The Independent on Saturday

ARSENAL ARE TAKING ONE STEP FORWARD AND TWO STEPS BACK

- JACK PITT-BROOKE

ARSENE Wenger was trying and failing to persuade his best player, Alexis Sanchez, to sign a new deal at Arsenal. He only had one year left and Wenger was desperatel­y reluctant to sell him to a rival. But he knew he might have to, so he signed a promising French striker from Ligue 1 as a potential replacemen­t.

For 2017, read 2012. The same situation Wenger is in now, trying to cling onto Sanchez and signing Alexandre Lacazette from Lyon, he went through five years ago.

Then, with Robin van Persie threatenin­g to run down the last year of his deal, Wenger spent £10 million on a relatively unknown 25-year-old who had just fired Montpellie­r to the French title, Olivier Giroud.

Giroud has been excellent value. He has given them five good seasons and scored 98 first team goals. £100 000 per goal is certainly not a bad return for the top end of the Premier League. It is no surprise that even now, as Giroud approaches his 31st birthday, he has some pretty serious teams in England and abroad trying to sign him. He has served Arsenal well.

And yet we all know that Arsenal replacing Van Persie with Giroud was a downgrade. Van Persie was then the best centre-forward in the country. In the 2011/12 season he scored 30 Premier League goals, the most by any Arsenal striker since Thierry Henry scored 30 in the Invincible­s season. 2011/12 was not exactly vintage Arsenal but they did at least finish third. And then that summer they took one step forward and two steps back.

Arsenal scored 74 Premier League goals in 2011/12 and it was only in the season just gone that they finally beat that total for the first time since Van Persie left. Wenger predicted when he sold Van Persie that his goals would be equally distribute­d among his teammates but it never worked out like that.

Only now are Arsenal back to that goal-scoring level, because only now do they have a world class striker again. The use of Sanchez as a centre-forward gave Arsenal an extra edge last season. They are a completely different propositio­n with and without him which is why he, unlike Mesut Oezil, is unquestion­ably worth breaking the bank for.Which means that if Arsenal do sell Sanchez, they will be facing the same dramatic downturn they did five years ago, no matter how good Lacazette might be. That is why Wenger is publicly flirting with the possibilit­y of keeping Sanchez, even if it means missing out on a £50 million fee Manchester City would be more than happy to give them. At one press conference in March he even said the remaining £8m in “book value” Sanchez had in the Arsenal accounts meant selling him would not be quite as lucrative as it might look.

The problem for Wenger is that he made the same pledges about Van Persie five years ago as he is making about Sanchez. Why would anyone believe he is going to dig in, say no to the player and the money, when he made the same promises and then caved in in 2012?

So if Sanchez does go, Arsenal are going to have to face the prospect of a long search to replace him. Not just his goals but his energy, inventiven­ess, leadership and all the other intangible­s you only get from a player that good. The only way to replace world-class is with world-class and while Lacazette is a very effective player at Ligue 1 level, he could not beat Giroud to a place in the France squad for Euro 2016.

For Arsenal to get out of this summer, if they do lose Sanchez, without their gradual gains of recent years evaporatin­g, their other attacking players will have to do very well, or else they will find themselves back at the foot of the mountain. – The Independen­t

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