THE FOOTBALL THREAD Vol 2

Burnley v Arsenal
FA Cup Round 3
Turf Moor
Sun, Jan 6, 2008, 2pm



By Richard Clarke

Arsène Wenger will shuffle his side for the FA Cup Third Round tie at Burnley on Sunday.

Arsenal have just emerged from a tough festive period and have a two-legged Carling Cup Semi-Final coming up so perhaps it is no surprise to see the Frenchman rotate for the trip to the Championship strugglers.

After the victory over West Ham on New Year’s Day, Wenger had suggested William Gallas and Gael Clichy would be rested at Turf Moor. He was remaining tight-lipped over the omissions when he spoke to Arsenal TV Online on Thursday afternoon but he did suggest that Jens Lehmann, Kolo Toure, Emmanuel Eboue and Bacary Sagna were likely to start.

On the injury front, Emmanuel Adebayor may miss out because of a slight hamstring injury but Robin van Persie (muscular) is around a week away from a return.

“I can’t really tell you too much about the team at the moment because I have to check my players,” said Wenger.

“I think Jens Lehmann will be involved. But Kolo Toure, Eboue and Sagna will all play. A few of the players who featured all over Christmas will be rested and a few will come in. It will be a mixture.

“We do have a little problem with Adebayor on his hamstring but, if really needed, he could play. Robin van Persie is still injured and will not be involved. But it is very short for him now. The next deadline could be Birmingham or just after
 
Song delighted by first international call-up

By Matt Fortune

A first international call-up is always a joy to behold but, for Alex Song, it has added spice. The Arsenal youngster has never been part of the Cameroon squad but he has been selected for the biggest tournament in his native continent - the African Cup of Nations.

The 20-year-old has been rewarded for his impressive performances in the Arsenal first team and will travel to Ghana to represent his country in the tournament which starts on January 20, with the Final being contested on February 10.

Song has made 10 appearances for his club this season, standing out as a centre back during the young Gunners’ run to the Carling Cup Semi-Finals. He is delighted that his hard work has been recognised.

“Yes of course I am really happy,” Song told Arsenal.com. “I have been working really hard for the opportunity to join up with the national team.

“I think that having the chance to play in the Champions League with Arsenal has helped me. Those games are never easy and they have helped me raise my level so that now I can go to the national team.

“I just need to seize my chance when I go to Ghana.

“Cameroon have got a lot of very good players. Players like [Samuel] Eto’o, Geremi and my uncle Rigobert. I know that I am going there to join them as a young player and I will speak to them all the time to learn and do much better.”

The Club is was still waiting for confirmation when Song has to join up with the Cameroon squad, therefore it is unsure whether he will be available for the FA Cup trip to Burnley on Sunday.
 
Fa Cup Time

FA Cup Round 3
Turf Moor
Sunday, January 06, 2008, 2pm


Burnley-


Arsenal-


By Richard Clarke

Arsène Wenger will preach a gospel of respect this Sunday. Respect for Burnley, respect for the FA Cup and respect for the momentum that has taken his Arsenal side to the top of the Premier League.

Having hauled themselves through a demanding yet rewarding Christmas period, the Frenchman could probably do without a throwback of a Third Round game at Turf Moor this weekend.

As usual Wenger will send out a much-changed side for the televised tie. In days gone by, that would have brought about accusations of dishonour from the Arsenal manager. However four FA Cup successes in 10 full seasons and plenty of long runs to the latter stages suggests this is a competition taken very seriously at Emirates Stadium. In fact this week it was an Englishman, Reading striker Dave Kitson, who hit the headlines for suggesting the world’s oldest knockout competition paled in comparison to his side’s fight for Premier League survival.

“I don't like it when people disrespect the FA Cup,” responded Wenger at his pre-match press conference. “Personally I love the competition.

“But I saw Kitson's interview. He's an intelligent boy and I think he was just saying they have different priorities.

“For us, this is our next game and we have created a momentum which we want to keep going. Whoever is in the squad, we know that if we play well, we win. So let's just go and win the next game whether it's the FA Cup, Carling Cup or any other competition.

“At the beginning of the season we didn't know if we were good enough to win our games. Now we know we can. And it's not like we have won the FA Cup 10 years on the trot.“

In terms of changes, Cesc Fabregas. Manuel Almunia and Gael Clichy will be rested while Alex Hleb (ankle) and Emmanuel Adebayor (hamstring) have only slight injuries but will not feature. There will be a late test on Theo Walcott’s shoulder and Mathieu Flamini is suspended. Robin van Persie (muscular) is still a week from fitness.

