby Jon West

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Tottenham's Emmanuel Adebayor v ArsenalEmmanuel Adebayor has spoken of the chants directed his way during the North London derby on Sunday as both Tottenham and Arsenal vowed to ban for life anyone proved to have been singing them. During Tottenham's 2-1 victory at White Hart Lane, Arsenal fans directed their vitriol at the man who used to play for them but now appears in the colours of their rivals by mocking the machine-gun attack on Adebayor and his Togo team-mates in Angola last year. That, you will recall, left three of them dead and Adebayor has now been quoted in The Sun as saying: "The songs that they sung about me were very bad but was I surprised? No. Disappointed? Yes. "Obviously it was all meant to hurt me, to upset me, to anger me. But I am so glad I kept my dignity in the face of people behaving like that." Tweeter FourSquare iPhone True, football could do without such bad-taste chants, with Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp correctly pointing out that it sent entirely the wrong message to the younger generation of supporters. And Tottenham put out an appeal to their own support on their official website, saying: "You do not have to put up with mindless supporters who are intent on ruining your day, so use the system, report the individuals and let us take it from there." It was the same message from Arsenal. "We do not tolerate discrimination of any sort at the club, on the pitch or in the stands. If you experience any form of discrimination at Emirates Stadium, please report this by texting 67777 or contact a matchday steward," their statement read. All well and good but Adebayor also knows he brought the abuse upon himself by his goal-celebration antics in front of the Arsenal support when he scored for Manchester City in 2009. That saw him run almost the full length of the pitch to reach the away support and that particular game saw him accused of deliberately kicking Robin van Persie, now the Arsenal captain, in the face. Will Cesc Fabregas get such a reaction the first time he plays for Barcelona against Arsenal? No, of course not as the Spain midfielder was always respectful towards the fans even when he had set his mind upon a move. Samir Nasri will get some stick for choosing City's offer of a far fatter pay-packet but no-one is likely to wish him dead. So Adebayor brought the torment upon himself in many ways. It doesn't excuse it of course, but it certainly does explain it. And therefore he does deserve credit for keeping his cool this time. The player himself has clearly grown up. But it is churlish to expect the fans to as, let us not forget, it was the Tottenham contingent who used to give renditions of uncomplimentary songs about Adebayor and his family not so long ago. True, references to elephants getting washed do not equate to sick death wishes but you simply have to ask Sol Campbell about how unpleasant Tottenham supporters can really be when in full voice. Good luck, then, with the attempts to use CCTV to pin-point the perpetrators therefore but the only way you will ever get rid of the abusive chanters is to make both White Hart Lane and the Emirates Stadium corporate and family zones only. And you can wash a lot of elephants before that will ever come to pass.

 

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Premier League Text Commentary: Tottenham v Arsenal As It Happened

Howard Swainsby Howard Swains

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Tottenham v ArsenalMinute-by-minute commentary from White Hart Lane.

 

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Gareth Bale’s Assessment of Arsenal’s Woes Makes Painful Reading For Arsene Wenger

Ian Winrowby Ian Winrow

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Arsene Wenger, Arsenal, Tottenham, premier league, white hart lane, october 2, 2011Arsene Wenger isn't known for his willingness to embrace the advice of others so it is highly unlikely he will welcome Gareth Bale's contribution to the debate about Arsenal's decline. As if it wasn't bad enough that the Tottenham midfielder could savour a derby win, Bale reacted to his side's victory by also offering his own analysis of the problems that have afflicted Wenger's side this season. "Arsenal have lost a few players, which makes them more beatable I think as that has damaged the way they play," he told the London Evening Standard. "We exposed that. I think keeping your best players is a massive thing. They are used to how you play and what you do. It is vitally important to do that and build your team around them." Bale was making the comparison between Spurs' success in holding onto Luka Modric in the face of interest from Chelsea and Arsenal's inability to keep Cesc Fabregas and Samir Nasri at the club. "It is important that we have kept him [Modric], and Arsenal were unlucky not to keep theirs," he added, before offering encouragement to Tottenham's closest rivals. "But they are still a great team. They haven't had the best of starts but I am sure they will improve. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone "They have a lot of young players who are going to grow up in the next season or two and learn a lot. I am sure they will be fine." Losing to Spurs is painful in its own right, being forced to listen to soothing words of encouragement from the young winger must be agony for Wenger and his players. If anything is going to fire up their season, it will surely be that. Bale has a point though, although the reason the two teams appear to be following different trajectories goes beyond the movements of Fabregas, Nasri and Modric. Tottenham's victory was built on the midfield platform provided by Scott Parker who is maintaining the form he showed for West Ham last season. Wenger could have pursued Parker this summer but decided against it, giving Redknapp a clearer run at the player. On the evidence of the game at White Hart Lane, there was no doubt whose judgement appeared the better advised. Equally, the performance of Emmanuel Adebayor emphasised Redknapp's knack of buying players who will make an impact on his side. Wenger's signings have, in more recent times, been slow burners, frequently young players who will take time to mature. His batch of summer recruits include several more experienced players who have come into the team but they have so far failed to match the deficit created by the departure of Fabregas and Nasri. Redknapp frequently claims the key to success is the players at a manager's disposal. And right now, it is hard to dispute the inference that it is the Tottenham manager who has accumulated a stronger, more stable collection of players than Wenger.

