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Re: Arsenal Lobby
YEAH LIST GOES ON
KOSCIELNY deserves to be be there but he will be busy need to throw balotelli and aguero off his pocket then i can include him after sunday match
KOSCIELNY deserves to be be there but he will be busy need to throw balotelli and aguero off his pocket then i can include him after sunday match
Sina- Fan Favorite
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Join date : 2011-06-05
Re: Arsenal Lobby
Mark Schwarzer out for 6 weeks. Will miss Arsenal's visit to Craven Cottage on Jan 2nd.
Re: Arsenal Lobby
Wenger in Q&A on arsenal tv, when asked about players he missed out on throughout his arsenal career:
"Cristiano Ronaldo. He had lunch with me at London Colney. He has gone home with an Arsenal shirt on his back. I negotiated with his agent in Paris. We had agreed a deal. But Sporting Lisbon wanted £4.5m for him, we offered £4m. Our bad luck was that at Manchester United, they had Carlos Quieroz. They organised a friendly with Sporting Lisbon..and Cristiano killed them. And after the game, they bought him straight away for £11m. He is just one of the players we missed out on. Makelele (was another)".
"Cristiano Ronaldo. He had lunch with me at London Colney. He has gone home with an Arsenal shirt on his back. I negotiated with his agent in Paris. We had agreed a deal. But Sporting Lisbon wanted £4.5m for him, we offered £4m. Our bad luck was that at Manchester United, they had Carlos Quieroz. They organised a friendly with Sporting Lisbon..and Cristiano killed them. And after the game, they bought him straight away for £11m. He is just one of the players we missed out on. Makelele (was another)".
Re: Arsenal Lobby
Samuelj29060 wrote:Wenger in Q&A on arsenal tv, when asked about players he missed out on throughout his arsenal career:
"Cristiano Ronaldo. He had lunch with me at London Colney. He has gone home with an Arsenal shirt on his back. I negotiated with his agent in Paris. We had agreed a deal. But Sporting Lisbon wanted £4.5m for him, we offered £4m. Our bad luck was that at Manchester United, they had Carlos Quieroz. They organised a friendly with Sporting Lisbon..and Cristiano killed them. And after the game, they bought him straight away for £11m. He is just one of the players we missed out on. Makelele (was another)".
Present Wenger should go back and punch Past Wenger in the face.
MJ- Fan Favorite
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
Ronaldo doesnt show up in big games. Plus he's selfish. We couldve used the 100 million he wouldve been worth after a few years of development though...
lenear1030- First Team
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
Some of you may have already read this quote before but I just stumbled upon it in an article I was reading about Frimpong and I thought I'd share it.
"Arsenal FC is pumping through my veins, I will never leave Arsenal even if I get released I will beg on both knees to stay. They're going to have to escort me out." - Frimpong
Still a young player so we'll see how true he stays to those words but they're pretty inspiring
"Arsenal FC is pumping through my veins, I will never leave Arsenal even if I get released I will beg on both knees to stay. They're going to have to escort me out." - Frimpong
Still a young player so we'll see how true he stays to those words but they're pretty inspiring
MJ- Fan Favorite
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
lenear1030 wrote:Ronaldo doesnt show up in big games. Plus he's selfish. We couldve used the 100 million he wouldve been worth after a few years of development though...
If Ronaldo came to Arsenal, he wouldn't be the same player he is today. Not saying he would be worse, but his playing style would be alot more different. SAF and Wenger develop their players very differently and give them different roles.
Amar- First Team
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
Shearer: "RVP will take my record away from me before the end of December, and I'll be the first to congratulate him."
"RVP is someone who leads by example with the excellence of his performances. He puts away headers, tap-ins and rockets."
"I would put RVP up there with the best strikers in EPL history. By the end of the year, the record books will verify that claim."
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/sport/football/3999489/Alan-Shearer-Robin-van-Persie-may-take-my-record-but-Arsenal-must-not-lose-him.html
"RVP is someone who leads by example with the excellence of his performances. He puts away headers, tap-ins and rockets."
