Arsenal vs West Ham Is Our Biggest Game of the Season

It’s been a while since I last blogged. Life has a way of getting in the way sometimes, and football writing naturally takes a back seat when your personal life becomes the priority.

But this Arsenal team has a way of pulling you back in.

As strange as it may sound considering what could still await us in Europe, I genuinely believe today’s game against West Ham is bigger than the upcoming Champions League final.

That might sound dramatic, but for me it’s simple: navigate a win against West Ham and Arsenal place one hand firmly on the Premier League trophy. Anything less hands momentum and psychological advantage straight back to Manchester City.

The reason this game feels so enormous is because of what we are trying to avoid as much as what we are trying to achieve.

The nightmare scenario would be losing control of the title race again and then walking into a Champions League final knowing it represents our only chance at silverware. That pressure changes everything. Football history is filled with teams who carried desperation into finals rather than belief. It can heavily affect the way you play and the deafening noise of the overused ‘Bottle’ term this season can infect the players focus.

Right now Arsenal have the chance to avoid that entirely.

This team is on course for something historic. A potential double. But even if it ends with “only” the Premier League title, it would still represent one of the greatest achievements of the modern era for Mikel Arteta and this football club considering the time since we were last crowned champions.

More importantly, it would finally break the psychological barrier.

For years Arsenal have carried the weight of nearly moments, collapses, banter, and question marks about their mentality to see it through. Winning the league would remove that fear permanently. Future title races become different once you’ve proven to yourselves you can get over the line.

That mental hurdle matters just as much as the trophy itself.

Of course, the wider noise around the club continues as always.

The discussion around Spurs potentially benefiting from an Arsenal win says everything about modern football discourse. Rival fans can hate-watch, debate outcomes, and obsess over Arsenal failing if they want to. That’s football tribalism.

But honestly, most Arsenal fans — certainly those not represented by the loudest reactionary social media accounts — only care about one thing: what is best for Arsenal Football Club.

Nothing else matters.

The same applies to the media narrative already beginning around Crystal Palace potentially resting players on the final day because of their upcoming Conference League final. The timing of those questions feels incredibly disrespectful considering that match is still weeks away and Palace still have important fixtures ahead, with European qualification still a possibility.

But if anything, that external noise only seems to unite Arsenal supporters more. The more the conversation shifts toward agendas and distractions, the tighter the fanbase seems to become around this team.

And maybe that unity is exactly what Arsenal need right now.

Emotionally, it’s been an unbelievable week already.

Everton taking points off City swung the title momentum back in our favour, and then came Tuesday night against Atletico Madrid — a night that honestly felt like the greatest Emirates experience I’ve had since the move from Highbury.

The feel-good factor is back.

For the first time in a long time, there’s a genuine sense that this club is ready rather than simply hopeful. That emotional lift, that psychological boost, could be massive going into the West Ham game.

There will obviously be nerves. There should be nerves. These are the moments supporters wait years for.

But more than ever, the players need the fans fully behind them.

That responsibility belongs to everybody — our loyal away supporters inside the London Stadium and the fans online. This is not the time for negativity, scapegoating, or digging out individuals after every misplaced pass.

This is the moment to create a protective wall around the team.

Positive energy matters. Belief matters. Backing every single player matters.

The noise from rivals and critics will always exist, but Arsenal have spent years fighting to get back into positions like this. Now that we’re here, the focus has to remain entirely on the team and the opportunity sitting directly in front of them.

One game at a time.

Everything rides on West Ham.

And if Arsenal can come through it, the dream suddenly becomes very, very real.

This post also features on Gunners Town site which I write for.

Carl Jenkinson: not ready for England

The international break is trudging along at a snail-like pace and boring the pants off premiership football fans across the land. I know there are those of you out there that actually have a concerted interest in their national team’s fortunes and follow their games at the same level as they would a club at domestic level. Don’t get me wrong I’m fully behind England and want them qualify for the world cup I just wish I had the equivalent of a Sky +/Tivo remote so that I could fast forward past all the advert like qualifiers and get straight to the good stuff: the finals.

