Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Arsenal Put Gravediggers Under; Chamakh Scores

With a sign in the stadium in Belgrade of "You have been run over by a steamroller," I'm not sure who the host Gravediggers were talking about, but they certainly were steamrolled under by Arsenal.
Bosting 71% possession, the Gunners went to the top of the table with a perfect 6 points, thanks to their demolition of Sporting Braga in the first match.
Andrei Arshavin started off the scoring in the 15'.  Though the Gunners came close a few times, it wasn't until the 57' when Chamakh was hauled down by Marko Jovanovic in the area that they got another chance to score.  Jovanovic was given a red card for being last man, but Arshavin missed from the spot, which meant the score remained 1-1 after Cleo had levelled for Partizan in the 33' with a penalty of his own.
Marouane made up for Arshavin's poor penalty by rebounding his own header that Stojkovic tapped on to the bar.  The rebound fell to Chamakh first and he headed home from close range.
In the 82' minute, new signee Sebastien Squillaci headed in a corner from Samir Nasri that put the Gunners up 3-1.  But the match wasn't over as Cleo was given a chance to score a penalty when it was ascertained that Kieran Gibbs had tripped Ivan Stevanovic in the area.  Fabianski saved the penalty so the score remained 3-1 Gunners.
With Marouane's goal, this means he has scored in the last five Champions League matches he has played (3 for Bordeaux and 2 for Arsenal).  Way to go, Marouane! :)

Enjoy the photos of Marouane:










Saturday, September 25, 2010

Arsenal Bagged by West Brom

There is no other word than dismal.  The Gunners put on a perfectly dismal display today against newly-promoted West Bromwich Albion...AT HOME.  The Baggies who are probably prescribed Dramamine, as they go up and down between the Premier League and Championship every other year, came out of the blocks in a sprint, and quite honestly, outplayed the Gunners the entire match.  Losing 2-3 at home is bad, but especially since the team atop the table lost today, giving you a big chance to make up points.
Arsene Wenger was not happy with his team:
"We made it more difficult because we were not at our usual level. Not defensively, not offensively. Overall everything was difficult for us today - passing the ball, winning the ball back, winning the one against ones - and we got what we deserved which was zero points. We didn't deserve more. The positive is that we did fight until the last minute but it was just not good enough at that level to get three points."

Wenger can say that, but his formation choice of 4-2-2 was not working either.  Then with the Baggies up by 3, he started to pull the defense (which may not have mattered as they were horrible today).  Poor Chamakh was playing striker, midfielder, and defender today.  But on the other end he had no service from Nasri, Arshavin, Rosicky or anyone. 
Nasri's crosses were pathetic. His shot choices were pathetic.  His freekicks were pathetic, just smacking the wall at knee-level, as if they were made of eight-year-olds.  With the amount of corners they were awarded, they should have utilized Chamakh's height, but for some reason they couldn't kick the ball in the right spot.

Give credit to West Brom for acting like they wanted to win this match.  They came out fiercely and never let up.  The score should have been 4-2, if Almunia hadn't saved the penalty (which he caused by his bungling tackle in the area).

I can't think of one positive thing to say about the performance today, on that Wenger and I agree:
"I didn't recognize my team today."

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Gunners Mash Spuds

The third-round Carling Cup tie between Arsenal and Tottenham Spurs at White Hart Lane turned into an extra-time affair when the score was 1-1 after regulation.  Samir Nasri scored two in extra, both being penalties.  The second occurred when Marouane was pulled back in the area.  Arshavin added a fourth and the score ended 1-4. 
This match puts the Gunners into the fourth-round, and ends Tottenham's run.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Chamakh Plays Well, but Gunners Cursed by Black Cats

