2011–12 Arsenal F.C. season
The 2011–12 season is Arsenal Football Club's 20th season in the Premier League, and also marks the club's 125th anniversary.[1] Arsenal will seek to win their first trophy for six seasons, competing in the Premier League, the FA Cup, the League Cup and the UEFA Champions League.
Review
Pre-season
Arsenal's pre-season transfer activity was once again dominated by media speculation regarding the future of club captain Cesc Fàbregas, whose return to boyhood club FC Barcelona was widely expected, although not officially confirmed until the middle of August when an initial fee in the region of £30 million[2] was agreed between the two clubs.[3] Prior to this, the Gunners' first signing came in the form of young English-Finnish right-back Carl Jenkinson from Charlton Athletic on 8 June for an initial fee of around £1 million[4], whilst the first major signing did not come until 11 July with the signing of Gervinho from French champions Lille for more than £10 million pounds.[5] The only notable exits in July came in goalkeeper Jens Lehmann, who retired for the second time, having come out of his first retirement in March to solve an injury crisis that left Arsenal with just one match-fit goalkeeper, whilst Gaël Clichy joined Manchester City.[6] It was August before the club's transfer activity increased, with promising young striker Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain joining from Southampton for a reported £12 million,[7] before the departures of Fabregas to Barcelona, the long-serving Emmanuel Eboué to Turkish side Galatasaray,[8] and Samir Nasri to Manchester City for a fee of £25 million.[9] Left-back Armand Traoré's departure to newly-promoted Queens Park Rangers on the penultimate day of the transfer window completed the departures from the first team,[10] before Arsène Wenger, under increasing criticism for the lack of arrivals so far,[11] went on something of a spending spree in the final 48 hours of the window. South Korea captain Park Chu-Young joined from Monaco,[12] before left-back André Santos,[13] centre back Per Mertesacker[14] and midfielder Mikel Arteta[15] all joined in the dying hours of the window, from Fenerbahçe, Werder Bremen and Everton respectively. Yossi Benayoun also joined the club on a season long loan from Chelsea,[16] whilst striker Nicklas Bendtner was loaned to Sunderland for the same period,[17] following fellow first-team members Denílson[18] and Carlos Vela,[19] who had joined São Paulo and Real Sociedad on loan earlier in the window. At the close of the window, Arsenal had spent an estimated £51.2 million, compared to an income of nearly £75 million.
Away from the transfer window, Robin van Persie was chosen to replace the departing Fàbregas as club captain, having stood in on several previous occasions when Fàbregas was not playing.[20] Pre-season saw Arsenal hold their first ever Asian tour, commencing against a Malaysian League XI in Kuala Lumpur where goals from Aaron Ramsey, Theo Walcott, Carlos Vela and Tomáš Rosický earned the Gunners a 4-0 win. Chinese side Hangzhou Greentown proved a tougher test in Arsenal's next match, where after falling behind in the 16th minute, Vela scored to achieve a 1-1 draw. Arsenal travelled next to Germany to face 1. FC Köln where new signing Gervinho scored twice in eight minutes on his debut to put the side two goals ahead, before fellow newcomer Carl Jenkinson put the ball through Arsenal's own net, to result in a 2-1 victory for the Gunners. Arsenal's only home pre-season matches came in the annual Emirates Cup tournament, where Boca Juniors, New York Red Bulls and Paris Saint-Germain were welcomed to London. Arsenal's matches both ended in draws, first surrendering a Robin van Persie and Aaron Ramsey created two-goal lead against Boca Juniors, before conceding an 84th minutes own goal from Kyle Bartley against New York Red Bulls the next day, cancelling out a van Persie opener. Arsenal's run of pre-season fixtures concluded with a loss to Portuguese team Benfica in the Eusebio Cup, once again surrendering a one goal advantage courtesy of Robin van Persie to end up losing 2-1 in Lisbon.
