by Hoop Blah » 01 Nov 2012 12:20
by Snowball » 01 Nov 2012 12:21
Hoop Blah [.
The likes of the keeper, left back (Miquel), Gnarby, Eisfeld, and even Frimpong are lightyears ahead of our established senior pro's? These are kids that might turn into decent players, but there is nothing to say they're better than our players as yet and if I were a senior pro I'd be gutted to think they'd run rings round me.
.
by cmonurz » 01 Nov 2012 12:23
by Hoop Blah » 01 Nov 2012 12:25
Snowball Arsenal had a total of 500 premiership appearances in their team for Tuesday
plus about 600 Top Flight appearances in France and Russia and shedloads of
European experience.
Coquelin has made12 Premiership appearances for Arsenal and was MotM v Spurs last year. He started in the Champions League away to Olympiacos. He has been a regular at every age level for France except the senior side. He signed a new long-term deal with Arsenal this January.
Jenkinson played 9 Premiership games last season and has started 8/9 Premiership games this season and is already on the fringes of the England team
Frimpong 6 Premiership Appearances. Highly rated by Wenger
Giroud 9 Prem appearances for Arsenal won the French League last year and was the league's top-scorer, cost a bargain 12 Million, has played 13 times for France
Arshavin cost at least £15 Million, 101 Premiership appearances for Arsenal, 236 for top Russian side Zenit St Petersburgh. Has won the Russian league, the Russian League Cup, the Russian Super Cup, the EUFA Cup, the EUFA Super Cup and was Russian Foot baller of the Year. He captained the Russia side for whom he has played 75 times. In 2009 he scored four goals at Anfield in a 4-4 draw!
Chamakh has appeared 40 times in the Premiership for Arsenal and played 230 games for Bordeaux, 61 times for Morocco. In 8 consecutive Champions League matches he scored 7 goals.
Djorou has made 99 Premiership appearances, 86 for Arsenal. He was CB when Arsenal beat Barcelona. He has played 33 games for Switzerland. He was first-choice CB in January 2011 when Arsenal played 8 games all clean sheets. In 2010-22 he payed 37 times for Arsenal. Last season he had 27 appearances
Koscielny played 35 times in the top division in France and has made 67 appearances for Arsenal in the Premiership. He has plenty of Champions League experience and was the CB partner of Djouru when Arsenal beat Barcelona 2-1. Voted 4th most important Arsenal player last season. Played 6 times for France
Walcott cost Arsenal 12 Million and has made 156 Premiership appearances, 30 games for England
Eisfield cost half a million, was in Arsenal's 24-man squad for the tour of Asia. He is a HUGE prospect and is being hailed as the new Freddy Ljunberg
Gnabry has been hailed as a super talent and has already broken into the Arsenal first team squad (100K) Gnabry was listed by Goal.com as one of the ten biggest talents in the world leading up to 12/13 season. Gnabry is widely perceived to be one of the bright stars of the future in German football and has been praised for his combination of technique and physical power.
by Snowball » 01 Nov 2012 12:26
Hoop Blah Our side, on the other hand, was made up of players who will, and have been, starting games for us in the league and were the best players available for McDermott (in his opinion, judging by his league team selections).
by Hoop Blah » 01 Nov 2012 12:27
SnowballHoop Blah [.
The likes of the keeper, left back (Miquel), Gnarby, Eisfeld, and even Frimpong are lightyears ahead of our established senior pro's? These are kids that might turn into decent players, but there is nothing to say they're better than our players as yet and if I were a senior pro I'd be gutted to think they'd run rings round me.
.
Gnabry was listed by Goal.com as one of the ten biggest talents in the world leading up to 12/13 season and is widely perceived to be one of the bright stars of the future in German football and has been praised for his combination of technique and physical power.
Eisfield has been getting rave reviews and looks a shoe-in to be a top star
by cmonurz » 01 Nov 2012 12:31
Hoop Blah As great as their reviews may be (and don't forget this is all PR you're talking about, like ours has been for many of our junior players) they are not first team players.
by Hoop Blah » 01 Nov 2012 12:36
SnowballHoop Blah Our side, on the other hand, was made up of players who will, and have been, starting games for us in the league and were the best players available for McDermott (in his opinion, judging by his league team selections).
Nonsense. In "pecking order" terms...
Kebe is currently ahead of McCleary. Didn't play
McAnuff is ahead of Hal Robson-Kanu. Didn't play.
Cummings is ahead of Gunter. Didn't play.
McArthy (IMO) is ahead of Federici. Didn't play.
Pearce is ahead of Morrison. Didn't Play
Marriappa is ahead of Morrison. Didn't play.
