Saturday’s midday fixture should have been a tale of a dramatic late equaliser from
Unfortunately, the 2-2 draw was marred by the terrible injury sustained by Arsenals new Brazilian born Croatian striker Eduardo da Silva. The tackle by
First of all, I would like to wish Eduardo all the best and I hope his recovery goes well. The pictures of his leg break were extremely disturbing, so much so that only Match of the Day showed them during their analysis of the game. In a rather cathartic way I had wanted to see it as everyone had been banging on about it all day, but now I have I wish to erase it from my memory.
Hopefully Eduardo will grace a football pitch again, especially having just landed his dream move to the Premier League leaders. He had just begun to find his feet in the Premiership and form a deadly partnership with Emmanuel Adebayor. He will now miss the rest of the season, as well as
The reaction to this injury has been huge but it is hard to justify what Arsene Wenger said about Martin Taylor. Wenger initially called for
However, I do agree with one comment he made when he said that the incident followed an increasingly used tactic and mentality by his opponents that “to beat Arsenal you have to kick Arsenal.” I do think that this is the perception of many teams in the Premiership, and Arsenal do get roughed up from time to time.
Don’t get me wrong, I don’t want football to become a non-contact sport. I just feel that Arsenal have become such as masterful side at times that managers and players may feel the only way to stop them is to boot them up in the air. This mentality could cause players to become excessively aggressive against the Gunners and maybe that played a part in this unfortunate incident.
The other reaction which caught my eye was that of
“I don't think you can send a player off for that. That's football. It can happen. It is an accident. Tiny didn't go in two-footed. He didn't lunge. He didn't dive in. Everyone knows what Tiny is like. He is such a nice bloke. He has not got a malicious bone in his body so it was very harsh for the ref to see the broken leg and then send him off because of that.”
This did interest me as I think Kelly has missed the point somewhat. I accept that the tackle was neither two-footed nor a lunge, and possibly the horrific injury prompted referee Mike Deane to pull out his red card. I am also confident that Martin Taylor did not go into that tackle with the intent to cause Eduardo any injury; I just think the striker has been terribly unlucky to suffer such a break.
However,
What I hope is that
The best we can hope for from this terrible event is that Eduardo can get back playing football and try and add to his 12 goals in 30 appearances for the Gunners, and that players start to realise the consequences of the increasingly nasty, high and dangerous tackles that have put a cloud over what has been an interesting and exciting season thus far.
3 comments:
nice article tibsy, totally right about the tackle, as soon as i heard about it i could not get on youtube quick enough to look at it - the dark side of human nature hey?..how often you doing these bad boys? may start my own, 'adam muses...'
Good work, Tibs. You make an interesting case although I personally take slight issue with Wenger's "you have to kick Arsenal..." claim. Perhaps teams do adopt a physical approach against Arsenal but in the main their opponents act entirely legally, despite Wenger's claims to the contrary (Allardyce and Hughes for instance know precisely how to frustrate Wenger in such a manner and take points off Arsenal in the process).
In the main, Arsenal play in the right manner - excellent football played where it should be, on the floor. However, we have seen over the years the Gunners push the rules of the game to their extremities. Wenger's team are no strangers to the red card and we witnessed the other week against Man United a petulant, and dare I say it, a rather malicious side to Arsenal which I feel has been a consistent feature of Wenger's sides throughout his reign. Indeed, Christiano Ronaldo is targeted on a weekly basis, but seldom do either he or his manager make a great song and dance about it. However, I think I speak for everyone when I say that the last thing we want to see is players sustaining horrific injuries like we saw on Saturday. Get well soon Eduardo.
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