August
Arsenal's fixtures in the Premier League started at Newcastle United, where, despite surrendering a four goal lead last season, they played out a 0-0 draw this time around. The match was perhaps more notable for disciplinary issues, with Gervinho receiving a straight red-card on his competitive debut, whilst Alex Song received a retrospective charge of violent conduct for stamping on Joey Barton. The Gunners faced a two-legged tie against Italian side Udinese to secure qualification to the season's UEFA Champions League competition, with Theo Walcott's 4th minute goal separating the teams in the first leg at the Emirates, before goals from Walcott and Robin van Persie, as well as a penalty save from Wojciech Szczęsny, saw the Gunners secure victory in the away leg in Udine, and secure their place in the group stage of the competition.
The two legs were sandwiched between an early Premier League title contender clash at the Emirates against Liverpool, where an own goal from Aaron Ramsey and a last minute strike from new Liverpool signing Luis Suárez saw the team fall to defeat, and fuel the widely held belief that Arsenal would once again fail to prove serious challengers for the league title. Any attempt to dispel such a notion was dealt a huge blow the following week, when Arsenal travelled to Old Trafford to suffer their heaviest ever defeat in the Premier League. A hat-trick from Wayne Rooney, two goals from Ashley Young, and goals from Danny Welbeck, Nani and Ji-Sung Park saw the club slump to an 8-2 hammering at the hands of Manchester United, with Robin van Persie and Theo Walcott's goals proving no consolation as Arsenal ended the month hovering just one place above the relegation zone, having failed to win any of their opening league matches.
September
Arsenal eventually secured their first league win of the season at home to newly-promoted Swansea City at the start of September, when Andrei Arshavin’s goal proved enough to separate the sides, before the team faced the first of their six Champions League group stage fixtures away to German champions Borussia Dortmund. A win looked to be on the cards thanks to Robin van Persie’s first half goal, but Dortmund’s Ivan Perišić equalised with just two minutes left to play leaving Arsenal to be satisfied with just a single point. Any hope of progress in the Premier League was dashed when the Gunners gave away a 2-1 half-time lead away to Blackurn Rovers, with own goals from both Alex Song and Laurent Koscielny gifting Blackburn a 4-3 victory.
Arsenal’s opening match in the Carling Cup looked to be a straight-forward home tie against League Two outfit Shrewsbury Town, but it was the opposition that opened the scoring, before Kieran Gibbs, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Yossi Benayoun eventually secured progress to the fourth round. This seemed to spark some life into the team, and they ran out 3-0 winners the following week against Bolton Wanderers in the league thanks to a brace from Robin van Persie and a late goal from Alex Song, before securing their first group stage win in Europe at home to Greek champions Olympiacos with goals from Oxlade-Chamberlain and André Santos.
October
Any suggestion that the end of September had been the start of an Arsenal turnaround was proved wrong in the North London derby at the start of October. Rafael van der Vaart’s opening goal at White Hart Lane was cancelled out by Aaron Ramsey, before Kyle Walker secured the bragging rights for Tottenham. Following an international break, the Gunners’ home match against Sunderland looked set to be heading for a 1-1 draw until Robin van Persie scored in the last ten minutes to secure all three points, whilst a late goal also earned an away European victory against Marseille, with Aaron Ramsey providing the required fire-power.
Arsenal’s season continued to improve with a 3-1 league victory against Stoke City thanks to two goals from van Persie and a strike from Gervinho, before Andrei Arshavin and Park Chu-Young saw the team past Bolton Wanderers in the fourth round of the Carling Cup. The turnaround was complete when Arsenal beat title-rivals Chelsea 5-3 at Stamford Bridge thanks to goals from André Santos and Theo Walcott, as well as a hat-trick from Robin van Persie, a performance that helped the Dutchman to the Premier League player of the month award, and saw the Gunners finish October 7th in the table.
November
November opened with Marseille visiting the Emirates for the return leg of the Champions League fixture, a game that ended in a 0-0 draw. In the Premier League, Arsenal’s good form continued with a 3-0 victory over West Brom thanks to goals from Robin van Persie, Mikel Arteta and Thomas Vermaelen, whose return from injury provided further good news for the team. After another international break, Arsenal continued where they left off with a 2-1 win over Norwich City thanks to two more goals from Robin van Persie, making him just the third player since the Premier League’s inception after Alan Shearer and former Arsenal captain Thierry Henry to score 30 goals in a calendar year.
