Thursday 15 May 2014

The tale of two Poles + Arsene talks manager rotation

Hello everyone.
The grand finale is still a couple of days away, but there were some interesting pieces both in the media and coming from our manager, so I decided to talk about these.

Starting with the good news: Szczesny will receive the Golden Glove. I was under the impression that with the same number of clean sheets, the keeper with a better CS -to -games played ratio becomes the sole recipient, but it seems I was wrong. Both Cech and Szczesny will receive this accolade and I'm so much happier for the Pole.

I've already said I think the younger Pole has done remarkably well this year (he is my candidate for the player of the season) and it was hugely important for him to be noticed and rewarded for his effort. We've conceded 41 league goals, 20 of those came in just four games, which means only 21 goal in 34 matches. That's almost 0.5 goals per game and exactly half of those games were clean sheets.

These numbers are brilliant, something that was acknowledged by the FA (or whoever awards the prizes) and so Szczesny gets his much-craved reward. Good for him. 

His older counterpart, Fabianski, was meanwhile talked up by Koscielny:

"Lukasz is a very good goalkeeper. He's a big professional and he's the first in training to prepare".

Well, was there any doubt? Fab had little practise during the last year (couple of years?), but was brilliant when called upon. Something Koscielny talks about:

"He plays the FA Cup - a little like Iker Casillas at [Real] Madrid, who plays in just the cups. But he's done the job well, every time when you call on Lukasz to play he has done the job".

I gotta admit, I like Fabianski's character and professionalism. He's featured on a number of (highly) important occasions and was always brilliant. Sometimes (more often than not) Fab slotted in with little to no time for preparation (Bayern Munich this year) and was the reason we won or at least didn't lose the game by a greater margin, if we had some other second keeper.

Two occasions stand out for me this year: Liverpool and Wigan in the FA Cup. During the former he made a string of fantastic saves to repeatedly deny both Suarez and Sturridge, thus ensuring we won. As for Wigan, he was the absolute hero during the penalty shoot-out, making two crucial stops to give Arteta and Giroud some breathing space and a platform to build our success on. And I haven't even mentioned just how good the Pole was a year ago in an away match against Bayern.

It'll be sad indeed if Fab goes in the summer, but I hope we'll at least crown his stint at Arsenal with the FA Cup. It may even change the Pole's mind, who knows.

In other news, Arsene has given a usual pre-game press conference, where among other things, he discussed the current situation with Premier League managers. On Sherwood he said:
For me if it's a Tottenham manager or any other manager it's always sad news when somebody loses his job. The only thing that looks a bit worrying is that the speed of the rotation level in the Premier League gets quicker and quicker. That's not a very good sign for the Premier League.
No comment here, didn't like that clown. And on the overall situation:
I think every club has the responsibility to make the right decision. I believe that technical stability is important for the development of the game. At the moment people think a lot about that so we accept in our job as well that if directors are not happy, or owners are not happy with us, that we can lose the job. But still technical stability is important for the development of the game.
Well, that's a bit more interesting. It's the first time in my memory so many managers were fired inside one season and that just demonstrates how important instant success has become.

The owners, the board, etc. etc. do not value stability any longer. Only delivering numerous trophies can help you keep your job at this high level and even that seems to under threat nowadays.With Guardiola hinting at a move away and even Pellegrini warning his own club against trying to force a certain play style on him, the situation is unstable even at the seemingly successful clubs.

The Club top executives do not understand that it's hard to hit the ground running immediately and so seek external solutions, when a manager doesn't deliver on their (sometimes overly ambitious) standards. The problem is not so much as who the manager is, but rather how much time he has spent with the team. Every manager needs some time to adapt to a new club in order to achieve something. All of this makes me value Arsene even more. We can say whatever we like, but Arsenal is the most stable club in the league for the past 18 years. And I think it's no coincidence we've reached and maintained such a high level under the guidance of one man only.

That's it for today. Back tomorrow or Saturday for a complete preview of the cup final.

Until then