Irish Daily Mirror

Let’s not blame Ozil for sticking to his guns..it’s Arsenal’s moneymen who got their sums badly wrong

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IT seemed to drag on as long and as painfully as Brexit, but at least Arsenal have finally Got Ozil Done.

Leaving many to ask how the relationsh­ip between the two became so toxic?

How did Mesut Ozil become so integral to almost every storyline and every debate about Arsenal over the past year?

It will go down as an eradefinin­g lesson as bemusing as Alexis Sanchez being put on the same earning power as the Sultan of Brunei.

Not just why the German was given a contract worth £18.2million a year when he was nine months shy of 30.

Not even how the club expected him to become a more motivated player because of his pay rise, with Arsene Wenger bizarrely claiming, when he signed it in January 2018: “You expect that he becomes the leader and takes the responsibi­lity to lead the team to success.”

Not even why, when the perception was that he didn’t take that responsibi­lity, such a senior player was treated like a leper for nine months. It is how, as he takes a pay cut to head to Fenerbahce, Ozil’s contributi­on has been so overblown by some that there was a debate, albeit started by a radio pundit, about whether he deserved a statue outside the Emirates.

As talented a player as he is, to argue his contributi­on to Arsenal’s history is up there with that of Herbert Chapman, Tony Adams, Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp is embarrassi­ng.

I never held the view, aired by a broadsheet journalist at the weekend, that the German “became a symbol of what most people think is disgusting about top-flight football: players earning obscene wages for doing, literally, nothing”.

If my employer suddenly decided they didn’t rate me any more,

I’d probably do what Ozil (right) did and keep taking my wages while watching Netflix, until something better turned up.

If Ozil became a symbol of anything it was the economic illiteracy of the club’s recent era, which stopped Arsenal achieving what they had done under the Henrys and Bergkamps.

The blame for this toxic saga lies with those who fell over themselves to give 29-year-old Ozil a threeand-a-half year contract worth £63.7m. The ones who gave 32-year-old Willian a three-year contract worth £42m. That’s Willian who has yet to score for Arsenal and has created just one assist since the first day of the season and can’t get a game, but who will hang around to pick up every penny of that contract.

The same ones who spent £72m on Pepe, who also struggles for game time.

The people who, in the summer of 2016, spent £87m on Granit Xhaka, Shkodran Mustafi and Lucas Perez while releasing Serge Gnabry to become a superstar in Germany for £5m.

The same people who, last August, sacked 55 mostly low-paid workers, due to the pandemic, claiming to have “looked at every aspect of the club and our expenditur­e before reaching this point”. Sackings that saved them £2m a year.

Weeks

later,

If my employer suddenly decided they didn’t rate me any more, I’d probably do what Ozil did and keep taking my wages while watching Netflix, until something better turned up

31-year-old Pierre-emerick Aubameyang was given a new contract worth up to £60m over three years. Don’t be surprised if there are Ozil-esque problems a year or so down the line.

The blame for the ugly Ozil saga lies not with the player, but with weak businessme­n who allowed Wenger to stay on too long when his judgement had gone and carried on getting their sums almost as badly wrong as their priorities.

Businessme­n, who this month took out an emergency £120m loan from the Bank of England to help them through the pandemic, yet whose owner Stan Kroenke is worth more than £6billion. Maybe Stan should give himself a statue.

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