Robin Van Persie: A Big Miss For Arsenal

It hasn’t been easy, speaking from an Arsenal point of view, watching your former lethal striker do so well in another club, especially for your rivals. His name is Robin, and he was like the perfect idol.

It has been over three months since Arsenal sold Robin Van Persie to Manchester United for a fee believed to be around £24 million. His departure also saw the arrival of former Montpellier and French international striker Olivier Giroud, who I won’t be so quick to criticize.

After all, given the fact it is his first season at Arsenal, his goals so far this season has been quite encouraging from a statistical point of view. But sadly, he is nowhere near to Robin. He would also fall behind Rooney and even Chicharito in the pecking order at Manchester United - making the Manchester City starting 11 is also a huge doubt.

For example, we have seen decent chances that Giroud has failed to convert and we find ourselves frustrated and then admitting “Robin would have scored that “. I’ve been guilty of saying that, and I will continue to do so until something is done about the strike force situation at Arsenal.

Don’t quote me wrong. I am not saying Giroud is not worth playing for Arsenal, in fact his brilliant scoring record and eye for goal hasn’t gone unnoticed. Scoring 14 goals so far and over 7 assists for a striker in his debut season at the club isn’t that bad to say the least, but he hasn’t really shown any sign of replacing the incredible work Robin has rooted and replacing a striker of his calibre was definitely going to be a difficult task.

The sale of Robin Van Persie has left a big (very big) vacuum to Arsenal, especially in the striking department as Olivier Giroud, as I mentioned, is struggling to produce the magical touch Robin had, despite having a good scoring record in his first season so far at the club.

Robin’s eye for goals and brilliant technique makes you ponder if this guy is really human. All you need to do is create the chance and leave Robin to handle the rest. When Arsenal need an equalizer or maybe a winning goal, he usually provides them. Also, not forgetting the fact that he is a consistent player and can bring positives out of a negative game in a matter of seconds.

He did that against Liverpool and Everton, his curling effort against Tottenham, and the list goes on. His tally of 37 goals out of Arsenal’s total of 95 goals in all competitions in the 2011/2012 season, is a testament to his undeniable talent and outrageous ability.

I have to say that I am not really surprised Robin has adapted at his new club. He is a consistent player and he is showing the same fate at his new club. He’s also a genius who is ready to fight, and provided his full commitment in his time at Arsenal. The downside was, he was never patient. He is a big player, and big players have massive “egos”. They dictate what they want, and if you display some of sort of opposition they would most likely depart in a moment’s notice.

Van Persie’s former manager, Arsene Wenger, had this to say about big players and “egos”:

“Can you become a big player without a big ego? I would say no, it’s impossible”

As much as Arsenal fans won’t hide their bitter frustrations on losing Robin to Manchester United, I would suggest Wenger should have done more to keep his big man. Rooney almost quit United after some behind the scenes outbursts with manager Alex Ferguson, with Mirror football quoting “Rooney to leave United after outburst with Ferguson beyond repair “.

The major difference between Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger is Ferguson’s way of understanding big players who have massive egos, and that you need to act and rise to their level to keep them at your club. He did the same on this situation, and Rooney stayed.

It still saddens me that he left, but he has clearly stated his desire to win trophies which Arsenal have failed to provide.

Arsenal lost a leader, talisman, a born goalscorer and a fighter. If Arsenal fail to finish in the top 4 this season, only then would the cost of his departure be very clear. Only then.

 

Written by @femi4arsenal

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Manchester United: Van Persie could be United’s next legend

Robin Van Persie was in attendance alongside Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, Dwight Yorke, Ruud Van Nistelrooy and Eric Cantona as the Manchester United honour role of strikers witnessed the unveiling of the Sir Alex Ferguson statue at Old Trafford last month. It was a fitting tribute to a man who, in 26 years at the helm of England’s most successful club, had been at close quarters with such attacking greatness.

It is Ferguson who is best placed to pass judgment on Cantona, the eternal enigma who produced his best years under the Scotsman in four title winning years between 1992 and 1997.

