CasinoApps.com<\/a>, former Arsenal front man Alan Smith reviews Arteta’s summer transfer window. Applauding the Gunners late move for Chelsea outcast Raheem Sterling.<\/p>\nSmith also sends a clear warning to manager Ten Hag, predicting the dutchman will be out of Old Trafford by January if there isn’t a starch improvement in Man United’s performances.<\/p>\n\n
Full Transcript<\/h2>\n
Question: Who do you think has been the signing of the window?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I think the one that would have made everyone think, \u2018oh, for God’s sake, really?\u2019 Would have been Manchester City signing Gundogan on a free transfer. It\u2019s not like they\u2019re not good enough already and dropping in a world-class player like Gundogan only makes them stronger.\u00a0<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nDid City really need to bring him back? They are such a brilliant team, and they have welcomed back the captain of their treble-winning side into the fold; a player that is capable of getting 20 combined goals or assists a season. Gundogan is a player that you can depend on. You know exactly what you are going to get from him. For City\u2019s rivals and challengers, I think Gundogan\u2019s signing was a bit of depressing news.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nFederico Chiesa going to Liverpool for \u00a312m will be a great piece of business if he can stay fit. If they can get the player that shone at the European Championships in 2021, then that looks like being a cracking bargain for them. He\u2019s a highly experienced player domestically and internationally. That could be a very cute deal if it all goes well.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI did commentary at West Ham the other day, they’ve made a lot of good signings.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nAaron Wan-Bissaka looks like he’s going to enjoy his time there. That looks like a really, really good signing as well.”<\/span><\/em>
\n<\/span><\/p>\nQ: It would be rude not to discuss Chelsea\u2019s window. Sterling left, Sancho came in, yet they seem light in central defence and in the striker position. What have you made of it?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I think everybody’s just flabbergasted by Chelsea\u2019s transfer business and the Jadon Sancho one put the lid on it. They signed Jadon Sancho, and he\u2019s another player that hasn\u2019t really proven himself in the Premier League. Obviously, he was excellent at Dortmund, but he still has got a lot to do and to sign him, you’re letting Raheem Sterling go. I know Sterling didn’t show his best form at Chelsea, but even so, he’s a senior player that you can depend on.<\/span><\/p>\nThose deals summed it up for me; that told me what Chelsea\u2019s game plan is. It’s obviously looking long term, but football is such a short-term game. There aren\u2019t that many managers who have presented a five-year plan and seen it come to fruition.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nChelsea\u2019s approach has really confused the football world, and maybe even the sporting world. As to what they’re trying to do and whether it will be successful, we’ll have to see.<\/span><\/p>\nSo much depends on the quality of these players, young lads, and whether they can make a mark and increase their transfer value.”<\/span><\/p>\nQ: Arne Slot\u2019s Liverpool have started the season with maximum points playing a different style to Klopp\u2019s Liverpool. Are you surprised how quickly they have adapted?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “Liverpool have got off to a magnificent start. Three games, three wins, with the signature victory coming at Old Trafford, which is only going to endear you to your new supporters very quickly.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nSlot\u2019s got some of his key players hitting the ground running. Obviously, Mo Salah looks just brilliant at the moment. All the Liverpool lads are talking in glowing terms about the new manager, and I suppose as brilliant as Klopp was, it’s nice to have a change, and to then hear a different voice and to have different methods.<\/span>That\u2019s no criticism of Klopp because he’s an absolutely brilliant manager, but at the moment, and it’s still the honeymoon stage, everybody’s really enjoying what Slot’s bringing to the club.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nThe fans are hopeful after a fantastic start. Can they mount a tittle challenge this season? I\u2019m not sure. I suspect they come up a little short, but you never know.”\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nQ: After 3 games are there any teams that have surprised you in the premier league so far?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I suppose the biggest alarm would be Everton. Zero points, bottom of the table and to be 2-0 up against Bournemouth in the 87th minute and lose\u2026that is going to hurt very badly indeed. People talk about a good time to have an international break, and I think that this is probably a good time for them. Everton can use this period to let the dust settle a little bit and try and forget about the Bournemouth result because that was disastrous.\u00a0<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nAfter the game, Sean Dyche said he could smell a comeback in the air as soon as Bournemouth scored their first goal. If he said that, you’re wondering what he thinks about his players. Maybe he feels they’re not made of as stern of stuff as he would want.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Which of the newly promoted clubs if any do you think will stay up this season?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “Ipswich are having a go, aren’t they? They’ve got a point on the board. It’s been a really tough start for them with Liverpool and Manchester City. From what I\u2019ve seen of them, I think they’re going to attack it.