 

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Tottenham 2 Arsenal 1: Kyle Walker’s Strike Settles North London Derby

Ian Winrowby Ian Winrow

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Benoit Assou-Ekotto, Tottenham, Gervinho, Arsenal, Premier League, White Hart Lane, october 2, 2011Kyle Walker's long range effort delivered Tottenham victory in the north London derby and put the focus firmly back on Arsenal's disappointing start to the season. Walker struck midway through the second half after Arsenal's Aaron Ramsey had cancelled outz Rafael van der Vaart's 40th minute opening goal. Gunners keeper Wojciech Szczesny should have kept out Walker's effort, but the keeper's error summed up a miserable campaign for Arsenal who have now lost four of their seven league games and already lie 12 points adrift of the top of the table. Arsene Wenger's frustration was evident at the final whistle when he exchanged words with Clive Allen, one of the Spurs coaches, as he made his way down the tunnel. GOALS: 40 mins: Emmanuel Adebayor - who else? - creates the chance that allows Rafael van der Vaart to open the scoring with a floated pass that the Holland striker ocntrols on his chest before finishing with a left foot shot. 51 mins: Arsenal level when Alex Song is allowed to run forward and deliver a low cross that is turned home by Aaron Ramsey. 73 mins: Kyle Walker puts Tottenham back in front with a 30-yard effort after Luka Modric's shot was blocked by Song OTHER HIGHLIGHTS: 7 mins: Alex Song's misplaced pass allowd Van der Vaart to send Scott Parker clear into the Arsenal area but the midfielder is denied by an excellent one-handed save by Wojciech Szczesny. 16 mins: Brad Friedel dives full length to divert Theo Walcott's left foot shot beyond his rightt hand post. 29 mins: Jermain Defoe's low cross finds Van der Vaart at the near post but the Holland forward's flick directs the ball straight at Szczesny. 29 mins: Arsenal respond immediately with Robin van Persie working his way to the byline before finding Gervinho who pulls his shot wide. 58 mins: Gareth Bale sends Adebayor one on one with Szczesny but the forward's shot is saved by the keeper. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone REACTION: Harry Redknapp singled out Scott Parker for praise: "It wasn't even easy for me to sign him. It wasn't easy from the chairman's point of view to sign him. He felt it was his age and length of contract. "I understood the chairman's point of view. But I also knew that if we could get him, he would be a massive influence on the team - and that's what he's been." On his side's steady improvement: "I just felt after two or three weeks, I could see what was coming. I never went home and worried about it because I was confident. "We had Adebayor coming in, we had Scott Parker. We had Sandro coming back. I knew we'd suddenly be a much better team." On the abusive chants directed directed at Emmanuel Adebayor: "It was digusting. There was some pretty disgusting chanting at me but that's life. "How do you chant something like that to someone? You can't be right mentally. You need help. "There are kids up there as well." Arsene Wenger admitted his side cannot be regarded as title contenders at the moment: "I think at the moment we have to set realistic targets like to say today we want to get in the Champions League positions. If we come back to a better position, at the moment we are 12 points behind Man United and Man City, that not realistic to say today we will win the league." On his spat with Clive Allen: "I shook the hand of the manager and the assistant manager. How many people do I have to shake hands with?" WHAT IT MEANS: Tottenham are the dominant club in north London at the moment and Redknapp's summer transfer business is beginning to take effect. Arsenal are badly short of confidence and Wenger will welcome the opportunity to regroup over the international break. The period after the break will define their season. TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR 2 (Van der Vaart 40, Walker 73) ARSENAL 1 (Ramsey 51) PLAYER MARKING: Tottenham Hotspur (4-4-2): Friedel 6; Walker 7, Kaboul 7, King 6, Assou-Ekotto 6; Van der Vaart 7 (Sandro 6,63), Parker 9 (Corluka 6,89), Modric 6, Bale 6; Defoe 7, Adebayor 7 (Livermore 6,85). Subs (not used): Cudicini, Pavlyuchenko, Dos Santos, Bassong. Arsenal (4-2-3-1): Szczesny 7; Sagna 6 (Jenkinson 6, 68), Mertesacker 7, Song 8, Gibbs 6; Coquelin 6, Ramsey 6; Walcott 6 (Benayoun 6,72), Arteta 6, Gervinho 6 (Arshavin 6,78); Van Persie 7. Subs (not used): Fabianski, Park, Santos, Frimpong. ATTENDANCE: Tbc REFEREE: Mike Dean NEXT UP: - Tottenham Hotspur v Newcastle United (away), Premier League 16/10, 1600 BST - Arsenal v Sunderland (home), Premier League 16/10, 1330 BST MAN OF THE MATCH: Scott Parker (Tottenham Hotspur): Redknapp mused on Arsenal's failure to move for the midfielder this summer before the game. The question was even more pertinent after.