Their replacements are not certain yet. However Wenger did suggest that Lassana Diarra, Denilson and Abou Diaby will be contesting midfield roles and Jens Lehmann would be starting in goal. Nicklas Bendtner is available after his ban and Johan Djourou is back in the Arsenal fold having returned from a loan spell at Birmingham. Kolo Toure and Emmanuel Eboue are likely to start in their last games before leaving for the African Nations Cup.

Burnley are on a terrible run right now. They have picked up just two points from their last six games and, after the 3-0 defeat to Blackpool last time out, manager Owen Coyle felt the need to apologise to the fans for his side’s performance. However Wenger is far too experienced in this competition to think that a lower-league opponent cannot lift their performance by several notches on the day.

“We have to respect Burnley,” said the manager. “The side we take up will have to play at their best because if you give them a chance they certainly have enough quality to take it. They have Ade Akinbiyi, David Unsworth, Jon Harley and Graham Alexander. That’s many good Premier League players with experience.”

While Burnley are worried about arresting their poor run, Arsenal’s concerns are to balance their highly-plausible ambitions in the Premier League and Champions League. Traditionally the addition of the FA Cup has been highly problematic to Wenger’s side at this time of year.

“It's not in conflict too much with the Premier League but more the Champions League,” said the manager. “That’s because of the number of replays positioned every time just in front of the Champions League games.

“But we want to do well in the competition and we have a common desire to do well in every single competition we play in. In fact, if you look at it, in the last 10 years nobody outside the top four has won this competition. And we are highly motivated to win it again.

“So please, don't expect us to sacrifice the FA Cup.”
 
Wenger - I respect the way Lehmann has acted
Burnley v Arsenal
FA Cup Round 3
Turf Moor
Sun, Jan 6, 2008, 2pm



By Richard Clarke

Arsène Wenger has spoken of his respect for the way Jens Lehmann has conducted himself in recent weeks.

The Arsenal manager admits “the door is open” for the German keeper if he wants to leave Emirates Stadium during January. However suggestions that, on Friday morning, Borussia Dortmund would be announcing his decision to re-join them proved to be false.

In fact Lehmann will play in goal for Arsenal at Burnley on Sunday. Wenger believes the 38-year-old has not yet decided whether to stay or go during the current window however this summer’s Euro 2008 tournament could well be a factor.

“When I extended the contract for Jens, I opened the door that if he does not play [for us] and has a chance to play in the European Championships, then I would not stop him from leaving in January,” said Wenger at his pre-match press conference. “If he does not play, that means somebody else can get in front of him.

“I have heard that Dortmund made a press conference and they did not announce Jens but they are hopeful. The door is not closed for Jens, but at the moment we have not reached any agreement. I do not even believe he has made his mind up.

“He still thinks he should play, and I respect that. On one side you cannot want a player to give 100 per cent every day to be the best and then accept he is not the best. They do not work together.

“But what I respect the most is he is a player who comes in and does his job 100 per cent and does not talk too much. That is what he does at the moment.”
 
beckham_train5.jpg


Beckham trains with Arsenal - video and pics
Former England captain David Beckham has joined up with the Arsenal sqaud as part of his pre-season training regime.

The 32-year-old, who currently plays for LA Galaxy, is with the Club in preparation for the start of the domestic season in the United States.
 
wtf?!this has gone too far.was really surprised when i looked at the pic and how are the arsenal fans gonna react?
 
Match Report
FA Cup Round 3
Turf Moor
Sunday, January 06, 2008, 2pm


Burnley0


Arsenal2Eduardo 9, Bendtner 75


By Richard Clarke

Goals from Eduardo and Nicklas Bendtner gave Arsenal safe passage to the FA Cup Fourth Round with a 2-0 win at Burnley on Sunday.

The Croatian completed a cool finish after only nine minutes, his sixth goal in his last four starts for the Club. The Championship side did have their moments in a highly-competitive first half but their challenge faded on the hour after Kyle Lafferty received a straight red card for a foul on Gilberto.

Fifteen minutes from time, Bendtner ended the argument when he danced around the keeper and slotted home.

Saturday had seen a number of FA Cup shocks but, if Burnley had pulled off a win this afternoon, it would have dominated the back pages for days.

That was never really on after Eduardo's strike. Arsenal were competent, composed and controlled as, once again, they avoided this perennial banana skin.

They march on.

Wenger had said his side would be “a mixture” and he was good as his word. Only three were retained from the starting XI against West Ham on New Year’s Day. Emmanuel Eboue and Kolo Toure were playing their last game before going to African Nations Cup. Eduardo was asked to continue his striking success over the festive period.