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nI thought Leicester were going to finish bottom, but now the news that they’re not going to be deducted points is going to give everyone a huge lift at the club and it will give them a chance. It will still be a very difficult season, but that will give them a chance.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nAs for Southampton, it’s been a tough start for them. I would still put those three as favourites to go back down again.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Eddie Howe didn\u2019t get Marc Guehi. He obviously really wanted him – do you think he could feel a little bit let down by the club\u2019s failure to bring him in?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “You would think that Eddie Howe would feel let down after the club failed to deliver him Marc Guehi. The deal was played out quite publicly, and when the price was rising it only seemed that Newcastle were a few million away from getting the deal over the line.\u00a0<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nI\u2019m surprised that they didn\u2019t sign him given that Guehi was his number one choice. When you heard that Newcastle had upped their bid, you thought that it was only a matter of time before he signed.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nDid Newcastle have a second or third choice for that central defence position? If Eddie badly wanted a central defender, well-run clubs typically have backup options. Perhaps he was the club\u2019s top target and, if they couldn\u2019t get him, they didn\u2019t want anyone else.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI do wonder what Eddie Howe will be thinking at the moment in terms of where the club’s going and how quickly they can become one of the forces in English football.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nIt’s going to be harder than we all thought and maybe he thought when they qualified for the Champions League.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI don’t think they can get in that top four this season. It’s been a bit of a stuttery start for Newcastle, but they got a really good result against Spurs; they’ve got some very good players. Thankfully for Eddie Howe, they’ve managed to keep the likes of Alexander Isak, Anthony Gordon and Bruno Guimaraes. That\u2019s a boost.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI think that they’ll be looking for a European place, but not a Champions League one.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Given the speculation about ten Hag\u2019s future, it feels like he\u2019s one bad defeat away from the vultures circling. What do you think will happen with ten Hag and Manchester United this season?\u00a0\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “If Manchester United\u2019s performances continue in this vein, I don’t think that Erik ten Hag will be in a job at Christmas. From what we\u2019ve seen of Manchester United so far, there aren’t too many signs that things are going to change.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nManuel Ugarte is coming in, you would imagine he’ll be a plus point, but I’m not sure.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nEverything feels quite volatile at the club. It\u2019s never a good sign when your manager is fighting back against journalists in press conferences; he keeps quoting the two cup wins in the last two years. Lots of clubs would have liked to have won those, but you judge a team by their league standing and there’s nothing really to suggest that Manchester United are going to be any better than they were last season.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nEverything is on a knife edge after three games, which is a crazy situation. Manchester United spoke to a lot of managers before the exercised Erik ten Hag\u2019s one-year extension clause. I think its noticeable that they didn’t give him another three years. They just gave him another year, and that tells you something about what they’re thinking.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI think there might be some movement before Christmas at United, unless he can quickly get things together.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Chelsea. Lots of changes, same inconsistencies. Is that what Chelsea fans can expect this season?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “Snakes and ladders, isn’t it? Poch seemed to have got Chelsea up the ladder, but by hiring a new manager they may have gone back down the snake a bit, and they’re trying to clamber back up again with a lot of new players. It’s so hard to predict what they’re going to do in the Premier League this season.\u00a0<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nThey\u2019ve been inconsistent so far, drawing at home to Crystal Palace after whacking Wolves away. They’re capable of doing that, thrashing teams when it all clicks.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nEnzo Maresca, talk about having your hands full. He\u2019s an inexperienced manager as well. It’s a heck of a task for him. He’s been quite bullish about how he\u2019s done things so far; he\u2019s been very direct in his press conferences when dealing with the media and answering questions about different players.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI don’t know how Chelsea will do to be honest with you. I don’t see them being consistent in the league, put it that way. They could do well in the cups again, but I don’t see them clambering into the top four. Maybe they could get into the top six.”\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Can you tell us anything about the vibe around the camp or what you may have seen at St. Georges Park?