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The Arsenal dressing room seems divided on Mikel Arteta. We don’t even have it, but it has a lot of supporters and detractors from what we know …
Bernd Leno – FOR ARTETA
“I really believe in Bernd. I know what it can give us. We have to adapt to the circumstances; We can’t do everything we want in the market and we have players with value. We had two fantastic goalkeepers and they were both performing very well, but we had to make decisions.
That was Arteta’s explanation for deciding to back Leno by selling Emiliano Martínez to Aston Villa in September. The goalkeeper surely realizes that he owes a debt of gratitude to his coach.
Runar Alex Runarsson – FOR ARTETA
It was barely mustard in Dijon when Arteta pulled it out of the darkness from a bench in the lower half of Ligue One in the summer. Runarsson has been a member of every Arsenal day team since joining and has no obvious reason to resent the boss.
Matt Macey – FOR ARTETA
While there will be understandable frustration at the lack of opportunities, Macey recently noted that Arteta “blew everyone away” when he was appointed as he brought “a new way of training that I have never seen before.” It’s strange to think that a 6-foot-6 goalkeeper has never experienced a center bombardment in practice before.
Héctor Bellerin – FOR THE SPECIES
There will be no Spanish civil war at Arsenal. Bellerin absolutely loves Arteta, who “adopted me when I arrived” at Arsenal and “was like a father to me”. And children never disagree with their parents.
Kieran Tierney – FOR ARTETA
When you work with Ronny Deila and Neil Lennon it probably imbues you with a little more perspective. Tierney plays almost whenever he’s fit and available and we find him the type of person who has silenced all the WhatsApp groups involving David Luiz.
William Saliba – CONTRA ARTETA
Maybe Saliba doesn’t hold a grudge against Arteta for his lack of opportunities at Arsenal, but it wouldn’t be difficult at all to influence him against the Spaniard. I suppose it would take a wild and far-fetched non-negotiable joke to get him to launch into a non-stop 12-minute spiel about his Lego hair.
Socrates – AGAINST ART
Okay, yes.
Gabriel – FOR ARTETA
He’ll support the coach who signed him and starts him for now, but his outlook depends entirely on where he sits on the team bus going forward. It’s too early for Gabriel to have turned against Arteta yet.
Sorry fans, we will get out of this situation. we need you!
– Gabriel Magalhaes (@ biel_m04) December 13, 2020
Rob Holding – FOR ARTETA
There may be some anger at Arteta preventing him from going to a team three places and four points higher in the summer, but Holding cannot ignore that he is playing real soccer games.
Cedric Soares – FOR ARTETA
There may be some anger at Arteta preventing him from competing for the Premier League title, but Cedric also cannot pretend that he will play really meaningful football matches for Southampton. Plus, a four-year contract at 28 generates great loyalty.
Shkodran Mustafi – FOR ART
It is unlikely that one of the players recovered from the perennial cold by Arteta will turn on him so easily. The chances are high that he will side with a former international partner, though.
Calum Chambers – CONTRA ARTETA
He has played only three games for the Spaniard, although that is mainly due to a knee injury he suffered shortly after his arrival.
Pablo Mari – FOR ARTETA
“The first thing is, I think that quick manager changes are not the right thing to do,” he said this month. “I’m going with Mikel until the end of the world.” It sounds pretty supportive.
David Luiz – CONTRA ARTETA
He will do it protest your innocence and issue public denials, but Pepperidge Farm, and Frank Lampard’s five or more immediate predecessors in Chelsea, remember.
David Luiz is the first horse of the business apocalypse.
– Tim Stillman (@Stillberto) December 13, 2020
Sead Kolasinac – CONTRA ARTETA
He hardly plays and is close friends with the unofficial expert on social media from the club’s live session. If the attackers with knives are is not sufficient To dissuade him from protecting Ozil, Spaniard Tim Sherwood poses no threat.
Bukayo Saka – FOR ARTETA
The progression and development could have been natural regardless, but Saka is an England international and a Premier League regular at 19 thanks in large part to Arteta’s influence.
Dani Ceballos – FOR ARTETA
He cited Arteta’s training as one of the factors that prompted his return to Arsenal, and he plays more frequently than most.
Mesut Ozil – CONTRA ARTETA
LOL. A difficult one.
