I only scanned it, not in big letters so obviously he isn't very good.That is great because he says there is nobody and then names one...
You say 'only' Gibbs and Wilshere but that's still more than other big clubs.That looks like it taken from the Sun Cabinet so doesn't count.
They do make a decent point though as other than Gibbs and Wilshere there haven't been many English youngsters make it at Arsenal in Wenger's time other than ones they have signed for decent money.
A few names on there I have never heard of, hope the guy writing the article knows his stuff.
Not to mention the most objectionable left back of all time.You say 'only' Gibbs and Wilshere but that's still more than other big clubs.
I'd also argue the case for Walcott and Oxlade-Chamberlaine.
Well both them are Southampton products actually. Hardly spent any time if any playing for Arsenal youth teams after being signed for massive money.You say 'only' Gibbs and Wilshere but that's still more than other big clubs.
I'd also argue the case for Walcott and Oxlade-Chamberlaine.
Clutching at straws going that far back, may as well let Man U claim Giggs, Beckham and co.Not to mention the most objectionable left back of all time.
Well, yeah. Why not? You suggested that Arsenal under Wenger had not produced many good young players. I was merely pointing out that under Wenger Arsenal produced the most capped English fullback of all time.Clutching at straws going that far back, may as well let Man U claim Giggs, Beckham and co.
So 3 players in nearly 20 years. Whoopee.Well, yeah. Why not? You suggested that Arsenal under Wenger had not produced many good young players. I was merely pointing out that under Wenger Arsenal produced the most capped English fullback of all time.
Quality > Quantity.So 3 players in nearly 20 years. Whoopee.
Yeah, I'm really not sure how the people at the FA have never picked up on this. The possibilty of these sorts of things happening should have been immediately obvious to whoever drafted the rules in the first place. The fact that EU law makes it illegal to discriminate on the basis of nationality also makes it impossible to avoid clubs having a bunch of overseas players counting as home grown anyway. It is a really poorly conceived framework of rules, and that's before you even get on to the rather questionable logic behind it.There are some unintended consequences that the FA seem completely blind to. Firstly, all of the proposed restrictions apply to squads rather than first teams. So what Premiership teams are likely to do is load up the reserves with second-tier English players. Those English players would previously have been getting game time in the lower leagues, but now they're not. We've arguably already seen this effect after the CL restrictions came in, the careers of Jack Rodwell and Scott Sinclair were shot down altogether.
Secondly, it makes English players worth much more to English clubs than they are to overseas ones. So the chance of any English player getting experience in Germany or Spain is basically nil. And that insularity has always been a problem, but right now it's huge because we're in a phase of German and Spanish dominance. So we have these reforms aimed at getting more English players playing top-level football, but the Premiership probably isn't even top-level any more- there's clear daylight after La Liga. When it comes to getting more English players playing at that level, the reforms have the complete opposite effect.
And subsequently you see those players play less and often stall in their development. To end it Hodgson and co would have to show themselves to be more prepared to select away from the top clubs though.The bigger problem in English football is the stockpiling of young talent by the top clubs, not the number of English players they produce.
Yeah, what they're doing is making it three years before the 18th birthday, rather than 21st. So players like Fabregas, Clichy, Bellerin etc. who currently count as homegrown wouldn't under new rules. But clubs will adapt. They'll poach 14 year olds instead of 16 year olds.Yeah, I'm really not sure how the people at the FA have never picked up on this. The possibilty of these sorts of things happening should have been immediately obvious to whoever drafted the rules in the first place. The fact that EU law makes it illegal to discriminate on the basis of nationality also makes it impossible to avoid clubs having a bunch of overseas players counting as home grown anyway. It is a really poorly conceived framework of rules, and that's before you even get on to the rather questionable logic behind it.