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “The vibes around the camp seem good. There’s a few new lads in there that are<\/em><\/span><\/p>\neager to impress and, obviously, one of the new lads is Lee Carsley. I think Lee\u2019s anxious to get the first game out of the way rather than doing press conferences and media.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI know what it’s like when there’s a new manager for the players to impress. It doesn\u2019t matter how established you are, you all want to show the new manager something and you want to make your mark.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI haven’t got any inside info on the team he’ll select. I suppose it will be influenced by the lads who had to pull out in Cole Palmer, Ollie Watkins and Phil Foden, who are some of England\u2019s top players. He’s got some new additions that will be interesting to have a look at – I\u2019m looking forward to seeing the team that he goes with against Ireland on Saturday.”\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Were you surprised with Lee Carsley\u2019s appointment as interim England manager?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I wasn\u2019t surprised that the FA appointed Lee Carsley, given his experience with the under-21s. it certainly makes sense in an interim basis, and it might well make sense long term.<\/em><\/span>
\n<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nSome people may turn their noses up at the idea of Lee being appointed on a full-time basis, but he’s been very successful through the England age groups and obviously won the UEFA European Under-21 Championship in 2023.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nHe isn\u2019t a big name, but that isn\u2019t important. You don\u2019t have to be a big name or have a massive managerial career behind you to be a success. If the players listen to you and understand what you’re trying to do; if they are impressed by the sessions you put on and they respect you, then it doesn’t matter.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nSo in a way, I hope he does get the job on a permanent basis. He’s worked hard in his footballing career.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nIn his playing days, he wasn’t one of the big stars, but he’s worked hard. On the coaching side, he\u2019s worked extremely hard, and he’s been successful at it. Maybe he deserves a chance.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Do you think he has any chance of getting the role permanently or do you think he\u2019s warming the seat for a bigger name to come in next year?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I think his chances of getting the job on a permanent basis will depend on what alternatives are available. It will depend on the choices the FA have.\u00a0\u00a0<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nEddie Howe’s name keeps popping up. I don’t know how Eddie feels about all that.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nHe would be the most likely though, wouldn’t he, if you wanted to put an Englishman in there? I can’t really think of too many others.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nWith Grealish and Maguire back, are you expecting both experienced men to play key roles in Carsley\u2019s England moving forwards?<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I imagine Jack Grealish and Harry Maguire will play a role. Both will be pleased to be back in the squad. Both players know international football very well.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nJust because they\u2019re back in, doesn\u2019t mean that they will start. There are still some choices for Lee Carsley to make. Anthony Gordon can play on the left. John Stones and Marc Guehi formed a great partnership and did really well at the European Championships. Maguire is a good option to have, of course.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI’m pleased to see Maguire back as well. Maguire\u2019s a top pro, and one of those lads that you do want in the dressing room. He’s also done extremely well at international level.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI imagine Lee Carsley will swap a few things around over the two matches and see what he’s got in front of him.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Although England got to the final of the Euros there was a lot of criticism of Gareth Southgate over team selection and tactics do you think Carsley will pick and play a\u00a0<\/b>team that reflects our attacking abilities?\u00a0\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I think he’ll stick with his principles, and he should do. He should be himself and behave how he did with the under-21s. His teams for the under-21s were attacking, took risks and played on the front foot. That\u2019s what everyone wants to see from an England team.\u00a0<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nThere were some things that didn\u2019t quite happen for us in Germany (at EURO 2024) under Gareth. It looks like he’ll play a slightly different system as well. A lot of his lineups have been 4-4-2 or 4-4-1-1, so slightly different to what we\u2019ve seen under Gareth.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI don\u2019t think he can radically move away from what Gareth Southgate was doing. He’s just got to do what he thinks is best as a coach and he’ll be judged on that.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: A couple of guys that have come into the squad who he’s trusted before in his under-21s teams are Morgan Gibbs-White and Angel Gomes. What kind of role do you think either one of those guys will play?<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I would imagine both Morgan Gibbs-White and Angel Gomes will get run outs. Morgan Gibbs-White is a bit more experienced, he has that Premier League experience, and I really like him as a player.