With their Premier League campaign seemingly re-energised, Arsenal’s attention turned once more to the Champions League, with Dortmund being the latest visitors to the Emirates. Arsenal knew a win would be sufficient to secure progression to the knockout phase, but it was Dortmund who made the brighter start until injuries forced two of their key players – Sven Bender and Mario Götze, to be substituted before half time. This allowed Arsenal to capitalise, with man of the moment Robin van Persie netting two goals in the second half thanks to assists first from Alex Song and then Thomas Vermaelen, before Shinji Kagawa netted the Germans a consolation goal in injury time. The 2-1 victory was not only enough to secure the Gunners’ progression, but also top spot in group F thanks to Olympiacos’s victory over 2nd placed Marseille in the night’s other match. This Champions League success came at a price, however, with the team appearing off form in their next Premier League game against Fulham, who took the lead in the match thanks to a Thomas Vermaelen own goal. It was only when the Belgian defender was able to convert into the right net in the 82nd minute that the Gunners were able to draw level, and end the match with a 1-1 draw. The impact of the result was only alleviated by results elsewhere, with four of the six teams above Arsenal in the table – Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Newcastle United all playing out draws in the same weekend.
November ended on somewhat of a negative note, with the team exiting the Carling Cup with a 5th round loss to Manchester City, although the Gunners were by no means overwhelmed by the Premier League leaders. Instead, the young and relatively inexperienced side that included the likes of Emmanuel Frimpong, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Park Chu-Young, as well as reserve team players Ignasi Miquel and Francis Coquelin, held their own for much of the match, with just a single goal by Sergio Agüero in the 83rd minute being able to separate the two sides.
December
A 4-0 win in the Premier League away at Wigan allowed Arsenal to continue their progression up the league table thanks to goals from Mikel Arteta, Thomas Vermaelen, Gervinho and Robin van Persie, before the team travelled to Athens to face Olympiacos in their final group stage match in the Champions League. With a group topping position already secured, Arsène Wenger chose to field a much weakened side, making 10 changes from the team that started at Wigan 3 days earlier, and this was evident as the team fell to a 3-1 defeat. The game was perhaps most notable for highlighting Arsenal’s ongoing out of sight goalkeeping problems, with Łukasz Fabiański being forced off injured in 25th minute to be replaced by Vito Mannone, whose erratic goalkeeping gifted the Greek side’s 2nd goal.
The return of Arsenal’s stronger starting 11 in their next Premier League match saw the team return to winning ways, securing a 1-0 victory at home to Everton, before making the trip to the Ethiad Stadium a week later to face league leaders Manchester City without both first choice full-backs, Bacary Sagna and André Santos. Despite these absences, the Gunners put up a strong fight, and it was only David Silva’s effort early in the 2nd half that was enough to separate the teams at the final whistle. Arsenal entered the Christmas fixtures with a 2-1 victory over Aston Villa, with Robin van Persie scoring his 34th Premier League goal of 2011, equalling Thierry Henry’s club record, before Yossi Benayoun secured his first league goal for Arsenal, along with all 3 points.
Arsenal ended December with 2 games in 4 days, and Gervinho’s 8th minute goal looked to have set the Gunners off well against Wolves, but Steven Fletcher’s equaliser later in the first half ended up restricting them to just a single point. The year ended with a 1-0 win over Queens Park Rangers at the Emirates, with Robin van Persie’s goal being enough to secure him the club record for goals scored in a calendar year, although he did fall a single strike short of equalling Alan Shearer’s Premier League record of 36.
Key events
Players
Squad information
N
|
P
|
Nat.