"I would put RVP up there with the best strikers in EPL history. By the end of the year, the record books will verify that claim."
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/sport/football/3999489/Alan-Shearer-Robin-van-Persie-may-take-my-record-but-Arsenal-must-not-lose-him.html
Re: Arsenal Lobby
Samuelj29060 wrote:Shearer: "RVP will take my record away from me before the end of December, and I'll be the first to congratulate him."
"RVP is someone who leads by example with the excellence of his performances. He puts away headers, tap-ins and rockets."
"I would put RVP up there with the best strikers in EPL history. By the end of the year, the record books will verify that claim."
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/sport/football/3999489/Alan-Shearer-Robin-van-Persie-may-take-my-record-but-Arsenal-must-not-lose-him.html
Reeeaally hope he does. Also really hope Shearer didn't just jinx him
MJ- Fan Favorite
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
I'm doing match preview will be completed as soon as i get team news
maybe Friday afternoon
maybe Friday afternoon
Sina- Fan Favorite
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
sina90 wrote:I'm doing match preview will be completed as soon as i get team news
maybe Friday afternoon
Can't wait to read it
Ali- First Team
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
Cant wait for it Sina
RealGunner- Admin
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
my eyes been deceived or what?
Sina- Fan Favorite
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Raptorgunner- World Class Contributor
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
The woman's feeding him drugs, so he doesn't know what he's doing...sina90 wrote:
my eyes been deceived or what?
Don't hurt our Godolski .
beatrixasdfghjk.- Fan Favorite
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
He was young and like every young guys, he just picked up everything that's out there.
Barca shirt
Zidane poster on the wall
Poland team poster
Brazil team poster
& Koln number 1
I'm sure there were lots more in his room.
Barca shirt
Zidane poster on the wall
Poland team poster
Brazil team poster
& Koln number 1
I'm sure there were lots more in his room.
Twoism- First Team
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
Yeah, just seems like a bandwaggoneer
He knows where to come, plus Barca don't need him.
He knows where to come, plus Barca don't need him.
Sushi Master- Fan Favorite
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
Wenger denies interest in Podolski and adds: 'At the moment Thierry Henry just practises with us'
Wenger: 'I played Santos because I wanted to be fair to the competition... I had a long hesitation before I picked him'
(twitter)
Wenger: 'I played Santos because I wanted to be fair to the competition... I had a long hesitation before I picked him'
(twitter)
Re: Arsenal Lobby
Reading stuff on Football365, would you prefer to have won a treble, or completed the Invincible season?
beatrixasdfghjk.- Fan Favorite
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
Roberto Mancini has confirmed Michah Richards is fit to face Arsenal, whilst Pablo Zabaleta will play at left-back.
Re: Arsenal Lobby
http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story/_/id/997366/sunderland-duo-bailed-over-damage-to-cars?campaign=rss&source=soccernet&cc=5901
That Bendtner.
That Bendtner.
Eman- First Team
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
bendtner is a retard, what a waste
bloodless- Starlet
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
He is out of control, it will be really hard to get ride of him.
Raptorgunner- World Class Contributor
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
Invincibles without a doubtbeatrixasdfghjk. wrote:Reading stuff on Football365, would you prefer to have won a treble, or completed the Invincible season?
MJ- Fan Favorite
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
another nice article about Arteta
Arteta making it easy for Gooners to forget Cesc
Spain and Barcelona’s dominance of international and club football respectively has redefined the way people view the game, especially in Britain, and for the first time in recent memory our management, players, media and fans are thinking “maybe we have been going about things the wrong way after all.”
For years the words you would hear in relation to both the England national team and clubs sides were ‘passion’, ‘grit’ and ‘determination’ and although sides have been lauded for their skill and attacking verve, it seemed almost a bonus that was secondary in importance to the superlatives I have just listed.
But the Spanish have changed all that, now we are all obsessed with 4-3-3’s, high pressing and possession statistics and a team is seen as incomplete if they do not have a 5ft 7in maestro pulling the strings in midfield. There was no better example of this than the top English sides’ summer transfer activity.