 

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Tottenham v Arsenal Preview: Emmanuel Adebayor Faces Former Club

Mike McGrathby Mike McGrath

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Emmanuel Adebayor, Tottenham PREMIER LEAGUE: WHITE HART LANE, SUNDAY OCTOBER 2, 2011. KICK-OFF 1600 BST Last year it was William Gallas, but this season the focus will be on Emmanuel Adebayor when Tottenham face their bitter rivals Arsenal. While Gallas left the Emirates Stadium and was signed by Harry Redknapp for the next campaign, Adebayor has joined Spurs via a spell at Manchester City and a loan at Real Madrid. But that will not have softened the attitude of Gunners supporters after he ran the length of the pitch to taunt them with his celebration after scoring for City against his old club two years ago. He felt fans had made him a scapegoat for his club's failings. And it got worse since he left. Still no trophies and now a start to the season where Arsene Wenger's methods have come under intense scrutiny. Victory over Bolton has not masked the problems at Arsenal, who are short of confidence and have lost to Blackburn and Liverpool as well as getting thrashed at Manchester United. Form is usually irrelevant when it comes to derby matches. And Arsenal will be looking for revenge after letting two-goal leads slip against their rivals twice last season. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone Key Match-up: Emmanuel Adebayor v Per Mertesacker: Adebayor has made an instant impact since arriving from City on loan. So far it is three goals from as many games and he has set up plenty of other chances with his powerful displays. Mertesacker arrived from Werder Bremen just before the transfer deadline passed and is still adjusting to life in the Premier League. Not been helped by joining a defence short on confidence. Form Guide: Spurs have won three Premier League matches in a row and have improved after a poor start. Arsenal have recorded a trio of victories in all competitions but are still short of confidence and have not hit anything like their top form. Odds: Tottenham 11/10, Arsenal 23/10, Draw 5/2 TOTTENHAM: Tottenham manager Redknapp rested his key players in the Europa League this week to make sure they are ready to face Arsenal. He has backed Adebayor to rise to the occasion of facing his former club. "It is another great opportunity for Emmanuel Adebayor to play for Tottenham," Redknapp said. "He has been playing well for us, the crowd love him and he has been a big bonus for us so far. His performances have been fantastic. Let's hope he can keep that up. "There is always aggravation when players leave clubs but he will get on and hopefully play well. William Gallas played against Arsenal last year and for me was the man of the match. "He showed his character last year in that game and I am sure Manu will do the same on Sunday." Redknapp believes Arsenal will still mount a challenge for a top-four place this season, despite their poor start. He added: "I would not write Arsenal off. And if you write Arsenal off in your newspaper you could be made to eat all those words. They are a good side with a great manager. Liverpool will be up there and so will Tottenham and I would not write any of us off. "We keep talking about finishing fourth - who knows, we might not. We may finish third or second - it's not impossible." Redknapp believes Ledley King could be important. The Spurs skipper will be asked how his knee feels on the eve of the game. "He has been great since he played this season," Redknapp said. "He made a big impact in the last three league games and has been a top class player. "He won't train again as usual and will come out on Saturday morning and hopefully have a little 15 minutes, do okay, and play on Sunday again. I'm sure he will be great for us." Strategy: Gareth Bale will be asked to attack at pace, as will Aaron Lennon if he is passed fit. Adebayor then provides a more direct route to goal. Injury Update: Gallas is struggling with a calf injury. Michael Dawson and Tom Huddlestone are out. Lennon is hoping to be fit after problems with his groin. ARSENAL: While Spurs have Adebayor, Robin van Persie will be the focal point of Arsenal's attack. He approaching his best, with five goals already this season. "I am very demanding with Robin and he does as well as I expect him to," said Wenger. "He plays well with the team, with the other players, he finishes well, his finishing record is absolutely fantastic and he is not only a finisher. On Van Persie's future and signing a new contract, Wenger added: "That depends on us and on him. On our side we are quite clear so that is no problem. "I do not say there is no problem because it does not depend only on us but we are clear with our intention. After that you have to respect that he has nearly two years to go so let's not make an immediate issue of something like that. Two years in football is a very, very long time." Wenger is hoping the win against Olympiacos in midweek will help build confidence. He said: "Any victory will help us. I have always been optimistic because I feel that the players are mentally strong, focused, I am impressed by the quality of all the players we brought in, not only on the football pitch that I knew but also their mental attitude is absolutely fantastic. "That's why even before the Bolton game I was very positive about our future. But that is what's at stake for us - to show we can deliver week-in week-out." Strategy: They will attempt to dictate the pace of the game with their passing style. Van Persie will lead the attack and Mikel Arteta will pull the strings in midfield. Injury Update: Wenger needs to check on Laurent Koscielny, Theo Walcott and Gervinho.

 

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West Ham’s ‘Hopes’ of Carlos Tevez Reunion Are Dashed

