072 – Forever In Our Shadow (25th September 2014)



Gooner Gimli (@GoonerGimli) is back like a bad smell and is joined by :

Andrew (@PR_WhoRu).

Geoff (@GeoffArsenal).

Dom (@ozgooner49).

Danny (@The_GFP).
From : The Highbury Inn

Problems using either of the two media players, try these :

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There is no Jason so swearing will be less than normal but im sure the odd rude word will pop up.


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071 – In Dortmund No One Can Hear You Scream


FK (@fkhanage) has abducted Gimli by leaving a trail of my little pony heads and has now locked him up in a secret tower in a land far far away and tonight is joined by :

Jason (@jasondavies71).

Kris (@AFCfreddie8).
From : Barbican Pirates FC

Andrew (@PR_WhoRu).

Danny (@The_GFP).
From : The Highbury Inn

This weeks shout outs :

FK – Woz The Gooner (@wozthegooner)

Jason – Jonas Guttierez (Newcastle Utd Player)

Kris – John Colton (@John_colton) & Greg Birch (@GregBirch1982)

Andrew – Mark King (@mzk90) & Steven Neighbour (@sjneighbour)

Danny – The birthday boys : Ellis Mehl (@EllisMehl), Raj (@rajpatel1809) & Sol Campbell (@SolManOfficial)

Facebook competition winner was :

Duncan Rowe (He wins an autographed Sol Campbell biography)

Problems using either of the two media players, try these :

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With FK in charge there wont be much swearing as he beats us with his Armani flip-flops.


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Cast Long Shadows

By ‘#ABW Chief Blogger’ The Other Geoff (@Hollefreund)

Cast Long Shadows

It was 101 years ago that we moved into a stadium that went on to become ingrained into our identity over the course of the following 93 years. From its art deco styling, to the marble halls, Highbury was a truly extraordinary place. I remember the poignancy of the Final Salute to this day – and I’ll likely never shake that feeling of loss when I think of our former home.

While I can recall May 7th, 2006 with some accuracy, the same cannot be said about the 1913-14 season. I could lie but I think one or two of you sharper one’s out there might find me out for the imposter I would inevitably be.

The last season (1912-13) in Plumstead was calamitous to say the least as the club found itself with dismal attendances, poor performances, and an eventual relegation to Division 2 for the 1913-14 season. The club needed a change and the result was a move to our eventual home in North London.

Our start to the season was impressive, recording three wins to begin the campaign and vault us to the top of the Division. Fans were returning to see the Arsenal, the new ground was impressive, and the team was showing signs of a successful season ahead. The mood was buoyant in North London.

The Director comments in the Official Programme from September 20th, 1913 reflected the disposition of the club, players, and fans alike:

“There is a Latin motto which runs something like this: ‘Victoria concordia crescit,’ which, translated, is ‘Victory grows out of concord’ – and this is absolutely what we attribute our success to this season. ‘Concord.’ Our players, our manager, ourselves – and, yes, yourselves-have only one thing in view – the well-being and success of our Club. This is particularly so with our players – and depend upon it, so long as this happy state of things exists, so long will our Club do well, and thereby help to make these weekly chats pleasant.

“Of course we cannot, and do not, expect always to win, but the present spirit will, we are convinced, carry us successfully through many a hard struggle for the ownership of League and S.E. League points.”

  • Our Weekly Chat – By the Directors – Woolwich Arsenal F.C. Official Programme Sept 20, 1913

Victoria concordia crescit – victory grows out of concord. As far as anyone can tell*, this is the first known use of this motto in relation to Arsenal. Over the years, “concord” has evolved into “harmony” but the meaning remains the same – united we are stronger than divided.

It’s funny that something said about the Gunners over 100 years ago can still remain relevant today.

As I prepared for my Deadline Day Podcast appearance last Monday, I listened to the first episode of the day. Time difference meant it was 6 or 7 in the morning with me due on at 8 am for the 4 pm UK show. I listened intently as I scanned NewsNow and Twitter for any tidbits of transfer news we’d possibly talk about but there really wasn’t anything concrete at that point.