|
Name
|
Age
|
EU
|
Since
|
App
|
Goals
|
Ends
|
Transfer fee
|
Notes
|
1 |
GK |
ESP |
Almunia, ManuelManuel Almunia |
34 |
EU |
2004 |
175 |
0 |
undisclosed[21] |
£0.5M[22] |
|
2 |
MF |
FRA |
Diaby, AbouAbou Diaby |
25 |
EU |
2006 (Winter) |
160 |
19 |
undisclosed[23] |
£2.0M[24] |
|
3 |
DF |
FRA |
Sagna, BacaryBacary Sagna |
29 |
EU |
2007 |
186 |
3 |
2014[25] |
£7.5M[26] |
|
4 |
DF |
GER |
Mertesacker, PerPer Mertesacker |
27 |
EU |
2011 |
21 |
0 |
2015[14] |
£8.0M[27] |
|
5 |
DF |
BEL |
Vermaelen, ThomasThomas Vermaelen (vice-captain) |
26 |
EU |
2009 |
69 |
11 |
2015[28] |
£10.0M[29] |
|
6 |
DF |
FRA |
Koscielny, LaurentLaurent Koscielny |
26 |
EU |
2010 |
66 |
4 |
undisclosed[30] |
£8.5M[30] |
|
7 |
MF |
CZE |
Rosický, TomášTomáš Rosický |
31 |
EU |
2006 |
145 |
17 |
2012[31] |
£6.8M[32] |
|
8 |
MF |
ESP |
Arteta, MikelMikel Arteta |
29 |
EU |
2011 |
22 |
3 |
2015[15] |
£10.0M[33] |
|
9 |
FW |
KOR |
Chu-Young, ParkPark Chu-Young |
26 |
Non-EU |
2011 |
4 |
1 |
undisclosed[12] |
£1.8M[34] |
|
10 |
FW |
NED |
van Persie, RobinRobin van Persie (captain) |
28 |
EU |
2004 |
256 |
116 |
2013[35] |
£2.75M[36] |
|
11 |
DF |
BRA |
Santos, AndréAndré Santos |
29 |
Non-EU |
2011 |
14 |
2 |
undisclosed[13] |
£6.2M[37] |
|
13 |
GK |
POL |
Szczęsny, WojciechWojciech Szczęsny |
21 |
EU |
2007 |
52 |
0 |
undisclosed[38] |
Youth system |
|
14 |
FW |
ENG |
Walcott, TheoTheo Walcott |
23 |
EU |
2006 (Winter) |
199 |
35 |
2013[39] |
£9.0M[40] |
|
15 |
FW |
ENG |
Oxlade-Chamberlain, AlexAlex Oxlade-Chamberlain |
18 |
EU |
2011 |
6 |
2 |
undisclosed[41] |
£12.0M[42] |
|
16 |
MF |
WAL |
Ramsey, AaronAaron Ramsey |
21 |
EU |
2008 |
84 |
8 |
undisclosed[43] |
£4.8M[44] |
|
17 |
MF |
CMR |
Song, AlexandreAlexandre Song |
24 |
EU |
2005 |
181 |
10 |
2014[45] |
£1.0M[46] |
|
18 |
DF |
FRA |
Squillaci, SébastienSébastien Squillaci |
31 |
EU |
2010 |
36 |
2 |
2013[47] |
£3.3M[47] |
|
19 |
MF |
ENG |
Wilshere, JackJack Wilshere |
20 |
EU |
2008 |
64 |
3 |
undisclosed[48] |
Youth system |
|
20 |
DF |
SUI |
Djourou, JohanJohan Djourou |
25 |
EU |
2003 |
134 |
1 |
undisclosed[49] |
Youth system |
|
21 |
GK |
POL |
Fabiański, ŁukaszŁukasz Fabiański |
26 |
EU |
2007 |
60 |
0 |
undisclosed[50] |
£2.0M[51] |
|
23 |
MF |
RUS |
Arshavin, AndreiAndrei Arshavin |
30 |
Non-EU |
2009 (Winter) |
129 |
30 |
2012[52] |
£15.0M[53] |
|
24 |
GK |
ITA |
Mannone, VitoVito Mannone |
24 |
EU |
2005 |
10 |
0 |
2014[54] |
£0.35M[55] |
On loan to Hull City |
25 |
DF |
FIN |
Jenkinson, CarlCarl Jenkinson |
20 |
EU |
2011 |
11 |
0 |
undisclosed[56] |
£1.0M[57] |
|
26 |
MF |
GHA |
Frimpong, EmmanuelEmmanuel Frimpong |
20 |
EU |
2008 |
14 |
0 |
undisclosed[58] |
Youth system |
On loan to Wolverhampton Wanderers |
27 |
FW |
CIV |
Gervinho |
24 |
Non-EU |
2011 |
24 |
4 |
undisclosed[5] |
£10.5M[59] |
|
28 |
DF |
ENG |
Gibbs, KieranKieran Gibbs |
22 |
EU |
2007 |
59 |
1 |
undisclosed[60] |
Youth system |
|
29 |
FW |
MAR |
Chamakh, MarouaneMarouane Chamakh |
28 |
EU |
2010 |
58 |
12 |
undisclosed[61] |
Free |
|
30 |
MF |
ISR |
