Who Are The Favourites for The Premier League Title? Chelsea, United, City or Arsenal?

After 5 games of the campaign so far, and that horrific opening day of the season against Aston Villa, Arsenal find themselves top of the Premier League with 12 points.

Tottenham Hotspur are second on goal difference, Manchester City, Chelsea and Liverpool are on 10 points and Manchester United find themselves in 8th position, on 7 points.

So 5 games in, who are the favourites for the Premier League?

Before the season began, Chelsea were installed as favourites with the bookies and Manchester City second. Manchester United were third favourites while Arsenal were well down in fourth, being around 14/1 if I remember correctly (which I thought was fair at the time but I’m sure those odds have gone down a little with the signing of Mesut Ozil).

At the time of writing, the current odds for the Premier League title are as follows:

Manchester City – 7/4
Chelsea – 3/1
Manchester United – 9/2
Arsenal – 6/1
Tottenham Hotspur – 10/1
Liverpool – 14/1

And they all seem fair enough at this moment in time.

Manchester City have the strongest squad in the Premier League and look determined to win the title back after losing out to Manchester United last season. And their performance on Sunday was one of hunger and intent, and it was clear they really wanted to send out a message to the rest of the Premier League.

Chelsea were the easy season favourites but their form has dipped recently and their performances have been less than convincing. They lost against Everton last week, and made tough work of Fulham at the weekend. There seems to be a bit of funny business with the striker situation as well, with some not convinced that Samuel Eto’o or WIllian were actually Jose Mourinho signings. It was obvious Mourinho wanted Rooney as the spearhead of his new Chelsea attack and with Juan Mata out in the cold, there seems to be a small amount of discontent at the Bridge. Of course, Jose Mourinho is a born winner and his track record is the best in the business, so underestimating Chelsea would be extremely foolish. If Chelsea are struggling now, then what will they be like once they start firing on all cylinders?

Then we have Manchester United. David Moyes has had a tough run in already this season, having played Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester City in his first 5 games. While some rate David Moyes and the job he did at Everton, I completely disagree with that. I know Everton supporters who were glad he left because his brand of football was boring and tactically he was very limited. It is interesting to note that he has never won a big game. He failed to win a single Merseyside Derby in his 11 year career at Everton, and last season I remember this vividly, he failed to beat Wigan Athletic at home in the FA Cup. Victory would have seen a clear path to the final as the next opponents were Millwall in the semi-finals. And then he had the Champions League Qualifier against Villarreal in the 2005-2006 season and lost that too.

So it was hardly surprising he has failed to win any of the “big” games this season. Against Chelsea he ran out of ideas, against Liverpool he had no answer and the Manchester City game was a shambles. Like Chelsea, if they go a goal down then they don’t know how to respond. A lot was made about the absence of Robin van Persie yesterday but with a powerful midfield with Yaya Toure and Fernandinho, playing with Carrick and Fellaini and not with a midfield three was suicidal. But then again maybe I’m being too simplistic.

And we have Tottenham Hotspur. They sold Gareth Bale and brought in a lot of quality players. They have yet to gel but once they do then they will be a very good side. Do they have the mental capacity to mount a real title challenge? AVB was disastrous at Chelsea and bottled 4th place last season, but he has had success with Porto – although the merits of that success are under dispute as his road to Europa League success was relatively easy (he didn’t have to face a single side from Germany, Italy, France, England or Holland). I think they best that can hope for is a Top 4 finish, and that is being optimistic.

Liverpool are an interesting side. They bought a lot of players over the summer and they have been solid (Southampton aside) this season. They have definitely improved on last season but I can’t see them finishing in the Top 4. They have Suarez to come back and he will improve the team, but will he be as effective as he was last season? If he’s looking for a move away in the January Transfer Window then who knows.

Then our beloved Arsenal. How will they fair this season? Since losing to Tottenham Hotspur last season (when AVB famously said we were in a “negative spiral of results”) we have played 18 games, won 15, drawn 2 and lost 1 – which puts the Aston Villa result into perspective. Like it or not, our form has been excellent and is that of a title challenging team.

But the $64,000 question is can we do it?