Then something quite unexpected happened. It was Geoff (@GeoffArsenal) and he was speaking about how he thought it was going and his tone was wavering. I had to pause and re-listen again.

Geoff is generally a pretty sensible guy and I’d categorize him as an optimist based on my regular listening of the Pod and his Twitter activity. I should state that I don’t know Geoff any more than any of you do but his tone on the pod was unmistakably deflated.

It threw me off.

It wasn’t Geoff’s fault and I’m not throwing him under the bus at all. I’m also not a total melt. It just gave me an ominous feeling like we weren’t going to get the business done that I thought we needed to do.

Of course we went on to bring in Danny Welbeck, and given a chance to reflect on our Transfer Dealings this summer, they were, overall, very good. We could maybe use a couple more bodies over the course of our next 55-60 games but the quality we’ve brought in has been excellent and I struggle to remember a transfer window that has been this productive.

Transfer dealings aside though, I want to come back to Geoff. I’ve been dwelling on that feeling for a week now and I’ve been trying to figure out a way to articulate why it had such an effect on me.

I think it comes down to influence. There is an idiom that goes something like this – cast a long shadow. It means to have influence over something. Leaders, people in power, celebrities, sports heroes; they all cast a long shadow in some way.

Andrew over at Arseblog, Tim Stillman, Daniel Cowan, Pedro, Geoff, Tim Payton, Robbie at Arsenal Fan TV, and countless others that share their views through podcasts, blogs, and various forms of social media, all cast their own shadows across us. Whether they like it or not, they have the power to influence us and the way we feel about Arsenal.

I don’t want to be perceived as being on the proverbial soapbox – perhaps I will, but that isn’t the intent. It is more of a comment based on observation. This isn’t a blog about leadership responsibility either. I think what I’m really saying is that there are many voices that comment on our Arsenal. Some you’ll agree with and others you won’t – but they all have that power to influence the way we view our team – and sometimes it’s just important to be aware of that influence.

The proliferation of social media and blogging means there are more and more voices being added to the din that is Arsenal support and by extension, we as fans, all have a shadow that we’re casting – some longer than others.

I think it brings our Latin motto back into sharp focus and gives renewed meaning to the word “harmony.” We as fans can effect two outcomes – how we treat each other, and how we support the team. That’s it. We can’t influence transfers, magically heal players, or take corner kicks no matter how much we enjoy endlessly debating those things.

Let me be clear here – I’m not proposing that AKB’s and WOB’s get together to sing “kumbaya“ in order to win the title. I think differing viewpoints and constructive debate make supporting the Arsenal that much better as a supporter. But somehow if we could all agree that above all else we’re here to support the Arsenal, if we could give our team that unequivocal support every time they take the pitch – well I can’t help but feel that there’s nothing bad that would come of that.

Victoria Concordia Crescit. Cast long shadows.

The Other Geoff

*The programme reference and research on the use of Victoria Concordia Crescit was based on this article by friend of the Pod and Arsenal historian Andy Kelly (@Gooner_AK) – go give it a read.

By ‘#ABW Chief Blogger’ The Other Geoff (@Hollefreund)


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070 – Mr Lipton, Mr Gregory & Mr Welbeck (4th September 2014)


Gooner Gimli (@GoonerGimli) Has mopped away his tears after a disastrous transfer deadline day and is joined by :

Martin Lipton (@MartinLipton).

John Gregory (@JohnGregory77).

Geoff (@GeoffArsenal).

Raj (@rajpatel1809).

Danny (@The_GFP).
From : The Highbury Inn

Problems using either of the two media players, try these :

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We hope this week will be a potty mouth free zone.

End music was by The Santa Marias, the band are from Adelaide Australia and the guitarist is our very own Dom (@ozgooner49) and the song is called “17”, the band members are Trav George, Dom Nuske, William Bahnisch, Chris Moloney & Will Correll.