Jon Westby Jon West

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Carlos Tevez in action for West Ham 2007At a time when the previously reclusive Paul Scholes is busy plugging his autobiography by revealing to the world he once did a Carlos Tevez on Sir Alex Ferguson another of the troubled Argentinian's former clubs has expressed the desire to end his ruined spell at Manchester City. It's not one of his ex-South American employers desperate to do a deal like Corinthians were in the summer. No, step forward West Ham United. Currently of the Championship. As you might already have guessed, it just ain't gonna happen. According to the Sun, the Hammers were quick to contact City in the wake of Tevez's refusal to come off the bench at Bayern Munich on Tuesday night. The Championship club has a mountain of debt but were understood to be willing to fork out a big chunk of the forward's £250,000-a-week wages in a three-month loan deal in the knowledge that they could not be gazumped by anyone from the Premier League. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone City made it clear they were not prepared to listen so we will never know Tevez's own thoughts about swapping the Allianz Arena for the chance to play at Doncaster or Peterborough. Tevez remains a legend at Upton Park thanks to a late flurry of match-winning goals that kept the Hammers up on the last day of the 2006-07 season but supporters will also remember his complicated third-party ownership arrangement ended costing the club millions in compensation and he quickly moved on to Manchester United anyway. And even when he was wearing a claret and blue shirt he wasn't particularly happy as he stormed out of the ground in a huff at half-time in one game having been subbed by then-boss Alan Pardew. Some things are best left as memories and this is destined to be one. Far more likely new destinations for Tevez now appear to be Inter Milan, Juventus and Paris Saint-Germain, who are hoping the kerfuffle will have halved the player's price to around £20 million by January. PSG are bank-rolled by rich Qataris so could easily out-bid the Italians, both of whom failed to land Tevez in the summer. Naturally, the fact that they have umpteen internationals already has not deterred City from ear-marking a top quality replacement once Tevez is finally shown the door and Arsenal fans will not be enjoying speculation suggesting Robin van Persie is that man. The Gunners are still reeling from losing Samir Nasri to City in August and also sold Gael Clichy to the Eastlands outfit at the emnd of last season. Those two were both in the final year of their Arsenal contracts and Netherlands forward van Persie will be in exactly that situation at the end of this term. It is understood he is in no hurry to renegotiate and could therefore be the centre of another tug-of-war next summer. And all because a grouchy groucho refused to run about a bit alongside a patch of grass in Germany...

 

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Kevin Doyle Has His Best Years Ahead of Him at Wolverhampton

John Percyby John Percy

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Kevin Doyle, Wolves, Crewe, July 16, 2011Mick McCarthy has been in real need of a lift after a difficult few weeks at Molineux and persuading Kevin Doyle to sign a new deal is a massive boost in his bid for Premier League survival. Doyle is the undoubted talisman at Wolves and epitomises the whole-hearted spirited approach of McCarthy's squad and will now be committing his best years to McCarthy after agreeing a new four-year deal. The likes of Arsenal, Liverpool and even Juventus have been huge admirers of the Republic of Ireland international without ever firming up their interest but this news will kill off any fears of a raid for at least another season. It also shows that, despite struggling annually to stave off relegation, Doyle clearly believes McCarthy is making progress and Wolves are a club on the up. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone Doyle is one of football's deep thinkers and will not have signed this contract without giving the matter considerable thought. McCarthy's mission this season may he humble, in that midtable mediocrity will be a huge step forward. But Doyle obviously feels at home and prefers being a big fish in a small pond, as opposed to battling it out at somewhere like the Emirates where there would be no cast iron guarantees of first-team football. He said: "We know that this league is very tough and that we have to make sure we stay in the division, first and foremost. "There are exciting plans here for the next four years. There will be setbacks along the way - sometimes we may take two steps forward and then one back - but the club is going to get better. "Hopefully in four years' time we will see Wolves as a club that is consolidated in the top division but we know that will take a lot of hard work to continue what has already been started. There's a real feeling this club is going places." Doyle's lack of goals has always been levelled at him and he only has one to his name so far this season. There were only five Premier League goals last term, too, which may explain why a manager like Arsene Wenger was cautious to make his move.

 

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Jack Wilshere’s Five-month Lay-off is a Major Blow For Arsene Wenger

Matt Butlerby Matt Butler

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Jack Wilshere, Arsenal, England, Switzerland, June 4, 2011Just days after Arsene Wenger actually appeared to enjoy an afternoon at the game, the manager has been forced to confront the fact he will be without Jack Wilshere for five months. The midfielder has had surgery for an ankle problem that provoked only minor concern when he was forced out of the pre-season friendly with New York Red Bulls back in July, but was subsequently diagnosed as a stress fracture. That means he could be missing for around 20 more Premier League games and may not play until the Champions League last 16 ties. Wilshere's absence is a setback for Arsenal, who have made an inauspicious start to the season and who would have loved the England man to slot into the space left by Cesc Fabregas to soften the blow of their captain leaving. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone Consequently, the fact his injury has not responded to a rest cure is frustrating. Manager Arsene Wenger had acknowledged earlier this season that Wilshere had been played too much and said after Wilshere had been out two weeks that he had a "hot spot" on his ankle that may have been "a consequence of overuse last year". The hope was that a period of inaction during which Wilshere wore a protective boot would help the injury to heal. It didn't, and a decision was made to undergo surgery. The timing could have been worse - had this happened in the wake of the 8-2 defeat at Manchester United it would have been another devastating blow to morale - but not much worse. Wenger's side may have shown signs of a return to form in the second half against Bolton last weekend but Wilshere's absence has only served to underline just how important he is to the team. Without him, the task of reviving a stuttering campaign becomes an awful lot harder. England will suffer too, although a consequence of this lay-off is that, assuming Fabio Capello's side qualify, Wilshere should head to the Euro 2012 finals fit and fresh. At least the player is showing no signs of being weighed down by the latest disappointment. His Twitter followers were treated to a picture of the player laid up in a hospital bed smiling, while he admitted he kept falling asleep because of the drugs. The club announced on Monday afternoon: "Under the care of two world renowned surgeons, Jack has had the stress fracture of his right ankle repaired. The initial indications are that the surgery has been successful and Jack will now undergo a prolonged period of rehabilitation. "It is envisaged that Jack's rehabilitation will take a period of four to five months." Wilshere himself over-used the exclamation mark key - not to mention risking censure from hospital staff on the lookout for patients breaking the inevitable "no mobile phones" rule - as he tweeted: "Had my operation and all went well! "I am feeling good will spend the night in hospital to monitor me but apart from that I am happy! I am lying in my hospital bed recovering. still a bit drowsy so awake one minute asleep the next!" Now that he has had his ankle cut open, the rehabilitation will be less uncertain. In months to come, Wenger and his medical staff will face the tricky decision of when to re-integrate Wilshere into the team - and that's another decision with little margin for error.

