This coming weekend not only marks the end of 2011, a very
eventful year indeed, but it also marks the half way point of our football
season which has been every bit as eventful. After 179 games and 509 goals it
seems only logical to rewind 5 months, back to August to review the season so
far, starting from the very beginning.
The likes of Manchester City, Manchester United and Chelsea
all made big money signings during this summer’s transfer window, just as you
would expect of the big teams. Manchester City spent in excess of £80 million
on Sergio Aguero, Samir Nasri and co adding to their ever increasing transfer
bill that is likely to continue to increase at a substantial rate for some time
yet. Contrastingly Manchester United
invested in youth players, bringing in Ashley Young, Phil Jones and Athletico
Madrid hot shot David De Gea, to keep goal in place of the imperious Edwin van
Der Sar at Old Trafford. Arsene Wenger was left with little choice but to spend
during the transfer window after losing Cesc Fabregas, Gael Clichy and Samir Nasri.
Wenger brought in a host of players to strengthen his squad including Mikel
Arteta, Gervinho and German international Per Mertesacker. Elsewhere Chelsea
continued their re-building process by adding Spanish magician Juan Mata and
Belgian youngster Romelu Lukaku to the furniture at Stamford Bridge for a
combined fee in the region of £45 million. Liverpool continue to invest in new
players under the guidance of Kenny Dalglish spending big on Jordan Henderson
and Stewart Downing.
Although football is becoming a very expensive business and
it is often necessary to overpay to get the top players it is occasionally the ‘less expensive’ players however that
have the greatest impact on a team. Take for example, FWA Footballer of the
Year Scott Parker who moved to Tottenham this summer in a deal worth roughly £5
million. Since his move across London from relegated West Ham he has given Spurs that extra bit of stability in
midfield giving more freedom to the creative players in the team when going
forward. This has enabled Spurs to
mount a serious title challenge this season, which currently sees them sitting
pretty in third place, 4 points clear of Chelsea heading into the new year. Fellow newcomer and top scorer this season Emmanuel
Adebayor seems to be the answer to Harry Redknapp’s problem striker position,
contributing 9 goals and 6 assists to Tottenham’s title push.
Having scored 14 goals in his last 13 appearances after
being signed on a free transfer from West Ham surely makes Demba Ba one of the
signings of the season. He has been integral to Newcastle’s brilliant if not
surprising start to the season providing more than half of their 25 goals this
season. Only Robin van Persie has scored more goals this season in the Premier
League. Whilst Demba Ba has been providing the firepower up front the key to
Newcastle’s strong start was a well organised defence that had only conceded 15
goals from their first 14 games. However an injury to Steven Taylor led to
major defensive problems resulting in Newcastle conceding seven goals in three
matches, four against Norwich City, outlining the importance Newcastle placed
on their defence. It will therefore be interesting to see how Newcastle fare in
the new year with Steven Taylor out for the rest of the season and Demba Ba on
international duty with Senegal at the African Cup of Nations during January.
Newcastle striker Demba Ba after his hat-trick against Blackburn at St James's Park |
The transfer window is open for two months allowing clubs plenty of time to
strengthen their squads, but somehow transfer deadline day always seems to be packed
full of action, often as a result of panic buying following a disappointing pre-season. Keeping with
deadline day tradition we had a flurry of transfers this season, most notably
from Arsene Wenger and Andre Villas Boas with Wenger signing Mikel Arteta and
Yossi Benayoun among others and AVB signing Raul Meireles from Liverpool.
Leaving major signings until the last minute affected the form of both clubs.
More so Arsenal but nonetheless Chelsea’s campaign didn’t get off to the
smoothest of starts either with 4 defeats to their name already. Adding to a
poor pre-season that involved an under par performance in the Emirates Cup, in
which they finished third after draws to both PSG and Boca Juniors, Arsenal
started the season in terrible form, losing to Liverpool, Manchester United,
Blackburn and Tottenham, leading many fans to call for the end of Arsene
Wenger’s 15 year reign at the helm of Arsenal. Andre Villas Boas’ start to
Premier League life probably wasn’t as smooth as he would have hoped for as he
has thus far failed to hit the heights Roman Abramovich would have been
expecting, especially considering the amount he has invested into the club over
the past few years. If it wasn’t for the €15 million Abramovich paid to release
the young Portuguese manager from his contract at Porto, at the same time making
him the most expensive coach in history, I fear his tenure at Chelsea may have
been as short as his predecessors. Despite what can only be described as below
par starts for both Chelsea and Arsenal they lie fourth and fifth respectively.
In comparison Manchester United did their shopping early, giving their new
signings plenty of time to settle into the squad during their pre-season tour
of the States. This had the desired effect as United triumphed against rivals CIty
in the Community Shield, before going on a sparkling run of form during the
first few months of the season. All three new signings hit the ground running;
Ashley Young showed his class with some stunning displays during United’s free
scoring displays at the start of the season. Phil Jones has proved a
revelation, featuring in all but two of United’s league games this season and
David De Gea has shown he has the quality to become a world class ‘keeper in
the future. Manchester United currently sit second on goal difference to
Manchester City.
Newcastle have
slipped to seventh following their recent dip in form. Liverpool lie just above
Newcastle in sixth place looking like a much better team this season under the
stewardship of club legend Kenny Dalglish. Rounding off the top half are Stoke
(8), West Bromwich Albion (9) and Everton (10). We have come to expect Tony
Pulis’ Stoke to feature in the top half of the table joining the ever reliant
David Moyes and his resilient Everton side. If Roy Hodgson can keep up his fine
job at West Brom they will most certainly lose their rather unfortunate reputation
as the ‘yo-yo club’.