The Croatian’s partner was Bendtner, who was back from suspension. Gilberto and Denilson formed an all-Brazilian central midfield while Armand Traore came in at left back for only his second start in this competition. Johan Djourou named on the bench for the first time since returning from his loan spell at Birmingham. He was joined there by two Carling Cup wannabees — Mark Randall, 18, and Henri Lansbury, 17.

Burnley had been struggling in the Championship under new manager Owen Coyle recently but Turf Moor was buzzing with anticipation for Arsenal’s first visit in over 30 years.

And the Clarets nearly took the lead with their opening attack in the fifth minute. Andy Gray escaped down the right-hand side and crossed to the far post where Lafferty arrived to power a header against the bar. The ball bounced down and Arsenal scrambled it away but the effort could only go down as a major let-off for the visitors.

Wenger’s men had hardly settled but, in the ninth minute, they snaffled the opening goal. It was not a clear-cut chance. Toure’s chipped pass forward sent Eduardo through but the bobbling ball would not come down and the 24-year-old was being pursued by a couple of Burnley defenders. However the Croatian is fast becoming the coolest finisher in the top flight. He took his time before tapping a trickling shot past Gabor Kiraly and just inside the upright

It was harsh on Burnley but you don’t always get what you deserve in FA Cup football. They responded with what you would expect — gusto. Gray threaded a shot through and then Robbie Blake thundered a drive over the bar. However you sensed that Arsenal were relatively comfortable with the situation. They expected the home side’s onslaught and were confident they could cope with it. They were also causing the home side some problems on the break.

In the 20th minute, Arsenal might have grabbed a second when Gilberto met Denilson’s corner with a stooping header. It deflected towards Graham Alexander at the near post and he scrambled the ball off the line.

Burnley continued to pressure but the visitors continued to enjoy the best opportunities. Most of them fell to Eboue on the right. He hammered the best chance over the bar midway through the half and then he nearly flicked the ball past Kiraly from close-range.

Eight minutes from the break, Traore dallied over his clearance at the far post and Wade Elliot harried him into a mistake. Chris McCann blazed his effort over the bar when he should have done better.

Kiraly saved Bendtner’s overhead kick just before half-time and, at the interval, Arsenal were content.

They should have all but completed the victory six minutes after the restart when Bendtner found Eduardo unmarked 12 yards out. It was a much more straightforward opportunity than the ones he had netted recently against Everton, West Ham and earlier this afternoon. However he steered an inexplicable shot a yard wide.

Burnley might have responded in the best fashion when Blake’s free-kick picked out the unmarked McCann at the far post but, wastefully, he nodded over the bar from six yards out.

The Clarets were perhaps exercising their last throw of the dice. Certainly Lafferty gambled and lost on the hour when he caught Gilberto on the knee with a nasty-looking challenge. Referee Alan Wiley had little option but to send off the Northern Irish international.

The dismissal only fuelled a match that was already starting to boil. Senderos nodded Elliot’s cross off the head of Gray as the Burnley striker threatened at the far post.

However, 15 minutes from time, Arsenal made the game safe. Eduardo exploited gaping holes in the Burnley defence to feed Bendtner. The Dane skipped around the keeper and tucked his shot past Kiraly.

Burnley were now a spent force. Two goals and one man down, they failed to mount a response.

Arsenal held on with comfort. But, in a straightforward afternoon, they had barely been out of their comfort zone from the moment Eduardo had given them the advantage.
 
Arsenal will face Stoke or Newcastle in the FA Cup
Arsenal will face Stoke City or Newcastle United in the Fourth Round of the FA Cup.

Arsene Wenger's side were first out of the hat when the draw was made at FA headquarters in Soho Square on Monday afternoon. They will have to wait for the result of Stoke and Newcastle's Third-Round replay before their opponents are confirmed. The teams drew 0-0 at the Britannia Stadium on Sunday.

Arsenal eased into the last 32 with a 2-0 victory at Burnley. Eduardo and Nicklas Bendtner were on target at Turf Moor.

The Fourth-Round ties will be played over the weekend of January 26 and 27.

Stay close to Arsenal.com for reaction to the FA Cup draw.

