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| Even a sulking Henry
is capable of moments of matchwinning brilliance |
In times of trouble, a team looks
to its senior players and, above all, to its captain, but
what if the captain himself is desperately in need of a
lift? That is the problem at Arsenal where, although Thierry
Henrys groin has healed, there are fears that his
melancholy could last for months.
His malaise, a common one that
has been known to twice afflict Steven Gerrard before he
made a full recovery, begins as a nagging concern that everyone
else is winning medals. Before too long, the player is refusing
to sign a new contract or dropping hints through the newspapers
(and often denying the quotes afterwards) that his ambition
is not being matched by his club.
In Henrys case, recovery
from injury may see an immediate upturn in his mood but
there are grave concerns among his employers that only a
transfer to Spain can act as a permanent cure for his frustrations.
The prospect of him forming a
fearsome attacking trident with Ronaldinho and Samuel Eto
is said to be the talk of the Barcelona dressing room.
Arsenal, however, have not given
up all hope of persuading Henry to extend his contract but
well-placed sources are already saying that the best they
may be able to hope for is an auction between Barcelona
and Real Madrid to drive up the price.
Otherwise, it is a buyers
market as Liverpool discovered to their cost when they had
to sell Michael Owen to Real Madrid for ?8 million rather
than risk him walking out for nothing 12 months later.
Henry will have only one year
left and so expect an opening bid from Barcelona to be about
?20 million; less than half the ?50 million Roman Abramovich
once offered which, given the lingering emnity between Arsenal
and Chelsea, would still not be nearly enough.
Even a sulking Henry is capable
of moments of matchwinning brilliance but the uncertainty
over his future, and his inability to mask his disenchantment
at Arsenals decline in the 12 months since they were
renowned as the Invincibles, could overshadow a campaign
that, in managerspeak, was always likely to be transitional.
Or bloody frustrating in terrace vernacular.
Selling Patrick Vieira, at 29,
to Juventus for about ?14 million made sense to Wenger and
his board but the players have performed as though they
still need convincing that it was the right decision. At
times, like in surrendering the lead to lose 1-2 at West
Bromwich Albion on Saturday, a young team has been searching
for its leader.
Vieira has gone and, for all his
many gifts, Henry is not a natural successor to Tony Adams.
It all adds up to a difficult
campaign for Wenger so it is as well that he has more credit
than Abramovichs savings account. Arsenal owe more
to the Frenchman than to the financial organisations who
have funded the new ?400 million stadium at Ashburton Grove.
There are valid criticisms, such
as his failure to reinforce his squad ? with ?20 million-plus
available according to some sources ? but, in footballs
world of excess, it seems rich to have a go at a manager
for spending his clubs money as if it was his own.
Particularly at Highbury, where one manager thought Arsenals
money was his own, and had to give it back.
The other, common failing
of Arsenal is said to be their over-elaboration. Unashamedly
aesthetic, Wenger can hardly be expected to apologise for
trying to play pretty football at a time when the whole
country is supposedly pleading for a break from 4-5-1.
With his squad at present depleted
by injuries, the passing patterns are all too easy to disrupt
and Wenger can be sure of a lack of sympathy from a couple
of his managerial counterparts. Jose Mourinho and Sir Alex
Ferguson seize every opportunity to undermine the Frenchman
? or old vinegar face as one of his rivals has
been known to describe him.
After their recent disputes, Chelsea,
in particular, will take glee from Arsenals lowly
eighth-place but, if this campaign represents one of Wengers
biggest tests, there is an enduring faith beyond N5 that
The Professor can return with another great
team.
If you doubt that, just ask most
neutrals in London whether they would take a season ticket
to Highbury or Stamford Bridge. The majority would not choose
the home of the English champions, even after a weekend
when the gap between them stretched to 14 points.
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