At the moment, the signs look positive. We have a settled squad and have only a couple of new players (and even then one of them used to play for us) to get used to the “Arsenal way”. Defensively we look better than we have for a long time (with Sagna an excellent deputy centre back) and cover in the full back positions. In midfield we have a lot of top quality options, when everyone is fit (Arteta, Wilshere, Ramsey, Rosicky, Santi, Flamini, Diaby, Oxlade-Chamberlain) and in terms of attackers we have Ozil, Theo, Ryo and Oxlade-Chamberlain. The only position where we are a “little light” is upfront, with Giroud and Podolski our only recognised strikers (I don’t even want to think about having to use TGSTEL).

A lot has been made of the management changes at Chelsea, Manchester City and Manchester United. Personally, I only believe the team that will suffer from this is Manchester United. They are incapable of winning any big games which can be decisive in the title run in. They won’t have any problems winning the smaller games so they will still be up there or thereabouts. Pellegrini is a manager who likes attacking football and they will entertain this season – they have a formidable squad and will always have an excellent defence marshalled by Vincent Kompany, who is immense. Playing the way they are, they will win most of their games. Chelsea, are a team that could struggle but this is Jose Mourinho that we’re talking about. By hook or by crook, he will find a way to start bulldozing teams and getting the results he needs. Don’t be fooled over the talk of finding a “new style” of playing football – this man is in the results business and is very good at it.

For me, it is a 3 horse race between Manchester City, Chelsea and Arsenal. Manchester United look off the pace to me, and I don’t think Tottenham and Liverpool can sustain any real title challenge.

So what do you think? Leave your opinions in the comments section below.

Mesut Özil Shows His True Worth As Arsenal Top The League (w/ Player Ratings)

Arsenal (3) – (1) Stoke City
Ramsey 5′, Mertesacker 36′, Sagna 73′
The Emirates Stadium, London
Barclays Premier League

Today’s game against Stoke City marked the home debut of record signing of Mesut Özil, and boy didn’t he show us what he brings to the side.

Much has been made of Arsene Wenger’s summer transfer policy which has seen Yaya Sanogo, Mathieu Flamini, Emiliano Viviano and Mesut Özil join the club. Some supporters have said that we really needed another striker, either a player who is more clinical than Olivier Giroud or at least someone as cover if the big Frenchman gets injured.

With Lukas Podolski injured and Nicklas Bendtner our only backup, that would seem to be a valid argument. But in his 79 minute performance, Mesut Özil showed exactly why he was brought to the club.

His performance wasn’t a massive one, one where he dominated the game from start to finish. But what he did show was his class and more importantly, how he can fire this team to the heights of competing for the Premier League title.

He played just under 80 minutes and assisted all 3 Arsenal goals. The first from a freekick, which was saved and Ramsey scored the rebound. Then he floated in a corner for Per Mertesacker to score a tidy back header and Bacary Sagna scored the third Arsenal goal with a looping header from another Özil freekick.

While Giroud will be given the responsibility to score the majority of goals this season, Özil has shown that he can make things happen and help setup goals for any member of the team.

And that is a valuable asset to have. He will no doubt create many opportunities over the season for Giroud but making chances for other players in the team is just as, if not more important. You will remember his clever back heel pass for Gibbs against Marseille midweek – giving any player in the team a chance to score improves our team no end.

Stoke were solid as they usually are, putting their boot in as you would expect. But Arsenal mixed it up and showed they can score goals from set-pieces. With Özil orchestrating the corners and freekicks we have another string to our bow. Theo used to take that responsibility and did a decent job but with Özil taking the set-pieces we have that extra threat in the attacking third.

We’ve seen games like this in the past end in frustrating draws or even worse, defeats. We struggled to make any clear chances from open play but with the outstanding quality of Özil from freekicks and corners we didn’t have to.

As it stands, Arsenal top the league after 5 Premier League games, and by two points to boot (this was written before the Cardiff v Tottenham game, which we can all hope they lose). And who would have thought that was even possible after the home game against Aston Villa?

Player Ratings:

Wojciech Szczesny: 6/10
Wasn’t needed to make any massive saves but did well well called upon. Was left exposed by the defence for the goal and didn’t have much chance with that.