FA Cup Fourth-Round draw

Arsenal v Stoke or Newcastle
Coventry City v Walsall or Millwall
Oldham Athletic v Huddersfield Town
Swindon Town or Barnet v Fulham or Bristol Rovers
Wigan Athletic v Chelsea
Luton Town or Liverpool v Swansea City or Havant & Waterlooville
Southend United v Barnsley
Southampton v Norwich City or Bury
Manchester United v Tottenham Hotspur or Reading
Portsmouth v Plymouth Argyle
Derby County or Sheffield Wednesday v Preston North End
Watford v Wolverhampton Wanderers
Peterborough United v Charlton Athletic or West Bromwich Albion
Sheffield United v West Ham United or Manchester City
Mansfield Town v Middlesbrough
Tranmere Rovers or Hereford United v Cardiff City
 
Eduardo is O2 Arsenal.com Player of the Month
Eduardo was still finding his feet in the hustle and bustle of English football at the start of last month but by the end of December he was justifying Arsene Wenger's billing as Arsenal's "secret weapon". The fans certainly agree - they have picked the Croatian striker as their Player of the Month.

Eduardo only featured in five of Arsenal's nine games but still did enough to scoop 27.8 per cent of the votes. He was quiet at Newcastle and Middlesbrough but exploded into life in the Carling Cup win at Blackburn, firing the young Gunners into a two-goal lead and slotting home the winner in extra time after Rovers had pegged back Wenger's side.

The Croatian produced two more clinical strikes at Everton to turn a one-goal deficit into a 2-1 lead. It was yet more evidence that the Croatian is probably the Club's most natural finisher since Ian Wright. Eduardo has staked an early claim for the January prize too after goals against West Ham and Burnley, taking his recent tally to six in just four games.

Manuel Almunia finished second in our December poll, earning plaudits for his consistency in goal - and that penalty save against Tottenham before Christmas. Gael Clichy, consistently excellent at left back, was third.


December Player of the Month Results Player %
Eduardo 27.8%
Manuel Almunia 16.9%
Gael Clichy 13.9%
Others 41.4%
 
natural finisher since ian wright.so where does thierry henry belong in the ranks?natural betrayer?
 
nah ... he was loyal coz Barca & Madrid chased him for years b4 they finally got him...

ANELKA .. and CASHLEY COLE ...those MOFOs were 1st CLASS TRAITORS MERCENARY MONEY FACE !@#$%^&*()_+!!! ...GOOD RIDDANCE

Eduardo RULZ!
 
Van Persie back for Carling Cup Semi-Final against Spurs
Arsenal v Tottenham H.
Carling Cup S/F Leg 1
Emirates Stadium
Wed, Jan 9, 2008, 7.45pm



By Richard Clarke

Robin van Persie will return from injury for the Carling Cup Semi-Final first leg against Tottenham at Emirates Stadium on Wednesday.

The Dutch striker has played just 85 minutes for Arsenal since October 23. He injured his knee on international duty then, after returning for two games in mid-December, suffered a muscle problem. Speaking to Arsenal TV Online on Tuesday afternoon, Arsène Wenger was delighted to have the 24-year-old back in the fold at last.

“Yes Robin van Persie is back in the squad,” he said. “He had a little set-back coming back from his knee injury, it was a muscle problem. But the positive side of it is that he could forget about his knee and work on his fitness.”

Apart from that, the manager intends to stick with the young side that has taken the Club to their fourth Carling Cup semi-final in the past five years.

“Lukasz Fabianski will play in goal again, Theo Walcott is available while Johan Djourou and Philippe Senderos will play at the back,” he said. “Apart from that it will be the players who played in the last [Carling Cup] game. Basically it will be a young side maybe with one or two experienced players.”

Arsenal.com will announce the full squad on Wednesday morning.
 
about becks at arsenal for training is just nothing.beckham will be appointed the global ambassador for manchester united when he retired at who knows what age.he will take over the place of united's proud legend sir bobby charlton as the aforementioned ambassador.differences between sir alex and becks might be surfaced but the two have come to good terms long ago.
 
Match Report
Carling Cup S/F Leg 1
Emirates Stadium
Wednesday, January 09, 2008, 7.45pm


Arsenal1Walcott 78


Tottenham H.1Jenas 37


By Richard Clarke

Theo Walcott bundled home a late equaliser to preserve Arsenal’s proud unbeaten record against Tottenham and set up a mouthwatering second leg to the Carling Cup Semi-Final.

Arsène Wenger’s run of 20 North London derbies without defeat looked under serious threat for much of tonight.

Tottenham bossed the latter stages of the first half and deservedly grabbed the lead when Jermaine Jenas slotted home eight minutes before the break. Arsenal were disjointed and, although they improved after the break, they were staring at their first home defeat since May 1993 before the equaliser emerged with 11 minutes to go.

Eduardo sent Walcott clear and Lee Young-Pyo’s attempted challenge saw the ball ricochet off the England winger and past Radek Cerny. Emirates erupted with relief as much as anything.