Chelsea spend £24 million on Valencia wizard Juan Mata and were also on a relentless pursuit of Tottenham’s Croatian creator Luka Modric, Manchester United couldn’t go a day without being linked with Wesley Sneijder and Manchester City spent £35 million on attacker Sergio Aguero in order to compliment the skills of playmaker David Silva.
But amongst all the extortionate fees it could be Arsene Wenger who has once again got the bargain of the season as he swooped to sign Mikel Arteta on deadline day for a fee of reportedly just under £10m. While the former Everton star had undoubted quality, his talents were downplayed as some fans struggled to get over the loss of captain Cesc Fabregas and cast envious glances at their rivals who boasted more glamorous Spaniards in Mata and Silva.
While Arteta may not be as flashy as some of his fellow countryman, the best signing for a team is not always the most expensive or the biggest name player, and as Arsenal fans are now well aware it is often the players that initially go under the radar that shine brightest in the end (just look at £2.5m signing Robin van Persie!).
Schooled at the famous La Masia training complex in Barcelona, Arteta grew up learning to appreciate the ball and his teammates and as he began to develop he was earmarked for the ‘pivot’ role in defensive midfield that Pep Guardiola had mastered before him. Arteta never got the chance to emulate his hero at first team level though and having spent 5 years in the B-team and 2 years on loan at Paris Saint Germain, it was only in 2002 that he officially left the Nou Camp.
His next destination was slightly unorthodox for a young, technically gifted Spanish midfielder as he moved to Glasgow to play for Rangers. It proved to be a wise decision as he learned the more physical side of the game and got an opportunity to finally play first team football at a team he could call his own. During his 2 years at Ibrox Arteta became a fan favourite as his controlled midfield displays helped the club to a league title in 2003 as well as the Scottish Cup and Scottish League Cup.
Arteta’s impressive performances in the SPL had attracted attention in his homeland and in 2004 he earned a dream move back to the Basque country where he grew up, as he signed for Real Sociedad. Unfortunately his dream soon turned into a nightmare as his good friend Xabi Alonso left for Liverpool and he himself failed to make an impact on the Erreala first team, making just 15 appearances before being made available for loan in January of 2005.
It was his next move that would define and save his career, as David Moyes offered him a lifeline at Everton with a loan subject to a permanent transfer. At Goodison Arteta would finally fulfil his potential, flourishing in a more advanced midfield role as well as on the flanks and becoming the heartbeat of one of the best Blues teams of the modern era.
Like all great Spanish midfielders he had perfect ball control and dribbling ability, an eye for a killer pass and the skill to find the strikers from almost anywhere on the pitch. But what set Arteta apart was the fact he was slightly taller than a lot of Spanish playmakers (around 5ft 10in) and knew how to take a bit of punishment after his spell in Scotland (at Everton in 2006/07 he was the most fouled player in the Premier League).
Arteta’s grace and beauty coupled with his physical attributes brought him great success during his 7 years on Merseyside but after spells out with injury he struggled to recreate his best form and when Arsenal came in for him this summer, he may have felt it was his last opportunity to play at the very top level.
Back to the present and Arteta has emerged from the shadow of Cesc Fabregas to become one of the Gooners’ most important players, with his experience and calming nature helping Arsenal to become much more assured when they have the lead. Although the team may not be quite as dynamic as they used to be, they now seem to have the ability to kill teams off and grab those scrappy victories that many didn’t previously associate with Arsenal.
An early season blip has now been well and truly forgotten at the Emirates as they look like favourites to make the top four once again and remain one of only two English sides still in the Champions League. While van Persie rightly takes many of the plaudits, Arteta has quietly gone about his business, sitting deeper and allowing Alex Song to get forward more than ever and if Wenger’s team continue their current form then come the end of the season fans may be saying “Cesc who?” as they hail their new Spanish midfield maestro.