Ainsley Maitland-Niles – CONTRA ARTETA
It has been a tumultuous relationship to say the least. Arteta reinstated Maitland-Niles as a first-team option after Unai Emery ignored him, then froze him shortly before the lockout. Following the return of football, he gradually established himself again as a valued member of the team, but it was widely reported that it was for sale in the summer. Arteta then changed his mind, retained him, fed him a diet made up almost exclusively of Europa League minutes and only let him stretch his legs intermittently on the right or left side.
Thomas Partey – FOR ARTETA
New kid. Happy to be on the side of the teacher and the besieged students. Being pushed onto the field and immediately exacerbating an injury is the kind of flash point that could cause the tide to slowly turn.
Mohamed Elneny – FOR ARTETA
How in Dick’s name was that wonderful performance in the win over Manchester United just a month and a half ago? There are not many teammates playing more regularly.
Elneny shoving Tarkowski in the face is apparently Arsene Wenger’s fault. 😂😂 Souness is a strange guy. #ARSBUR
– Lukeyash (@ LukeAshworth5) December 13, 2020
Joe Willock – CONTRA ARTETA
It can’t be fun watching this shit from the bench. It is even worse now that there is no Europa League for a while to eliminate those frustrations.
Emile Smith Rowe – CONTRA ARTETA
As previously.
Xhaka granite – CONTRA ARTETA
The latest claim is that Xhaka ‘was no longer happy at the club after being used in a variety of different roles since Arteta took over’. Coming from someone who had been booed outside the stadium and seemed sure he would leave before the Spaniard took over and helped rehab his image, that’s a bit rich. Arteta was conveniently annoyed with his abdication of duty against Burnley. Thierry Henry may turn your widescreen back on soon – though you should probably watch what he says if Patrice Evra gets another round of invites.
Alexandre Lacazette – FOR ARTETA
Is this the greatest example of an Arsenal player who owes Arteta his support? Many coaches would have given up on Lacazette much earlier, but Lacazette continues to tweak his system in hopes of getting as much out of the French as possible. You are hardly reciprocating that faith on the field, so one can only assume you are doing it off the field.
Willian – FOR ARTETA
Forget about it: if anyone should be knocking on doors in North London, asking for five minutes to talk about Mikel’s Church, it’s Willian. Arteta approved his three-year contract at silly salaries, excused his breaking the obvious rules in a global pandemic, and continues to overlook shoddy performances when others are eliminated and exiled for much, much less. He and David Luiz must have had some tough conversations, like when your dad mentions that he really really likes Boris Johnson’s chill cut jib.
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang – FOR ARTETA
Now this one is difficult. Three months ago Aubameyang extended his contract because “I believe in Arsenal” because “we have something exciting here” and “the best is yet to come.” Much of that was due to the short-term impact Arteta had on the club. But this season he has brought as many Premier League goals in open play for Arsenal as there are own goals against them, as the manager continues to play with a system that fails to bring out the best in one of the best strikers on the continent. Arteta has built enough goodwill with her captain, but that only lasts so long.
Nicolas Pepe – AGAINST ARTETA
the unconscious amateur boy because the apparent discomfort in the locker room has been kept to its own advice, but it is not unreasonable to suggest that two Premier League starts throughout the season could lead to a degree of quiet annoyance. Pepe would probably be one of the leaders of any revolution if the manager is overthrown.
This having the image of Arteta is so appropriate 😭😭😭 pic.twitter.com/GTzELDxjcm
– Seb 🇳🇱 (@NotYourWinger) December 6, 2020
Reiss Nelson – CONTRA ARTETA
A total of 70 Premier League minutes in two substitute appearances is probably not what Nelson had in mind this season. The veteran players ahead of him in attacking positions have set the bar incredibly low, but Arteta isn’t interested in seeing Nelson clear it.
Eddie Nketiah – CONTRA ARTETA
Whether it’s the answer or not, it must be pretty painfully discouraging to become his club’s top scorer for the season on a Thursday and have eight minutes to turn the tide of an entire match the following Sunday.
Gabriel Martinelli – FOR ARTETA
Unless David Luiz has gotten into his adorable ear, Martinelli has no real reason to side with Arteta. The Spaniard has handled it quite well and would surely have trusted him had injuries not been a factor. It doesn’t matter in particular who the coach is when you are destined to become the greatest player of all time.
Folarin Balogun – FOR ARTETA
He doesn’t have a real horse in this race. Why would you care who runs Arsenal when you are at Bayern Munich next year?
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