Bacary Sagna: 7/10
Very solid defensively and did well in the attacking third as well. Scored with a brilliant looping header which killed the game and secured all 3 points.

Laurent Koscielny: 7/10
Made some excellent interceptions and coped well with Jones and limited his threat throughout the game. “Almost” scored from the Mertesacker header but succeeded in putting off Begovic enough for Arsenal to take the lead.

Per Mertesacker: 8/10
Real captains performance and was solid for the whole game. Organised the defence well and was a threat from set-pieces. Was unlucky from his first header from a corner but scored with his second chance and that gave Arsenal a valuable lead.

Kieran Gibbs: 6/10
Was solid and kept Nzonzi relatively quiet. Made some good crossed early on and linked up well with Wilshere and Özil on the left.

Mathieu Flamini: 8/10
Outstanding and made some excellent and vital interceptions. Full of running, positionally sound and made some great tackles. In a game which was tight, Flamini kept the threat from Stoke at bay. Never shy to organise the team and becoming a massive player for Arsenal.

Jack WIlshere: 6/10
Struggled at times with the physicality of Stoke’s midfield and couldn’t get his passing going for large spells. Seemed off the pace at times and should have done better with a lay off to Giroud in the first half.

Aaron Ramsey: 7/10
Was all over the pitch and linked the midfield and attack really well. Fed in Özil whenever he could and once again, was in the right place and the right time for his goal and took it with supreme confidence. The man bang in form at the moment.

Serge Gnabry: 7/10
Came in for Theo Walcott who was ill but was excellent I thought. Not phased one bit making his only second Premier League appearance in an Arsenal shirt but held the ball well, made the right passes and coped well with the physical Stoke approach.

Mesut Özil: 8/10
Made his home debut under a massive weight of expectation and didn’t disappoint. Linked play well and while he didn’t take hold of the game or dominate it like some expected, made 3 goals for the team. The assist master lived up to his reputation.

Olivier Giroud: 7/10
Found it difficult against the physical Robert Huth and the massive cunt that is Ryan Shawcunt but did well overall. Won several freekicks and won a few of the phyiscal duels when asked. Had a couple of half chances but didn’t really have a clear chance to score. But a solid performance from the front man.

Florentino Perez is a F*cking Idiot

The Real Madrid president Florentino Perez has come out yet again to talk about Mesut Ozil, in an attempt to deflect any responsibility of selling the player with the highest assist rate in Europe.

Cristiano Ronaldo, Sergio Ramos, Sami Khedira, Joachim Low amongst other high profile names in football have expressed their surprise and dismay at Ozil being allowed to leave Real Madrid. Even the Real Madrid fans were upset; reportedly chanting that Ozil was not for sale during Gareth Bale’s unveiling at the Bernabeu.

So after talking about Ozil’s personal life (classy) he’s now come out and said:

“The player asked to leave and nobody here should be upset about it. He couldn’t handle the pressure at Madrid,”

Okay Perez, let’s go through your statement shall we?

He had (and still has) the highest number of assists in Europe. He has played in the Champions League, World Cup and European Championships. He’s won La Liga, the Copa del Rey and been in the Euro 2012 Team of the Year and had the most assist in the 2013 World Cup.

I would be inclined to ask what the hell are they smoking over there at the Bernabeu?

If that wasn’t ridiculous enough, Perez had this to say about Jose Mourinho:

“He’s a coach who gave Madrid a lot, we’ve taken a real stride forward because of him, especially in Europe.

“I like him and he did great things for the club. His values and way of seeing things is the right one.”

Right, so this was the Jose Mourinho that caused loads of friction in the board room, dropped Real Madrid favourite Iker Casillas and had issues with some of the big names at the club such as Jose Mourinho and even Ronaldo towards the end of his Real Madrid reign. He also engineered a move away from Madrid so he could join Chelsea.

Seriously, Perez is one massive c*nt.

Why Thierry Henry Is The Greatest Player To Ever Grace The Game

There are only two things in this world I will never understand; If there is a God, then why does he let bad things happen? And how did Thierry Henry never win the World Player of the Year Award?