 

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Arsenal Must Act Quickly to Extend Robin Van Persie’s Contract

John Percyby John Percy

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Robin van Persie, Arsenal, Bolton, Premier League, Emirates Stadium, september 24, 2011Life is never straightforward at Arsenal these days, and even Robin Van Persie managed to add to the uncertainty at a time when it should have all been about easing the pressure on Arsene Wenger. Van Persie underlined his importance to the Gunners by notching his 100th goal for the club in the vital victory over Bolton but the topic of debate on Monday didn't centre exclusively on that impressive achievement. Headlines proclaiming the Netherlands international's contract talks have been put on hold will hardly be further palatable reading for Wenger, who will have been staggered to see one newspaper on Saturday printing a poll over whether he should stay or go. The situation with Van Persie is no immediate concern, with his current deal having another two years left to run. But the recent messy departure of Samir Nasri after hesistancy from the Gunners board, could leave Wenger with another potential headache if he does indeed stick around for the long-term. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone Nasri was vulnerable because he had been allowed to reach the final year of his contract, forcing the board to balance any offer with the possibility he could leave for nothing in 12 months time, and history cannot be repeated if the club is to make any forward strides. Van Persie told The Mirror: "I still have almost two years until 2013. So for the moment that's fine, but I don't know. We will have to look. "I'm happy with my contract, I'm good. That's how it is, I can't say much more. I can't look into the future. "The main thing for me is the team and that we play well. I do believe you have to look for a right moment to sit down and speak about your own stuff. It's not only about me, it's about the team. "I don't want to give the wrong message to speak about my own stuff while the others are a bit more important. I can't say we are talking now because we are so busy - we have games every three or four days." Wenger is desperate to tie down one of his few remaining prized assets and will want to accelerate talks to prevent another high-profile departure. The inference is fairly clear from Van Persie, however. He will want an indication that Arsenal are going places before committing himself to a longer deal.

 

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Arsenal 3 Bolton 0: Robin Van Persie Strikes Twice in Confidence-boosting Win

Ian Winrowby Ian Winrow

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Darren Pratley, Bolton, Laurent Koscielny, Arsenal, Emirates Stadium, september 24, 2011Robin Van Persie struck twice as Arsenal showed signs of a return to form with a comfortable win over a struggling Bolton side reduced to ten men by the dismissal of David Wheater. Arsene Wenger's side stuttered their way through the first half but Van Persie fired them ahead immediately after the restart. Wheater was dismissed for a foul on Walcoot in the 55th minute and from that moment the game was effectively over. Van Persie flicked home his second in the 71st minute and Alex Song confirmed the victory in the 89th minute. GOALS: 47 mins: Robin van Persie catches out Jussi Jaaskelainen from a tight angle after being sent clear by Aaron Ramsey's pass. 71 mins: Van Persie turns home Theo Walcott's cross with a neat flick. 89 min: Alex Song completes the scoring with a powerful shot. OTHER HIGHLIGHTS: 2 mins: Arsenal's back four is soon caught out when Darren Pratley heads on Martin Petrov's free kick and it takes a full-length dive from Wojciech Szczesny to deny David Ngog's volley. 7 mins: Gervinho wastes a great opportunity when he is sent clear of the Bolton defence but the forward overruns the ball, allowing Jussi Jasskelainen to save. 9 mins: Robin van Persie sends a curling free kick inches wide. 34 mins: Gervinho cuts in from the left and fires narrowly over from the edge of the Bolton area. 45 mins: David Wheater's block denies Van Persie's shot. 55 mins: Wheater is sent off for holding Walcott back. 67 mins: Jaaskelainen denied Van Persie's header with a good save. 78 mins: Walcott shows Jaaskelainen too much of tyhe ball after breaking clear. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone REACTION: Arsene Wenger admitted his side initially suffered a hangover from the defeat at Blackburn but that the result was never in doubt: "It was a question of nerves at the start of the game and patience. And intelligence. "I think we controlled the whole game even if Szczesny made a good save at the start of the game. But in the second half I could not see Bolton scoring a goal. And when they were down to ten it made it even more difficult for them." On Van Persie's contribution? "I think he is one of these guys who develops with responsibilities. You would think he is not naturally at the start but he really grows well into the role. I have observed him and he does well there." Owen Coyle was uncertain whether Wheater's red card was justified: "Whether there was real contact I don't know. I will need to see it back with David Wheater but Walcott looked as though he was ready and there was some sort of collision and if David's pulled him back, "We all understand the rules if it was a goal scoring opportunity but I will need to look back at it. There certainly looked like there to some sort of contact." On Gary Cahill's absence: "He has not been well. He did not travel with us. That was a huge blow because we are a better team with him in it. Stuart Holden as well there was a little bit of puffiness in his knee which we couldn't take a chance on to cause any ill effect. On his side's predicament: "We can't feel sorry for ourselves have to work hard and do something about and that's what we have to do. "We have played four of the top six, or who I think will finish in the top six. We have Chelsea next week. That wil be five. So its a tough set of fixtures." WHAT IT MEANS: Wenger's side were fortunate they faced a Bolton side who were so meek and willing to allow Arsenal to play their way back into something resembling their normal form. There is still a long way go go before they are back to their best and defensively they remain suspect, but confidence will grow after this result. Bolton look in desperate trouble and will go sown unless they improve dramatically. Tellingly, they provided weaker opposition than Shrewsbury had done five days earlier. ARSENAL 3 (Van Persie 46, 71, Song 89) BOLTON WANDERERS 0 PLAYER MARKING: Arsenal (4-2-3-1): Szczesny 7; Sagna 6, Koscielny 6, Mertesacker 6, Gibbs 7; Ramsey 6, Song 7; Walcott 5, Arteta 8 (Rosicky 6,82), Gervinho 6 (Arshavin 6,80); Van Persie 9 (Chamakh 6,86). Subs (not used): Fabianski, Santos, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Frimpong. Bolton Wanderers (4-5-1): Jaaskelainen 8; Steinsson 5, Knight 5, Wheater 4, Robinson 5; Petrov 5, Reo-Coker 6, Muamba 69 (Boyata 6,55), Pratley 6, Eagles 5 (M Davies 6,70); Ngog 6 (K Davies 5, 20). Subs (not used): Bogdan, Tuncay, Gardner, Kakuta. ATTENDANCE: Tbc REFEREE: Mark Clattenburg NEXT UP: - Arsenal v Olympiakos (home), Premier League 28/09, 1945 BST - Bolton Wanderers v Chelsea (home), Premier League 02/10, 1330 BST MAN OF THE MATCH: Robin van Persie (Arsenal): Confirmed his value with two goals and was a constant threat. Arsenal would be in trouble without him.