Make no mistake, this was not the type of performance we are used to from the youngsters in this competition and they will have to improve markedly if they want to go through after the second leg on January 22.

However they are still in the tie and, just perhaps, still hold a psychological edge over their neighbours.

Certainly, given the nature and timing of the equaliser, Tottenham will be a worried side at White Hart Lane.

It was perhaps surprising to see Wenger name Robin van Persie in his starting line-up this evening. The Dutchman had just 85 minutes under his belt since October 23 because of knee and then muscular injuries. Eduardo, the star of recent Arsenal victories, made way.

Johan Djourou returned for his first appearance of the season following that loan spell at Birmingham and Theo Walcott was back after a shoulder injury. Lukasz Fabianski and Justin Hoyte also came in.

Transport problems caused a 15-minute delay to the kick-off. It did little to quell the bubbling atmosphere this evening. Both sides could draw motivation from last season’s tie between the sides at the same stage.

Tottenham felt they were a much better side under Ramos while Arsenal’s youngsters had a reputation to keep up in this competition - and wonderful record to sustain against the old enemy.

Certainly it was Tottenham who quicker were off the blocks tonight. They created a couple of fleeting frighteners for Arsenal when Ledley King and Dimitar Berbatov momentarily went clear. But their early bluster soon fizzled out.

In the 13th minute, Walcott raced into the area and found a second of space before being swamped by Tottenham defenders.

It was the prelude to a period of Arsenal pressure. Van Persie fed Hoyte on the right and his cross was headed powerfully goalward at the near post by Bendtner. Cerny, surprisingly selected above Paul Robinson, threw himself to his left to save.

However Tottenham’s fightback was severe. Senderos obstructed Berbatov and Jamie O’Hara curled a low free-kick wide.

Then, just past the half-hour, Berbatov hoisted a ball forward to Robbie Keane in the area. Senderos timed a dispossessing challenge to perfection however the ball fell to Steed Malbranque. With Fabianski out of position, the Frenchman trickled a hurried shot wide of the far post.

Seconds later, Keane skipped past the onrushing Fabianski and crossed to Malbranque at the far post. The former Fulham midfielder rose above Hoyte to nod wide.

Tottenham had now built up a head of steam and the Arsenal midfield was struggling to hold back their incessant attacks leaving the defence exposed.

It was no surprise when the visitors took the lead eight minutes before the break. Berbatov’s pass put Keane clear and referee Mike Dean waved play on despite calls for offside. That left the Irishman with the relatively simple chance of sliding a sideways pass to the unmarked Jenas. His low shot past Fabianski was even more straightforward. Replays later suggested that Keane had been onside — albeit by a whisker.

As in the Premier League game between the sides in December, Tottenham’s goal rattled Arsenal. Before half-time, the overworked Fabianski had to save from a low Jenas shot and Berbatov’s attempted chip. When the whistle blew for the break, few could argue with the scoreline.

Wenger made changes after the restart. Van Persie and Djourou went off, Eduardo and Bacary Sagna were the replacements. The Frenchman filled his usual position at right back and Hoyte moved into the middle of the defence.

Again Tottenham pressured at the start of the half. In the opening seconds, Fabianski spilled O’Hara’s corner and Denilson had to hack the ball off the line.

Arsenal were better for the changes but Tottenham had the confidence of that goal and they were using it. But they were not creating much anymore. Keane’s woeful dribbler from distance was the only effort from either side for the first 25 minutes of the half.

The home side started to sustain some pressure after that. However had Keane controlled a relatively simple pass forward with 15 minutes to go then the lead could have been doubled.

Diaby wriggled himself into space on the edge of the area and had a goalbound shot charged down. Before that, Armand Traore had wastefully blasted over after Arsenal had won a free-kick in a promising position. It seemed that the home side were nearly spent.

Then, with a slice of good fortune, they grabbed that equaliser.

Gilberto flicked a ball forward to Eduardo in midfield. He sent Walcott sprinting through with Lee Young-Pyo in close pursuit. The Korean timed his challenge well but the ball spun up, hit the Englishman and bobbled past the onrushing Cerny.

It was one the scrappiest goals Emirates Stadium had seen. Yet, in the fans’ eyes, it was perhaps one of the most important.

Tottenham could have replied five minutes later when Aaron Lennon broke forward and clipped an angled ball to substitute Jermain Defoe at the far post. It was a gilt-edged chance but the England striker shot high over the bar.

At the end of the game, the home fans sang ‘you’ll never beat the Arsenal’. That proud boast has now stretched to 21 games however, on the evidence of tonight, the gap is closing.
 
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