Emery brings in 5 man entourage, here’s why that’s a very odd move (long read)

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Let’s crack into a delicious portion of hot off the press Gooner news.

Bernd Leno: What does it mean?

Arsenal were rumoured to have a £50m budget this summer. We just dropped £25m on a keeper. Petr Cech might take the #1 jersey, but it’s hard to see past Leno starting. Cech’s form has been shoddy, he can’t play with the ball at his feet and at 36, it’s clear his reactions aren’t what they used to be.

I think the legendary Czech will stay on for his experience and winnertivity. Leno didn’t move at 26 to be an understudy. I would certainly expect David Ospina to be moved on. He’s never been good enough, he showed how poor he is with a miserable World Cup opener against Japan. It gave me heart to watch Chezzer also gaff hard against Senegal. He’s another keeper who was massively overrated by our fans.

What I love about Leno; outside his ability to make the unexpected saves Arsenal fans have been starved of, is the new layer of options he brings to us defensively. Hoof won’t be the only option, allowing us to transition the ball up the pitch from the back, we’ll also have a keeper who can break the lines with smart passing, as well as a sweeper option if we need it. He’s going to be very useful if he can regain the form that had everyone fluttering eyelashes at him 2 seasons ago.

Also worth noting that form and scouting for keepers is super fucking hard. Confidence and system plays such a massive role in performance. Look at Richard Wright and Jordan Pickford. Both looked exceptional for shite sides, then couldn’t cut it when they made the move up. Ter Stegen, on the other hand, went from relative unknown to winning a lot of big trophies at Barca.

I remember reading Dave Seaman talk about the difference between big and small clubs. He basically said when you play at a big club, it’ll be freezing, you’ll have seen none of the ball all night, then BANG, there’s a 90th minute top corner strike you need to deal with.

His bad season at Leverkusen isn’t the issue, it’s whether he has the focus to make it at an elite side (if all goes well this season and we become elite). Is he Oblak or Karius? Let’s pray this expensive gamble is a lucky one.

Jack Wilshere: how do we feel?

We all feel sad. Jack was the kid that curled home that beauty against West Ham for the kids. The real deal. He was the pugnacious tough guy who took it to Barca. He was our Gazza. Sadly, Wenger blew his body by overplaying him, then the injuries set in and he never recovered.

I can see the difficulties for Jack. Growing up in the spotlight of the English press must have been a nightmare. As with all our Project British players, Wenger never really settled on a position for Jack. The player wanted to play at the base of our midfield like he did for England, Wenger thought he was a #10 or a right midfielder. If you can’t own a position, it’s very hard to develop. I also heard the player wasn’t exactly a fan of Wenger’s ways, which can’t have helped.

It’s difficult to see Jack Wilshere go when we’re offering players like Xhaka new deals. Outside fitness, I can’t see anything the Swiss does better. But it is what it is. We can’t keep waiting on potential, and when money is tight, you have to make important decisions and the club has made their choice.

Question is, who replaces him? Kike Marin has us in for Banega, which feels like a very solid stop gap replacement. However, the Spanish journo also comments that the Argentine is seen as a cheaper option to Torreira, which would be really disappointing. I mean, firstly, Banega is a centre mid, not a defensive mid. Secondly, I’d much rather be investing £20m more in a 22-year-old, than a 29-year-old. Also, Banega broke his leg getting run over by his own car. That’s Gabriel levels of dimness.

Are we really doing this?

Emery: Bringing the band back together

Arsenal confirmed to the press that Jens was off, along with Boro, Peyton, and Banfield. To replace them, the club has basically let Emery bring his entourage with him from PSG.

‘Emery worked alongside Carcedo, Villanueva, strength and conditioning coach Julen Masach, goalkeeping coach Javi Garcia and video analyst Victor Manas at his previous clubs and all of them have made the move over to London Colney.’

This move is really interesting. In the blur of excitement around how well Ivan and his new team are doing, the fact that our CEO let the head coach bring in 5 of his mates without question is amazing. The club is going back on its plan to control the backroom infrastructure, instead, opting to give the new manager a huge amount of power with these hires. Really, when they didn’t need to. Arsenal had all the leverage with the Emery hire. He needed us more than we needed him.

The oddest move has to be in the performance department. I wrote last summer that the hiring of Darren Burgess was really weird as we already had Shad Fosysthe. One is listed at the Head of Performance on the website, the other the Director of High Performance. That’s a cluster fuck right there. Now we have a strength and conditioning coach coming in who is the manager’s confidant.

HOW DOES THAT WORK?

