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Andrey Arshavin: The Enigma

WIGAN ENGLAND - DECEMBER 29:  Andrey Arshavin of Arsenal celebrates after scoring his goal during the Barclays Premier League match between Wigan Athletic and Arsenal at DW Stadium on December 29 2010 in Wigan England.  (Photo by Alex Livesey/Getty Images)

 Andrey Arshavin is just one of those players. You know, the ones that have immense talent but appear to waste it. The Premier League is littered with such players (Alex Hleb, for example, whose career moves weren't his best choices). Except, on the face of it, he's having a good year, with 7 goals and 11 assists, which is the highest at the club. With Cesc Fabregas recently missing, he took a lead role in creating, starring against Aston Villa, with a goal, assist and heavily involved in the third, and again against Fulham where he had an assist and was heavily involved in Nasri's second. The good, though, has been overshadowed by the bad, and many times this year Arshavin has looked disinterested, sluggish, and has also been disappointing, being poor defensively, giving the ball away with simple passes, and not scoring when he should.

Star-divide

Wigan away two weeks ago was a microcosm of Arshavin's season: He had 70 minutes of looking really bad and then he had a 10 minute spell of brilliance, scoring an outstanding volley and assisting for Nicklas Bendtner's goal. He then proceeded to have 70 minutes of giving the ball away, defending slackly, and missing the goal that could've sealed 3 points and was eventually substituted for Theo Walcott, who has come to replace Arshavin in Arsene Wenger's first choice XI.

Instead of speculating any possible psychological reasons for Arshavin's demise (besides a loss of confidence), instead I want to look at what he's doing differently this year to years gone by, and what might have affected him tactically.

Tactics

One thing to consider when discussing Arshavin is that Arsenal play a different season now than they did in 2009 when he came in. Last year, he had an injury affected campaign, and also played up front, so I'll disregard that season, mainly because I want to compare this year's Arshavin, who has stayed mainly on the left wing with 2009's Arshavin. In 2009, when Arshavin arrived, Arsenal played a very fluid 4-4-2. The wingers had more defensive responsibility, and the midfield two were deeper (this is why the invincibles had Pires and Ljungberg score more than Gilberto and Vieira - they, along with Bergkamp and Henry were the creators and scorers). As a direct result, Arshavin was involved more in the build up play than he is now; with the change to a 4-3-3 meaning Arshavin is now usually involved in the final parts of play. That is one of the reasons why fans accuse Arshavin of not doing anything: For him, his role is now that of a finisher than an instigator. Even in the 4-4 draw with Liverpool, where Arsenal played a 4-2-3-1, Arshavin did very little, other than score 4 goals. In that regard, Arshavin is the same player, but with a different role. Instead of switching wings in a 4-4-2 as he did, he sticks to his left sided role, cutting in and appearing in the middle too. His passing is not the best, often because he is trying a difficult forward pass, or, as his detractors say, lazily losing the ball in the midfield. If, though, he's the same player, why is he not the Arshavin of 2009?

One thing that has become noticeable over the last few weeks is the amount of blocked shots Arshavin has had. This would be something that indicates that Arshavin is being closed down quickly, and lacking the confidence or the form to escape that situation, is having a shot at goal. Could this just be that Arshavin is lacking form?

Chalkboards

If you look at the Chalkboards from 2008/09 and 2010/11 (and they're available in Power Point form), it's hard to see the problem with Arshavin. If anything, the Russian is more effective in getting the ball into goal-scoring opportunities than he was in 2008/09.  The Chalkboards do back up Arshavin's positional difference, as his interplay with the midfield then was much greater than it is in 2010/11. He plays higher up the pitch, and he usually attempts to play with the front man (Marouane Chamakh or Robin van Persie), with the other winger, and with whoever is creating in the midfield. In 2008/09, he was more apt to spread the play around the midfield, and switch wings with Samir Nasri or Theo Walcott. The few times Arsenal played a 4-2-3-1, which meant he was higher up the pitch, he did very little (Liverpool away for example, where he completed 20 passes and scored 4 goals) other than assist or score, which was a preview of last year and this year. 

Another factor to consider is that playing on the left might not be Arshavin's best position. Both Zenit and Russia, for whom he starred, built their teams around Arshavin, with him playing behind the front man. His two best games this year, Villa and Fulham, show Arshavin popping up in central areas, as Rosicky, who is more willing to go out wide than Fabregas, was playing in the role behind Marouane Chamakh, but swapping with Arshavin. Playing Arshavin in a central role gives him space to roam, and less defensive responsibility. Unfortunately for him, Fabregas usually fills that position, but if Arshavin gets into those central positions when cutting in, a return of form is likely.

Conclusion

The change of Arshavin's role is the reason that he is not as heavily involved in play as he was when he first arrived. Because of that, he often goes long periods of the game being uninvolved, but his ability to make the final ball means he is still a dangerous player that is going through a loss of form and confidence, rather than a lack of disinterestedness, which some claim because he's not as involved as he was when he arrived in England. That's not to say that they're wrong, and it would be better for Arsenal if Arshavin was more involved in the build up play, because he is a very good player, but it's his role rather than his work rate that can make him anonymous for 70 minutes. With a regaining of form, he could be a more dangerous player than he was in 2008/09, and take some of the creative burden off Cesc Fabregas.

