Arsenal's trio of teenagers face baptism of fire against Liverpool

 

Sam Wallace
Wednesday 17 August 2011 19:00 EDT
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Trying to second-guess the Arsenal team that will play on Saturday against Liverpool, once you take injuries and suspensions into account – not to mention recent and impending departures – is no simple task. When Arsène Wenger sits down to discuss his options at his press conference tomorrow lunchtime he will hope for some good news on those recovering from injury because otherwise he is down to the bare bones.

His goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny is in form and one of the few elements of the team he does not have to worry about. After that Wenger can juggle the back four to move Bacary Sagna to left-back which allows Carl Jenkinson to make his first senior start in his preferred right-back position. Between them, Thomas Vermaelen and Laurent Koscielny are fit at centre-back even if there is precious little cover after them.

In midfield it gets trickier. Emmanuel Frimpong can step in for his first Premier League start in place of the suspended Alex Song. Aaron Ramsey has been in good form and is fit. But there is now little chance of Jack Wilshere playing again until Arsenal's home game against Swansea City on 10 September. His ankle problem means he will miss the return leg against Udinese next week and is certainly out of England's Euro 2012 qualifiers against Bulgaria and Wales.

The most likely solution is to bring Andrei Arshavin back into that first bank of three midfielders. It is risky given his typically patchy record in tracking back, but needs must. The front three? Robin van Persie and Theo Walcott are obvious starters but who occupies the third spot? Marouane Chamakh was woeful against Udinese, Gervinho is suspended and Tomas Rosicky was injured again on Tuesday.

There is more than a strong suggestion that Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, the 18-year-old bought for £12m from Southampton this month, who has never played above League One level, might get his debut at the Emirates on Saturday. If he did, that would mean an Arsenal starting XI with three teenagers making their first Premier League starts, with just 60 minutes' experience in the senior team between them.

The injuries have hit Arsenal hard and they have hit them early in the season. Wilshere, Abou Diaby, Rosicky and Kieran Gibbs are out. Combined with the suspensions for Song and Gervinho it would be enough to affect any team. But add in the departure of Cesc Fabregas and the hopelessness of the Samir Nasri situation ahead of his move to Manchester City and it looks much worse than it should have been at this early stage of the season.

To give Wenger his due, Jenkinson did not look out of place as a substitute in the Champions League qualifier on Tuesday and Frimpong would probably have played many more games last season had it not been for a cruciate knee ligament injury one year ago. It is asking a lot of Oxlade-Chamberlain to throw him in at such an early stage – if that is what Wenger chooses to do. Should he play on Saturday it would be enough for him simply to hold his own at this level.

It is a tough time for Wenger. The first home league game of the season should be an occasion for optimism rather than mustering a team from the far corners of his squad to take on one of the summer's biggest spenders in front of a restless home crowd. Whoever Wenger may have his eye on as a potential signing this month – Lucho Gonzalez, Marseilles' Argentinian midfielder was mentioned yesterday – will not be able to help him on Saturday.

The Arsenal manager had a rough ride on Tuesday night with an official from Uefa calling at half-time from their headquarters in Switzerland to warn Arsenal that they did not want Wenger to pass messages to the bench via his assistant Boro Primorac, who was on the phone alongside him in the club level seats.

Club sources have indicated that Arsenal club secretary David Miles expressly sought clarification from Uefa officials on Monday that Wenger would be permitted to communicate indirectly with his bench and was told that was not against the rules. The club do not expect a Uefa charge for Wenger, who has now served his touchline ban, but he will in all likelihood get a warning for failing to speak to the media after the game.

After Tuesday's match, Walcott observed that looking around his table during the pre-match meal in Newcastle on Saturday he had realised that, at 22, he was the oldest player there. Nevertheless he said that he believed Wenger had a plan. "I'm smiling right now, so I'm very positive," Walcott said. "I'm sure the boss has got players coming in, I don't know, but if you sell one of your best players I'm sure he's got some options coming in.

Signing players will be the least of Wenger's short-term worries as he surveys his options in training this morning. For all the encouragement – friendly and otherwise – he has had this summer to spend money on players, Saturday will come down to how well he manages his existing, dwindling resources.

Call the doctor: Injury bug strikes early at Emirates

Jack Wilshere injured an ankle in pre-season on 31 July. He was ruled out for three weeks but is a major doubt for Saturday's Premier League game with Liverpool.

Kieran Gibbs injured his hamstring in the 1-0 defeat of Udinese at the Emirates on Tuesday. He was replaced by Johan Djourou, who was taken off with the same injury. Neither Gibbs nor Djourou will play on Saturday.

Tomas Rosicky played with a groin strain against Udinese but is a doubt for Saturday's match. Armand Traoré injured his groin in a reserve game this week, and Abou Diaby is a long-term absentee after ankle surgery.

New signing Gervinho is suspended for three domestic matches after his red card against Newcastle United last Saturday: he will miss games against Liverpool, Manchester United and Swansea. Alex Song wll miss the same three games after a retrospective violent conduct charge for stamping on Joey Barton in the same match.

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