The Director of High Performance will have the report into the manager’s mate by the looks of things. Imagine flying halfway around the world to make an impact in your new job, only to find out you’ll be reporting into somebody who sneaked in the back door because he had mates in high places. It’s the fitness equivalent of Gerard Houllier and Roy Evans sharing duties back in the day.

Broader question here, did the club interview all of the new appointees? Or is it just a wink and nod from Emery that has them in new jobs? More importantly, do any of them speak English? This extract comes from an interview with Emery.

‘Luckily, the French I learned when I was younger helped me out a bit! Of course, I don’t fully master it. One day, I heard Rafael Benitez say that he wasn’t able to transmit everything he wanted to say in English, and that surprised me because he was fluent in English and that he had been living there for 15 years. But he was missing that small percentage which would have allowed him to connect perfectly with his players.

My language proficiency in French was enough to explain myself and to be understood. Of course, one of the most important elements for a coach to succeed lies in his ability to communication and connect with this players. On an emotional level. Furthermore, I tend to talk a lot in the dressing room, even if I brought down the intensity of talks to 60%. But I was able to say what I wanted to in French thanks to the two years of French I had studied in Hondarribia when I was young. My talks with the team were done in entirely in French, and I think that we understood each other and that the language wasn’t a barrier for us.’

How do the club manage the language barriers? Does Emery do what Pep G did, and hire in a Premier League player who can speak Spanish and think at the right level? A Santi like object would have been perfect, but maybe someone like Cesc Fabregas who could end up leaving Chelsea this summer, and has gone on the record to say he’d love to return to Arsenal as a coach, could return in some capacity?

Alternatively, Emery could keep it simple and go with the team he’s kept with him throughout his career. If he chooses that path, that’ll mean the Spanish speaking players will be elevated to leadership like positions. Nacho Monreal, who I think is an exceptional player and human might relish that role. Hector Bellerin might enjoy that as well. The revenge of Lucas Perez could see him return and wreak havoc on the club that dismissed his talents.

I keep talking about the language challenge because the first three months of the job are so important. This paragraph helps give context to what I’m getting at.

One day, Jorge Valdano said, “At Barcelona, the leader is Messi. At Real Madrid, it’s Florentino Perez. At Atletico, it’s Diego Simeone.” A player, a coach and a president. A different kind of leader every time. I know when I’m the main person responsible, and when I’m not. It’s a process that a coach has to live with and internalise, and that he assimilates with time and experience. In every club, you have to know what your role is and what role you have vis-a-vis the rest of the group.

I am of the opinion that PSG’s leader is Neymar. Or that he is currently becoming it. Neymar came to PSG to be the leader, to go through this process to someday become the best in the world. It’s a process that will require a bit more time in order to consolidate this position. At Manchester City, Pep is in charge. At PSG, Neymar has to be.

I think that I managed the dressing room quite well. My greatest satisfaction was that the team didn’t sink, after losing against Barcelona or Real Madrid. A few weeks ago for example, we had a horrible first half against Saint-Étienne, but after the break, with one player sent off, we reacted well and managed to equalise. One of my staff members told me, “Unai, today the players showed that they are with you. If that weren’t the case, we would have lost.”

The notion that players can end you is something new to Arsenal fans. This is something Emery is going to be acutely aware of when he comes to Arsenal. The players at our place couldn’t end Arsene, he was an immovable object. The last two seasons, they pretty much-downed tools, yet the manager was given full backing by the board.

Emery won’t have that luxury. He has a two-year deal, with Arsenal retaining the option to keep him on with a 3rd year if he smashes it. If the players don’t like what they see, or they don’t react well to the violent shock to the system that’s coming, the new man could be in trouble, very quickly.

That’s why he has such a tough job on his hands. Sure, there’s a lot of low hanging fruit to be had, but only a fool would try and harvest it all in one go. If you’ve been in any sort of transformational role at a company, where you’ve taken over a bad team (or watched a bad team taken over), you’ll know that the secret is to work with the people you have and slowly implement your ideas and changes. The dick swingers who wade into big organisations and try to enact an overhaul in weeks, usually come out with egg on their face. They alienate the people working for them, and often those watching in. They miss the good bits and end up making swift exits with their tails between their legs.

Emery is going to have to play a masterful game. He needs to show the board he’s making progress, at the same time, he needs to show the players and backroom peeps he’s a team player. That’s why it’s so interesting the club let him bring in a large backroom team of his mates, versus giving him a team they owned to work with him (the modern structure Ivan promised). If you let him bring in two people, he’s forced to work in a system, if you give him 5 people, that’s a fully formed unit everyone has to abide by straight away.