THE RED Samurai
Arteta making it easy for Gooners to forget Cesc
Spain and Barcelona’s dominance of international and club football respectively has redefined the way people view the game, especially in Britain, and for the first time in recent memory our management, players, media and fans are thinking “maybe we have been going about things the wrong way after all.”
For years the words you would hear in relation to both the England national team and clubs sides were ‘passion’, ‘grit’ and ‘determination’ and although sides have been lauded for their skill and attacking verve, it seemed almost a bonus that was secondary in importance to the superlatives I have just listed.
But the Spanish have changed all that, now we are all obsessed with 4-3-3’s, high pressing and possession statistics and a team is seen as incomplete if they do not have a 5ft 7in maestro pulling the strings in midfield. There was no better example of this than the top English sides’ summer transfer activity.
Chelsea spend £24 million on Valencia wizard Juan Mata and were also on a relentless pursuit of Tottenham’s Croatian creator Luka Modric, Manchester United couldn’t go a day without being linked with Wesley Sneijder and Manchester City spent £35 million on attacker Sergio Aguero in order to compliment the skills of playmaker David Silva.
But amongst all the extortionate fees it could be Arsene Wenger who has once again got the bargain of the season as he swooped to sign Mikel Arteta on deadline day for a fee of reportedly just under £10m. While the former Everton star had undoubted quality, his talents were downplayed as some fans struggled to get over the loss of captain Cesc Fabregas and cast envious glances at their rivals who boasted more glamorous Spaniards in Mata and Silva.
While Arteta may not be as flashy as some of his fellow countryman, the best signing for a team is not always the most expensive or the biggest name player, and as Arsenal fans are now well aware it is often the players that initially go under the radar that shine brightest in the end (just look at £2.5m signing Robin van Persie!).
Schooled at the famous La Masia training complex in Barcelona, Arteta grew up learning to appreciate the ball and his teammates and as he began to develop he was earmarked for the ‘pivot’ role in defensive midfield that Pep Guardiola had mastered before him. Arteta never got the chance to emulate his hero at first team level though and having spent 5 years in the B-team and 2 years on loan at Paris Saint Germain, it was only in 2002 that he officially left the Nou Camp.
His next destination was slightly unorthodox for a young, technically gifted Spanish midfielder as he moved to Glasgow to play for Rangers. It proved to be a wise decision as he learned the more physical side of the game and got an opportunity to finally play first team football at a team he could call his own. During his 2 years at Ibrox Arteta became a fan favourite as his controlled midfield displays helped the club to a league title in 2003 as well as the Scottish Cup and Scottish League Cup.
Arteta’s impressive performances in the SPL had attracted attention in his homeland and in 2004 he earned a dream move back to the Basque country where he grew up, as he signed for Real Sociedad. Unfortunately his dream soon turned into a nightmare as his good friend Xabi Alonso left for Liverpool and he himself failed to make an impact on the Erreala first team, making just 15 appearances before being made available for loan in January of 2005.
It was his next move that would define and save his career, as David Moyes offered him a lifeline at Everton with a loan subject to a permanent transfer. At Goodison Arteta would finally fulfil his potential, flourishing in a more advanced midfield role as well as on the flanks and becoming the heartbeat of one of the best Blues teams of the modern era.
Like all great Spanish midfielders he had perfect ball control and dribbling ability, an eye for a killer pass and the skill to find the strikers from almost anywhere on the pitch. But what set Arteta apart was the fact he was slightly taller than a lot of Spanish playmakers (around 5ft 10in) and knew how to take a bit of punishment after his spell in Scotland (at Everton in 2006/07 he was the most fouled player in the Premier League).
Arteta’s grace and beauty coupled with his physical attributes brought him great success during his 7 years on Merseyside but after spells out with injury he struggled to recreate his best form and when Arsenal came in for him this summer, he may have felt it was his last opportunity to play at the very top level.
Back to the present and Arteta has emerged from the shadow of Cesc Fabregas to become one of the Gooners’ most important players, with his experience and calming nature helping Arsenal to become much more assured when they have the lead. Although the team may not be quite as dynamic as they used to be, they now seem to have the ability to kill teams off and grab those scrappy victories that many didn’t previously associate with Arsenal.