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nI’ve covered a lot of Nottingham Forest games over the last couple of years and he’s their go-to man; their talisman to get things going. He’s got so much energy and plays with a real desire as well, so I’m sure he’ll have a big part to play.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nAngel Gomes is a player that a lot of people may not be that familiar with. It\u2019s quite a strange situation for him to find himself in, and I said as much to Lee Carsley when I spoke to him. It’s not often that a player gets picked for the international side who maybe a lot of the public don’t know, but Manchester United fans will know all about him. I’d love to see him get a run out and see what he’s got.”\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Ivan Toney was left out of the latest England squad. Do you think he can get a call up whilst playing in Saudi or has he kissed goodbye to his England career?<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I would have thought that Ivan Toney\u2019s England career is over now he\u2019s move to Saudi Arabia. It\u2019s a difficult one. You can never say never to these types of scenarios, and if he scores 40 goals this coming season, looks sharp, he might still be in the manager’s thoughts.\u00a0<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nObviously, the financial appeal of the move is massive. From that respect, it\u2019s a brilliant move for him. As he was sat on the private jet bound for Saudi, I do think there will be a part of him that\u2019s a little bit sad by how it has all panned out for him this summer. He\u2019s signed his career away in many respects in his prime. It\u2019s not like he\u2019s 22 and can think \u2018I\u2019ll play a couple of years in Saudi and come back\u2019. It does feel a little sad.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nIt sounds like he didn’t have too many attractive offers, if any. He could have stayed at Brentford and then he could have left on a free transfer next season. He might have had some offers then.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI am surprised that there wasn\u2019t an offer from a Premier League club, especially with the size of the fee that he was available for. I thought that Manchester United could have been a club that may have had a nibble given they could do with some more support through the middle and a bit more experience in the strikers position.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI just feel a little bit sad about it and maybe he does deep down as well.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: No Ben White in the England team. He\u2019s been solid as a rock now for the last two seasons at Arsenal – are you worried about his England career being over before it\u2019s got started?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I feel it’s a shame that Ben White hasn\u2019t played that much for his country. Lee Carsley said he wasn’t available at one of his press conferences, so Ben or someone from Arsenal must have told them that.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nDoes that mean he’s never going to be available again? I don’t know. He might just need a little bit of time for the dust to settle rather than saying, \u201coh, yeah, I’m available now\u201d. He might believe a little bit of time is better for all parties.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nThere’s no doubt that he’s a quality option to have. You don’t want to regret things at the end of your career. You want to have given it your all. He\u2019ll probably be thinking long and hard about that, and what to do.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: What do you think Raheem Sterling can add to Arsenal this season and is it enough to win the league?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “The signing of Raheem Sterling certainly isn\u2019t going to take Arsenal further away from winning a league title.\u00a0 I think it was a bit of a no-brainer for Arteta to be able to bring him in for a year.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nMost Arsenal fans wanted the club to bring in a player that could take some of the burden off Bukayo Saka because he plays an awful lot of football. He gets kicked, he takes big knocks, and Sterling can play in any of the forward positions, so that will allow them to rotate with real quality. When they\u2019re not playing together, Sterling will be a very good alternative. He can play on the left, of course, but Trossard and Martinelli can fill that position.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nI think he\u2019s a good character to add to that dressing room. Arteta thinks long and hard before bringing players in because of the good chemistry at the club. I think all of the players realise that they\u2019re all in it together and they need to win a trophy pretty soon. That’s the next step. Sterling might just help them to do it.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nSterling sounds delighted to come across London, he\u2019s escaped the mad house that’s Chelsea and joined a fine old club that has welcomed him in. When he signed, he sounded absolutely delighted. That’s a great sign.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: There were a lot of outgoings as well as a number of players coming in. How would you assess Arsenal’s transfer window?<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “Arsenal have generated good money for the academy boys. Nketiah and Smith-Rowe left for good sums, while Nelson went out on loan. That gave them an opportunity to raise some much-needed funds because of the new financial rules that the clubs have to adhere to.