Self

What happened to Gael Clichy?

0 Comments 09 February 2010

Arsene Wenger may have seen natural talent in the prodigious young left back, but Gael Clichy should start proving his worth or else the Gunners faithful will turn on him like they turned on Emmanuel Adebayor.

Losses to both Manchester United and Chelsea in successive matches has the citizens of Islington panicking about Arsenal’s title chances. Several weeks ago Wenger’s boys looked title bound, leading the league table from two promising displays versus Bolton. Today Arsenal’s title hopes hang by a thread; the tail end of a rope which has placed Chelsea and Manchester United in a class of their own at the top of the table for the past three seasons.

A large portion of the blame falls on the injuries, man marking, and an offense that lacks height. But the stand out weak link of the squad has been Clichy.

The former Cannes defender was assigned the duty of defending Nani in the United match on the 31st of January. Nani turned Clichy inside out, which led to the young Portuguese winger’s immensely significant goal. One week later Clichy found himself in a similar position, getting schooled by Drogba’s fancy footwork on a counterattack. Clichy, dumbfounded, should have been taking notes as the Ivorian smashed in the second goal. Pending fans take a closer look at recent defensive openings, Clichy might want to invest in a benchwarmer.

Overall the 24 year-old has played Wenger’s game: possession play. Arsenal have played brilliantly as Wenger has reiterated, yet Carlo Ancelotti and Michael Ballack overrule the Frenchman’s philosophies with practicality. “[Wenger] always says things like this when he loses to find an excuse but football is not possession of the ball and playing a nice pass, football is about winning games and that is what Manchester United showed when they played them and what we did.” Ballack commented after claiming a 2-0 victory at Stamford Bridge.

Now that fans and neutrals alike agree Arsenal are out of contingency for the title, the blame is falling on Arsenal’s playing style. A gunner has not been red carded in over a year, and there recent performances prove that possesion and beautiful passing does not win football matches, scoring does.


by Guardian Chalkboards

Clichy’s role has been strong where the critics are harshest. He plays the ball up and down his flank well, completing far more passes than Evra in the United match, and hardly missing a target in his passing play. Clichy completed twice as many passes in the 2-0 loss to Chelsea, tallying a total of 50, in comparison to a mere 26 in Arsenal’s last victory over Chelsea in 2008. If pundits choose to criticize Arsenal’s style of play, he cannot be at fault for this mid season massacre.


by Guardian Chalkboards

However, if critics were to accept Arsenal’s style and find the one weak link that caused the chain to snap-Clichy is a likely candidate. The player who Allows Nani and Drogba to flick a ball past you (while not uncommon due to Nani and Drogba’s world class talent) is the player who fails to meet defensive standards of a squad that are trained to disallow there opponents time and space.

The French full back should, at the very least null any attack from the right forward or right winger, let alone press forward for his own teams attack. But Clichy fails to do both, allowing Chelsea and Manchester United forwards to trample him and failing to complete any crosses from a wide position. With no Bendtner, Eduardo, or Van Persie to head home his crosses, Clichy’s role in the squad seems impotent.

If the Professor is still building a young team that needs time to mature, he may want to choose a left back that has the potential to intercept top class opponents rather than Clichy, who used to appear to have the potential. Understudy of London’s best left back for the past 5 years, Clichy took over Cole’s abandoned role with much promise, youthful enthusiasm, and without a stitch of greed (something his mentor could not downturn).

A very long sideline spell may have done the worst to Clichy, who now plays as if he is any other 24 year old defender. He follows the managers tactics but does nothing more.

It’s not every day a manager gets to hand pick his squad from all of Europe’s young talent pool, unless of course you are Arsene Wenger. Just as he sat down with Clichy’s parents in Toulouse, the Professor will need to sit down with another set of cautious parents and convince them that their son will be the next great Arsenal star.

Media

Apparantly I’m Clean on Twitter

1 Comment 26 November 2009

Having said that, I feel like I could be a bit nicer on the most popular social networking tool. I tend to yell, virtually yell that is.

How much do you cuss on Twitter?

Created by Oatmeal

I’m An Idiot

Technology

I’m An Idiot

0 Comments 17 November 2009

This post was originally called “Me Vs. Lacie Tech Support,” however after weeks of this event happening, I realized how stupid and idiotic I acted, thus the new name of this post. Here’s what went down:

Continue Reading

Self

Blogging Has Sucked For Me

0 Comments 14 November 2009

I’ve never been able to get into the blogging thing. But I’ve been trying for MONTHS. I guess that isn’t that long…but now I realize that the entire time I was creating different blogs I was focusing on the wrong aspects.

Continue Reading

The Resident Hometown-Team Complex

Sport

The Resident Hometown-Team Complex

1 Comment 14 November 2009

It’s that all too familiar time of year. The Red Sox are the “October team” pushing their way to victory in the MLB playoffs. Last year at this time I was only a few months into college in Boston, and the Sox were tied 3-3 in the ALCS series versus

Continue Reading

Confessions of a Barista

Self

Confessions of a Barista

0 Comments 14 November 2009

I spent the past few days pondering whether I am experienced enough to write about a job at Starbucks. Let’s face it, I’ve been there a week; I don’t even know how to make a salted caramel signature hot chocolate. Perhaps  what is more

Continue Reading

Fitness

Run For Your Life!

2 Comments 14 November 2009

You kneel down and turn the lock dial three times around, then once left, stop. Back to the right, stop. You are focused enough to feel the click of the lock; then you swiftly open the locker. You strip down to your boxers and feel the chill of

Continue Reading

College

Emerson College=Gay Friendly.

