From departed players to injury victims and those out of form, some teams are suffering from a missing player or two.
10) Richard Dunne (Aston Villa)
Since twanging his groin in
rather painful-sounding circumstances at Euro 2012, Dunne hasn't played
or indeed even trained this season. While he is hardly Franco Baresi and
his lack of pace was often comical last season, Villa have arguably
missed those two most intangible qualities of 'experience' and
'leadership'. Their defence so far this season can charitably be
described as 'callow', with the 27-year-old Ron Vlaar being the old man
of the Villa back line and the other regulars (Joe Bennett, Ciaran
Clark, Eric Lichaj and Nathan Baker) being no older than 23. Of course,
Dunne will probably lumber back into the team and make a dreadful
cock-up, just to make me look bad.
9) Heidur Helguson (QPR)
9) Heidur Helguson (QPR)
Don't laugh. At this stage last
season, Helguson had scored six goals, including winners against Chelsea
and Stoke. This campaign, they have Bobby Zamora - much more expensive,
but with five goals in 22 starts since his transfer from Fulham and
three goals this season, not quite as effective. Of course, Helguson's
relatively meagre contribution for the rest of last season might suggest
that QPR haven't exactly lost a dead-eye finisher, but for a team with
no wins and just eight goals in ten games, they need all the attacking
options they can get.
8) Steven Caulker (Swansea)
8) Steven Caulker (Swansea)
While their attacking play has
perhaps been more incisive since Michael Laudrup and Michu arrived, and
Joe Allen's passing has been neatly replaced by Ki, Swansea have
suffered a fair few defensive 'issues' this campaign. Ashley Williams
made a couple of pretty comical errors at the start of the season, while
Chico Flores is a lot of fun but perhaps a little...erratic. They have
missed the rather more calming presence of Caulker, perhaps the
outstanding young defender in the Premier League who has become a
regular at Spurs.
7) Woijech Szczesny (Arsenal)
7) Woijech Szczesny (Arsenal)
Arsenal's Polish keeper is
not this generation's answer to Lev Yashin. Hell, he might not even be
this generation's answer to Jan Tomaszewski, but he's sure as sh*t a
better option than Vito Mannone in goal. A reader e-mailed us recently
to wonder how well the other challenging sides would do with their
third-choice keepers between the sticks, and it's a reasonable point.
Mannone, despite looking like a cross between one of the Klitschko
brothers and a Yates's bouncer, does not exactly inspire confidence in
the Arsenal defence which, despite actually having a perfectly
respectable 'goals conceded' record, can be sliced apart far too easily.
Of all the men currently in the Arsenal treatment room, Arsene Wenger
will hope for the return of his consonant-heavy stopper the most.
6) The Bellamy/Kuyt/Maxi options (Liverpool)
6) The Bellamy/Kuyt/Maxi options (Liverpool)
All left for
assorted individual reasons, and Brendan Rodgers cannot be blamed for
Craig Bellamy's desire to go home or Dirk Kuyt taking advantage of an
exit clause in his contract, but boy could he have used some attacking
support this season. All three (certainly Maxi and Bellamy) would have
fitted nicely into Rodgers' favoured system, and at the very least would
have provided some support for Luis Suarez and the pair of children
currently flanking him.
Given how Raheem Sterling and Suso are currently
performing, it's debatable whether any of the three would be starting
every week, but they would at least have given Rodgers an alternative
when Liverpool need a goal. As it is, the best he can presently conjure
when turning to his bench is Stewart Downing.
5) Last season's Stephane Sessegnon (Sunderland)
5) Last season's Stephane Sessegnon (Sunderland)
This
season, Sunderland have scored just six goals. One of them was slotted
away by Demba Ba, who the shrewd among you will have spotted plays for
Newcastle. There's a reason for this too - they've had just 12 shots on
target in their nine games - the next least is 34 by Stoke. Steven
Fletcher is doing his best, as five of those goals and eight of the
shots on target have come from him. He's trying, bless him, but he's not
getting a great deal of support, and much of that support should be
coming from Sessegnon.
"They are good players just lacking in confidence
but that will come," said Martin O'Neill last week, and no player fits
that description more than Sessegnon, so often at the heart of
Sunderland's creative play last season. When the Beninese playmaker's
form returns, one suspects Sunderland's will too.
