As yet another of Arsenal's most talismanic players departs for
supposedly greener pastures, fans of the North London club around the
world are today faced with a somewhat hollow feeling that's become all
too familiar during recent summer transfer windows.
Last year it
was the beloved Cesc Fabregas and the not-so-beloved Samir Nasri who led
the exodus, to Barcelona and Manchester City respectively. This year of
course it's Dutch goal-scoring sensation Robin van Persie who has
departed the club and gone to play in the colors of Manchester United.
Losing
van Persie who at times almost single-handedly kept the Gunners afloat
with his 35 goals last season, to one of Arsenal's direct rivals is a
bitter, bitter pill to swallow.
The club hierarchy at Arsenal will of course claim they had no choice in the matter.
After
all, van Persie is 29 and with one year left on his contract, meaning
he could walk for nothing at the end of this season. And certainly it
could be argued that 24 million pounds for an injury-prone striker who
is nearly 30 and has only one truly notable season under his belt is a
tidy parcel of business for Arsenal.
But Arsenal's continued
success at running itself based on a self-sustaining model offers little
comfort to the club's fans who've now seen the Gunner's trophy drought
stretched to seven years. Meanwhile the gap has widened between Arsenal
and monied clubs like City and Chelsea, Tottenham have emerged as title
contenders, and Manchester United have just prized away their best
player, something that would have seemed inconceivable five years ago.
Feelings
today must surely be mixed. Obviously, the situation does not seem so
dire as it did one year ago when Arsene Wenger let Fabregas and Nasri
go, claiming the club would do just fine without them. Then it took an
8-2 thrashing by Manchester United to force the manager to dip into the
transfer market.
This
year at least the seemingly inevitable loss of Arsenal's best player
was tempered by the addition of some proven attacking talent to the
club: the German striker Lukas Podolski, the French forward Olivier
Giroud, and Spanish attacking midfielder Santi Cazorla have all been
acquired this summer.
There are also rumors still circulating that
the Gunners will take Nuri Sahin on loan from Real Madrid and buy
Fernando Llorente from Bilbao.
Even with van Persie gone, it's not
difficult to look at the Arsenal squad that's currently taking shape
with at least some cautious optimism. Obviously there are few players in
the world one could replace Robin van Persie with.
But in his
acquisition of Podolski, Giroud, and Cazorla, Wenger has at least given
us some indication of where the goals that last season came from van
Persie might come from in the upcoming campaign.
Still at the moment, it all amounts to a spoon-full of sugar in a jar of bitter medicine.
Arsenal
fans must wonder why it was that their beloved captain Robin van Persie
couldn't look on Wenger's new acquisitions with the same sense of
hopefulness that they did. Was there never a moment when the prolific
Dutch frontman stopped and thought "you know maybe this work?"
At
the same time they are faced with the reality that the club hierarchy,
rather than doing everything possible to bring a title to the
trophy-starved Emirates by holding onto their best player, seemingly
prefers to cover its financial bases by selling him to a direct rival.