My Arsenal bias aside, for me, Thierry Henry is one of the most underrated players ever to play the game and one of the greatest ever as far as I’m concerned.

In terms of pure goalscoring at the top level, Thierry is near on untouchable. He smashed Arsenal’s goalscoring record set by the great Ian Wright, and has won every major international honour going and every league title in every league he’s played in. He’s also won The Champions League, countless FA Cups, Copa del Reys, and even a UEFA Super Cup and Fifa World Club Cup to boot.

Added to that, he’s France’s all time top goalscorer, third in the list of all time Premier League goalscorers (only behind Alan Shearer and Andrew Cole) and the highest scoring foreigner to play in England. He’s also got a shed load of personal awards and accolades, and was voted the greatest foreign player ever to play in the Premier League.

And his goalscoring record for Arsenal is bordering on the unbelievable. His first season in England (the one where players need to “settle” into the league) he notched up 26 goals in all competitions. After that, he scored 22, 32, 32, 39, 30, 33 and 12 in the next 7 campaigns.

On paper then, Henry’s record is flawless.

But it’s not just records where the king excels. His recent comeback to Arsenal has been an emotional roller coaster for Arsenal fans, and something of a fairytale for supporters and the man himself.

Fernando Torres, a man with 18 games and 0 goals (I believe, I can’t be bothered to check) was bought for £50 million only a year ago. Thierry Henry, a man who has been away from England for 6 years has had a total playing time of 96 minutes, and scored 3 goals – 2 of them dramatic match winners.

Have legends like Zidane, Maradona or Pele managed to do this? The simple answer is no.

And besides all that, it is Thierry’s level of consistency at the highest level which makes him the greatest for me. He has played 17 seasons at the top top level – for Monaco, Juventus, Arsenal and Barcelona – and raked up 316 goals in 4 of the best leagues in Europe. This gives him an average of 19 goals per season, which is hugely impressive in itself. Take the goals per season average just for the Arsenal and Barcelona campaigns then the average is even more impressive, giving exactly 25 goals per season. And that includes his injury-ravaged final seasons at both clubs.

You have players like Messi, Maradona, Ronaldo, Pele, Zidane, Platini, Best, etc. who could be considered the greatest ever but have any of them maintained a 17 year consistency like Thierry Henry?

And Henry has lit up so many matches and given the fans so many special moments it’s hard to count how many there have been.

My final argument for Henry being the greatest is that he won the league several times, was part of the team that went unbeaten a whole season and won other honours with Arsenal. Arsenal are a fantastic side with a beautiful history, but it’s not unreasonable to say we are not one of the most, how can I put this, naturally biggest football clubs. We are competing at the top level because of Arsene Wenger but we don’t have the bottomless pit of money other teams such as Real Madrid, Barcelona, Manchester United and others have.

So in that sense, Thierry’s accomplishments are even more outstanding. He didn’t join a massive club when he arrived so to do all he has done is all the more impressive. He didn’t achieve his honours and records with a team such as Barcelona, Real Madrid or Manchester United.

I’m not saying players like Messi, Ronaldinho, Zidane and Ronaldo aren’t great, but it is much easier to achieve honours and accolades with a more prestigious football club with the infrastructure to bring in the worlds best players.

You might think I’m crazy, but Thierry Henry is not just the king of Arsenal, but he is the king of football.

Cue the abuse!

Last Minute Edit: I’ve also just checked and of the all-time greatest goalscorers Thierry Henry has the best goals to goals per game ratio, at 0.68, compared to the next best of Alan Shearer who’s record is 0.59 goals per game.

A Tough Night in Marseille (w/ Player Ratings)

Marseille (1) – (2) Arsenal
Walcott 65′, Ramsey 84′
Stade Velodrome, Marseille
Champions League Group Stage

Arsenal did well to win the game and get through what was a tough night in Marseille.

I haven’t seen much of Marseille but from what they showed last night, they’re a very physical side. They go into challenges 110% and I did think some of the “tackles” they made were well over the top, especially for Europe. The incident when Mathieu Flamini was literally thrown to the ground was unbelievable and how the referee didn’t blow for that was amazing. The referee on the whole was okay, but in trying to “let the game flow” failed to pick up on some blatant fouls.