After a fine pre-season and a feisty start to the regular season, the Gunners looked to have rid themselves of the defensive slide in the waining minutes.  Last year they dropped points in too many matches that should have been put away.
Have they returned to their old ways?
In the match against Sunderland at the Stadium of Light, their play seemed spirited at the beginning of the match, running the Black Cats ragged in the final third.  In the 5' during what should have been a routine clearance by Anton Ferdinand, he waited too long to kick and an advancing Cesc Fabregas put his foot up and blocked the ball, which took a bizarre flight straight into the goal some 25 yards out!  ARSENAL 0-1.  Ferdinand's face said it all, and he struggled for much of the first half to keep up defensively, making several errors that could have meant more goals for the Gunners.
But sadly for the Arsenal fans, that crazy/lucky goal was the only they could muster during the remaining 90 minutes.
In the midst of that nutty goal, Fabregas tweaked his ankle a bit and had to come off.  His replacement, Rosicky, did an okay job, but didn't have the same spark as el Capitan.  He had a chance to put the game away (and make it 2-0) with a penalty that was awarded.  He completely missed it and put it over the bar.  That would prove costly for his team.
It's not that they didn't have the chances.  But their finishing lacked polish today.
The one bright star for the Gunners was center-forward Marouane Chamakh.  Hailed before the match by the footy pundits as the "get for the summer," he has impressed the usually-dire commentators.

So what happened?  Like last year, the Gunners got sloppy.  Alex Song (a doppelganger for Fred Sanford) had too many crazy challenges and earned himself a second yellow.  It's ironic that his team played better with ten men, but it also cost them in extra time, when they didn't have the numbers in the box. 
Sunderland played hard the entire match (aside from the first ten minutes), and quite honestly outplayed Arsenal for the majority of the time.  And in the final kick of the match, their doggedness paid off.  Darren Bent jumped on a loose ball in the box and smacked it home to level.  Bye Bye two points for the Gunners.  Arsene Wenger looked as though he wanted to impale himself on the fourth official.  Was too much time added on? I don't know.  But I have to say it was a wonderful strike by Bent, who has a new-found confidence since his call-up to the England NT.

Almunia (with eyes closed!) is thwarted by Bent

Maybe the quick turnaround from the Wednesday Braga match was too much for the London team, but it wasn't as if they traveled to Portugal for that match, it was at home.  They will need to toughen up and marshall the backline if they have any hope of keeping pace with United and Chelsea at the end of the season...when those dropped points can become the death knell.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Chamakh's First Interview with Daily Mail

Marouane Chamakh lists an unusual set of talents for a professional footballer. He is good at reading spreadsheets, something of a master mathematician and even claims to be a dab hand at waiting tables. He still waits tables now, he says, when he's back home in France and working in his brother's salon de the.


'When I was playing in Bordeaux I would go back all the time,' he says. 'I used to really enjoy being part of the family environment, and I like to help out my little brother, Yassin, whenever I can. It's good fun.'

He could just as easily be in the back office doing his brother's accounts, though. Chamakh studied hard at school, gaining a Baccalaureate in accountancy before focusing exclusively on football.

'I am good at spreadsheets,' he says. 'Maths, accountancy; they were things that came easy to me. I found accountancy quite interesting, probably because I was good at maths. It was one of those subjects I didn't have to work too hard at because I just picked it up in the lessons.'

In his first major interview since arriving at Arsenal in the summer, it quickly becomes apparent why Arsene Wenger signed the 26-year-old from Bordeaux.

First and foremost he is a talented striker, as he has been quick to demonstrate in his short time at the Emirates with three goals.

But Wenger stores an awful lot of importance in a player's character and personality and this guy comes across as a joy to work with compared to someone as tempestuous as Emmanuel Adebayor.

From a young age Chamakh was tipped for success. At his first club, near his home town of Aiguillon, the youth team coach nicknamed him 'Mr George'. 'After George Weah because I used to score four or five goals in every game,' he says.

But Chamakh is a product of modest Moroccan parents and never took that seriously.

'I placed a lot of importance on my studies because I didn't want to neglect them for my football,' he says, having chosen to speak French and use an interpreter even though he clearly understands the questions I put to him across a table at Arsenal's training ground.

'I passed my exams, got good results and got my Baccalaureate in accountancy, so I knew I would always have something to fall back on.

'Only once I had that qualification under my belt did I then focus more on my football. My parents encouraged me as well but I realised on my own that I needed options should things not work out as a player.'

His talent came from his father, who had flirted with the idea of pursuing a football career - he played for a team in Casablanca - before leaving for France to secure more reliable work as a stone mason. His mother followed a year later, with Marouane arriving on the scene four years after that.

'From the beginning it was just football for me,' he says. 'At the age of seven or eight, I joined my first football club and that was pretty much that. I liked other sports but really it was only football.'