\u00a0<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nThere is probably a little bit of sadness about the departures of Nketiah and Smith-Rowe, there always is when you sell your academy boys, but it\u2019s part of the game now. They were sellable assets that teams wanted, and you have to balance the books.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: You mentioned that the likes of Reiss Nelson, Eddie Nketiah, Emile Smith-Rowe and Aaron Ramsdale had to move on this summer. They have all gone – it\u2019s the largest rotation of players that I can remember at the club in a long time. With the way that Arsenal handles their business this summer, do you think Edu has put to bed any concerns about his ability to sell players?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “When you\u2019re trying to sell a 28 or 29-year-old who has seen his best days as a player, and Arsenal have had a few of them, then getting them out of the club for good money is a very difficult task.\u00a0<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nThe likes of Nketiah and Smith-Rowe, they’re at the start of their careers. They’ve been brought up well. They’re clearly talented. They want to do well in the game. They’re attractive players, so clubs will pay the money.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nFair play to Edu for standing his ground and holding out for the fee the club wanted for Nketiah. He could end up getting 20 odd goals for Palace this season, and then you could add \u00a320-30 million to his price tag, but Arsenal will have included a sell-on fee if he were to move on from Palace in the future at a profit.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nEdu has been in the job for a few years now and they knew what they had with those lads. They knew that they were attractive, they were saleable and that’s exactly what they did.”<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: Are you concerned about any areas of the squad?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “I do think the Gunners are a bit light through the middle in the striker position. Gabriel Jesus keeps on picking up injuries, he\u2019s out at the moment, and we don’t know how close he is to fitness. It’s difficult to rely on him. If he is injured, then you’ve just got to have what you have, which isn\u2019t ideal. <\/em><\/span>
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\n<\/span>In an ideal world, Arteta would have brought somebody in, but the striker he wanted wasn\u2019t available. That is the one part of the Arsenal team where you worry about depth. I have my fingers crossed that Havertz doesn\u2019t get injured.”\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nQ: For someone like Nketiah, is Palace the perfect place for him to demonstrate that he is a top-class striker at Premier League level?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “It will be interesting to see if Oliver Glasner starts him, because Mateta has been flying for Palace. Will he play them as a pair? Will one of them shift wide? With the money that Crystal Palace have paid for him, I expect him to start. <\/em><\/span>
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\n<\/span>Eddie was talking about returning to South London, saying he felt at home. We also saw someone like Eze who showed, with that goal at Chelsea, that he’s a brilliant player to have alongside you or behind you.<\/span>
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\n<\/span>I hope he does well. He’s capable of doing well. He\u2019s not been in a situation where he has to shoulder the responsibility of scoring the goals for a team as a first-choice player before, so we’ll see how he handles that. I think he can do well at Palace.”<\/span><\/em>
\n<\/span><\/p>\nQ: Kai Havertz has scored 10 goals in 15 Premier League games playing as a striker for the Gunners, with seven assists as well. Does he fit the mould of how Arteta wants his forwards to play? Do you think he\u2019s a better fit for Arsenal there than Dom Solanke or Ivan Toney would have been?<\/b><\/p>\n
Alan Smith: “In an ideal world, I think Arteta would want another striker to compliment what he already has; a player with different qualities to the likes of Gabriel Jesus and Kai Havertz, so more of an orthodox centre-forward.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\nHe\u2019ll be pleased with the options he has. Arsenal wanted Benjamin Sesko and didn\u2019t get him, so they\u2019ve decided to keep the faith with the options they have. <\/span>
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\n<\/span>Sometimes it’s horses for courses against different opponents. In certain matches, maybe you’d like a more powerful presence through the middle if you see a weakness in the central defence of the opposition.<\/span>
\n<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nArteta doesn\u2019t have a player like that. He’s going to have to try and do it in a different way, but he\u2019s found the solutions so far.\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/p>\nKai Havertz has really impressed after a difficult start. He’s absolutely thriving at Arsenal.”<\/span><\/em>
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\n<\/b>Q: Arsenal have won their last two visits to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and were 3-0 up at half-time in this fixture last season when the pressure was on in the title race. Do you expect the same with Spurs off to a slower start than they’d like this season?<\/b><\/p>\nAlan Smith: “We often say that derbies of this sort, the gap closes and form goes out of the window, but I think that’s less true these days. Arsenal are clearly a good few notches above Spurs in terms of where they are, so even though it’s at Spurs, you’d probably say they go in as favourites.<\/em><\/span><\/p>\n