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State Of Play : What Lies Ahead

By Jake (@JakeArsenal1)

State Of Play : What Lies Ahead

Equilibrium is defined as “a state of rest or balance due to the equal action of opposing forces”. Why I am mentioning this is with this blog, I’m intending to balance out the positives and negatives of what does indeed lie ahead for Arsenal this season and maybe beyond.

I want to be careful how I go about this and how I word this blog. Because after such a lacklustre deadline day, we are all still on edge a little. I’m not going to harp on about what has already been brilliantly covered by everyone on the pod last night, and as much as I’d have loved to have jumped in, I must admit, for the first time in a nearly a decade. I didn’t stay up all night on my side of the world to see if we would sign anyone, because quite frankly, I didn’t care anymore.

If I woke to the news that we signed Cavani, Reus a decent centre-back and defensive midfielder, of course I would have jumped for joy (of course I didn’t think this would happen). I don’t claim to be” in the know” anymore than anyone else. But the problem for me and everyone else is, this whole “we just need two or three players to really compete” thing. Has been the same story for years now.

It’s beyond asking why don’t we buy these players anymore. It’s who is to blame? Knowing the man like I do, from his horrible handling in owning the Denver Nuggets and Colorado Avalanche ice hockey team, not to mention St Louis Rams NFL franchise, mediocrity and making money is the ONLY reason Stan Kroenke is involved with Arsenal or any sports franchise.

You want to ask why fans are being asked to shell out an extra 3% for ticket prices? Look no further. I would bet everything I own, (and that’s next to naught by the way). That after the July spending, there is every chance that he turned to Gazidis and Wenger and said. “Let’s reel in the spending now boys”.

Of course I could be wrong. But you only need to look at his track record with similar acts selling off his teams best players, assets and draft picks for money, while replacing with less than adequate players moving forward. You could argue with me that we are now “a self sustaining club and he doesn’t have that much an influence” this man is the majority share holder at the club. His influence is always going to bigger than we on the outside looking in know.

I don’t want to make this a Kroenke out blog, but if you’re not interested or bothered looking up how the fans of sports franchises he owns feel about him. Take this one, free to public record fact of note.

On August 15th 2008 the WWE booked a wrestling event at the Denver Nuggets Pepsi Center for may 25th 2009. The long and the short of it is this. Stan Kroenke knowingly booked a wrestling event under the belief that his Denver Nuggets (who were a decent top 8 in the western conference team, being led by Carmelo Anthony) would not make good run in the playoffs an ENTIRE season later. This backfired as result the Nuggets had a home game in the NBA Western conference finals against the LA Lakers scheduled for the same night as the wrestling event.

This is all true and fact. Now, look at this from an Arsenal point of view. This man, KNOWINGLY booked an event at the same arena a team he owns plays at, because he was under the belief the team weren’t good enough to make it this far in to the playoffs.

Now, wouldn’t any of us Arsenal fans worry naturally on a few fronts here? One. He literally had 9 months to improve the team to a point where they could compete. And had already pulled the pulled the plug on the idea is the sum of this. Either that or he was so stupid in his negligence that he “just plain forgot”.

To sum it up. This is a man who doesn’t have ambition when it comes to his teams seeing success, and to put it bluntly. If he does not see it as a profit. He does not get involved.

Remember when we stopped believing what players said when it came to transfers and their loyalty as gospel? I think we can now confidently stop believing the board, the owners, or the manager to that extent. And I love Arsene Wenger. But there is no logical justification for not buying at the very least a defender. And scrambling on the final day for one is not acceptable for a club who wish to compete for four trophies.

Right, enough on that. Anyone who wishes to debate me on that is more than welcome to try and defend this somehow. But that was one of many ridiculous things Stan Kroenke has done during his tenure with his Kroenke sports enterprise.