By the time he was 16, the biggest club in his region had come calling. Girondins Bordeaux, he knew, had been home to Zinedine Zidane before France's greatest player made his move to Juventus and Chamakh began to have more serious aspirations.

Within three years he had represented France at Under 19 level, with players like former Liverpool stars Anthony Le Tallec and Florent Sinama Pongolle.

In the same year, however, came a call from Morocco to represent their senior side, and he decided to go with his heart.

'Before I came here to London, I lived my whole life in France,' he says. 'And when I was approached by Morocco it was a tough choice. I was 18 or 19 and I had to think long and hard about it, but I opted for Morocco and it's something I haven't regretted.'

He never regretted moving to Bordeaux, either, because it would eventually give him the opportunity to work with the man he considers his most powerful influence.


Blanc et Chamakh at the Bordeaux city celebration of their Ligue 1 title

Chamakh idolises Laurent Blanc. He speaks of the 'golden goal' his hero scored against Paraguay during the 1998 World Cup.

'I remember it so well,' he says with boyish enthusiasm before then recalling how Blanc would kiss Fabien Barthez's bald head before every match. 'It was an amazing goal.

'When I ended up working with him at Bordeaux, it was brilliant. He was the fourth coach in my time there, and he was the one who really pushed me to improve. I worked with him for three magnificent years and I think my real development as footballer was down to him.

'I've learned things from all the coaches I've played for, going back to when I was a kid. I always made sure I listened and respected them. I've remembered lots of little pieces of advice along the way, so you could say each coach had an influence on me. They have all played a part in my development.

'But in Laurent Blanc I got the coach I needed at that stage of my career. I needed a character and a coach who could help me move to the next level. 'It's fair to say the fact that I'm now an Arsenal player is down to his advice and his experience as a player.'

It seems Chamakh's talent for mathematics proved useful in absorbing the advice he received from Blanc.

'He told me that statistics are important for a striker,' he says. 'He believed that in the past I had been too generous towards my teammates, stressing that for a forward it's important to get on the scoresheet as well as get assists.

'That, he said, is what you will be judged on, and I took it on board.'

The whole time he had one eye on Arsenal. For so many young players in France, Arsenal is the dream. The chance to play for Arsene Wenger in the Champions League as well as the Barclays Premier League. The chance to follow Henry and Vieira, Petit and Pires.

'Dennis Bergkamp was probably my favourite,' says Chamakh. 'I have followed Arsenal since I was 12 or 13. Bordeaux was my team, but Arsenal became my international team, because of the manager I guess. So it was always a dream to come here one day.

'I loved Bergkamp. I admired the whole team but Bergkamp was a great player. Classy. I liked his style of play but I loved the way he scored his goals, too. Do you remember the one against Argentina in the 1998 World Cup? That was the goal of the year!' Chamakh was a 14-year-old wa t ching the tournament on television and as well as Blanc and Bergkamp, there was one other.

'Zidane,' he says. ' I a l w a y s admired the w a y h e played but I like the man he is off the pitch, too; very humble. I had the chance to meet him when I was at Bordeaux. He would return to the club for special events; exhibition matches, things like that. And he was everything I thought he would be.

'He has such an aura. He has always been my inspiration to succeed in football. It's players like him who have motivated me to improve and make a big effort.'

But it was Wenger who lured him towards Arsenal. This French manager who built teams that won trophies with style and imagination.

'That was the major factor that attracted me to the club,' he says. 'The manager. And the players, too. The chance to play with the French players and guys like Van Persie, Fabregas.

'They've all given me a brilliant welcome, the atmosphere is great and so is the football. I feel we can have real success together.'

So why did he not come sooner? Why did he not come to England when Wenger, and indeed other Premier League clubs, first expressed an interest?

'It was quite complicated with Bordeaux,' he says.

'Before England I was supposed to join Lyon, with Gerard Houllier, in 2005. I was excited because I knew Houllier had done well with Liverpool. But Bordeaux wouldn't let me leave. 'It became complicated with the move to England, too, and in the end I had to run down my contract so I could get away.

'I would never have reached an agreement with Bordeaux otherwise, I guess because they valued me too highly.

