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Johan Djourou has passed a fitness test and will
be able to line up at the back alongside Swiss compatriot
Philippe Senderos against Chelsea today. Great news.
They may not be Kolo Toure (suspended) and William Gallas
(injured) but
they're both fine players and there can't be many clubs in
the world with a better 3rd and 4th choices for the position.
Thierry Henry also misses the game with his back trouble, and we'll
also miss Tomas Rosicky. I'd expect a midfield 5 with Robin van Persie
in it along with Freddie Ljungberg and Alexander Hleb supporting
Emmanuel Adebayor up front. But you never know, Arsene's recently been tempted
into a more defensive midfield with Matthieu Flamini as well as
Cesc Fabregas and Gilberto in the middle. Let's hope not, we're not
at our best when we lack options going forward. And you never know,
Julio Baptista or Theo Walcott might start, although a place on
the bench along with Matty seems more likely.
Ashley Cole is expected to return to
the Chelsea side having been left out of their Champs League game in
midweek. The same goes for Makalele and John Terry (the latter having
missed the game against Levski Sofia through suspension).
Carlo Cudicini is doubtful but they have a unusually decent 3rd choice
keeper in Hilario.
Anyway. On to the important stuff. Slightly different attitudes to the booing Ashley Cole
issue have been expressed by Arsenal's manager and goalkeeper.
Arsene Wenger's
trying
to play things down, supporting the club's request for travelling
fans to show Cole respect and not heckle him in tomorrow's big London derby
against Chelsea. He points out that "he has done well" for Arsenal.
To be fair to Cole, that's an understatement. Cole was a superb player
for us, and particularly loved for his attitude and the belief that in
some sense, having been an Arsenal fan, he was one of us. He was also
regarded with fondness because of the fact that (as he admitted) he
wasn't the sharpest tool in the box.
But while a certain amount of harmless idiocy is endearing, the stuff
that Ashley's been saying since he left leaves not only Arsenal fans
with a bad taste in their mouths. You might feel you deserve more, but
talking about 55K per week as if it's a pittance will never sit well
with the fans who have to scrape together for the absurdly escalating
price of a match ticket.
Cole expects
flak, so he does at least have some grasp of reality. And, unlike
Wenger, Jens Lehmann has has
been saying that Ashley deserves it.
""Of course Ashley should expect criticism from supporters...
He should get criticism."
"That is football. It makes the game exciting. If he didn't it would have
meant that he wasn't an important player, but he was.
He was a vital member of our squad and we enjoyed some major successes with him.
So obviously he should expect some negative emotions when he plays against Arsenal."
He also echoes many fans' thoughts with his comments on the trend for
autobiographies by people who've hardly lived yet.
"I do not understand why young players write books. I do not know why a player at
25 wants to tell me all about their big experiences.
When I consider the age I am now, I would have a lot to tell people. But it seems
to be an English habit to come out with books that nobody needs."
"I will probably write one when I retire. But I am a bit older than these players.
As I said, what is the point of writing a book at 25?"
I guess the answer in this case is that the poor lad's pension plan was
badly hit by having to endure miserly Arsenal wages for an extra season.
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