
Arsenal crisis talk called premature by man who starts Arsenal crisis talk, as Thierry Henry says seven âtellingâ words; we just donât know which ones.
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Thierry Henry identifiesâĻ
Mediawatch had to laugh when we saw the actual top story on the MailOnline football site:
Thierry Henry tells Arsenal theyâre not challenging for the title and identifies what the Gunners are ânot good enoughâ at, with concerns ahead of trip to Chelsea
First, obviously Henry did not tell Arsenal anything of the sort; he told CBS Sports Golazo.
Second, weâre pretty sure that Arsenal already know they are not currently challenging for the title; they can access Premier League tables just like Thierry Henry.
And as for âwhat the Gunners are ânot good enoughâ atââĻaccording to Henry on this particularly astute occasion, that is getting results away from home.
And as Arsenal have won only one of their last six away games â against Preston â we suspect that Arsenal will not be shocked by this insight that has been âidentifiedâ by Henry.
In fact, we would go as far as to say that they would not be remotely interested in anodyne comments that could have been uttered by anybody with access to a list of results and a Premier League table.
But still, itâs definitely the biggest story in football right now.
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SEVEN!
Taken from the same quotes, hereâs the take from football.london:
Thierry Henry makes telling seven-word Arsenal prediction as Mikel Arteta demand made
This is some excellent trolling because there really is no obvious âseven-word Arsenal predictionâ in Henryâs comments. And itâs never mentioned once in the story that there are seven important words. So we can only guess.
Narrowing it down to a prediction, when Henry was asked how Sundayâs game v Chelsea would go, he answered: âI donât know what weâre going toâĻâ
There is more but we stopped at seven words.
So it could also be âthe results are not good enough toâ or âI donât think itâs good enough butâ or âletâs see what happens against Chelsea. Iâ.
Do any of those qualify as a âtelling seven-word predictionâ?  Perhaps itâs âitâll be extremely difficult because thereâs tooâ or âI donât see two teams collapsing. Thatâs.â?
Or it could be that some bod at Reach â the same one that suggested that all journalists should produce at least eight stories a day, perhaps? â has decided that seven is the magic, telling number, and no f***er is as pedantic as Mediawatch to actually count them.
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Crisis? What crisis?
Over at the Daily Telegraph, Luke Edwards is constructing a straw red-and-white man and is busy tearing it downâĻ
There will always be a temptation at Arsenal to overreact to any sort of setback and there are bound to be those who wish to use a second successive defeat for Mikel Artetaâs side to provoke that sort of response.
You will see and hear all sorts of damning assessments over the next 24 hours. Words like crisis, ineptitude and failure will fly around.
Mediawatch has Google at its fingertips (itâs very good, you know) and the âArsenal crisisâ query brought up two recent results:
âNo âmassive crisisâ â Martin Keown insists Arsenal âway betterâ despite UEFA Champions League loss to Inter Milanâ â TNT Sports.
âYes, Arsenal lost â but they dominated Inter and this is just a blip, not a crisisâ â Telegraph.
So far, the only real talk of an Arsenal âcrisisâ is coming from Martin Keown and Luke Edwards saying there is no crisis.
So what of âArsenal ineptitudeâ? No recent Google results.
And âArsenal failureâ? The only thing close is this â âInter Milan vs Arsenal: Mikel Artetaâs side fail to rediscover their sparkâ â from The Times.
In fact, we have taken a good look across the football media â itâs our job â and the Arsenal coverage largely boils down to âsomethingâs not quite right but Martin Odegaardâs return will solve a lot of thatâ.
But Edwards was not just talking about the mainstream media; he predicted âthere will be an explosion of noise on social media, as people launch themselves into the sort of frenzied inquest that trails in the wake of a third defeat in six gamesâ.
So we searched âArsenal crisisâ on X. The top result:
âYes, Arsenal lost â but they dominated Inter and this is just a blip, not a crisisâ
âī¸ @LukeEdwardsTele#TelegraphFootball | #Gunners
â Telegraph Football (@TeleFootball) November 7, 2024
Crisis? Ineptitude? Failure? Those words belong to Edwards and pretty much nobody else.
There is a hint of #ArtetaOut trending, but social media has always had its idiots and those who shout loudest are the biggest pricks with the bluest ticks, which is how we think the old proverb goes.
Itâs a waste of time addressing those idiots so we presume Edwards is talking to the ordinary fans, none of whom will be seeking the sack of a brilliant if obviously flawed manager. And if they were, they would not be consulting the Telegraphâs resident Newcastle man first.
So, yes, Arsenal lost again, but take a deep breath. Do not be the panic-button presser or the attention-seeking ranter.
Excellent advice, Luke. Maybe next time take your own deep breath.
MORE ARSENAL COVERAGE ON F365
đ Mikel Arteta proves Martin Odegaard more important to Arsenal than him after Inzaghi lesson
đ Mikel Arteta slams referee over Mikel Merino âpunchâ as Arsenal boss explains half-time hook
đ Seven Arsenal signings made by Edu who could join Nottingham Forest include ÂŖ106m flops
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Oh what a shameâĻ
So this might not be the worst piece of churnalism you will see today but this is a fine example of the lengths certain publishers will go to find a headline that could possibly bang on an aggregator or social media. This is a headline made for Google Discover, where clickbait headlines can be rewarded with ludicrous traffic.
Chelsea boss Enzo Maresca admits three Blues stars canât play together â âI feel a shameâ
Sounds like such a massive admission that we are surprised we have not seen it elsewhere but on Mirror football.
And the article even begins: âEnzo Maresca admits he has been left feeling âshamefulâ after failing to fit stars worth ÂŖ135m into his Chelsea team.â
The problem? Enzo Maresca did not admit any such thing.
Hereâs what he did say: âI feel a shame for Joao and I would like to give him more minutes in the Premier League, but we need defensive balance and we cannot play with Joao, Cole [Palmer], Christo [Nkunku]. Iâd like to put all of them on the pitch but then you need to defend, and you need the right balance.â
Clearly, he means that he feels sorry for Joao Felix; English is not his first language and âItâs a shame for Joaoâ has come out as âI feel a shame for Joaoâ.
I know, you know and the Mirrorâs Daniel Orme definitely knows thatâs not the same thing as âfeeling a shameâ and absolutely nowhere near the same thing as feeling âshamefulâ.
Is Maresca going to sue because they said he feels âshamefulâ? No. Does it hurt anybody? No. Is it essentially deceitful and indicative of the malaise in journalism as a whole that makes us feel a bit f***ing depressed? God yes.