'Even with just a year on my contract, we couldn't reach an agreement for me to leave the club. I had to be a free agent to move on or I would still be there now.' Not that he seems too bitter. 'I have mixed feelings about it,' he says. 'I was a little frustrated because I was so used to everything at Bordeaux and I wanted to experience something new.

'But at the same time I got to play Champions League football and f ight for the t i t l e unde r Laurent Blanc. I enjoyed being part of that success.'

Now, however, he is at Arsenal, and learning what he can, as fast as he can, from Wenger. Another test awaits at Sunderland.

'I first met Arsene in May when I signed for the club,' he says. 'And at this point it's hard to explain what's special about him.

'I guess it's the small things. His charisma, perhaps, the fact that he has always managed to build a team which has consistently been at the top end of the league table and playing in the Champions League. That success personifies him.

'I thought he was going to be a really serious guy, never smiling, always appearing very concerned. But now I know him a bit I can see that in a relaxed environment he can also be really laid-back. He manages to appear serious yet relaxed at the same time, which is quite rare and quite an achievement.'

A bit like combining football with accountancy.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Chamakh Scores in CL, Arsenal Victorious

It wasn't much of a test versus so-so Portuguese side, Braga, so the Gunners racked up a 6-0 win in the first Champions League test of the year.
With two goals each by Cesc Fabregas and Carlos Vela, and one apiece from Andrei Arshavin and more importantly, MAROUANE CHAMAKH!!!!!
Captain Fabregas was quick to note that they were not tested, saying that their European competition will get tougher...
"It was good training because in the Premier League and the Champions League we will have games where we will not have it easy,'' Fabregas told ITV.
OUCH!  "It was a good training..."  That will not go over well with Braga fans (but it's true).

A few tidbits about Marouane's match:
**He has scored in his last four Champions League outings (3 with Bordeaux last year, 1 with Arsenal this year).
** In the first half, he connected all 28 passes he attempted...a 100% average.  That is unheard of, especially from a player just now getting used to a new team.

Marouane watches as Fabregas scores


Then they celebrate!


Marouane challenges for the ball


Marouane is taken down by the keeper


Marouane shoots...


shoots...


...and SCORES!!!!! (assist by Wilshere)

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Chamakh Scores His Second in Gunner Win

Playing perennial EPL bottom-feeders, Bolton, on Saturday, Marouane Chamakh garnered his second goal for the EPL club.  In a 4-1 dismantling of the Wanderers, although at 10 men for the last 30', number 29 showed his aerial skills...heading home the go-ahead goal at the hour mark.

Wenger lost a few starters this week when it was revealed that Robin van Persie, Theo Walcott, Vermaelen, Nasri, and Sagna were injured.
With van Persie and Walcott out, this meant that Chamakh would definitely get the start up front with Arshavin.
The match started fast for both teams, then slowed to a lull...until the 24' when a pinball match in front of Bolton's goal resulted in Laurent Koscielny slapping home a winner, after being fed by Fabregas.  The Bolton keeper got a hand on it and actually helped the ball into the net...although Koscielny was the last to touch, so no own goal was called.  ARSENAL 1-0
Chamakh and Arshavin continued to press the area, with Chammy putting a nice ball through to Rosicky, who should have scored in the 30'...then Arshavin had two chances to score in the 31' and 41', with both hitting the side netting.
Marouane was taken down in the area in the 43' but no penalty was called.  On the breakaway play by Bolton, Elmander headed home a winner after goalscorer Koscielny let him run around him in the 18yd box.  The Frenchman has had a time of keeping up with the EPL's pace, as evidenced by last week's performance too.  Elmander's header from a cross was bang-on, with Almunia having no chance.  TIED 1-1.

