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    Home - Sport - ‘I fell in love with Arsenal again because of Mikel Arteta – five years on this is why I still trust the process’ | Football
    Sport Updated:November 22, 2024

    ‘I fell in love with Arsenal again because of Mikel Arteta – five years on this is why I still trust the process’ | Football

    By WTX Sports Team12 Mins Read
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    ‘I fell in love with Arsenal again because of Mikel Arteta – five years on this is why I still trust the process’ | Football

    A little under halfway through Mikel Arteta’s five years at Arsenal.

    Feeling a little delicate, I sat down on my sofa for the 12:30 kick off. I
    was wearing a white jumper, and only remember that because I never
    wear white on a match day out of superstition. But that day, something
    about it felt right. A new year, a renewal, a new beginning.

    Arsenal were facing Pep Guardiola’s Premier League champions
    Manchester City at The Emirates… and I was fearing the worst.
    But there was no need.

    Arsenal were extraordinary. I could not believe what I was watching at
    times. We connected inside and out, we swept up the pitch in wave
    after wave, we created big chances. We went toe to toe against
    undeniably the best football team in the league at the time, and in my
    opinion the greatest Premier League team ever.

    The difference between that and the 5-0 drubbing we’d taken at their
    place just 4 months earlier was night and day — and a smooth finish
    from Bukayo Saka had me dreaming.

    It may feel familiar now, but before then the idea of Arsenal under Arteta
    competing with City felt a million miles away. Arteta was at home that
    day, having tested positive for Covid-19… but it didn’t matter. His
    imprint, his vision didn’t need him present. It had gone beyond him, and
    radiated through the players. Arteta’s soft furnishings might have felt his
    fury that afternoon as a late Rodri header went in, but we knew what
    we’d seen.

    As we approach Arteta’s 5 year anniversary, I remember that moment
    so fondly… and I think it’s because the future seemed so bright.
    So where are we now? Well, let’s go back first.

    Bukayo Saka’s goal against Manchester City in a 2-1 defeat showcased new-look Arsenal under Mikel Arteta at their best

    It’s difficult to overstate the mess Arsenal were in on and off the field
    when Arteta first took charge in December 2019. Arsenal sat 19 points
    off the pace by late November on a record winless run under thenmanager
    Unai Emery, and the decision was made to part ways.

    The results were bad enough, but it wasn’t only that — everyone will tell you
    it was the energy. The fans were disengaged and the players looked
    lethargic and aimless. A deadly combination. I’m certain I saw eye rolls
    from a few on the field when Alexandre Lacazette scored a very late
    equaliser against Southampton days before Emery left.

    Photos of a sparse home crowd at Unai’s final game in charge, a
    Europa League defeat to Eintracht Frankfurt, tell you everything you
    need to know. We wanted change, we wanted better football, we
    wanted new energy. But what we needed was a revolution.

    In comes a rookie manager.

    Sure. Why not?

    There has always been an element of learning on the job for Arteta, but
    from a remarkably prescient first interview talking about changing the
    aforementioned energy through to his role in new training ground &
    stadium artwork, Mikel’s approach has always been holistic. It was
    about creating a whole new way of “living”, as he described it from the
    start. Growing up in San Sebastián and playing football in Paris,
    London and Barcelona, it’s perhaps no surprise Mikel picked up a few
    things about living well along the way.

    Mikel was supported from the off by the likes of Tim Lewis (owner Stan
    Kroenke’s man on the ground) Richard Garlick (now Arsenal Managing
    Director), and until recently Sporting Director Edu — but what Arsenal
    had now was a man who could communicate a vision clearly. A
    figurehead for the fans to rally around. Intense, sometimes fiery, but
    always meticulous — an early change of job title from ‘Head Coach’ to
    ‘Manager’ in September of 2020 reflected Mikel’s growing stature within
    the 4 walls of London Colney.

    But cultural change brought with it some pain. The club had given out
    some big contracts to the likes of Mesut Özil and club captain Pierre-
    Emerick Aubameyang in prior years — the group described as having
    “Champions League wages on a Europa League budget” by Josh
    Kroenke, no less. Something needed to be done about the
    overpayment and under-deliverance, and the young executive team bit
    the bullet.

