KallorsUnusedMoisturiser, on 19 April 2011 - 01:43 PM, said:
What do you think has happened to Wenger? There's no denying he's a damn fine manager, but he's lost the plot in recent years. He was known as the unflappable mr cool, never rising to the bait, and now he's arguing with everyone, blaming the world for his misfortunes, and refusing to change tactics.
I think he is just too stuck in his ways to be creative anymore, too proud to go for big signings, and too embittered by his lack of success despite being the team playing arguably the most creative and attractive football in England. He's in a downward spiral until Arsenal finally wins something.
The problem is, you can't just fire him and appoint someone else, because the entire team is built up according to his criteria and specific ideas (and is reasonably balanced in that respect, too), and to his idea of football. So, basically, yuo'd want to fire Wenger and then hire Wenger again.
What Arsenal needs imho is a quality centreback to match Vermaelen (if you want to buy 'm young, go for Radkitskyi or Subotic), a good goalie and an accomplished, explosive striker for Van Persie to play besides or behind.
Rumours are Wenger will sell Nasri as he is in his last year of contract, and Archavin may want to leave of his own accord. That creates room in the first eleven for a striker like Benzema (although he'll be a tad bit too expensive... but there are plenty of guys like him. Sergio Aguero or Hulk are both be awesome and are still young enough to fit Wenger's search profiles.
Here's what the Guardian has to say:
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Five reasons why Arsenal's season has unravelled
The Gunners are running on empty and Arsène Wenger's demeanour as manager is not helping
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David Hytner
The Guardian, Tuesday 19 April 2011
Article history
Arsène Wenger questions the officials after Arsenal's draw with Liverpool. The manager's tendency to blame referees has compounded his team's problems. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images
1 Arsène Wenger's persecution complex
To the Arsenal manager's mind, this has been an encouraging season. Wenger's side have challenged seriously for the Premier League title; they have gone deep into both domestic knockout competitions and there can be no shame in losing to Barcelona in the Champions League, particularly when it was all down to the referee. Arsenal have, into the bargain, played some fantastic football to more than justify the admission prices.
Wenger is unable to accept any alternative readings and he has come to feel that there is a conspiracy in place to chip away at his club, to relentlessly beat him and the players. Everyone is in on it, from match officials and the authorities to rival clubs and the media. Wenger has propagated a culture in which Arsenal can never be to blame. He believes that no team are under such pressure, that no team must endure being written off so routinely. But the siege mentality is draining and not only to Wenger, who has withdrawn from some of his press commitments. The players have had to shoulder an onerous burden. It is hard enough to win and win well, without needing to defeat the world.
2 The psychological blow of losing the Carling Cup final
Arsenal had hardly hired the open-top bus and cordoned off areas of Islington but the English game's oft-derided secondary cup competition had assumed tremendous significance. The players considered themselves on a mission to win it; Cesc Fábregas had demanded to play in both legs of the semi-final against Ipswich Town and he was distraught when injury ruled him out of the final. The Wembley showpiece against Birmingham City was the opportunity for Arsenal to get back into the groove, to prove that they could win after five trophy-free seasons and to set themselves fair for a tilt at the bigger prizes. Yet they fell short and it was as much the manner of the 2-1 defeat. Birmingham's 89th-minute winner, which followed a calamitous mix-up between Laurent Koscielny and Wojciech Szczesny, had Arsenal bent double from the kick to the guts. Since then they have suffered six dispiriting results in eight matches – Champions League and FA Cup exits, together with four Premier League draws. To Wenger's enormous irritation, the mental toughness of his squad has been questioned. What is it about February meetings with Birmingham?
3 Players running on empty through fatigue and injury
Wenger had said that Arsenal needed to beat Liverpool at home on Sunday or kiss goodbye to the title. But, after the call to arms, he saw a dreadfully flat performance and after the 1-1 draw, he admitted that "we were a bit jaded physically". It was the day of the London Marathon and it felt appropriate to talk of Wenger's men hitting the wall. Jack Wilshere looked like a player with 49 matches for club and country in his legs while Samir Nasri's form has been nose-diving for some weeks. Fábregas has grimaced through plenty of the season because of a long-standing hamstring problem. The injury list has offered mitigation, even if the number of niggling muscular problems remains a worry. Is it the way that the club train or condition the players? Or the way they rehabilitate them?
After the 0-0 home draw against Sunderland, Wenger had lamented his players' lack of a "change of pace" and he used the same phrase on Sunday. Arsenal have not played a midweek fixture since the Barça defeat on 8 March but the damage appears to have been done in January and February, when they played 16 matches. Wenger's core of 19 outfield players are struggling to the finish.
4 The absence of a focal point in the attack
Robin van Persie's statistics brook no argument. In 20 starts in all competitions, the Holland striker has scored 17 goals; his record is 13 in 13 in the Premier League. He is almost always wonderful to watch, the classic Wenger fusion of swiftness of thought, skill and technique. Yet in Wenger's 4‑2-3-1 formation Van Persie has sometimes looked ill-equipped to lead the line on his own.
His best position is surely as a No10, who can work off and with the main front man. Van Persie regularly drops deep and wide to seek out the ball but a lone striker ought not to be building up the play.
Arsenal have often had plenty of creators flitting around the edges of the penalty area, but then had nobody inside it. Wenger's vision is a take on Total Football; but has he got the team's balance right?
His back-up options in attack are more in the mould of the traditional No9 but players in that role have flattered to deceive. Marouane Chamakh has been awol since December and Nicklas Bendtner continues to talk a better game than he plays.
5 The high-profile lapses of the back five
It is the easiest hole to pick in Wenger's masterplan for the simple reason that when his goalkeepers or defenders make a mistake, it is often the sort that makes blooper DVDs. Arsenal have a better defensive record in the Premier League this season than Manchester United but, equally, Arsenal do seem to have the capacity to gravely undermine themselves at the back. Perhaps Wenger's attacking system leaves them exposed.
There is little doubt that Koscielny's central-defensive partnership with Sébastien Squillaci has been problematic – the pair have been together in all five of the club's league defeats – while the chopping and changing in goal has not been ideal. The recruitment of Jens Lehmann was one of the season's many outlandish story-lines.
Everyone is entitled to his own wrong opinion. - Lizrad