His defensive awareness, or lack of one, means that in the bigger games, he should be left on the substitute bench, but this isn't a situation too different from Dimitar Berbatov, who is often sacrificed in the big games at Manchester United, and has also been accused of being lazy.

Arshavin is not going to be a player that puts in a defensive shift like Dirk Kuyt or Park ji-Sung does, but he's a dangerous player that still has a big role to play in Arsenal's season.  

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Arsenal 4 - 0 Fulham

May 2010 by Ted Harwood - 5 comments

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What would happen, I wonder

if Wenger went with Nasri on the left, Theo on the right, Arshavin behind van Persie, and Cesc and Song next to each other behind Andrei? Or Andrei and Cesc both in front of Song?

Nowhere for Jack to go, then, and maybe not enough continuity in midfield?

by Ted Harwood on Jan 13, 2011 11:23 AM EST reply actions  

I worry a bit about Cesc in that role

Jack’s got that habit of nipping at people’s heels, for lack of a better phrase, and really does his box to box role well.
I just can’t see Cesc doing that.
It’d be interesting to try against a team that played very deep and defensive

Squeezed to Song and Bendtner and Song and Nasri oh lovely lovely lovely!
-Peter Drury, the one time his commentating has ever been acceptable.

by Aidan Gibson on Jan 13, 2011 3:40 PM EST up reply actions  

I have to dispute a bit your assertion that he "lacks defensive awareness" rather than being lazy.

Lacking awareness is when you don’t realize the opponent is overloading down your side.

When I watch Arshavin, that is not his problem. He loses the ball, and then 9 times out of 10 he just STANDS there and pouts. This infuriates me to no end, especially because I KNOW he can try on defense, the few times he actually tracks back he looks good doing it.

He doesn’t need to be a Dirk Kuyt, and right now he certainly isn’t anywhere close to such a comparison.

I do agree that he looks a lot better when he is drifting around the pitch instead of staying on the left. But with Song pushing up and Cesc in charge of the middle, seems like its not going to happen too often.

Thanks for the writeup! A peek at Arsh was long overdue.

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by silverace99 on Jan 13, 2011 12:26 PM EST reply actions  

Saying he lacks defensive awareness

was me trying to be kind about not tracking back.

The problem I have with Arshavin’s defending is after he tracks back and wins the ball, he tries to dribble his way or makes a bad pass out of the back.
Either a) lump it, or b) don’t bother if you’re going to give the ball straight back

Squeezed to Song and Bendtner and Song and Nasri oh lovely lovely lovely!
-Peter Drury, the one time his commentating has ever been acceptable.

by Aidan Gibson on Jan 13, 2011 3:38 PM EST up reply actions  

I'm not jumping on you, just making a point on Arshavin in general.

I’m simply tired of hearing how Arshavin’s goals and assists totals mean he’s having a good year. Football isn’t about statistics; it’s about seeing a player play and judging his performance for oneself.

In my opinion, Arshavin has been bollocks all year long. He’s sucked. Apathetic. He is drawn to opposing player’s tackles like a magnetic. I’m sick of him. Rosicky should be the first choice attacking midfielder off the bench, not Arshavin.

errollknight22

by errollknight22 on Jan 13, 2011 1:19 PM EST reply actions  

for the sake of fairness

You should probably have more substantial arguments then “He’s sucked”, and “Apathetic”. BeltransMole put in the time to take a deep look; you should take some time too before responding.

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The Short Fuse (Arsenal, EPL)
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by silverace99 on Jan 13, 2011 1:54 PM EST up reply actions  

Honestly I'd rather have Arshavin than Rosicky starting

At least Arshavin is scoring goals and getting assists, Rosicky is playing well but he’s not really changing the game as much as Arshavin.

by Roa on Jan 15, 2011 11:00 AM EST up reply actions  

A goal is a statistic so it could be argued that soccer is in fact about statistics

They’re not making art out there, they’re trying to score more games than the opposition and win games. if they look pretty doing it, so much the better, but I’ll take statistically significant over pretty seven days a week.

by pdb on Jan 13, 2011 3:34 PM EST up reply actions  

But I kind of didn't say that
Except, on the face of it, he’s having a good year, with 7 goals and 11 assists…
The good, though, has been overshadowed by the bad, and many times this year Arshavin has looked disinterested, sluggish, and has also been disappointing, being poor defensively, giving the ball away with simple passes, and not scoring when he should

Squeezed to Song and Bendtner and Song and Nasri oh lovely lovely lovely!
-Peter Drury, the one time his commentating has ever been acceptable.

by Aidan Gibson on Jan 13, 2011 3:39 PM EST up reply actions  

Facts?

Fact!

Squeezed to Song and Bendtner and Song and Nasri oh lovely lovely lovely!
-Peter Drury, the one time his commentating has ever been acceptable.

by Aidan Gibson on Jan 13, 2011 3:47 PM EST up reply actions  

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