    Arteta & Edu took a lot of flack for tearing up contracts or paying off the
    likes of Shkodran Mustafi, Sokratis Papastathopoulos and Sead
    Kolasinac, but Arsenal were intent on getting younger, leaner and more
    serious… and it paid off. Aubameyang was perhaps the most infamous
    victim of the culture change at the club, fined, taken out of the match
    day squad and eventually leaving the club by mutual consent after a
    series of disciplinary issues. It was a hard line, but it was proof Arteta
    was serious — no one was exempt from the new ‘non-negotiable’
    values, extensively examined in the All or Nothing series in 2022.

    Arteta often used the analogy of a train — get on it, or get left behind…
    and that’s exactly what happened with some of the club’s biggest
    names, on and off the field. We rarely think twice about that period
    going another way now, but a rookie manager (so young he had actually
    played with some of those he was coaching) plotting his way through it
    wasn’t always guaranteed.

    But Mikel has an emotional intelligence you rarely come across in
    someone that book smart, so it’s easy to see how he got that train to
    move. He’s not perfect — but he’s never shied away from what he calls
    the “beautiful challenge”. But despite Mikel’s qualities, Arsenal needed
    new players — and to me an Arteta footballer can now be roughly
    summed up in 3 words; versatility, physicality and intelligence.

    Oh, and they’re usually a defender. Broadly the policy to double down on under 25 talent has worked, and the league has followed. Benjamin White at £50m was widely derided, but he’s now developed into one of the best full backs in the country. Martin Ødegaard at £30m is one of the great Arsenal signings full stop, and in time I suspect the signing of Jurrien Timber for less than £40m will age superbly.

    Not every signing has worked out as Arteta might have hoped. Sambi
    Lokonga at north of £17m looks a touch steep and Fabio Vieira never
    quite settled in North London. Mikel has no doubt been backed with big
    money, but no more than any other top team during his time — and
    crucially, his hit rate has been excellent.

    Mikel’s speciality in the market, as I see it, is identifying players with
    unique physical gifts. Rice’s telescopic legs, Timber’s turning radius,
    Riccardo Calafiori’s carries, Havertz’ running, White’s stamina. If you
    look closely, almost every player he signs is blessed with some ‘freaklike’
    physical quality, in the best sense.

    And that focus when making signings is one of the places we can see
    his uniqueness shine — now established as a top coach.

    And Mikel has a wide range of influence. He’s been a player in multiple
    countries. He’s worked under Arsène Wenger and David Moyes among
    others. He’s known the intensity of an Old Firm derby and played keepup
    on the beaches of San Sebastián. But while Arteta is often painted
    as a Guardiola acolyte, look harder, and you see how much they differ
    in approach and influence. Now we know him better, we see how Mikel
    favours physical control — duels, counter-pressing. Pep is more
    technical control, death by a thousand passes. Mikel uses the wide
    areas, Pep prefers the centre. Mikel is his own man, with his own ideas.

    Mikel will have to face the future without right hand man Edu, recently
    courted by Evangelos Marinakis to spearhead his group of clubs after 5
    years at Arsenal — but with every reshuffle or departure comes room
    for new ideas and (in true Mikel style) when asked about it recently, he
    said he viewed it as an opportunity to get better.

    There are some in the club’s orbit who worry about Mikel gaining more
    power. Critics see this as a moment where Mikel might consolidate
    further, and without Edu there we might go back to a world where, akin
    to Arsène Wenger, one man runs the show. Arteta, like anyone, needs
    challengers… but he knows that.

    A recent interview with ex-Arsenal assistant Andreas Georgson now of
    Manchester United, spoke of Arteta picking his assistants exactly
    because they aren’t yes men. The Kroenkes will appoint a replacement
    for Edu, rumours are swirling, and I’d welcome a bit more football
    experience in the setup — but sometimes when you’ve unearthed an
    evidently quite special football mind, you do need to get out of their
    way a bit. Handing the keys to any one person can be a risk, but name
    any successful era of a Premier League club… and it usually traces its
    way back to one singular, pretty powerful figurehead.

    Winning by committee rarely works in England. And if you were going to
    go all in on someone, I think this might be the man.

    From small glimpses over the years you build a picture of Mikel’s
    famous attention to detail — from the perfect angle of the pass from the
    full back to the winger as he explains in a brilliant clip from 2017 when
    coaching at FA Wales, right down to things like the right body shape
    when receiving the ball and how the goalkeepers arm position should
    decide your shot location (yes, really).

    And he’s adaptable. While it’s a little rudimentary, you can probably very
    broadly split Mikel’s time at Arsenal into 4 main tactical chapters.
    There was the 3-4-3 that won the 2020 FA Cup with its heavy reliance
    on transition. Aubameyang looking for the release in behind, defensively
    patient without particularly special athletes. Between 2020 and 2021
    Mikel was building his group; and despite the club’s reputation, went for
    practical over pretty.