That’s great if these new guys are easy to work with, troubling if not. As I said the other day, Arsenal are closer to PSG than they are to Sevilla. This excerpt kind of talks through the basic differences.

As a coach, I had the habit of showing players what steps to follow, similar to controlling someone with a joystick. Except that when you come to PSG, you realise that the players are the ones who make the most effective decisions. One day, I told Neymar that, “There are match situations we have worked before the game, but in your case, you imagine those situations by yourself.”

Let’s start from this very basic principle: coaching is very, very, very difficult. From there, coaching excellent players is even more difficult. Why? Because being convincing is the most fundamental thing to coaching: the players have to believe in you. Whether they believe in you because you have won many trophies, because you are a great coach, because you are imposing, because everything you say ends up happening… Whatever the reason may be. But they have to believe in you. And in big teams, the players expect exactly that – for the coach to not to mess up.

That’s also what they expect in a more modest club, but they are also aware of the larger margin of error and that bad results can happen more often. That is not the case with a big team. You have to be right even on the finest of details: your work, your preparation, your principles, your way of speaking, when you decide to speak. Everything is a bit more difficult. Maybe from an external perspective, you may think that you can work less, but it’s the opposite. You have to speak up at the right time, which can help your team win. In a team like PSG, where winning is expected, that is what gives meaning to your actions and what you say. In smaller teams, the results can vary. Here, it’s not the case. You almost always win, and that’s what forces you to hit your target at the right moment. Every time.

Arsenal isn’t PSG, but we still have exceptional players with big egos. Ozil won the World Cup. Aubameyang is one of the best hitmen in Europe. Lacazette is the top scorer in the Europa League. Ramsey thinks he’s Roy of the Rovers. How will Emery deal with a less talented version of PSG, with the same types of egos?

It’s going to be fascinating. I’m too wrapped up in the excitement to worry too much about the politics of the Arsenal training ground, but you have to pay attention to the amount of change going on, how it’s being implemented, who it’s being implemented to, and the role communication is going to play in making those first three months work.

Anyway, I hope you enjoyed that. Have a great day!

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GunnerDNA

Graham62

What do the “Americanized ways” actually means?

Marko

Gambon you about? You ever end up getting married? You’ve mellowed out since back in the day. I suppose that’s what happens once Ming the merciless is finally over thrown.

Marc

Got to say I quite like what Cesc has to say – not the Cesc on here, he’s a terrible human being – Pedro referenced coaching ambitions maybe he has something worth looking at.

Marko

Argentina is not winning the world cup. Their negative approach will only get them so far. They’re just not that good

salparadisenyc

Marc

Our livers should hang out, besties!

PessimisticPat

Ha suck it eagle

Im normally at the front of the cunt queue.

This world cup has been a big disappointment so far I think.

Can’t quite work out what the fuck Argentina are doing, shameful considering the players they have available

TR7

such poor midfielders, can’t bring Messi and Aguero in to play at all.

Bamford10

Sancho

I said it for two reasons: one, he had taken a number of swipes at me in the recent past; and two, I found his opinion — that Jack Wilshere at his best was no better a footballer than Granit Xhaka — ridiculous.

That is all.

And I’m sorry, but I can’t be bothered to explain the difference b/t the other two things again. A person can only spend so much time on something.

salparadisenyc

Fucking hell what a finish, what a MARE

Northbanker

What an awful error

PessimisticPat

Pahahahahahahahahahahaha

Marko

Oh and they’ve an awful goalkeeper. Fuck me what is wrong with him

Northbanker

Sign him up for Liverpool

steve

Caballero brilliant assist lol.

Jamie

Great finish. Could’ve easily ballooned it.

Leedsgunner

What. A. Howler.

TR7

Perisic has been very good

Vintage Gun

Big Wiily…

What a dick!

Champagne charlie

This the Arsenal-linked Pavon ?? Argentina look pony

Leedsgunner

Caballero won’t be flying home to Argentina anytime soon.

gambon

Marko

I am indeed married.

Definitely a bit more mellow than the old days.

I was 26 when I started posting here. 36 now.

alexanderhenry

..great finish though

Leedsgunner

Rebic took his chance, all credit to him — although you could say he should have been sent off earlier.

Messi needs to step up like CR7 did.

azed

Sampoli goofed big time.

Bamford10

WE

Still think Neymar will win the Golden Ball?

WengerEagle

Cameraman on point scoping out the birds hehe.

WengerEagle

Yep.

HillWood

Such a shame for the Argies. Hope they don’t get out the group

Sancho Monzorla

Croatia deserved that goal in my opinion. Argentina have been gash. Messi has been invisible, although Croatia has done well to shut him out.

