By Tony Attwood The 2008 pre-season had the usual level of comings and goings with Mathieu Flamini, who had had a superb season in 2007/8 moving onto Milan at the end of his contract, Lehmann joining Stuttgart on a free, Gilberto signing for Panathinaikos, Hleb to Barcelona, and Justin Hoyte going to Middlesbrough. Coming in we …
By Tony Attwood Having settled into the Emirates for one year Arsenal’s 2007 pre-season was one of the most extensive – not just in the number of games but in terms of the sizes of audience that the club played to. As for the transfer window that was hectic too. Fabrice Muamba went to Birmingham City …
By Tony Attwood The pre-season games for the 2006/7 season – the first at the Emirates Stadium, were different from the norm. They started with a draw with Barnet, the first Emirates game for Bergkamp’s testimonial, a set of overseas friendlies, and then a Champions League qualified, all before the season started. Here are the …
By Tony Attwood After years of an on-off transfer Patrick Vieira was sold to Juventus where he won a title, and then lost it because of match fixing, and was immediately sold again as Juventus changed from being champions to a relegated club. Alexander Hleb was purchased from Stuttgart. Nic Bendtner and Vito Mannone also …
by Tony Attwood In the midst of the 49 this was a transfer window with limited input. Almunia arrived from Celta Vigo, Flamini came on a free from Marseille – his contract there having ended, and Emmanuel Eboué moved in from Beveren for £1.5m. The leavings were of a higher order. Keown, Parlour, Kanu and Wiltord …
By Tony Attwood Despite Arsenal’s position as one of the top two, at the end of the 2000/1 season there were extreme mutterings, after Arsenal finished second for the third year running, and this time ten points behind Man U. That was the season with the 6-1 defeat to Man U which Sky seem to …
By Tony Attwood Robert Pirès arrival was surely the transfer to note in the 2000 pre-season period, joining on 3 July, while Sylvain Wiltord joined at the end of the transfer window. Nigel Winterburn, Marc Overmars and Manu Petit all moved on. Arsenal opened with the usual couple of low key warm ups in the pre-season starting with …
Alfred Godfrey Calverley was born 24 November 1917 He joined Huddersfield Town from school, played a couple of games for Mossley on loan and then returned to Huddersfield. He was still registered with Huddersfield when the war ended guested for several clubs during the Second World War including Leeds, Bradford, Clapton Orient. In one match on …
By Tony Attwood The pre-season gathering of the players together was disrupted by world cup call ups so many of the preliminary games of the summer of 1998 gave the lesser known players a chance to shine. David Grondin and Nelson Vivas were the players to join us before the pre-season games began. (Fredrik …
By Tony Attwood Paul Taylor wrote to the AHS a little while back about the Arsenal player Frank Ransom. His report is that he was born sometime in 1878 and and he is found on all censuses from 1881 to 1901 living in Plumstead; latterly as a house painter. None of his immediate family is …
By Tony Attwood. This article continues the series on past pre-seasons, this time dealing with the summer of 1996. None of us knows, of course, what happened when Bruce Rioch left and Arsene Wenger arrived. We know that Rioch finished the previous season of 1995/6 in a bit of style, but had a dreadful 1996 …
By Tony Attwood I am not sure if the Kapfenberg Tri-Team Pre-Season Tournament of 2002/3 was unique, but it was certainly unusual. As the name suggests three sides (Arsenal, Panathinaikos and Roma) played each other. What the titles doesn’t suggest is that the games all took place on 1 August 2002, and were games of …
James Devlin has always been at best a footnote in the history of Arsenal, playing just one game for the club. But as always when one looks behind the scenes there is a little more to be revealed and it is rather an interesting tale. But there is mystery even as to his place and …
By Tony Attwood The season 1999/2000 started with some high hopes after 1998/9. Arsenal had finished second, just one point behind Man U, who had won the Double, beating Arsenal 2-1 after extra time in the FA Cup semi-final. A return to the 1997/8 style and pomp could be hoped for especially as Arsenal had …
8 July 1997: St Albans 1 Arsenal 4 (Grimandi Rankin Shaw 2) 12 July 1997: Leyton Orient 0 Arsenal 1 (Shaw) 20 July 1997: Stade Nyon 0 Arsenal 4 (Mendez Boa Morte Overmars Bergkamp( 25 July 1997: Strasbourg 1 Arsenal 2 (Garde Wright( 30 July 1997: PSV Eindhoven 1 Arsenal 0 4 August 1997: Norwich …
By Tony Attwood In 2003 there had been the wretched Confederations Cup, and Arsenal’s French players were by and large absent from most pre-season training. The results are below – but the game that really stood out for me was the first one – I have such vivid memories of Mr Wenger strolling about on …
By Tony Attwood Herbert Chapman’s last major signing came four months before he passed away suddenly. Arsenal already had four centre forwards in the club: Lambert, Jack, Coleman and Bowden, but Chapman was always looking to improve and develop, and give competition for those who were in the team. So he chose Jimmy Dunne. In …
I first wrote about Paul Vaessen on this site with an article that had the bleak title The awful tragedy of Paul Vaessen After that article appeared I received an email back from a regular reader asking that if I was going to publish something as moving and ultimately tragic as this, would I mind not …
By Tony Attwood Jimmy Logie was an Arsenal player from 1939 to 1955, playing 296 league games for the club. It could of course have been many more, of course, but for the war. However he was still there for the club in 1946 and went on to win the FA Cup and the first …
By Tony Attwood Benefactors have a long tradition of rescuing football clubs – and Arsenal’s major benefactors (although there were other benefactors of the club before him) was Henry Norris in 1910, and again with the building of Highbury in 1913. But it is interesting in reading Tom Whittaker’s memoires that despite his joining the …
By Tony Attwood Reading a real manager’s memoires, as opposed to the sanitised rubbish we normally see, one gets some real insights. If you have been following my recent meanders around Arsenal’s history you’ll know I’m writing the annual AISA Arsenal History Society publication which will go out to all members this summer, and it …
By Tony Attwood 1945/6 was a strange season. The wartime leagues continued as before, for although the war was over, too many players were still away from their clubs in the armed forces. But the FA Cup came back after its wartime suspension, and for one season only, it was played on a home and …
By Tony Attwood When the real success started for Arsenal with the FA Cup victory in 1930, football in England was dominated by a group of regular cup and league winners. The subsequent turnaround for football in general and Arsenal in particular was extraordinary. In the post-first-world-war era before Arsenal’s first triumph in 1930, the …
By Tony Attwood I was writing before about my lack of knowledge of exactly how Tom Whittaker got a job as a trainer with Arsenal, having been an out of favour player, and then getting injured on an FA tour in Australia. (The article, How did Whittaker get Chapman to believe in him, as the …
By Tony Attwood Today’s anniversary list has as its first item, 4 June 1925: Herbert Chapman returned to England early from a tour with Huddersfield, ready for talks with Arsenal about becoming the club’s new manager. And in these last couple of days, that has given me a bit of a problem. Not with the …