Mark Brophy

Home » Posts tagged 'Ben Arfa'

Tag Archives: Ben Arfa

Give a Little Bit

A Premier League manager gave a masterclass in man-management this week. He dealt with two problem players and came up with solutions that were in the best interests of everybody involved. One was a wayward talent, a creative force who has been criticised for a lack of application, of being lazy even, and who splits opinion amongst his club’s fans. The other was a player with a long-running grievance over non-selection which had meant the breakdown of the relationship between player and manager. Unfortunately for  fans of Newcastle United I’m not talking about Alan Pardew, Hatem Ben Arfa and Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa, but Neil Warnock, new manager of Crystal Palace, and his players Wilfried Zaha and Jason Puncheon.

On taking up his post last week, one of the first things Warnock did was arrange a loan from Manchester United of former Palace player Zaha. Zaha had hardly set Manchester on fire in his time there so far and had an underwhelming time on loan at Cardiff last season culminating in the kind of uninterested display we witnessed at St James Park in our last home game of 13/14. Responding to the many criticisms of Zaha, Warnock stated that the impression of the player as lazy was a superficial one, in fact his attitude had been ‘fantastic’ and that his creativity could provide a much-needed spark to the side. The player came off the bench against Newcastle at the weekend, looked dangerous every time he got the ball and scored a late equaliser to salvage a deserved point for Palace.

Earlier this year, Puncheon had publicly accused Warnock of corruption while the manager of QPR, where at the time Puncheon had been on loan. The situation had deteriorated to the point of threats of legal action against Puncheon for his unsubstantiated claims. On Warnock’s appointment as Palace manager, the most likely outcome seemed to be Puncheon leaving with some haste. However, according to Puncheon the manager had immediately sought a private meeting with him and told him that he would be playing in the Newcastle game, that neither player or manager were bigger than their club, and that they should forget the past. Puncheon was Palace’s stand-out player last year in avoiding the drop under Tony Pulis and Warnock will be aware that he would struggle to recruit someone to replace him should he have left. Puncheon was excellent on Saturday,  skilful and energetic in attack, strong and committed in defence. Getting him on-side was vital to Palace’s prospects for having a good season and Warnock did what he had to do. I still don’t like him but he could hardly have had a better first week in his new job, and it is all down to skilful man-management.

Contrast that with the actions of Alan Pardew over the last few months. Certain elements of the situations at Palace and Newcastle are very similar. Ben Arfa, like Zaha, is perceived as lazy and unreliable. His relationship with Pardew had become poisonous after being frozen out of the first-team and a rumoured bust-up between the two, much like Puncheon. Newcastle look leaden, pedestrian in their play at the moment and someone with the talents of Ben Arfa motivated and pulling in the same direction as the rest of the team could have made a real difference. Someone needed to remember what Warnock had, that the club was bigger than personal differences, but instead of offering an olive branch Pardew chose to perpetuate their bust up. Moving Ben Arfa on to a probable rival makes little sense other than to strengthen Pardew’s own position at the club by removing a dissenting voice. Yanga-Mbiwa too hadn’t had a sniff of the first team for some time and wanted to cut his losses and get out, we are led to believe by newspaper reports. Again, Newcastle were desperate for experienced cover at centre-half but instead of trying to reintegrate him into the squad, to persuade him he had a future here, Pardew chose to cut him out and send him on loan. If it’s true that Newcastle are still paying 80% of his wages then this one makes even less sense than Ben Arfa’s loan. Newcastle gain virtually no benefit from the deal. Roma have an option to buy, so there’s obviously no intention of getting him back. Top-class match practice is not the reason he’s gone, nor is reducing the wage bill.

Pardew evidently didn’t rate either player enough to make it worthwhile to bend a little and bring either back into the fold. He’s the manager of course and is paid to make those kind of decisions. However I refuse to believe that he thinks either is worthless. He must know there are situations when both would be useful to have around. Though Ben Arfa obviously isn’t blameless for what has happened, he is also always capable of a good day on the pitch nevertheless. Pardew ‘s ego means he’s reluctant to look small by allowing Ben Arfa to criticise him and stay in the team, he doesn’t want to let him win. Conversely, just like Warnock did I think he’d appear a bigger man had he done so but that’s neither here nor there. Yanga-Mbiwa in particular is a French title-winning captain and international, who has moved to one of the top teams in Serie A to play in the Champions League, replacing a £20m player in Mehdi Benatia who has just moved to the European Champions Bayern Munich. Try and think of a time he played a couple of games on the trot in his favoured position of centre back while paired with Mike Williamson, as he seemed unable to form a partnership with Coloccini. Actually I can think of two games that happened last season: NUFC 2 Chelsea 0 followed by Spurs 0 NUFC 1, after which he was dropped for the returning club captain. He simply didn’t get a fair crack of the whip at Newcastle. From  the very off he was played everywhere but at centre-back and I get the impression Pardew never wanted him and never knew what to do with him. Rather than not rating him at all though, getting rid of him enables Pardew to make a point in a power game he may feel he is playing with Graham Carr. In Pardew’s mind, Carr recommended the signing and moving him on now enables him to say the player wasn’t a success here and wasn’t suited to the Premier League.  He is telling Mike Ashley Carr is not infallible and that Pardew is not merely a coach for  the players Carr buys. It suits Pardew to get both out and if that is to the detriment of the club when looking at the larger picture then so be it.

To Change or Not To Change – Match Preview, NUFC v Wigan 22/10/11

Following on from Newcastle’s unbeaten start to the season, Saturday’s visitors Wigan pose a problem for Alan Pardew in terms of selection and formation. There have been calls for starts for Hatem Ben Arfa and Davide Santon, without it being obvious who if anyone should make way.

Wigan,  currently in the bottom three, are a more difficult test than their league position suggests. A good run towards the end of last season, 20 points in 14 games from February, saw them climb out of the drop zone on the last day. That form extended over the whole season would have seen them finish comfortably in the top half. They’ve struggled to continue that form at the start of this season, finding it difficult to score goals so far. That might change following the return of Hugo Rodallega last week after a month out.

Last season Wigan were unfortunate to leave St James Park with only a point, conceding a late equaliser after dominating play for long periods. James McCarthy was particularly impressive in the centre of midfield as Newcastle’s pair in their 4-4-2 failed to get anywhere near Wigan’s 3 in the middle of the park in their 4-5-1. Wigan are a footballing side, pass the ball well, and numerical superiority in that area made it very difficult for Newcastle to achieve any effective possession of the ball.

Last week against Spurs Newcastle were always chasing the game, again with 2 central midfielders up against 3 when Van Der Vaart chose to drop  in. It’s no coincidence that Newcastle scored their 2nd equaliser and then pushed on sufficiently to almost grab a winner after Spurs went to 4-4-2 and Newcastle to 4-5-1 following Defoe’s replacement of Van Der Vaart and Ben Arfa and Shola Ameobi coming on for Ba and Best.

The temptation against a side in trouble is to get as many strikers on the pitch as possible to ensure the goals come which will win the game. Wigan aren’t a standard struggling side however. They try to keep the ball and in that and their style of play more closely resemble Spurs than Stoke or Wolves. It’s essential that Newcastle get a fair share of possession or no number of strikers will help. This game seems an ideal opportunity to give Hatem Ben Arfa his first start in a year, bolstering midfield numbers while retaining an attacking outlook. That, in turn, would raise the question of whether Demba Ba is capable of leading the line on his own. It would be harsh for either he or Leon Best to lose their place, but with Ben Arfa and Ameobi changing the game last week one or both might well do so.