Tabb is barely a squad player. Played.
and Church?
by Royal91 » 01 Nov 2012 13:46
by melonhead » 01 Nov 2012 14:39
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 01 Nov 2012 17:18
cmonurz I think we all get the difference in class between the teams Snowball, but this debate wouldn’t be being had if we had battled hard but utlimately lost 2-0 or 3-0 to an obviously better side.
Instead we capitulated from a position no football team should fail to win from really, whatever the circumstances.
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 01 Nov 2012 17:32
Hoop Blah These are players for the future though. As I've said, in the future some of them may turn into very good players. At the moment though they are kids that a senior pro should be pretty comfortable dealing with once they're 4-0 up!
As great as their reviews may be (and don't forget this is all PR you're talking about, like ours has been for many of our junior players) they are not first team players.
by floyd__streete » 01 Nov 2012 20:59
PistolPete Yes we lost. Yes we lost after being 4-0 up. But we had the character to come back from 4-5 (and got beaten by a team with £40m worth of striking talent on the pitch.)
We showed that we can put on one of the greatest games of football this country has ever seen.
Why blame Anton for not spending? We're not down yet and there's no certainty that any big money signings would have paid off. Why blame the manager for trying a 'togetherness' theory? Maybe it's not too late to change his mind. Why blame Roberts for talking on the radio as if he should be playing football better? He seemed alright to me tonight. Why blame McDermott for making a sub in injury time? The net gain in time for Arsenal was zero.
You lot are a moaning and fickle lot - Shorey was not wanted and not good enough but McDermott proved us wrong. He proved us wrong on Shane Long, he proved us wrong on Leigerwood, he proves us wrong time after time so let's just accept he'll make the odd mistake and is as good a man as any to move us forward...
We were 5 seconds from a fantastic win, let's not forget that...
by Hoop Blah » 01 Nov 2012 21:29
Rev Algenon Stickleback H I take it when we were fielding young sides in cup ties against lower league opposition a few years ago, you were utterly amazed how these kids could beat the seasoned pros from a division below?
Rev Algenon Stickleback H Really, you make it sound like just because they aren't regulars in Arsenal's first team they must be naive young things that any pro should handle with ease.
B team of not, they are a better team than us.
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 02 Nov 2012 00:23
Hoop BlahRev Algenon Stickleback H I take it when we were fielding young sides in cup ties against lower league opposition a few years ago, you were utterly amazed how these kids could beat the seasoned pros from a division below?
I might if that ever really happened! We played fringe players yes, as did Arsenal, but we didn't through loads of kids in together as such, and when we did do a bit more of that we weren't really successful at it.
I'm not saying they should find it a stroll in the park but they should, as a collective of players we have as Premier League starters be able to close out the game against that mix of talent and inexperience that Arsenal put out against us. I'm sure those that matter at RFC will agree with that.
by Arch » 02 Nov 2012 02:23
by Libertine » 02 Nov 2012 04:24
SnowballHoop Blah Our side, on the other hand, was made up of players who will, and have been, starting games for us in the league and were the best players available for McDermott (in his opinion, judging by his league team selections).
Nonsense. In "pecking order" terms...
Kebe is currently ahead of McCleary. Didn't play
McAnuff is ahead of Hal Robson-Kanu. Didn't play.
Cummings is ahead of Gunter. Didn't play.
McArthy (IMO) is ahead of Federici. Didn't play.
Pearce is ahead of Morrison. Didn't Play
Marriappa is ahead of Morrison. Didn't play.
Tabb is barely a squad player. Played.
and Church?
by Elm Park Pasty » 02 Nov 2012 09:17
Arch The thing I don't get in all this is the idea that something ground-breakingly new happened on Tuesday night, something that finally exposes the frailties that have been hidden, shows the emperor is really stark naked. The fact is, the game was pretty much business as usual for Reading for about as long as I've been a fan which goes back to about 1971. We are the team who get beat 7-5 in outlandish circumstances (or 6-4 or 7-4 or 7-5 again). We are also the team who win thirteen times in a row from the first game of the season, who get 106 points in the second tier, who beat Liverpool thanks to the mercurial skills of Brynjar Gunnarson, who put six past Wednesday within hours of Schards' famous "dull and uninspiring" speech. In my first season following Reading as a youngster we twice lost to Bury 5-1, but we also thrashed some people. What people don't seem to appreciate is that Reading are interesting - to the public at large, and not just because we are involved in games like Tuesday's, but because we do things like win the Championship against more vaunted opposition from a position of almost impossible weakness. Pride in Reading is not just pride in any old football team but pride in one that's constantly involved in events that catch the public imagination. We love to pretend that people or the press don't care about or notice us, but the fact is they do. Reading are a fun club for many different reasons. It's unceasingly entertaining following this club, and Tuesday was just another night at the theater.
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