 

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Arsene Wenger Admits He is Powerless to Stop Arsenal Talent Exodus

Jon Westby Jon West

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Robin van Persie in discussions with Arsene WengerIt's easy to criticise Arsene Wenger. He's stubborn, irritatingly one-eyed when it comes to his players' on-field indiscretions and glacially slow in the transfer market, but the majority of Gunners fans would take all that for a repeat of the success they used to enjoy just a few seasons ago. Except that those glory days are more unlikely than ever to be returning to the red half of north London, and for one good reason. And it's not Arsene Wenger, who has received yet more bad news on the injury front by confirmation that Jack Wilshere requires an operation on his damaged ankle and will not be available for selection before Christmas. Robin van Persie, Theo Walcott, Thomas Vermaelen, Andrei Arshavin and Johan Djourou are nearing the final season of their contracts and the Gunners board are not among the top wage payers in world football. Which means the players in question could very well follow Samir Nasri's path out if the Emirates Stadium exit door rather than sign new deals, forcing Arsenal to sell before they become free agents in 2013. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone Of course, many fans would be delighted to wave good-bye to error-prone defender Djourou and frustratingly inconsistent forward Arshavin. But losing van Persie, captain and the undisputed jewel in the Gunners' crown now that Cesc Fabregas has left, would be a huge blow. Walcott's pace makes him all but impossible to replace and the injury-hit Vermaelen is missed at the back every time Arsenal have to take the field without him. And Wenger's hands are tied by his employers' wage ceiling policy. "We will try to sign them but we have tried before," Wenger admitted. "The gap on that front has become bigger for us. I cannot say that if we go to our maximum wage we are sure to sign the players. "We will try to convince them. Our desire is there and we are ready to sit down with them. After that we will see where we go." Of course, much will depend on how Arsenal fare over the next few months in the Champions League as well as the Premier League, where they began the weekend fourth from bottom. Keeping van Persie would be every fan's priority and the Netherlands international is understood to be on around £80,000 a week at the moment. The Arsenal hierarchy would no doubt be willing to raise that figure but have so far shied away from trying to compete with the real big spenders in the game, the clubs Wenger bitterly accuses of being guilty of financial doping. He has a point but even if he wins his crusade to enforce a fairer financial playing field the victory will probably come too late to stop Arsenal's current stars from having picked up one big pay day elsewhere. And that will leave him with no option but to have another crack at defying the odds with talented youngsters. One last crack perhaps. No wonder, then, that Wenger is feeling protective - and grumpy. "When you have heavy criticism of a young player I am more worried about it," he said. "I am supposed to take the bullets and absorb them. Like a bear. A polar bear. "In fairness, it does not hurt too much. You worry more about the young player who gets in the team at the moment and gets slaughtered, it's much more difficult. When I was 19 that was much more difficult to take for me. "I'm a human being and I prefer it when you say I am not an idiot. But I know that it is an emotional game and I have to deal with that. That is why it is important that we do well for the club. That we try to get our fans happy again." No-one thinks Wenger is an idiot. How could they with his track record? But he will find it increasingly difficult to please the fans as for as long as the board is content with being also-rans financially then the team is likely to be just the same on the pitch. Owner Stan Kroenke is not short of cash but so far the American has shown Gunners fans precious little of it. Now might be a good time to change that, too.

