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AFP PHOTO / BEN STANSALL |
Alex Iwobi is highly rated by his boss and peers and doesn’t deserve
so much criticism, says his manager, Unai Emery. According to
www.independent.co.uk,
Iwobi has all the hallmarks of a cult hero. He joined Arsenal at the
tender age of eight, while still practising his times tables at primary
school. He has never played a single match of professional football for
any other club — not even on loan. And, at 22, he has already been a
first-team regular for three seasons.
But for a player who has spent 15 years playing for the same club,
Iwobi remains curiously unloved by Arsenal supporters. Just earlier this
month, he was jeered when substituted against Huddersfield — a game in
which he scored — while the famously neurotic Emirates crowd always
seems to lose patience with him first before any other player.
And, unlike down the road at Tottenham, where Harry Kane and Winks
are dotingly serenaded as “one of our own” approximately every
two-and-a-half minutes, precious few Arsenal supporters seem that
inclined to celebrate the progression of one of the club’s precious few
Hale End graduates, instead preferring to obsess over his shortcomings.
It is difficult to pinpoint exactly why Iwobi has become such a
lightening rod for criticism. Especially when his stature in the Arsenal
dressing room appears to have grown exponentially, as Emery revealed
ahead of this evening’s clash with Bournemouth.
“When I ask Nacho Monreal and Send Kolasinac who is the player who
you feel better on the pitch when he is playing, they say to us: Iwobi,”
Emery said, when asked just how important he considers Iwobi to be at
Arsenal.
“It is because Iwobi can open space on the overlap for them. So I
think Iwobi is giving a lot for us. We want to play and we want to
create our philosophy and I think for that Iwobi is important. But he
needs to carry on improving and he knows that the situation can still
improve.”
The area in which Iwobi most needs to improve is obvious. His end
product since first breaking into the Arsenal team has been consistently
underwhelming, with first Arsene Wenger and now Emery repeatedly urging
the midfielder to improve his decision making in dangerous areas.
“When he is getting into the attacking third, into the box, he needs
to be calm and to make better decisions in the final action so that he
can assist and score more,” Emery added on Tuesday.
“We have to be demanding with him and he has to be demanding of
himself, so that he can improve these things and increase his overall
quality. But he is giving us a lot of attacking moments and opening
space for other players when they are arriving to the ball. So I am very
happy with him and I think that he is working a lot to improve.”
Finishing has long been a weakness for Iwobi but he is certainly
making progress. For the first time in his career Iwobi has worked
closely with a data analyst this season, in order to improve his
decision-making when in dangerous positions in the final third. And
while he can remain wasteful in front of goal, he has already equalled
his highest goal tally in a season, while recording six assists. In
fact, only one other Arsenal midfielder — the much-maligned Henrikh
Mkhitaryan — has scored more goals than him this season.
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