Cantona still possess an aura of effortless brilliance and is still regarded as the man who bridged the gap between Ferguson’s also-rans of the old Division One to the Premier League behemoth it continues to be. Therefore, it is no modest achievement to be compared to the Frenchman by Ferguson, a man who is now, fifteen years after Cantona’s passing, reaping the benefits of a Dutchman who is having the same effect of galvanisation.

A similar profile to Eric” was the manager’s verdict when describing Van Persie to Eurosport last week, testament enough to his immediate impact in Salford.

Manchester City’s first title win, secured in dramatic fashion on the last day of the season to United’s expense, riled the 71 year old whose will to win rages inside like no other. He promised his side would be back and he turned to the purse strings to ensure it, spending £16 million on Shinji Kagawa and £24 million on Van Persie to give his attack line the same fearsome look it did back in the treble winning year of 1999; for Cole, Yorke, Sheringham and Solskjaer, read Van Persie, Rooney, Welbeck and Hernandez.

It was a move borne out of Arsenal’s failure to tie him down to a new contract at the end of a year in which he demonstrated the scintillating form of 44 goals from 57 appearances for club and country.

For a striker approaching 30 years of age with an admittedly poor track-record with injuries, an outlay in excess of £20 million may have represented a gamble but with Manchester City also in the hunt, a claim that since been certified, it was one Ferguson had no problem fast-tracking in order to steal a march on his neighbours.

Five months later, a period in which Van Persie has played 24 games, 17 goals have been scored as Manchester United sit 6 points clear of City in top spot and are also in the last 16 of the Champions League, a feat they did not manage last term.

It is an achievement in itself how the 29 year old has kept the injuries at bay, there was a suspicion that his prolific year in north London was an anomaly amongst several years of misfortune dogged by ankle and foot injuries that saw him fail to make over 30 league appearances in a single season before last year. This season, he has already made 17 and it is not yet Christmas. His last forced absence was of March 2011 as he finally begins to shake the “injury prone” tag.

Van Persie goals, 12 in total in the league, have provided United with the same catalyst for success Cantona’s had done. The defence is still ropey, but Van Persie’s goals have earned wins over Liverpool, Arsenal, Southampton, West Ham and Manchester City whereas Cantona famously did the same back in 1996-97 upon his return from his karate-kick induced suspension.

Then, the Frenchman hit winners against Tottenham, West Ham, Arsenal, Coventry, Liverpool in the FA Cup final and most vitally, Newcastle at St James’s Park which ultimately decided the fate of the league title.

His goals were a figurehead of the team’s success just as Van Persie’s are now, there was a feeling that his last gasp free-kick winner in the recent Manchester derby roller-coaster, or his hat-trick at St Mary’s to rescue a 2-0 deficit, was an instance of him dragging an imperfect squad from the slipstream to out in-front, it is a huge difference and Van Persie makes it.

His effect not only on the goal scoring charts but on his team-mates has also not gone unnoticed by his manager who was glowing in his reference to the quality summoned in the likes of strike-partners Wayne Rooney, who has tallied eight goals and Javier Hernandez, who has nine.

43 goals have been amassed as a team in total, ten more than closest challengers Manchester City, as they have won 14 of their 17 games. Such a potency has seriously outweighed the vulnerable back-line which has shipped 24 goals as a philosophy of “we’ll score one more than you” has seemingly been adopted; Van Persie also scored in the near-ridiculous 3-4 win over relegation threatened Reading.

There is no doubting that Van Persie’s impact can be likened to Cantona’s but there is an opportunity for the Dutchman to build a comparable legacy, just like the stars he joined to tribute his manager at the end of November. There is a chance for Van Persie to score the goals needed for United to be a consistent force both in domestic competition and on the continent, marking his name in Manchester United’s history like the series of greats before him as he does it.

That explains why he listened to the little boy inside when he made his decision between Manchester clubs in the summer, leaving Arsenal behind after seven barren years without a trophy and one glance at the further malaise occurring at the Emirates, minus his 37 goals, suggests the quality he brings to a team.

However Arsenal is the past for Van Persie and Manchester United promises an extremely bright future.

 

Written by Adam Gray

Follow him on Twitter @AdamGray1250

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