As it stands, we got Welbeck. I spent the day thinking the best possible outcome we can expect from him this season, and seeing Gooners on twitter retweeting the dismay and distain of unbelievably ungrateful United fans (who got F****ng Falcao by the way!!) as they cried Welbeck had left, as if it’s some justification that he “may well turn out alright” is almost as ludicrous as the notion that Di Maria will be the replacement for Ronaldo at that club and score tonnes of goals. A player who has never scored more than 7 a season, yet he’s going to score loads in the Premier League?. Absolute bollocks. It proves how many casual, deluded, and limited knowledge fans that club actually have. Are you telling me any Arsenal fan would have rather Welbeck over Falcao? If that’s the case United fans, give us Falcao, cover his wages, and you can keep Welbeck. Ridiculous them lot. And that’s not to say our fans are easily pleased either. Some wouldn’t be happy if we signed Messi.

To think Danny Welbeck will turn in to Danny Sturridge is a little far fetched for me. I’ve put it down to this. With Giroud out, Welbeck, Sanogo, Sanchez, Podolski, Campbell and at some stage Walcott will all be likely given a go up front until Giroud returns. That’s roughly 4 months, plus how ever long until he finds his form. Let’s say Welbeck ends up as the man to lead the line for arguments sake, with Sanchez on one of the wings. Between now and the return of Giroud, I think if we can manage 7 goals and 4 assists in the league alone, out of the young England international, that should be seen as successful.

At United, he never got a real chance up front in his preferred position, to think he will get the chance here, where Arshavin never got to as an attacking midfielder, Santi and Özil are rotated in that same position now or chucked out on the flanks, my outlook is not positive.

But to the theme of balancing things out. He is better than Sanogo, maybe? We will find out. His positives are, he is quick, 6 foot 1 and can run all day and is known to make intelligent runs. Negatives are he is a shoddy finisher, does not have a proven goal scoring record, and (I know this will piss people off). If he did cost a reported 16 million pounds. For another 8 million United bought RVP off us. Are you trying to tell me Danny Welbeck is only 8 million pounds worse than the best striker we had since Henry?

I suppose you can justify that with, “well we waited so long it’s our fault” or “he’s English and from a rival so we had to overpay” but if we were going to overpay. I said on my twitter a week ago and got abused to no end for it. We should have got Bony even before Giroud’s injury. Could you imagine, in a tough game where we are trying to scrape a win, a front pair of Giroud and Bony? Tell me there would be a more physically imposing strike pair in the Premier League? He might not be what some deem “Arsenal quality” but is Welbeck?.

I don’t want to slag the lad off. He’s still got his best years ahead of him and he’s an Arsenal player now, so I wish all the best for young Danny. I’d absolutely love it if he started banging in goals left and right and personally told me to stick it my arse for doubting him to be honest. Then United fans can have something proper to cry about, mugs.

More to the state of play and what lies ahead. We still await the arrival of Theo Walcott after a long injury layoff. I’m hoping his pace and once he finds his form, can find the back of the net with some regularity. You also have to consider Giroud was our top scorer last season. Considering he will miss half the campaign, try to think we will need at least 8 of the 16 league goals he scored by the half way point of last season before his return.

I think with the attackers we have, Welbeck included. We can get that amount plus obviously more that will need to come from all the strikers. But, think like this. We still need Ramsey’s goal threat. Sanchez will have to take the brunt of goal scoring responsibility. Podolski will score if he plays more often that not. It’s Sanogo, Welbeck and Campbell who I worry about. Will Campbell even play? I don’t want to see more injuries before he is “forced to play” be the scenario for the Costa Rica international.

I know I’m being pessimistic more than positive here. But now with the no additions to the back. I believe the manager has a “versatility” plan within the squad. It’s been said that Monreal will be the fourth choice centre-back. So that makes Chambers third choice back up. Does that mean he is also first back up at right-back or is Bellerin to take that job? Lots of questions will be answered in the next few months.