 

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Arsenal v Bolton Preview: Title Race Not Over, Insists Arsene Wenger

Darren Witcoopby Darren Witcoop

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Arsene Wenger, Arsenal, Blackburn Rovers, Ewood Park, September 17, 2011PREMIER LEAGUE: EMIRATES STADIUM, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBERB 24, 2011. KICK-OFF: 1500 BST Another quiet week in an uneventful season for Arsenal. If only. The midweek Carling Cup victory over Shrewsbury was greeted with relief and spared Arsene Wenger further discomfort but, having been publicly backed by Ivan Gazidis, the club's chief executive, before the game, the manager's position was again the focus of debate. Wenger insists he accepts criticism as part of the job but is increasingly frustrated at the speed which judgements are formed about the performance of himself and his players. He has also made it clear he is realistic enough to know it will be results that settle any arguments about whether the club is moving in the right direction. On that count, it would be hard to make a case for progress with only one win in five league game, increasing the pressure on this meeting with a Bolton side currently bereft of confidence and without a point since the opening day. The presence of Gary Cahill in the Wanderers line-up will also concentrate minds on Wenger's transfer policy this summer. Arsenal's late bid for the England centre back was dismissed by Bolton as derisory and Wenger then opted to bring in Per Mertesacker from Werder Bremen. The Germany international has so far failed to plug the gaps in the Gunners' defence and an impressive performance from Cahill is likely to encourage Wenger to revive his interest in January. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone Key Match-up: Robin van Persie v Gary Cahill: Attention has been trained on Arsenal's defensive problems but they have hardly been in shining form up front where Van Persie has too often laboured alone. Cahill has the pace to match the Holland forward but must avoid a lapse of concentration if he is to win this personal battle. Form Guide: The last home league game against Swansea produced Arsenal only win of the Premier League season and was quickly eclipsed by last weekend's defeat at Blackburn. Bolton have lost, not unexpectedly, to both Manchester clubs and Liverpool but last weekend's home defeat to Norwich was particularly painful. Odds: Arsenal 4/9, Bolton 13/2, draw 10/3 ARSENAL: As disappointing as Arsenal's start has been, Wenger refuses to concede his side is already out of the running for the Premier League title despite already lying eleven points behind leaders Manchester United. He accepts, though, that his side's current standing in the race is causing him concern. "Of course I am worried," he told a media briefing. "It is absolutely not realistic not to be worried when you have a team like Manchester United in front of you. "The only thing we can do is focus on our performances, win our games and hope they will drop some points at some stage. For us, at the moment, we have to be realistic. Let's not look too much at Manchester United and win our next game." And he added: "What is important for us is to give absolutely everything to do it. At the moment it is too early to speak about that. Let's come back to a better distance with the top teams before we speak about that. If the team gets momentum, we can be very strong." The Premier League aside, Wenger believes his side has suffered because of the demands already placed on them by the Champions League. "I still believe we paid a very heavy price for the Udinese game, where we didn't get any credit at all," he said. "Today, they are top of the league. We had to give absolutely everything at Dortmund and in the second half at Blackburn you could see that. "Our start of the season was disturbed by the transfers and by the fact that we had to qualify for the Champions League. We lost a lot of energy in these games." Strategy: Bolton are well practised at unsettling Arsenal and Mertesacker will face his most testing examination yet against Kevin Davies. Wanderers have been poor this season, however, and if Arsenal fail to establish midfield superiority over Coyle's side, Wenger's mood will darken further. Injury Update: Aaron Ramsey and Bacary Sagna trained on Friday morning while Tomas Rosicky is fit again. Yossi Benayoun, Johan Djourou, Thomas Vermaelen and Abou Diaby are out. BOLTON WANDERERS: Owen Coyle, who called his struggling Bolton team in for extra training the aftermath of their Premier League loss to Norwich, reckons hard work is the only way his side can fight their way out of the current slump. Bolton have failed to enjoy a win since the opening-day and lie just foot place off the foot of the table. But the Bolton manager said: "Regardless of who it is, no-one in football enjoys losing games or under-performing for whatever reason. "When you lose a game, you have to go away and look extensively at everything. "I'm totally understanding of where we are as a football club and I certainly don't want to be second bottom in the league. "I think because of the tough start we had, everyone would have perceived that Norwich would have been a great three points. If we had got them, we would be quite content with six points from the first five games. "But we didn't. And how do you react to that? You get back and work hard." In the opposite dugout, Arsene Wenger's position at Arsenal has also come under some scrutiny after the Gunners' worst start to a season for 58 years. But Coyle is at a loss to explain why Wenger has come under such heavy fire. He added: "We understand how football works but for me, it's absolutely ridiculous. "He's one of the best managers football has ever been lucky enough to have. "But we know the nature of the game and Arsene will as well. But if he left Arsenal then I'd suggest there would be nobody else out there better to do the job. "He's an outstanding manager and he's shown that year after year with his players and in the way they play." Strategy: Expect Coyle to pack his midfield and revert to a 4-5-1 formation in a bid to stop the rot. He will look to grind out at least a point and an early goal would help them achieve that - as well as heap the pressure on the Arsenal players given their poor start to the season. Injury Update: Coyle may opt to rest Stuart Holden, who has just returned after six months out, while Sam Ricketts and Sean Davis are among the long-term absentees. Ivan Klasnic is suspended.