Now with most of our squad away with their national teams the focus over the past few days has been focused on those players who have not been called up to their national squads; most notably Carl Jenkinson and Mikel Arteta. Our rejuvenated full back Jenkinson has been the subject of many pundits opinion on whether he should pledge his future to England before Finland snap him. As we all know he qualifies for Finland through his mother and has represented Finland for the majority of his youth up to U-21 level.

I have been very impressed with Carl Jenkinson this season along with everyone else who has watched him. I feel his performances have been deserving of the plaudits but I do feel the England calls have been very knee jerk which is a common fault with the English press/pundit system. We are quick to jump on the bandwagon of any players that emerge and tend to throw them to the top of the tree before they have had a chance to prove themselves. Maybe I’m old school but I feel some players are elevated to international football far too quickly; we end up with a high number of players on the scrap heap with a few international caps because they were thrown in the deep end and then the national exposure highlighted parts of their game that was not up to standard yet. There is no patience playing for England, its sink or swim and many a time players sink because it’s too much too soon. There’s nothing to say they will not be great players but my argument is that a good start to the season should not mean a starting spot for your national team. An apprenticeship should be followed; if a player is under 21 he should play for the under-21’s at some point then experience being called up to the full squad to train with the seniors but not play any games for a few call ups until they are deemed by the manager to be on same wavelength as the senior players.

Many players that are deemed true talent are fast tracked straight into the full squad, our own jack wilshere is one of those players who bypassed his apprenticeship but his quality was evident from the off and he definitely swam when thrown in. when you see a player like Raheem Sterling who in my opinion is going to be a massive player seeing him in England squads already is a bit of an insult.

We must also consider that the fast tracking and avoiding the apprenticeship can have a detrimental effect on the player’s psychology. When you give a young player too much too soon it can harm their career as they lose their humbleness and start believing they have made it, they are surrounded by people telling them how great they are, they are representing their country and everything seems easy before their career has even started. David Bentley could be an example of such a player, where is he now? Despite being a complete knob he did have talent but he believed he was the next David Beckham without putting in the work David Beckham did to become…David Beckham. Now he is trying to reinvent his career somewhere in Russia.

Now the example I used for Raheem Sterling is possibly one similar to Carl Jenkinson, the England hierarchy want to secure their services for England before they pledge to their other eligible countries (Jamaica and Finland). But I feel despite the possible chance of missing out on a player because they are offered international football a lot sooner; it says a lot more about the player’s character. If you have real plans to be a top player then im sorry Finland and Jamaica are just not going to put you there. If you as a player really want to reach the top and England is your option then you must be prepared to wait for when you are ready to represent England and not settle for the easy option elsewhere.

Its playing for England that will give you the opportunities to play in international tournament showpieces (how well they do when they get there is another story). But it is the utmost importance that when representing your country you have earned the right and have not got there by default. A player like Stephen Warnock at Aston Villa was part of the England squad during the world cup in 2010, today if you ask anyone their opinion of the player you will struggle to find anything positive said about him. Had he become a bad player overnight or was he never good enough to start with?

Now is Carl Jenkinson a player good enough to play for England? The answer is yes. Is he ready to be England’s first choice right back? I would say no. I have to take my arsenal tinted glasses off and admit there are English right backs well ahead of him at this time. Carl has had a great start to the season and what he needs to do is put the international talk aside and focus on building on his development this season. The only real test this season he should face is the competition when Bac Sagna returns to the first team squad. England selection is not a burden he needs right now, his fight is for the right back spot at arsenal is. If he can overcome that hurdle then he may be ready to move on to the next stage which is international football.

In fairness Jenkinson has played down the England talk and I hope he continues to do so. I do believe in him but I just don’t want him to be thrown in the deep end before his time. He has made a great start to the season but it is only 7 or so games this season I believe he needs to continue on this season as he’s going then maybe come end of the season the England people can really assess his capabilities. It was good he wasn’t included in latest squad, at the moment he is first choice at Arsenal by default but let’s see if by end of season he is first choice by merit.

NB: No disrespect is meant in this post to Finland or Jamaica. If a player feels strongly enough to represent their country of birth then fair play to them.

Enjoy your day people.

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