New Straits Times

GUNNERS FEEL THE PUNCH

Arsenal’s spending ups pressure on Arteta to deliver

- LONDON

FACING up to a first season in 25 years without European football, Arsenal were expected to feel the economic crunch caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic but have spent more money on new players that any other Premier League club in the transfer window to date.

The arrival of Norwegian midfielder Martin Odegaard from Real Madrid and imminent signing of Aaron Ramsdale as competitio­n for the role as number one goalkeeper has taken the Gunners outlay to a reported £130 million (RM750 million).

In both Arteta’s first two seasons in charge, Arsenal have finished eighth in the Premier League, their worst performanc­es since 1995.

A club that between 1998 and 2016 enjoyed 19 consecutiv­e campaigns in the Champions League under Arsene Wenger has now been deprived of the prestige and riches of Europe’s top club competitio­n for five years.

Their start to the new season has done little to offer hope that run will be ended come May as they opened the Premier League campaign with a 2-0 defeat to newly-promoted Brentford.

Arteta bemoaned the fact that match was not postponed on Friday after four positive coronaviru­s cases robbed him of strikers Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Alexandre Lacazette.

But the Spaniard needs a quick response ahead of today’s visit of European champions Chelsea and a trip to Manchester City next weekend if his side are to avoid going into the September internatio­nal break without a point.

“I love challenges and we have a challenge,” said Arteta.

“Let’s just embrace it and do the best that we can every single day to try to create the best possible atmosphere around this place.”

The atmosphere inside the Emirates for a first full house in 17 months today will reveal a lot about whether a summer spending spree has eased the angst among fans.

Unlike United’s signings of Raphael Varane and Jadon Sancho, who could make them title contenders, the response to Arsenal’s arrivals has not been so positive.

Ben White, a £50 million signing from Brighton, was bullied by Brentford’s physical forwards on the opening night.

Nuno Tavares and Albert Sambi Lokonga will add depth to Arteta’s squad, but are not the calibre of names expected to launch Arsenal back into the top four.

A teenage sensation when he joined Madrid at 16, Odegaard has since been farmed on a series of loan moves, while Ramsdale has suffered back-to-back relegation­s at Bournemout­h and Sheffield United.

Arteta hit back at that criticism, pointing to a long-term project with all five signings aged between 21 and 23.

“I know people have the intention to bury us, to criticise us. I am not interested in that, we have a lot of positives, a lot of energy and my focus is on that and to find a way to beat Chelsea,” he added.

“It is a big turnaround and we are trying to do it in the right way so this club is stable. It is a clear indicator the business that we are doing. The ages are between 21 and 23 years old and it tells you the project that we are building.”

The question remains how long Arteta will be given to manage that project if there is no sign of progress in the coming weeks.

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