    Between 2021 and 2022 came the 4-2-3-1, with more focus on careful
    build up — there was a successful double pivot of Thomas Partey and
    Granit Xhaka and Lacazette as the focal point. Saka and Martinelli
    found their feet, and Arsenal were springing into life.

    Then, with the signings of Gabriel Jesus and Oleksandr Zinchenko,
    came the big jump. The one everyone noticed. The left full back pulling
    inside created the clear delineation between in and out of possession
    work, and with it we were incredibly progressive, favouring largely a 3-2
    in build up. Without it we pressed hard with a high line before settling
    into a 4-4-2 mid block closer to our box… high tempo and high scoring.
    Now we have our Chameleon-ball, so to speak. As Rob Edwards
    described it last season, Arsenal can play any ‘type’ of game —
    physical or tactical, running or sitting, chess or chequers. Tweaks from
    game to game, be it in Saka’s positioning, the full back’s width, Havertz’
    runs all exploit different weaknesses in the opponent.

    Nowadays, Mikel might be seen as uncompromising, rigid. But the irony
    is in his five years at the club, he has always adapted his ideas to the
    players, to opposition, to trend, to mostly… win. Tactically, Arteta can do it all.

    Right now, Arsenal aren’t in the best of places, having fallen behind in
    the title race and dropped points in some tough UCL away fixtures.
    With that, understandably, comes questions about his football.

    Impatience. Some of that impatience is from 2 decades of frustration
    and perhaps not fair to project onto these 5 years, but that’s the
    ‘beautiful challenge’.

    There is no doubt Mikel has shortcomings — you can see it in certain
    results. Villa last year, Newcastle away this year. As we sit here,
    accessing the centre of the pitch is a concern of mine, and on a
    personal note my patience doesn’t stretch forever. But when judging
    football managers, it’s important to consider what they can and what
    they can’t control… and Mikel always, eventually, finds a way.
    Lacking a creative spark? Here’s a kid from the academy called Smith
    Rowe.

    Thomas Tuchel makes Gabriel our spare man away at the Allianz? Ok,
    we’ll sign Calafiori and we can carry through you next time.

    We get well beaten going man for man against City at the Etihad in
    22/23? We’ll sit in and take points at The Etihad for the first time since
    2016 next time.

    We need to get bigger? We’ll get bigger.

    We’re making mistakes playing out? Here’s a new goalkeeper.

    He is sometimes slow to adapt to his critics… but he does always
    adapt in the end. So while this rotten period of form hurts… history
    suggests he will be the one to find the way out.

    The story, the tactics, the man… but how do we sum it up? Five years of
    Mikel Arteta.

    By almost every metric, Arsenal have grown under Arteta and his
    team’s stewardship. Tactically, physically, commercially, points totals…
    even the stadium feels reborn. Look at Arsenal’s recent Big 6 and away
    record — they have shaken off the “soft” tag of the Wenger years. 5
    years of mostly positive… but there is still an elephant in the room.

    Despite all of the progress, no major trophy to speak of since 2020, nor
    either of the truly big aims achieved — the Premier League or the
    Champions League.

    Mentioning the City game was no accident — it’s symbolic of a hurdle
    we still haven’t cracked since that day. That was a day, the first in
    maybe 10 years that we matched them in every sense… but in the end,
    City still won. No matter how well we play, the underlying numbers, the
    xG… unless you get it over the line, history will forget you. And history,
    unfortunately, is at risk of forgetting this Arsenal team unless they win
    something big.

    But I think about it like this…

    Leandro Trossard misses a sitter at 0-0 against Aston Villa at home last
    season. If that goes in, Arsenal are probably sat here as champions of
    the hardest league in the world, having toppled the greatest manager of
    all time in my book. As it is, we’re not. But we were one kick away.

    If you want to get off this manager’s train when we’ve come that close,
    one kick away, then be my guest, no-one’s stopping you. But I’m willing
    to hold out. We’ve come this far… I just think we need to wait a few
    more stops before tearing it all up.

    Mikel has always put process over panic and it’s got us this far and this
    close. Closer than we have been in 20 years. If we improve on the
    points total of last year in 24/25, it will be the first time in Premier
    League history a team has improved their points tally 5 seasons in a
    row.

    We don’t yet have the shiny thing yet — but this train is still only moving
    in one direction.
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