WengerEagle

Get Di Maria or Banega on, this is dire to watch.

Leedsgunner

Honestly people diving in desperation hoping to draw the penalty…

Paulinho

It was good to see and hear a pundit cut the crap about Rashford and actually say – albeit diplomatically – that he’s not that good and doesn’t do enough when he starts. So bravo Cesc.

salparadisenyc

Boss defending there.

TR7

Di Maria should be second name on the team sheet behind Messi, terrible underrated and underutilized.

Coach 15

‘Caballero won’t be flying home to Argentina anytime soon.‘

Neither will that Colombian centre back from the other day……….we all know what they do centre backs who fuck up at world cups.

Paulinho

Remember Sampaoli was another hipster manager hyped up a year or so ago.

Leedsgunner

If all the clear cut chances were taken this game should be 4-3 in my estimation!

Paulinho

The one fault with Banega is that he seems fragile and weak defensively. Sampaoli is probably making a mistake not starting – especially with Mascherano in there – but him not fancying Banega is bit concerning. That’s if we buy him of course.

Leedsgunner

4-3 to Croatia that is!

WengerEagle

Messi dropping to a CDM position just to get the ball.

Northbanker

Is there some way to get that fucking advert off my screen each time I come on this site. It’s really pissing me off

englandsbest

It wasn’t the money with Wilshere. The new manager would not guarantee him playing time and a regular position. My own view is that, after being messed up by Wenger, he deserved that. And signing him was a win/win situation money-wise because if he didn’t suit, the Club could have sold him next summer for £20 million, instead of getting zero now. So why didn’t Emery take him on? Pedro explained that very well: Emery wants total dominance over the players, and giving in to Jack would have invited others to try the same. The subtext of the Emery quotes… Read more »

Leedsgunner

Did anyone capture the glimpse of Diego with his head in his hands…? Very very funny.

Marko

I am indeed married.Definitely a bit more mellow than the old days. I was 26 when I started posting here. 36 now.

Sell out. The old gambon would have never settled down. Steak and whores forever he’d say

salparadisenyc

“Sell out. The old gambon would have never settled down. Steak and whores forever he’d say”

Best comment today….

And Erdinger in the Eastern bloc

Paulinho

“Messi dropping to a CDM position just to get the ball.”

Yep. Familiar sight.

No line-breakers in the Argie midfield so he drops deep and has to beat two blocks whereas at Barca it’s usually just one.

I’ve become a Ronaldo over Messi man in the last year or so and this tournament so far has done nothing to change that. Ronaldo mentally stronger and much better off the ball game, so he stands up better in all scenarios. Especially pressure ones.

TR7

This notion that Messi and Dybala can’t play in the same 11 is horse shit. With Messi having to drop so deep, Argentina would benefit from having Dybala in and around the final 3rd.

Marko

but him not fancying Banega is bit concerning. That’s if we buy him of course.

You just said that he’s a hipster hyped up manager. This world cup is showing up one or two managers for sure

salparadisenyc

This ones going to gape open with Argentina needing goal

gambon

Steak, brasses and bugle.

The glory days.

Paulinho

Marko – I know. But didn’t the same happen to Banega four years ago? I seem to remember him being sub then as well. Might be wrong though.

Graham62

Leedsgunner

Portugal let Ronaldo take control. They also play to his strengths.

Argentina do not.

Leedsgunner

Dybala should have passed to Higuain who was completely unmarked rather than shooting into space… although it is Higuain in an Argentina shirt so he more than likely would have bottled it.

Leedsgunner

graham

Yep, you’re right there.

alexanderhenry

Argentina are a bit of a mess.

salparadisenyc

Total mess but they have a goal in em.

Marko

Marko – I know. But didn’t the same happen to Banega four years ago? I seem to remember him being sub then as well. Might be wrong though.

No you’re right. A solid but unspectacular signing if it happens

Northbanker

Just downloaded a content blocker – Crystal – problem solved

Can’t say same for Argentina

WengerEagle

Paulinho

I’ll definitely give you the fact that if Argentina were to get a penalty now I wouldn’t back Messi to score.

Whereas Ronaldo in that situation you know the ball will end up in the back of the net.

I made a similar point about how remarkable it is that Ronaldo after Messi looking unstoppable around late 2015 has narrowed the gap in his 30s.

His 2017 CL knockout stage run was the best I’ve ever seen of any player.

Marko

Brilliant goal

Paulinho

Modric.

Genuine great of the game.

Sancho Monzorla

Oh you greedy Croatian bastard

Sancho Monzorla

Well. There’s that then.

HillWood

Get in there the Former Yugoslavia

Marko

Keeper gets a hand to it

Jamie

What a strike.

