Arteta sack? Five unreasonable Arsenal reasons includes the academy snub, Odegaard and lemons
In what even we would suggest is a rather knee-jerk reaction to a couple of bad results and a few unconvincing performances, the Mailbox has featured lively debate over the future of Mikel Arteta at Arsenal.
Sacking him now would be a madness but in a bid to understand the #ArtetaOut lunatics weâve come up with five reasons they might use in debates with lucid individuals to evidence the Spaniardâs incapacity.
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Too defensive
Arteta himself wasnât bothered and even claimed he welcomed the comparison, but there are plenty of Arsenal fans for whom Jamie Carragher likening Artetaâs football to that of Jose Mourinho will have really, really hurt.
They endured Chelseaâs rise under Mourinho by taking the footballing high ground, extolling the virtues of their team not stooping to dominate football based mainly on physicality as self-appointed guardians of The Beautiful Game.
But after two close-but-no-cigar seasons in which Artetaâs team at least nodded to The Arsenal Way, theyâre now firmly in the win-at-all-costs doldrums, as far away from the free-flowing football of Arsene Wenger as theyâve been since he left the club.
As Mikel Merino said when he joined, Arsenal âlook like a basketball teamâ.
Though weâre slightly surprised by the speed of the transition to this defensive, pragmatic style of football, as Carragher pointed out, thereâs no shame in it if it works. The problem is â and this will become more of a problem the longer it remains the philosophy â it does need to work.
While Arsenal fans may put up with losing while being entertained, they wonât abide failing to win with four centre-backs on the pitch.
Martin Odegaard/Bukayo Saka reliance
Manchester City have been struggling without Rodri. A Mohamed Salah-less Liverpool would a very different proposition; the same could be said for Chelsea without Cole Palmer. No matter how much depth a team has, the best players will always be missed. They wouldnât be the best players otherwise.
In that way it makes little sense to criticise Arsenal for not being as good without Martin Odegaard. It was always going to be the case. It makes more sense to criticise them for offloading the two players â Fabio Vieira and Emile Smith Rowe â who could have slotted in nicely in his absence. But even that would be harsh. They wanted to leave and the club took the reasonable view that it wasnât worth keeping unhappy players who werenât going to play enough unless Odegaard got injured. Unfortunately he did.
But it is reasonable to find fault with Artetaâs attempts to cope without Odegaard, which has seen him plough on with a woefully out-of-form Leandro Trossard behind Kai Havertz in nine of the 12 Premier League and Champions League games since the playmakerâs injury.
Odegaardâs absence wasnât initially so keenly felt thanks to Sakaâs brilliance, before opposition teams pretty quickly worked out that stopping him meant they stopped Arsenal. Once Sakaâs goals, assists and link-up play was nullified, Trossard, Gabriel Martinelli, Kai Havertz, Gabriel Jesus and Raheem Sterling have looked isolated and impotent.
But those arenât bad players. Theyâve all been brilliant at times before. And their shortcomings over the last couple of months really donât reflect well on Arteta, whoâs now relying on Odegaard to hit the ground running to shoulder the attacking burden his teammates have failed to share in his absence.
READ MORE: Mikel Arteta proves Martin Odegaard more important to Arsenal than him after Inzaghi lesson
Not making the most of the academy
It feels wrong to say only Bukayo Saka has come through to nail down a spot in the first team in Mikel Artetaâs time at Arsenal â itâs sodding Bukayo Saka â but it serves to illustrate the managerâs lack of trust in and use of the Gunners academy.
Not much can be done if the young players arenât good enough but we would contend that Arteta doesnât really know whether thatâs the case because he hasnât given them ample opportunities to prove themselves.
Myles Lewis-Skelly has been given a few chances this season, as has Ethan Nwaneri, but the latter in particular is a case in point of Artetaâs unwillingness to throw academy players into tough but enriching circumstances to show that if youâre good enough youâre old enough.
The teenager will likely be disappointed that a promising period which could have been his Big Break at Arsenal has nearly come to an end given Martin Odegaardâs imminent return, with his only starts in that time coming in the League Cup.
Nwaneri scored three goals in those two games and his cameos in the Premier League and Champions League have almost always earned rave reviews from pundits and fans, along with questions as to why heâs not being given more game time by Arteta, who surely canât be watching those starting ahead of him thinking theyâre more deserving of a place.
READ MORE: Premier League benchwarmers who deserve a chance: (Nearly) one per club
Pickpockets, lemons and lightbulbs
Nothing makes Arteta more ripe for the sack than his commitment to cringeworthy motivational tactics.
A lightbulb as a prop to promote âelectricityâ between the players and the fans, in a speech where Arteta eruditely pointed out âit would be f***ing dark without this guyâ, Thomas Edison. Lemons whose âjuice is our team magicâ as Arteta took one from a player who said he had squeezed out all the juice only for his manager to illustrate âyou can always squeeze moreâ. Hiring a pickpocket to steal from his own players â including one who had fought off a baseball-bat wielding thief in real life â to teach them a lesson about âthe importance of being ready and alertâ.
Itâs all very weird, a bit funny and a big red flag for 90 per cent of the population who dread corporate away days when a team leader opens a seminar with a smile and a promise that they will make the experience as interactive as possible.
âSpecialist in failureâ
Mourinhoâs infamous line about Arsene Wenger and one he would no doubt use against Arteta should he get his wish and replace Eddie Howe at Newcastle. One FA Cup in five seasons as the manager of Arsenal is not a good record.
Premier League focus is understandable and two second-place finishes is to be applauded, but they ultimately mean nothing if theyâre not a precursor to a title win, and it already feels a little bit like they may have missed their chance, with no team during Pep Guardiolaâs time in the Premier League able to sustain a challenge for longer than two seasons.