Barely after halftime, Chamakh was one-on-one with the keeper, and put in a viscious shot that was just palmed wide of the goal.  The ensuing corner in the 57' was blocked back by Bolton, but the ball fell to Fabregas.  He lobbed in a nice cross to the far post, where Chamakh was waiting GOAAAALLLLLLLLL!  Chammy's header was a mirror image of Elmander's in the first half.  ARSENAL 2-1

In the 63' Gary Cahill dove in late on the touchline as Chamakh flicked the ball back to Arshavin.  The ref recognized the cynical tackle and pulled his red card.  The only problem (aside from the fact that the red was very harsh...a yellow would have sufficed) was he stopped play, just as Arshavin was running down the wing unmarked.  I'm not sure why he stopped the momentum, but it didn't matter anyway.  Bolton were now down to 10 men.
The game took a more rough turn after the red card, with the Bolton players unleashing their frustrations on the Gunners.  Alou Diaby took a nasty boot to the ankle from Robinson, and the two ended up having words.  The comical part of this for me was that Marouane was saying something to Robinson...although I'm not sure what it was since his English is not very good! :)
In the 69' all of Bolton's frustrations almost paid off when Lee lobbed a ball that Almunia had difficulty spotting, and it could have gone into the net had he not gotten his hands around the ball.
Alex Song put the game to rest in the 77' when he chipped a ball past the keeper from a wideout angle.  ARSENAL 3-1.
Marouane was substituted off in the 80' (not sure why...he needs to play 90 to strengthen his fitness). His replacement, Carlos Vela, made good use of his substitution and scored in the 82' from a Fabregas pass.  ARSENAL 4-1.

Chamakh took second in Man of the Match voting, losing out to Fabregas.

The Gunners were patient, in the words of Arsene Wenger, and deserved the win:

"Overall it was a competitive game where we dominated and created many chances but it is the kind of game, when you play Bolton, that for as long as you don't kill the game off they can score. You can dominate 80 per cent of the game and still lose against Bolton because one or two balls, throw-ins, set pieces, can be dangerous and they are a good side in midfield as well. They marked us very tight and I think that provoked a very physical game but they played well as well."

Marouane makes it 2-1 Arsenal with his beautiful header!


Second goal of the EPL season

Giving thanks to Allah

Ever since Alex Song dyed his hair, he's reminded me of Fred Sanford! :)

Saturday, September 4, 2010

EPL Fast-paced for Chamakh

By Chris Davie, goal.com

Marouane Chamakh has conceded he has been left fatigued from Arsenal’s gruelling pre-season regime.
The striker joined Arsene Wenger’s side on a free from Bordeaux this summer and he has admitted the intense training schedule in the summer is a stark contrast to what he was accustomed to in France.
"There is a different preparation between Bordeaux and Arsenal.” Chamakh told The Sun. "Here [in England] it's shorter but a lot more intense.
"For three weeks it's a real slog. But that's what my team-mates have been telling me that we need a massive pre-season to last the whole season, particularly since there is no break in December."
The Moroccan international scored on his home debut against newly-promoted Blackpool but has confessed the three games in which he has played have come as a shock.
"Matches over here are all played at 100 miles per hour. You have to be on edge all the time and you have the impression that the ball never goes out of play."
The 26-year-old believes he is adapting well to life in London and insists it will not take long for him to replicate his form which became vital to Bordeaux’s success in Ligue 1 two seasons ago.
"I'm very happy at the moment.
"I don't speak much English yet but I'm taking lessons and luckily there are a lot of French speakers already in the Arsenal dressing room.
"I take a lot of pleasure on the pitch. I can improve at this club. Up until now my performances have been OK.
"Even though I've given myself a dozen games to get used to the Premier League, I have a good feeling about it."

Chamakh Settling In

Arsenal new boy Marouane Chamakh has declared he will improve once he settles into the hustle and bustle of Premier League life.

Chamakh, 26, has made a positive impression since signing on a free transfer from Bordeaux this summer and has already got on the scoresheet during the 6-0 victory against Blackpool. After proving himself as an effective marksman in Ligue 1 with 56 goals in 230 games, he has targeted a similar influence in his current surroundings.
Speaking to skysports.com while on international duty with Morocco, he said: "I am delighted to be back in my country as an Arsenal player.
"I am settling in well and the coach [Arsene Wenger] is doing his best to make me feel welcome at the club.
"I know that once I get settled, my game will improve a lot. The players have welcomed me also and I feel part of the family and the morale in the squad is good."
"We want to win the Premier League this season and we are all focused on that."
Chamakh’s decent start to life in English football is highlighted in the latest edition of the Castrol Rankings. The striker has risen 27 places and is now the 149th best player currently plying his trade in one of the top five leagues in Europe.