TR7

Said Otemandi is a complete fraud.

Northbanker

Maybe its just me but a tinge of sadness that Messi will always have this World Cup thing hanging against him

steve

Arsene: “I could’ve signed Modric”

Sancho Monzorla

Messi hasn’t been the same since he got that sleeve.

Marko

The longevity of Modric is incredible it has to be said especially when you see Cesc Fabregas doing punditry in the studio

Receding hairline

Argentina shouldn’t even have made it to this World Cup if we are being honest

This Sampaoli fellow is going to loose a lot of credibility after the tournament that is for those into the whole shouting and jumping style of management..

WengerEagle

Out of Argies hands now.

Best they can hope for is Nigeria to beat Iceland so it puts it back into their hands at least for runner up spot.

Goonah

Northbanker
June 21, 2018 20:30:20
Is there some way to get that fucking advert off my screen each time I come on this site. It’s really pissing me off
……………………………………………………

join #BinBamford

kc

Typical Argentina. Great players, horrible team.

Paulinho

WE – He’s just more versatile isn’t he? Two-footed, stronger mentally, better in the air, better off the ball.

Obviously in terms of ‘talent’ in the convention sense Messi is probably better but it all becomes a bit one-dimensional too often when the stakes are raised.

On a lower level it reminds me of the Ramsey-Ozil debate. Ozil more talented and more likely to look incredible against shit teams, but Ramsey more likely to get a goal against top side in a tough tight match because of off the ball game and being braver mentally.

omar

Would it be outrageous if a manager were to substitute a player like Messi. Sometimes I feel players like Messi and Neymar sometimes hold back their teams.

WengerEagle

Hard to believe that just 5 years ago Modric was being mocked as one of Real Madrid’s worst signings.

Fast forward 5 years and he’s been the main midfield man in 4 CL wins.

Paulinho

Croatia gonna get hyped again.

Cue the flat performance in the round of 16 and getting knocked out again.

TR7

Well none of that versatility mattered when Messi was in his prime.

Receding hairline

Let’s not start some Messi revisionist rubbish because Argentina are making a fool of themselves

We will never see a footballer like Messi ever again. He took football to a different level.

That doesn’t take away anything from Ronaldo.

Goonah

Croatia is gonna win the cup according to Bamford

Never heard/seen a worst turncoat/kneejerk thing in my life

PessimisticPat

For all those concerned about banega defensively he averaged 2.1 tackles per game last year. Xhaka 1.9 ramsey 1.6 and elneny 0.9. Seems like an upgrade to me

qna

That goal just knocked out Argentina on goal difference at the very least.

WengerEagle

Real shame that Messi and Riquelme didn’t get to play in the same generation.

3-0 could be it for argies.

GD will be tough to recover. If Iceland win either of their last 2 they’re out.

HillWood

Fray Bentos have been minced

Champagne charlie

Yea with Pat there, International selections mean very little imo. Arsenal have Emery as manager and he’s had Banega at two different clubs. If we get him, we know is because he brings something the manager wants

omar

So Argentina not bothering about goal difference.

Paulinho

Croatia are like a top class gatekeeper side.

Any chinks in your armour and they will find you out.

salparadisenyc

What a performance from the duo or Modrić and Rakitić, Xavi and Iniesta stuff.

azed

I have no idea why Argentina doesn’t take short corners. The Croatians are way bigger. Same thing happened against Iceland.
Every time Argentina got a corner, it led to an Iceland attack.

WengerEagle

Sampaoli totally bottled the line up.

GK howler didn’t help.

qna

Iceland just need to get the job done now. Croatia won’t put 3 past them.

Cesc Appeal

Banega seems to be actually happening then

TR7

Our reserve Emiliano Martinez is better than Caballero, what a horrible keeper that guy is !

Victorious

Messi flops at the biggest of stage again, Ronaldo far and away the better player

who was the plonker that made Argentina favorites for the cup again? lol

WengerEagle

Paulinho

Might be reading too much into it but genuinely don’t think that Messi relishes the pressure at all, reminds me of LeBron.

Whereas Ronaldo like like he lives for it, he nearly needs it to motivate himself at times.

Doesn’t help that Argentina have no creative players at all though.

Paulinho

Fabregas would make a great coach.

Goonah

Vic

You and Red could make out in his basement!

qna

Croatia aren’t star studded, but they have to have the best central midfield at the World Cup. They have 4 top class players for 3 spots. Think they are vulnerable at their centre of defence. They are decent but not outstanding up forward.

It’s getting ahead to say they will win the World Cup, but they are right up their in the top 5 or 6 IMO.