Benayoun, YossiYossi Benayoun |
31 |
Non-EU |
2011 |
15 |
3 |
2012[16] |
Loan |
On loan from Chelsea |
31 |
FW |
JPN |
Miyaichi, RyoRyo Miyaichi |
19 |
Non-EU |
2011 (Winter) |
2 |
0 |
undisclosed[62] |
Free |
|
39 |
MF |
FRA |
Coquelin, FrancisFrancis Coquelin |
20 |
EU |
2008 |
15 |
0 |
undisclosed[63] |
Youth system |
|
46 |
MF |
ENG |
Lansbury, HenriHenri Lansbury |
21 |
EU |
2007 |
8 |
1 |
undisclosed[64] |
Youth system |
On loan to West Ham United |
52 |
FW |
DEN |
Bendtner, NicklasNicklas Bendtner |
24 |
EU |
2004 |
157 |
45 |
undisclosed[65] |
Youth system |
On loan to Sunderland |
|
MF |
BRA |
Denílson |
24 |
Non-EU |
2006 |
153 |
10 |
undisclosed[66] |
£3.5M[67] |
On loan to São Paulo |
|
FW |
MEX |
Vela, CarlosCarlos Vela |
23 |
EU |
2005 |
62 |
11 |
undisclosed[68] |
£0.5M[69] |
On loan to Real Sociedad |
|
FW |
CRI |
Campbell, JoelJoel Campbell |
19 |
Non-EU |
2011 |
0 |
0 |
undisclosed[70] |
£0.9M[71] |
On loan to FC Lorient |
Last updated: 2 January 2012
Source: Arsenal F.C. and footballdatabase.com (for EU passport, country as international player, contract ending and transfer fee)
Ordered by squad number.
Reserve squad
- As of 9 August 2011.[72][73]
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Transfers
In
# |
Position |
Player |
Transferred from |
Fee |
Date |
Team |
Source |
25 |
? !DF |
Jenkinson, Carl ! Carl Jenkinson |
Charlton Athletic |
£1,000,000 |
02011-06-088 June 2011 |
First-team |
[4] |
|
? !MF |
Toral, Jon ! Jon Toral |
Barcelona |
£350,000 |
02011-07-011 July 2011 |
Academy |
[74] |
|
? !DF |
Bellerin, Hector ! Hector Bellerin |
Barcelona |
£400,000 |
02011-07-011 July 2011 |
Academy |
[74] |
27 |
? !FW |
Gervinho ! Gervinho |
Lille |
£10,500,000 |
02011-07-1111 July 2011 |
First-team |
[5] |
15 |
? !FW |
Oxlade-Chamberlain, Alex ! Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain |
Southampton |
£12,000,000 |
02011-08-088 August 2011 |
First-team |
[7] |
|
? !FW |
Campbell, Joel ! Joel Campbell |
Deportivo Saprissa |
£900,000 |
02011-08-1919 August 2011 |
First-team |
[70] |
9 |
? !FW |
Park Chu-Young ! Park Chu-Young |
Monaco |
£1,800,000 |
02011-08-3030 August 2011 |
First-team |
[12] |
11 |
? !DF |
Santos, Andre ! André Santos |
Fenerbahçe |
£6,200,000 |
02011-08-3131 August 2011 |
First-team |
[13] |
4 |
? !DF |
Mertesacker, Per ! Per Mertesacker |
Werder Bremen |
£8,000,000 |
02011-08-3131 August 2011 |
First-team |
[14] |
8 |
? !MF |
Mikel Arteta ! Mikel Arteta |
Everton |
£10,000,000 |
02011-08-3131 August 2011 |
First-team |
[15] |
Total spending: £51,150,000
Out
# |
Position |
Player |
Transferred to |
Fee |
Date |
Source |
13 |
!GK |
Lehmann, Jens ! Jens Lehmann |
Retired |
Free transfer |
02011-07-011 July 2011 |
[75] |
38 |
!DF |
Cruise, Thomas ! Thomas Cruise |
Unattached |
Free transfer |
02011-07-011 July 2011 |
[76] |
54 |
!MF |
Randall, Mark ! Mark Randall |
Chesterfield |
Free transfer |
02011-07-011 July 2011 |
[77] |
39 |
!FW |
Deacon, Roarie ! Roarie Deacon |
Sunderland |
Free transfer |
02011-07-011 July 2011 |