0 Comments 14 November 2009

It’s not everyday I find myself scouting the internet for information on my own college. Today I did though, and I came across an article written in July 2008 that announced the Princeton Review has awarded Emerson the title of, “the Most Gay-Friendly College.”

Continue Reading

Waiting for the Change, Commander

Politics

Waiting for the Change, Commander

0 Comments 14 November 2009

~Originally posted on November 5, 2008~

It’s the day after election day. The winner is Barack Obama and the campaign of “Change You Can Believe In” has proved victorious.

Continue Reading

Media, Politics

CNN? More like CEN!

0 Comments 14 November 2009

The coverage of the 2008 Presidential election was like no other, we can all admit that.

The technology blew away viewers under the age of 60. As for the rest of the viewers, well, they weren’t so fortunate,

Continue Reading

Playing

Video: Park Street Montage

Added on 11 December 2009

More Videos

  • Video: Park Street MontageVideo: Park Street Montage
  • Video: Guitar Hero SatireVideo: Guitar Hero Satire
  • Looking Inside the Baby’s MindLooking Inside the Baby’s Mind
  • The Confessional: Documentary ShortThe Confessional: Documentary Short

Video Playlist

First project from Video Field Production at Emerson College. Summer 2009 Video Projects: Park Street Montage/July 2009/Montage/Project 1 Inside the Baby’s Mind/July 2009/Documentary/Project 2 The Confessional/August 2009/ Narrative Documentary/Project 3

Photos on flickr

My Tumblr Feed

  • Patting myself on the back

    After finishing Matt taibbi’s great derangement, I feel so validated about my attitude toward politics. 

    There are certain beliefs I have about politics that people easily dismiss because they come off nihilistic, overly negative, and well, easy to dismiss. I have, since 2008, believed:

    1. The American political system is solely a business of businessmen, with money the number 1 priority, always.
    2. American foreign involvement in war or occupation in third world nations will never stop, it is embedded into the economy and always will be.
    3. The candidates are the same, other than small social issue debates. Both Democrats and Republicans support the war regardless of what they say, and the President has little power to make drastic changes to a system that already produces massive wealth for the upper class.

    In The Great Derangement Taibbi explores American politics and the right wing religious culture, only to discover that everything in this country can be whittled down to one key concept: $

    So when people argue with me about NOT voting for the candidate who will bring “CHANGE,” or try and make me feel like an asshole for not partaking in the hype/buildup/debate or the 08 election, I can now simply say- you are not on my level on knowledge and understanding.

    You don’t have a choice, you don’t win, and you can’t change it. You live in a terrible country (unless you like both buying new products and working 9-5).

    07/29/10

  • Here I have a confession to make. It’s not something that’s easy to explain, but here goes. After two days of nearly constant religious instruction, songs, worship, and praise— two days that for me meant an unending regimen of forced and fake responses— a funny thing started to happen to my head. There is a transformational quality in these external demonstrations of faith and belief. The more you shout out praising the Lord, singing along to those awful acoustic tunes, telling people how blessed you feel, and so on, the more a sort of mechanical Christian skin starts to grow all over your real self. Even if you’re a degenerate Rolling Stone reporter inwardly chuckling and busting on the whole scene-even if you’re intellectually enraged by the ignorance and arrogant prejudice flowing from the mouth of a terminal ambition case like Phil Fortenberry— outwardly you’re swaying to the gospel and singing and praising and acting the part, and those outward ministrations assume a kind of sincerity in themselves. And at the same time, that “inner you” begins to get tired of the whole spectacle and sometimes forgets to protest—in my case checking out into baseball reveries and other daydreams while the outer me did the “work” of singing and praising. At any given moment, which one is the real you?
    Matt Taibbi, The Great Derangement

    07/27/10

  • I spent saturday night doing what I do best: Analyzing Football

    What I learned from watching…

    Arsenal 49 Unbeaten DVD:
    Robert Pires is pronounced (roe bear peer es).
    Pires was a beast. His goals were all one of a kind, regardless of the fact they were 7 years old.
    Thierry Henry can rip a free kick, but…not anymore. In his prime he was much more advantageous.
    The Premier League has changed SIGNIFICANTLY throughout the Noughties. (Already knew this, but reminded again that only recently did the match venues become such blockbuster and media smothered events).

    Euro 2004 Final Portugal v Greece:
    Cristiano Ronaldo IS a crybaby. I had only seen him cry at the CL 2008 final, and his face was in the ground. There was a small feeling of guilt every time I called him a cry baby or a wuss, because I had never seen tears glisten down his Madeira-tan cheeks. In this match, he cries…hardcore. Lots of sobbing. And whining. Also- he is an arm flailing sore loser throughout (even though he came on as a sub in Portugal’s 1 nil loss.) Immediately after Greece score, Ronaldo (only 19 at the time) rips a wasteful effort from 25 yards. Typical.

    Portugal play dirty.

    Otto Rehhagel’s career was quite a roller coaster, his second greatest success coming with Greece’s defensive & tactical performance in Euro 04, his greatest was the creation of Werder Bremen as a European powerhouse and rival to Bayern and Hamburg. In between however he was laughed out of Munich for being a country boy and unsuccessful as manager of Kaiserslautern.


    07/18/10


Follow Me


Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes

© 2009 Tom Smith Hearts. Powered by Wordpress.

Wordpress themes by WooThemes - Premium Wordpress Themes