 

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London Clubs in Manchester’s Shadow as Battle to Finish Top in the Capital Hots Up

Mike McGrathby Mike McGrath

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Mini-battles have started in the Premier League already, starting at the top where Manchester United and Manchester City have already shared 38 goals in their first five games. Other teams will get sucked into a relegation battle, some have Champions League qualification ambitions. Everybody will have something to play for when the campaign heads into 2012. With Manchester dominating the top, there is new contest to see who will finish top in the capital. It looks like Chelsea, Arsenal and Tottenham will running a close race to see who will be London's leader. "If we keep doing well on the pitch, then we are a match for any team," said Spurs defender Younes Kaboul in the Evening Standard. "Can we finish as the top club in London? Yes, we can." The odds are that United and City will remain in the top two places. They have the strongest squads in the league and it is theirs to lose. Looking at the benches, even Chelsea are short of the Manchester clubs in terms of quality in depth. And has a team ever won a title with a player in such wretched form as Fernando Torres? It would take the most dramatic surges of self-confidence for the Spaniard to inspire a championship charge and shake off his tag of being a £50 million misfit. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone "It's right that people are excited because of the amount of goals (United and City have scored)," said Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas. "Chelsea started 6-0, 6-0 last season and then it didn't happen. The impact on the rest of the season can be decisive or not." Spurs did nothing in their first two games of the season, against United and City, to suggest they will be title challengers, even if their victory over Liverpool revived their hopes of finishing in the top four. "We're certainly going to be challenging," said Spurs manager Harry Redknapp. "There's no doubt about that. I like the look of us. We've players coming back as well and we'll be strong. It will be tight. Stoke, Everton, Sunderland, whoever, they'll be pushing but I think there's probably six pushing for the top four and we'll certainly be one of those." If Redknapp got the signings he wanted over the summer - including Giuseppe Rossi from Villarreal - then Spurs may have been challenging City and United. For now they are battling to get back in the Champions League, while Arsenal are fighting to stay there after their terrible start to the campaign. "Arsenal have lost many players and it seems like they are having a bad time in the Premier League, although we never know with teams like that when they will wake up," Kaboul said. Redknapp added: "Arsenal will improve, key players will come back like Jack Wilshere and Thomas Vermaelen, who make a big difference. "Sometimes everything goes wrong and against Blackburn everything that could go wrong did go wrong - two own goals and missing a lot of chances." They would settle for a top-four place at the moment. But the bottom line is that a title battle is remote. "I can understand that people are unhappy and criticise, but you know as well as I know people are very quick to go overboard," explained Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger. It will be seven years without a trophy if they go empty handed again. But finishing top in London at least gives them something to work towards as they get back on track. The chances are it will be the only thing left to play for as United and City wrestle for the top.

 

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With Friends Like These Arsene Wenger Makes It Clear He Prefers Enemies

Jon Westby Jon West

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Empty seats as Arsenal host Shrewsbury in the Carling CupA vote of confidence AND a clamour to get someone else in to sort out his defence? No wonder Arsene Wenger, currently presiding over Arsenal's worst start to a season in 58 years, was at his tetchiest after the 3-1 defeat of Shrewsbury. Which had seen the League Two side take the lead and go close to doubling it in front of swathes of empty seats at the Emirates Stadium... Of course the Gunners - a completely changed side from the one that had shipped four goals at Blackburn - came through in the end and Wenger will be hoping the game was a 90-minute premonition of the season as a whole: a bad start over-turned comfortably enough in the end. Certainly there was much to cheer those who did comprise the Emirates Stadium's lowest attendance - and let's not forget there were more than 46,000 of them, a figure, like Arsenal's Champions League qualification record, that so many other clubs can only dream of. Tweeter FourSquare iPhone Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain scored a fine goal on his full debut and midfielder Francis Coquelin, having been thrown in at the deep end in the 8-2 thrasing at Manchester United, was impressive enough to suggest he will be given plenty more opportunities in the Premier League. But with chief executive Ivan Gazidis having given him vocal backing that was inevitably going to be translated into football-speak as 'the dreaded vote of confidence' Wenger wasn't happy. "There is no issue about Arsene leaving," Gazidis said. "We are in a culture where things are easily discarded, and if this club were to give up the fundamentals that have made it so strong we would do ourselves more damage." Former Highbury favourite and now Sky Sports pundit Paul Merson was very clear on exactly why the Gunners would not fire Wenger. "You don't sack someone who makes you money," he declared, referring not only to the Champions League cash but the amounts banked for the sales of Cesc Fabregas and Samir Nasri as well. Wenger doesn't mind pundits having their say so long as he can ignore it but when your chief executive starts spouting opinions however well-meaning then inevitably it was time for some typically withering Gallic scorn. "My record? I have just managed 14 years at this club and I have kept them 14 years in the Champions League and I wish it lasts another 14 years," Wenger said. "Whether I work here for the next ten years for the club or the next day I will let others assess the situation. I focus on doing well for the club. And I must tell you something, I'm not bothered at all by all this speculation, not at all. "I am completely focused on doing well. I can understand that people are unhappy and criticise but you know as well as I know people are very quick to go overboard. "I accept critics and I do not say it doesn't matter that people criticises us, I prefer it like anybody else when they say I am good. But you cannot complain when you lose a game and you are criticised. "When we do well we take all the plaudits so we have to take as well all the blame when it doesn't go as well. But we have as well on both sides take some distance. "When it goes well we must not completely believe what people say and when it does not go as well, we must not completely believe it." Yes, but how about bringing in Tony Adams or Martin Keown as a defensive coach then Arsene? "I've just completed 32 years of coaching," snapped Wenger in response. "I don't want to answer this kind of question." Somebody certainly needs to provide an answer though, don't they Arsene?

 

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