From: Clive Waterman
Date: 19 Dec 2006
Subject: Lauren
Dear Myles
I await with interest your thoughts on the return to first team football, of arguably the player we have most missed defensively for the past eleven months. I don’t think many people realise how much extra defensive work Toure has to do to cover for Eboue’s shortcomings as a defender.
When Lauren comes back fully fit, AW will slot him straight in at right back without hesitation. He is as tough as nails and is so experienced that Toure will be able to concentrate on his own defensive duties without having to worry about the right flank as well.
The first 4 names on the team sheet, will, barring injuries, always be Clichy/Gallas/Toure/Lauren.Those 4 playing together will be the equal of any defensive unit in Europe.Fans talked about how much Gilberto was missed when he was out injured for a long period, well Lauren is in the same category. Our defense will improve dramatically once Gallas and Lauren return.
Everything else, midfield and attack, will blossom, because from defensive security the rest will follow.Think how much we have suffered defensively since Gallas got injured.
Add Lauren to the injury list and there’s1/2 our first choice back 4 missing.I firmly believe if Lauren had played in the CL final we would have won. All Gunners fans should welcome him back with open arms, a true professional who has been sorely missed. I cannot wait for the 2nd half of the season after Christmas.
regards,
Clive
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LAUREN has been injured for so long – a year – that many people have forgotten how solid he was. He has been a tremendously reliable player for Arsenal. And for Cameroon, before he retired. He was a superb player in a very good Cameroon team. It’s not easy to grow up black in a country as racist as Spain. Lauren deserved to come to England and play for a good club and earn great money and win trophies. He is a top pro who has never been controversial in anything he has done or said. Unlike Eboue, Lauren can defend, so I hope he will be as steady and durable as he was before.
But that is a big ask. That is a huge ask. Lauren’s comeback is imminent but it’s still, for me, hypothetical.We don’t know what he can do. He has played 55 minutes behind closed doors against some Vietnamese.We need to see him play a game, two games, ten games, 20 games.We just don’t know if he can be as good as before. Even if he can be as good as he was, he can’t do it in two weeks. It will take him six weeks to get match-hardened. All comebacks are difficult. Look at Gabriel Heinze at Man United – he is well below his best form, even now.
I wish Lauren well, just as I wish Heinze well. Both are terrific players.
I hope you’re right about the second half of the season
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From: Matt Whiteman
Date: 18 Dec 2006
Subject: Transition
Dear Myles,
I currently live in Melbourne, Australia, having lived in London for 35 years. I started going to Highbury at 6 years old and was a season ticket holder for many years. I am not one of these fans that like to bash his team and would like to think of myself as a realist. As an Arsenal supporter, over the last 2 years, I have become accustomed to trying to see the bigger picture.
I have two points:
1. Although some of the results have been disappointing, I see improvements from last year. I truly believe that games we would have lost last year we’ve drawn, and won when we would have drawn.
2. I also would like to believe that the Arsenal board took a bigger picture view. When Chelsea were first taken over, I would like to have hoped that the board took a pragmatic/strategic long term view on the potential league success. We haven’t got the financial muscle to compete with Abramovich/Jose M so lets build from the grass roots. My view is that the 06/07 Arsenal team are at best a top 4 team. However, assuming they all stay together, by season ’08/’09 I think they will be awesome and should make a strong challenge for the league.
I think Arsenal will follow in the footsteps of Man Utd. Expect a barren few seasons, but make sure you get CL qualification, and wait for the new crop to gel/mature.
Have a great Christmas and New Year.
Best regards,
Matt Whiteman
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THE NEXT year in football is impossible to predict, so I don’t think that far ahead, or comment about what might happen in two years time, as a rule.
Yes, treasure your memories of Highbury, as we all do.
But football to me is about now. To me, it’s a topical pleasure. A football match is like a newspaper, it’s meant to last one day, although some of us get carried away at times, talking about games that happened years ago, and some of us write books which have five and half pages about one match.
Football is the most important unimportant thing in the world. It’s the only sport that matters, even though I have loved other sports, and I still like other sports.
Football is about this game and the next game. I love a good game, I love it when Arsenal are dynamic and penetrating and exciting. I love to see a contest of competitive skill between two good teams who don’t cheat, don’t fall over, don’t grab shirts and don’t harangue referees en masse.
In three years time Niklas Bendtner could be doing for Arsenal what Drogba is doing for Chelsea now. Or Bendtner could be playing for Bayern or Barcelona or even Chelsea. Who knows ? He is a 19-year old centre forward with exciting potential. He looks good now. In the future, who knows?
The Arsenal board know that their shares are worth megamillions. Are they the people to take AFC to the next level ? Are they too old ? Do they have the imagination and vision and stamina? Maybe Arsenal in 2009 could be owned by Arabs or Americans or Russians.Who knows?
You could say the future is a journey into the unknown. But I think the present is a journey into the unknown. Arsenal v Blackburn is a voyage of discovery.If Arsenal are 2-0 down at half time, as they were to Portsmouth, they will be booed off, mainly by people who were not regulars at Highbury.We don’t know what will happen on Saturday, let alone in 2007 and 2008.
But, as Arsene once said, the life of a club never stops.