To be a tad more positive, maybe we will see the likes of Wilshere and Oxlade-Chamberlain step up this season too. Maybe Wilshere can prove to be a good long term partner to Ramsey in the midfield. Suppose Arteta and Flamini don’t get injured again this season, then we can just hope their performances against the bigger teams are decent enough.

I think once we find our feet as a squad, there should be enough creativity to score plenty of goals there. But, I do also fear that sometimes we won’t be able to break teams down or go that extra gear as was evident against Leicester.

The summery of the equilibrium and state of play for me is this.

– We have a long season ahead.
– the likes of Aaron Ramsey, The Ox, Sanchez, Özil, Chambers, Wilshere, even Sanogo should all improve.
– heh, if things are bad…we can always buy in January? Sorry, bad timing to make jokes.
– truth being told, the squad, although thin, is improved on last year personnel wise (although I still believe Sagna is a better defender than Debuchy).
– don’t forget how long we were top last season, we haven’t become a worse team since then across the board surely?.

There is always going to be questions to ask and answers to find. If I’m honest, if we are still in the title race right till the end, I’ll be impressed to say the least. If we get past the quarter final stage of the champions league, I’ll consider it a fantastic run in that competition.

It’s all for us to do. And honestly, with the likes of the near talismanic Ramsey, an improving Özil feeding passes to Sanchez, Walcott and The Ox amongst others. We should have a potent if not versatile attack.

So what lies ahead is truly anyone’s guess. I’m just trying to gauge it best as I can and stay as positive as I negatively can :p

Sorry for the long one. If you have a moment, check out my personal blog anytime here.

Thanks again.

Jake (@JakeArsenal1)


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069 – Transfer Deadline Day Podcasts 1 to 5 (1st September 2014)

All 5 podcasts in 1 long podcast in these 3 players above and below

————————————————

Part 1 of our Transfer Deadline Day podcasts with :

Gimli (@GoonerGimli)
Dave Hillier (@davehillierr)
Geoff (@GeoffArsenal)
Andrew (@PR_WhoRu)
Le Grove (@LeGrove)
Danny (@The_GFP)

————————————————

Part 2 of our Transfer Deadline Day podcasts with :

Gimli (@GoonerGimli)
Tim Payton (@timpayton)
The Other Geoff (@Hollefreund)
Dom (@ozgooner49)
Thomas (@tmundt3)
Danny (@The_GFP)

————————————————

Part 3 of our Transfer Deadline Day podcasts with :

Gimli (@GoonerGimli)
Bex (@bexington49)
Jason (@jasondavies71)
Raj (@rajpatel1809)
Danny (@The_GFP)

————————————————

Part 4 of our Transfer Deadline Day podcasts with :

Gimli (@GoonerGimli)
Kate (@GoonerGirlKate)
Sadia (@TheGoonerette)
Swainy (@paulswainAFC78)
Kris (@AFCfreddie8)
Danny (@The_GFP)

————————————————

Part 5 of our Transfer Deadline Day podcasts with :

Gimli (@GoonerGimli)
Geoff (@GeoffArsenal)
Tim Payton (@timpayton)
G.C (@SheWore)
Jason (@jasondavies71)
Raj (@rajpatel1809)
Kris (@AFCfreddie8)
Dom (@ozgooner49)
Thomas (@tmundt3)
Danny (@The_GFP)

————————————————

Problems using either of the two media players, try these :

Click here to listen to in a new window
Or
Click here to listen via iTunes
Or
Click here to listen via our YouTube channel
Or
Right Click Here then “Save link as” for .mp3

After over 3 hours of podcasting we have probably said every rude word known to man.


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Falcao And That

By Andrew (@PR_WhoRu)

Falcao And That

Just a very quick blog on Falcao.

I should caveat from the start that I’m not suggesting I think Falcao to Arsenal is likely or that any “source” has suggested this to me, I’m merely trying to tackle a few of the reasons people are giving for an agreed belief that Arsenal wouldn’t be interested in Falcao due to the cost. These beliefs include:

He’s too expensive for Arsenal.
Arsenal wouldn’t spend that sort of money on a player.
Arsenal would be crazy to spend €20m on a loan deal.