4) The Tiote/Cabaye partnership (Newcastle)
4) The Tiote/Cabaye partnership (Newcastle)
At stages last
season, it hardly seemed fair for other midfielders that Cabaye and
Tiote were allowed to play together. It was like a couple of under-16s
had been dropped into an under-12s game, running further, tackling
harder and just looking much tougher than almost any other combination
in the Premier League. It was how they got away with basically a 4-4-2
while many other teams packed the midfield in an attempt to control
games.
This season, the pair have only started three games together, and
Cabaye went off injured in one of those and Tiote was sent off after 25
minutes of another - in total, they've only spent 180 minutes on the
pitch together. There could be many reasons for Newcastle's relative
woes this season - the form of Hatem Ben Arfa and it being Demba Ba's
turn to score goals rather than Papiss Cisse's being two - but the lack
of their midfield powerhouse combo is certainly a significant factor.
3) Didier Drogba (Chelsea)
3) Didier Drogba (Chelsea)
On the face of it, and for all
the mocking, Fernando Torres's strike-rate of four goals in ten Premier
League games this season is actually perfectly respectable. However, the
importance of his goals is questionable at best. Indeed, only one of
Torres's goals this season - his opener against Arsenal - has actually
made any difference to the result of any games. Acutally, scratch that -
that's the only goal in his entire time at Chelsea that has made
a difference to results.
The strike in the Nou Camp last season changed
the score on the night, but Chelsea still would've gone through on away
goals, even if he hadn't caused Gary Neville's 'gentleman's moment'. If
you'd removed his entire goal-scoring contribution to Chelsea in nearly
two years there, they would be precisely two points worse off - that's
£50million that might have been better used making hats to keep the rain
off.
Drogba, on the other hand, is what Americans would call 'clutch'. Only last season Drogba scored the goals that beat Liverpool in the FA Cup final, Barcelona in the first leg of the Champions League semi-final and forced penalties against Bayern Munich in the final. Oh, and he rolled in the winning penalty as well. A useful man to have around. Chelsea may have changed styles these days, but they lack the option of the Drogba battering ram, the sheer physical force that could seemingly win games by size of chest-span, something that will come in handy as the season progresses.
2) Luka Modric and Rafa van der Vaart (Tottenham)
Drogba, on the other hand, is what Americans would call 'clutch'. Only last season Drogba scored the goals that beat Liverpool in the FA Cup final, Barcelona in the first leg of the Champions League semi-final and forced penalties against Bayern Munich in the final. Oh, and he rolled in the winning penalty as well. A useful man to have around. Chelsea may have changed styles these days, but they lack the option of the Drogba battering ram, the sheer physical force that could seemingly win games by size of chest-span, something that will come in handy as the season progresses.
2) Luka Modric and Rafa van der Vaart (Tottenham)
Tottenham's
primary problem this season is not the dicking around with goalkeepers,
it's not their fans booing the removal of Jermain Defoe after having
touched the ball 11 times in 60 minutes, and it's not even Andre
Villas-Boas's voice reaching the point of croaky where it's beginning to
sound like radio interference. It's that they simply don't have the
creative outlets they had last season.
Modric and Van der Vaart were
replaced by Mousa Dembele and Gylfi Sigurdsson, both fine players and
the former has certainly taken a chunk of the creative burden, but when
he is missing then Spurs basically have nobody to pick apart teams like -
to choose a completely random example - Wigan.
Sandro and Tom
Huddlestone are good at their jobs, Clint Dempsey is a handy attacker to
have around but hardly a string-puller, while Sigurdsson is basically
no use unless he's scoring goals. The failure to agree a deal for Joao
Moutinho in August might turn out to be their most costly move of the
season.
1) Robin van Persie (Arsenal)
1) Robin van Persie (Arsenal)
It's obvious, but true.
Arsene Wenger may like to pretend that he adequately replaced the
Dutchman by purchasing Lukas Podolski and Olivier Giroud in the summer,
but the evidence so far suggests - nay, bangs on a big metal pan and
shouts - that it is not. Arsenal have scored 15 goals this season, which
is the worst in the top seven, as many as Manchester United have scored
just at Old Trafford, and only one more than Southampton - who are
bottom of the league.
If Arsenal had scored one more goal in each game
this season, they would have nine more points and would be unbeaten.
This logic is inexact for various reasons, not least that it assumes
nobody has played in his place, but it does illustrate that Arsenal have
rather missed Van Persie, as would any team that had lost a player who
has scored 56 goals in 73 Premier League games since the start of
2010/11.
source: http://www.football365.com/topical-top-10/8227520/Top-Ten-Missing-Men-Of-The-Season
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