THE ARCHIVE
Clubs
Same old Arsenal | Same old Arsenal |
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After Arsenal remained unbeaten during the 2003-04 season, Arsène Wenger commented: “I enjoy a feeling of fulfilment when I feel the team has deserved its success.” Judging by his beatific grin at the end of the FA Cup final, undeserved success is a more than acceptable alternative. Dogged defending, a packed midfield, goalkeeping heroics, “lucky” and/or “boring” prefixes in tabloid reports, and the Millennium Stadium sound system belting out a tinny version of One Nil To The Arsenal; the “windfall final” was reminiscent of the club’s cup triumphs a decade ago. Short of John Jensen joining the midfield fray at some point in the second half, or Paul Merson indulging in a spot of mock lager swigging after Patrick Vieira dispatched his winning penalty, this was as close to a George Graham-style win as you could get. Yet only the most blinkered Arsenal fan would suggest that Wenger’s tactical genius (playing Bergkamp as a lone striker was never likely to bear fruit) was behind Arsenal’s unlikely victory. He got lucky. Wenger may have inadvertently stumbled upon the prototype of a formation that could succeed in the Champions League over the next few years. Arsenal’s cavalier approach, which destroys the majority of Premiership sides, is doomed to failure against Europe’s finest, who treat contests like games of chess. Bayern Munich and Chelsea realised that by close marking Thierry Henry, Robert Pires et al, the Gunners – unable to adapt to a slower, more technical game – become tetchy and desperate. When an Arsenal team containing such luminaries as Steve Morrow and David Hillier won the Cup-Winners Cup in 1994 by defeating a far more talented Parma side, Tony Adams commented: “We won by tangling them up in a spider’s web. Then we broke away quickly when it was possible.” Although the Champions League represents a far greater challenge, Graham’s tactics – with defenders and midfielders merged into a deflective wall – were better suited to the vagaries of European football. Arsenal’s approach in the FA Cup final, with the midfield five protecting the defence in the face of relentless United attacking, may be the team’s first tentative move towards a more flexible approach. Intriguingly, Wenger hinted in a recent Canal Plus interview that he might be prepared to utilise a sweeper system in next year’s Champions League and admitted that “a slower pace of game is required”. From WSC 221 July 2005. What was happening this month On the subject...
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