I have suggested that, whilst Falcao is clearly an expensive asset to simply rent, a 1 year loan deal in principle could make sense financially and for sporting reasons. It is said that Monaco, for FFP reasons, are desperate to get Falcao’s wages off of their books for the next financial year as they don’t want to suffer any of the 10 disciplinary measures that can be imposed by UEFA on Clubs that have requested to be eligible to play in a UEFA competition.

I suggest that using the break-even metrics that are used to calculate whether a club is in breach or not of being in line with FFP legislation, and the way teams have to amortise the book value of a player, Falcao at €20m for one year would cost Arsenal the same as what Mesut Ozil costs.

Explained:

Amortisiation under FFP:

Arsenal signed Mesut Ozil last year on a 5 year deal for £42.5m. For profit & loss reasons, the value of that asset and its subsequent depreciation has to be recorded over the course of the period. Regardless of if Arsenal (in theory) handed over £42,500,000 in one lump sum, only £8,500,000 will be recorded as a loss in depreciation in year 1 (42500000/5). This remains consistent for the 5 year tenure of the contract (if Arsenal don’t sell). This also means that the book value of Ozil depreciates by £8.5m each year so after 1 year of his contract at Arsenal, Ozil’s accounting value is £34m – year 2 is £25.5m and so on until his asset value is technically £0 after the five years when he is free to leave the Club. If after 2 years, for example, Arsenal sold Ozil to Bayern Munich for £40m, even though Arsenal would receive £2.5m less for him than they paid, they would technically record a profit of £14.5m under the rules of FFP. This is his theoretical transfer value of £40m minus his book value of £25.5m = £14.5m profit.

We should also consider that wages are accounted for as a cost on the balance sheets of football clubs and therefore both the cost of depreciation of a player’s asset value and their wages make up the total cost of ownership to the club. There are other costs such as insurances etc, but let’s keep this simple.

If Falcao joined Arsenal on loan for one season at €20m (and all of the cost was used to cover his salary as media reports are claiming), then his cost to Arsenal would be €20m – or, broken down weekly, £305,769. This would be reflected as a loss of €20m in the annual accounts. However, as Monaco would still hold the asset given we’d be technically renting him, Monaco would still incur amortisation on his book value. This means in terms of total cost of ownership, Falcao would only incur a salary cost and no amortised costs to the book value of him as an asset. This is not the case for our other superstars such as Ozil and Sanchez, who we incur both a salary cost and amortisation cost on.

Broken down in £ – (€20m has been converted to £15.9m):

Summary

Whilst it is true that Falcao would become Arsenal’s greatest earner, it should be remembered that FFP accounting for break even metrics concern themselves with a Club’s wider accounts and take into account the total cost of ownership of a player (ergo losses to the balance) into consideration.

Falcao’s annual costs of £15,900,000 are only £2,307 more per week than Ozil. If you include Ozil’s image rights which are believed to be between £40-60k a week (and for the purpose of this blog have been estimated at £50k) then Ozil works out £47,693 per week more expensive than Falcao.

Whilst Ozil would have a sell on value which Arsenal wouldn’t gain from a loan player, there also wouldn’t be any subsequent loss on depreciation of Falcao’s value within the periods of the next FFP round of fines – it should be remembered that break even metrics are counted for over time periods. It’s hard to see how much of a transfer fee Arsenal could recoup on Falcao if they purchased him today on a 4 or 5 year contract but for the purpose of this blog, there’s no point trying to guess what Arsenal could or couldn’t get for him.

I hope this clears a few things up.

You can find out more from this 93 page report published by FIFA.

Thanks for reading.

By Andrew (@PR_WhoRu)


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068 – Rob Beckett Uncut (28th August 2014)


Gooner Gimli (@GoonerGimli) Is has had a once over by a vet and has been passed fit to podcast and is joined by :

Rob Beckett (@robbeckettcomic).