[78] |
22 |
!DF |
Clichy, Gaël ! Gaël Clichy |
Manchester City |
£7,000,000 |
02011-07-044 July 2011 |
[6] |
41 |
!MF |
Emmanuel-Thomas, Jay ! Jay Emmanuel-Thomas |
Ipswich Town |
£1,100,000 |
02011-07-2626 July 2011 |
[79] |
|
!MF |
Edge, Jamie ! Jamie Edge |
West Bromwich Albion |
Free transfer |
02011-08-022 August 2011 |
[80] |
4 |
!MF |
Fàbregas, Cesc ! Cesc Fàbregas |
Barcelona |
£35,000,000 |
02011-08-1515 August 2011 |
[3] |
27 |
!DF |
Eboué, Emmanuel ! Emmanuel Eboué |
Galatasaray |
£3,000,000 |
02011-08-1616 August 2011 |
[8] |
8 |
!MF |
Nasri, Samir ! Samir Nasri |
Manchester City |
£25,000,000 |
02011-08-2424 August 2011 |
[9] |
30 |
!DF |
Traoré, Armand ! Armand Traoré |
Queens Park Rangers |
£1,500,000 |
02011-08-3030 August 2011 |
[10] |
54 |
!FW |
Sunu, Gilles ! Gilles Sunu |
Lorient |
£1,300,000 |
02011-08-3131 August 2011 |
[81] |
Total income: £73,900,000
Loan In
Loan Out
Squad # |
Position |
Player |
Loaned to |
Fee |
Date |
Source |
|
!FW |
Alves da Silva, Wellington ! Wellington |
Levante |
Loan |
02011-07-1010 July 2011 |
[82] |
15 |
!MF |
Denilson ! Denílson |
São Paulo |
Loan |
02011-07-1919 July 2011 |
[18] |
|
!GK |
Shea, James ! James Shea |
Dagenham and Redbridge |
Loan |
02011-07-2626 July 2011 |
[83] |
|
!MF |
Galindo, Samuel ! Samuel Galindo |
Gimnàstic de Tarragona |
Loan |
02011-08-044 August 2011 |
[84] |
|
!DF |
Bartley, Kyle ! Kyle Bartley |
Rangers |
Loan |
02011-08-055 August 2011 |
[85] |
11 |
!FW |
Vela, Carlos ! Carlos Vela |
Real Sociedad |
Loan |
02011-08-1616 August 2011 |
[19] |
|
!DF |
Botelho, Pedro ! Pedro Botelho |
Rayo Vallecano |
Loan |
02011-08-1616 August 2011 |
[19] |
46 |
!MF |
Lansbury, Henri ! Henri Lansbury |
West Ham United |
Loan |
02011-08-3131 August 2011 |
[86] |
|
!FW |
Campbell, Joel ! Joel Campbell |
Lorient |
Loan |
02011-08-3131 August 2011 |
[87] |
52 |
!FW |
Bendtner, Nicklas ! Nicklas Bendtner |
Sunderland |
Loan |
02011-08-3131 August 2011 |
[17] |
1 |
!GK |
Almunia, Manuel ! Manuel Almunia |
West Ham United |
Loan |
02011-09-3030 September 2011 |
[88] |
41 |
!FW |
Freeman, Luke ! Luke Freeman |
Stevenage |
Loan |
02011-11-1818 November 2011 |
[89] |
34 |
!MF |
Aneke, Chuks ! Chuks Aneke |
Stevenage |
Loan |
02011-11-2222 November 2011 |
[90] |
55 |
!FW |
Watt, Sanchez ! Sanchez Watt |
Sheffield Wednesday |
Loan |
02011-11-2323 November 2011 |
[91] |
26 |
!MF |
Frimpong, Emmnauel ! Emmanuel Frimpong |
Wolverhampton Wanderers |
Loan |
02012-01-011 January 2012 |
[92] |
24 |
!GK |
Mannone, Vito ! Vito Mannone |
Hull City |
Loan |
02012-01-044 January 2012 |
[93] |
Overall transfer activity
Spending
£51.15 million
Income
£73.9 million
Net expenditure
£22.75 million
Club
Coaching staff
Position |
Staff |
Manager |
Arsène Wenger |
Assistant manager |
Pat Rice |
First team coach |
Boro Primorac |
Goalkeeping coach |
Gerry Peyton |
Fitness coach |
Tony Colbert |
Physiotherapist |
Colin Lewin |
Club doctor |
Gary O'Driscoll |
Chief scout |
Steve Rowley |
Last updated: 11 May 2010
Source: Arsenal F.C.