An early season blip has now been well and truly forgotten at the Emirates as they look like favourites to make the top four once again and remain one of only two English sides still in the Champions League. While van Persie rightly takes many of the plaudits, Arteta has quietly gone about his business, sitting deeper and allowing Alex Song to get forward more than ever and if Wenger’s team continue their current form then come the end of the season fans may be saying “Cesc who?” as they hail their new Spanish midfield maestro.
THE RED Samurai
Sina- Fan Favorite
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Re: Arsenal Lobby
Tough Away Days
Much has been made of certain club’s poor records away from home in the Premier League, so we decided to investigate.
Analysing the scorelines of all top flight clubs from 2006-07 onwards, the results are quite clear…playing away is a struggle.
Eight established sides show a divide of away day success, while the other 24 teams who have graced the Premier League in the past 5 years all fail to boast an average of more than 1 point per away match (with the exception of QPR, who have 9 points from their 8 games away from Loftus Road this season, and Blackpool who did well in their only PL campaign).
The most successful side in recent years are Chelsea, who have claimed 199 points from 102 games, while there has been, perhaps surprisingly to many, success for both Aston Villa and Everton.
So, here’s a list of average points per game. How has your team performed?
Chelsea – 1.95 points per game
Manchester United – 1.91
Arsenal – 1.62
Liverpool – 1.47
Aston Villa – 1.33
Everton – 1.30
Manchester City – 1.18
Tottenham Hotspur – 1.18
QPR – 1.12
Blackpool – 1.00
Blackburn Rovers – 0.95
Portsmouth – 0.91
Newcastle United – 0.87
West Ham United – 0.84
Bolton Wanderers – 0.80
Wigan Athletic – 0.80
Reading – 0.79
Fulham – 0.76
Stoke City – 0.76
West Bromwich Albion – 0.73
Sunderland – 0.72
Wolverhampton Wanderers – 0.72
Hull City – 0.71
Norwich City – 0.71
Birmingham City – 0.68
Middlesbrough – 0.65
Sheffield United – 0.58
Watford – 0.53
Charlton Athletic – 0.42
Swansea City – 0.28
Burnley – 0.21
Derby County – 0.16
GameOf2Halves
Much has been made of certain club’s poor records away from home in the Premier League, so we decided to investigate.
Analysing the scorelines of all top flight clubs from 2006-07 onwards, the results are quite clear…playing away is a struggle.
Eight established sides show a divide of away day success, while the other 24 teams who have graced the Premier League in the past 5 years all fail to boast an average of more than 1 point per away match (with the exception of QPR, who have 9 points from their 8 games away from Loftus Road this season, and Blackpool who did well in their only PL campaign).
The most successful side in recent years are Chelsea, who have claimed 199 points from 102 games, while there has been, perhaps surprisingly to many, success for both Aston Villa and Everton.
So, here’s a list of average points per game. How has your team performed?
Chelsea – 1.95 points per game
Manchester United – 1.91
Arsenal – 1.62
Liverpool – 1.47
Aston Villa – 1.33
Everton – 1.30
Manchester City – 1.18
Tottenham Hotspur – 1.18
QPR – 1.12
Blackpool – 1.00
Blackburn Rovers – 0.95
Portsmouth – 0.91
Newcastle United – 0.87
West Ham United – 0.84
Bolton Wanderers – 0.80
Wigan Athletic – 0.80
Reading – 0.79
Fulham – 0.76
Stoke City – 0.76
West Bromwich Albion – 0.73
Sunderland – 0.72
Wolverhampton Wanderers – 0.72
Hull City – 0.71
Norwich City – 0.71
Birmingham City – 0.68
Middlesbrough – 0.65
Sheffield United – 0.58
Watford – 0.53
Charlton Athletic – 0.42
Swansea City – 0.28
Burnley – 0.21
Derby County – 0.16
GameOf2Halves
Sina- Fan Favorite
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