Barclays Premier League table as of 29/12/2011 |
Norwich City sit just below Everton in eleventh place after
an impressive start to the campaign from Paul Lambert and his men. Often newly
promoted teams find it hard to come by goals which is why they end up going
straight back down to the Championship. Norwich however have been able to rely
on a very successful partnership between Grant holt and Steve Morison, which
has produced 15 goals thus far and has made Norwich by far the top scoring
newly promoted team this season. In fact, only the top 5 have scored more goals
than Norwich City this term. However if it wasn’t for their strength in attack
they would be in the midst of the relegation battle as they have conceded
roughly the same number of goals as the bottom six. One point below them sit
Aston Villa in twelfth, who, truth be told have struggled since parting ways with
Martin O’Neill who led them to three consecutive sixth place finishes.
Nonetheless you would expect them to be in the top half of the table come the
end of the season especially as they finally seem to be getting to grips with
life after Ashley Young and Stewart Downing. In thirteenth place are Fulham who
have had a rather subdued start to the season under Martin Jol. The one bright
spark in an otherwise average season for Fulham has been the form of their
American talisman Clint Dempsey who has once again shown why he is arguably the
best footballer to come from the United States, having contributed 7 goals and
4 assists to Fulham’s cause already this season. Newly promoted and the only
Welsh team to ever make it to the Premier League, Swansea sit in fourteenth,
one place above Sunderland. Swansea have
proved a breath of fresh air to the Premier League as Brendan Rodgers has got
them playing a stylish possession game that has enabled The Swans to average 56.2% possession so far this season.
Manchester City and Arsenal are the only teams to have a higher average
possession figure this season at 57.8% and 59.3% respectively. This is very
impressive for a newly promoted side that have come out every weekend and stuck
to their passing philosophy even against the ‘big’ teams. The Swans have averaged 544 passes per game this term which has led
some to hail them as the Premier League’s Barcelona, bringing with it the
nickname ‘Swanselona’.
After only two wins from his first thirteen games Steve
Bruce became the first managerial casualty of the season after being dismissed
as manager by Sunderland after 98 games in charge spanning more than 2 years.
That gave Martin O’Neill the perfect opportunity to rejoin the Premiership as
manager of his beloved Sunderland and has since led The Black Cats to two wins, and seven points from his first four games
in charge. The bottom half of the table is propped up by Queens Park Rangers
(16), Wolverhampton Wanderers (17), Wigan Athletic (18), Bolton Wanderers (19)
and Blackburn Rovers (20). Many had tipped either Steve Kean or Owen Coyle to
win ‘the sack race’ after both Blackburn and Bolton made dreadful starts to
their seasons. Bolton have lost 14 games and won 4 this season, continuing
their current record of consecutive games without a draw, which currently
stands at 34. Blackburn however have only lost 11 games, but have drawn 5 and
only won 2, one of which was a giant victory against Arsenal. As with both
other newly promoted teams, QPR look as though they have what it takes to stay
up this season, with a decent squad, manager and plenty of cash available for
Neil Warnock to dip into the transfer market if necessary. As ever it looks
like the relegation battle will be going down to the wire come the end of the
season with as many as 7 or 8 teams fighting for survival.
Life for English teams hasn’t been so rosy in European
competition with Tottenham, Manchester United and Manchester City all failing
to progress further than the group stage in their respective compeititons. City were welcomed into the Champions
League for the first time by being drawn into a group with Napoli, Villarreal
and German giants Bayern Munich. A third placed finish behind Munich and Napoli
meant they would join rivals United in the Europa League whilst Chelsea and
Arsenal both progressed through to the knockout stage of the competition.
Tottenham also failed to make it out of their group meaning they were knocked
out of the Europa League all together which could turn out to be advantageous
as we move into the second half of the season, with Spurs chasing a return to the Champions League.
2011 also played host to the 20,000th Premier
League goal, scored by Aston Villa youngster Marc Albrighton against Arsenal on
21st December. Minutes earlier in Manchester United’s match against
Fulham, Ryan Giggs scored his first Premier League goal of the season meaning
he has now scored in every one of the 20 seasons since the Premier League
replaced the old Division One.
Derby day scarves: a tale of two Manchesters |
So eighteen games down, twenty to go and United and City top the table with 45 points apiece with an identical record
of 14 wins, 3 draws and one loss. The only thing that separates the pair is City’s superior goal difference which
came as a result of the thrashing they dished out to United at Old Trafford
back in October. Chelsea have already fallen 11 points behind and AVB has
recently said the title is out of their grasp. Although Arsene Wenger is not
likely to give up on the title quite as easily as AVB has done it will require
a valiant effort from his Arsenal side to bring the title back to London. It
seems local rivals Tottenham are now fly the flag for London, being the only
team realistically within reach of the two Manchester clubs, 7 points behind
with a game in hand. A lot has been said of Tottenham’s ‘title challenge’ and
whether or not they have what it takes to bring the first division title back
to White Hart Lane for the first time since 1960-61 season. Until Spurs can prove their title credentials
it looks to be a battle between the Red and Blue of Manchester.
Rest assured we are in for a spectacular year of football
ahead. Happy New Year.
cfreestone