Kit
Arsenal's kits for the season will carry a bespoke crest to mark the club's 125th anniversary.[1]
Supplier: Nike
Sponsor(s): Fly Emirates
Last updated: 25 July 2011.
Source: The Arsenal Direct
Other information
Last updated: 11 May 2010
Source: Arsenal F.C.
Squad statistics
Appearances and goals
- As of 2 January 2012
[R] - Reserve team player [L] - Out on loan [S] - Sold
Top scorers
Disciplinary record
Starting 11
This shows the most used players in each position, based on Arsenal's typical starting formation for the season.
Last updated: 2 January 2012
Source: Squad stats and Start formations.
Only competitive matches.
Using the most used start formation.
Ordered by position on pitch (from back right to front left).
Competitions
Overall
Last updated: 2 January 2012
Source: Competitions
Premier League
Classification
2011–12 Premier League Table
Updated to games played on 3 January 2012
Source: Barclays Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round.
Only applicable when the season is not finished:
(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.
Results summary
Overall |
Home |
Away |
Pld |
W |
D |
L |
GF |
GA |
GD |
Pts |
W |
D |
L |
GF |
GA |
GD |
W |
D |
L |
GF |
GA |
GD |
20 |
11 |
3 |
6 |
36 |
28 |
+8 |
36 |
7 |
2 |
1 |
16 |
6 |
+10 |
4 |
1 |
5 |
20 |
22 |
−2 |
Last updated: 2 January 2012
Source: Premier League
Results by round
Round |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
24 |
25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
32 |
33 |
34 |
35 |
36 |
37 |
38 |
Ground |
A |
H |
A |
H |
A |
H |
A |
H |
H |
A |
H |
A |
H |
A |
H |
A |
A |
H |
H |
A |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Result |
D |
L |
L |
W |
L |
W |
L |
W |
W |
W |
W |
W |
D |
W |
W |
L |
W |
D |
W |
L |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Position |
9 |
14 |
17 |
12 |
17 |
13 |
15 |
10 |
7 |
7 |
7 |
7 |
6 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
4 |
5 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Last updated: 2 January 2012.
Source: competitive matches
Notes: Premier League fixture not listed due to copyright. Results will be shown..
Ground: A = Away; H = Home. Result: D = Draw; L = Lose; W = Win; P = Postponed.
Matches
Pre-season
Last updated: 31 July 2011
Source: Arsenal F.C.
Competitive
Premier League
Last updated: 2 January 2012
Source: Arsenal F.C.
Note: Premier League fixtures not listed due to copyright
UEFA Champions League
Play-off round
Group stage
Group F
Knockout Phase
Last updated: 16 December 2011
Source: Arsenal F.C.
FA Cup
Main article: 2011–12 FA Cup
Last updated: 26 December 2011
Source: Arsenal F.C.
League Cup
Last updated: 29 November 2011
Source: Arsenal F.C.
See also
References
External links
|
|
|
|
History |
|
|
Home stadium |
|
|
Training ground |
|
|
Other teams |
|
|
Media |
|
|
Rivalries |
|
|
Related articles |
|
|
Affiliated Academies |
|
|
Book:Arsenal F.C. · Category:Arsenal F.C. · Portal:Association football · Arsenal task force · Commons:Arsenal F.C.
|
|
|