Kris (@AFCfreddie8).

Andrew (@PR_WhoRu).

Danny (@The_GFP).
From : The Highbury Inn

Problems using either of the two media players, try these :

Click here to listen to in a new window
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Click here to listen via our YouTube channel
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Right Click Here then “Save link as” for .mp3

The ‘C’ word was used once, other than that there are no more stats available for this podcast.


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My First Entry! A New Bergkamp Wonderland Blogger

By Jake (@JakeArsenal1)

My First Entry! A New Bergkamp Wonderland Blogger

So after months of negotiations, zero speculation and on a free transfer, I’ve joined the “A Bergkamp Wonderland” team. A relative unknown, the kind of transfer some will question, but in good time will think of me more a Koscielny than a Sanogo. I’m joking of course.

I think it’s only fitting that I join a team that pays tribute to mine and a lot of people’s favourite player of all time in an Arsenal shirt, the one and only Dennis Bergkamp.

Growing up with a Dutch grandfather (who was an Ajax fan), I heard all the stories of Cryuff, Neeskens and the incredible Ajax team of the 70’s. Even players like Van Basten, Overmars and many more, having my ears stuffed with talk of brilliant Dutch footballers, you’d think that would swing me to become an Ajax fan. But in Dennis it was the player I liked most. And not Ajax.

I also grew fond of the late David “Rocky” Rocastle. It was Rocky who was the first Arsenal player I liked, but when my idol Dennis moved to Arsenal, that was it for me. I knew what team I liked and it’s true, Dennis is the one who made me fall in love with this club.

Growing up in Australia, all we had to view football from my young age was the channel SBS on Saturdays and Sundays. Conveniently for me, they did show Arsenal and English league highlights. Along with loads or Serie A which bored me to death at the time. To say at my tender child years, I was watching Arsenal week to week would be a lie.

But as I grew, I always knew what was happening and never lost touch with the club and in my teen years I kept on following and now, living in South East Asia, in the age of high-speed Internet and satellite television, I can honestly say I’ve missed I believe 5 live games in 8 years. A 4:30am Capital one cup game against the Wigan’s and Sheffield United’s of this world wouldn’t deter the fact I had work the next morning at 9am. Arsenal was all I needed.

Much like all of you loyal readers I was along for all the drama of the last decade and more. I’ve laughed, screamed, chewed my nails off as we score a last minute winner in the league at home to the Wolverhampton’s, Aston Villa’s and more of the Premier League lesser lights.

I woke my neighbours as I yelled at the top of my lungs when Arshavin scored the winner against Barcelona at home. I’ve been there and will be for many more late night kick off’s.

And as for Spurs? Let’s leave them to one side, like we have done for the better part of two decades. It’s an absolute pleasure to team up with and write with the lads here and I hope this will be as enjoyable for the readers as it is for me.

In the coming days I’ll have a bit regarding the upcoming few games, transfers and more.

So until then, thanks for popping in to see what I’m all about and I’ll be back again very soon.

Thank you again to everyone at ‘A Bergkamp Wonderland’. It’s truly an honour to write for and work alongside some truly passionate Gooners like myself.

Cheers.

Jake (@JakeArsenal1)


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067 – Dave Hillier, Palace & Besiktas (21st August 2014)


Gooner Gimli (@GoonerGimli) Is back from the hairdressers after having his ginger perm fixed and his pigtails tightened and is joined by :

Dave Hillier (@davehillierr).

Jason (@jasondavies71).

Geoff (@GeoffArsenal).

Dom (@ozgooner49).

Danny (@The_GFP).
From : The Highbury Inn

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From previous experience of having ‘Mr Jason #WelshJustice Davies’ on the podcast there is no way on Earth that he wont swear so get the bleep button out mother.

End music was by “The SHAME” the band are from Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA and the song is called “For Football and the Pints”, the band members are Chad Malone, Josh Troutman, Kevin Gissendaner.

The SHAME (@TheShameOfTtown).


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