For large portions of the game, Marseille were the better team, without really threatening until the second half. We huffed and we puffed but couldn’t get our rhythm going and it was one of those nights where we had to dig in deep to get a result, and that’s exactly what we did.

The home side did well to keep us at bay and they were compact, quick and strong into the challenges. We struggled to impose ourselves on the game in an attacking sense and on 65 minutes Theo Walcott scored what was a really fantastic goal. Gibbs linked well with Wilshere on the left hand side, sent in a decent cross which Morel failed to clear. The ball seemed to take an eternity to come down but Theo blasted the ball first time into the top corner of the net.

What a volley!

After that, the game opened up and we managed to force a couple of good saves from Mandanda, in particular a shot from Gibbs after a delightful back-heel assist from Mesut Ozil.

On 84 minutes Aaron Ramsey, the man of the moment, surged through the middle of the Marseille midfield and rifled a hard shot low into the net to double our lead and kill off the tie.

But a minute into injury time, Ramsey clipped Andre Ayew in the penalty area and his brother Jordan stepped up and scored a late consolation goal. Replays showed they Ramsey actually nicked the ball first and that Andre Ayew threw himself to the ground without any contact. But Marseille were good at “buying freekicks” all the way through the match so it was hardly a surprise the referee “fell” for it (excuse the pun).

OVerall, it was a very professional performance and a massive 3 points. In a group with Marseille, Napoli and Dortmund, it is vital to get 3 points in the bag if we want to progress to the knockout stages, and in terms of that it is job done.

Bring on Higuain and Napoli in 2 weeks time.

Player Ratings:

Wojciech Szczesny: 7/10
Wasn’t called upon much during the first half but had to make a few important saves in the second and did very well. Looked really solid and very assured at the back. Also came out and collected some crosses with ease. Had no chance with the penalty.

Bacary Sagna: 7/10
Very solid and supported Theo well on the right hand side. Delivered some good crosses and gave as good as he got to a big, physical Marseille side.

Laurent Koscielny: 7/10
Did well against Gignac and restricted the big forwards influence. Made a rash challange early on in the game but was solid for the rest of the game.

Per Mertesacker: 8/10
Had to withstand a lot of pressure from Marseille throughout the game but coped well. Organised the defence well and made some very important tackles and interceptions. Almost scored one of the worst own goals of all time.

Kieran Gibbs: 9/10
Outstanding. Up and down the left hand side all night and created the chance for Theo to score the opener. Almost got on the scoresheet himself and was unlucky not to score after being crowded out by 3 Marseille players. Positionally excellent all night, typified by the awesome goal-line clearance after the Mertesacker and Szczesny mix up.

Mathieu Flamini: 6/10
Seemed a little off the pace but moved the ball around well and organised the team when required. Will be a very important player for us if we continue to struggle with injuries.

Jack Wilshere: 7/10
Full of running, and linked up the midfield and attack well. Popped up everywhere on the pitch and did well against a strong Marseille midfield.

Aaron Ramsey: 8/10
Another assured and excellent performance from the man of the moment. Scored a massively important goal with 5 minutes to go to seal the 3 points. Linked up well with Ozil, Wilshere and Theo and made some excellent tackles. Deserved his goal and he is in the form of his life.

Mesut Ozil: 5/10
Struggled to get into the game as Marseille were quick, powerful and controlled the tempo. Laid off a exquisite back-heel for Gibbs but could impose himself on the game. Struggled with the physical approach from Marseille.

Theo Walcott: 6/10
The enigma that is Theo Walcott. He had the beating of Morel in the first 15 minutes but then was ineffective for the next 50 minutes. He misplaced passes and wasn’t making any kind of positive impact. Then on 65 minutes he smashes in a volley of the highest quality. Excellent goal and one of such importance.

Olivier Giroud: 7/10
Did well to even compete with the power of Marseille’s midfield and defence. Only had on real chance to score which was a header from a corner which he really should have got on target. Linked up play well considering and caused a nuisance up front.