Note: this article was written by Tim Bostelle and first appeared on 7amkickoff in May 2013. It was one of many articles that were lost when we switched servers but thankfully it was archived by Arsenal in their column “Best of the Blogs”. I am reprinting it here because it is a timely reminder of what kind of player Arteta was for Arsenal. Not just his technical qualities on the field in terms of passing percentages, things I am certain he will teach the players, but his sacrifice, passion, leadership, and stewardship of the values of the club. Those are what made him my favorite player that season. And those are the same qualities that I hope will make him a successful manager at Arsenal for years to come.

Arteta, my player of the year

There are many qualities which one can point to to argue that their favourite should be player of the year; goalscoring, scoring important goals, overall defensive contribution, important saves and just plain winning games are probably chief among the reasons cited. But metronomic passing? Tackling? Not turning the ball over? Leadership? I say “it depends”.

It depends on how much they pass the ball, how consistently they pass, how selflessly they lead, if they take tackles which stem the flow of the opposition’s play and if they can make the other players around them truly better. I think Arteta does all of those things and that’s why he’s my pick for player of the year.

It wasn’t an easy choice. Santi Cazorla is my favourite player to watch. He’s just so eager to create goals and goalscoring opportunities and so endlessly creative with the ball that I love seeing him in possession. In my imagination this scene is playing on loop every time I think of Santi with the ball: Cazorla will pick the ball up (probably a long pass from Arteta!) on the wing and start his dance, dribble past a man, fake a shot, get his marker to commit then play a neat little splitting pass to Gibbs, move to the top of the box, wait for the return ball, and stroke home a masterful goal on the volley. My natural inclination is to give that guy the award.

But my counter-inclination is to step back from the obvious choice and ask if there is a foundational player upon which Cazorla’s creativity is given the chance express itself. Who is doing the dirty work, keeping possession and cleaning up after Cazorla when he fails to create? That guy is Mikel Arteta.

There was a strange moment toward the end of this season when a number of people started pipping Michael Carrick from Manchester United for player of the year. He ended up winning the United Player’s PoY award but Wenger actually tipped him for the league gong calling him “underrated” and saying that he could fit in at Barcelona with his passing style.

Carrick does represent a new style of somewhat defensive midfielder whose main job isn’t to be a destroyer but rather to hold possession and then to act as a bridge to the offence and occasionally as a shield to the defence.

I looked at overall passing numbers for the top five leagues and came up with the top six guys who make the most passes, Xavi, Arteta, Yaya, Pirlo, Carrick, and Schweinsteiger – I omitted Busquets because I didn’t want two Barcelona players, but he fits the mold here as well. I then compared their numbers and, no surprise, they are all slightly different but all do several things the same: they pass at a high rate, they turn the ball over at a very low rate, they make long passes at a high rate, and most of them tackle at a high rate as well.

European midfielder statistics

Player Age Apps Goals Assists Arteta 31 34 6 3 Carrick 31 36 1 4 Pirlo 34 32 5 7 Schweinsteiger 28 28 7 3 Xavi 33 28 5 6 Yaya Toure 30 32 7 5 Gonalons 24 35 3 0 Ramsey 22 36 1 2

European midfielder statistics

Player Avg passes Pass percentage Key passes long balls Arteta 81 91.5 26 179/205 Carrick 77 88.1 37 208/277 Pirlo 79 87.3 96 339/413 Schweinsteiger 74 87.9 25 260/324 Xavi 98 94.7 41 224/238 Yaya Toure 79 88.9 45 175/210 Gonalons 64 88 11 237/287 Ramsey 54 88.2 45 103/139

European midfielder statistics

Player Tackles Int Disp Turnovers Arteta 108 97 23 18 Carrick 83 76 27 13 Pirlo 82 39 32 18 Schweinsteiger 78 35 46 22 Xavi 13 22 21 29 Yaya Toure 37 28 39 21 Gonalons 139 109 36 27 Ramsey 71 44 43 23

As you can see, Arteta, Carrick, Pirlo, and Schweini are eerily similar in their numbers here. Pirlo is more of a deep-lying playmaker which is why his key passes and long passes numbers are so high but his other numbers are similar to the top four there. Yaya and Xavi are the outliers in that they don’t really play defence and Arteta is more defensive minded than any of them in the top group.

Arteta led the Premier League in passes per game, was near the top in passing percentage, made an incredible 87 per cent of his long passes and led Arsenal in tackles, interceptions and fouls committed. He was in almost every way as good if not better (statistically speaking) than the other players in that group above.

Four of those players won their respective leagues this year and it’s as clear an indication that top teams demand this type of cultured passer who rarely turns the ball over and can also get in a tackle when needed. If Arteta posted his same numbers and Arsenal had won the League, we would be easily talking about him as player of the year – at least as easily as Wenger did for Carrick, who is made to look a lot better than he is because no one ever pressures him in midfield whereas teams have tried to mark Arteta out of the game on many occasions.

“In the depths of the season, when all seemed to be falling apart around the club, Arteta became the glue by which Wenger led Arsenal out of the labyrinth”

But what makes Arteta even more special than just the numbers he posted is that he voluntarily took on the deeper role in midfield this season with the departure of Alex Song to Barcelona. We tend to forget that last year Arteta was second for Arsenal for key passes (shots created for others) with 60 and he scored six goals for the club from open play, whereas this year he has just the one (v QPR – all his other goals come from penalties). Arteta gave up that role to Aaron Ramsey and in so doing helped to transform the young Welshman’s Arsenal career.

That selflessness is the hallmark of a great leader which is the other reason why I think Arteta has to be player of the year. In the depths of Arsenal’s season, when all seemed to be falling apart around the club, Arteta became the glue by which Wenger led Arsenal out of the labyrinth.

He was seen marshaling the players on the field, organising the defence and off the pitch there were several videos of team training in which Arteta and Wenger were seen talking, rather animatedly, about the team. So, when Vermaelen was dropped, Arteta was marble-constant and he took the armband easily, no questions asked, no fanfare. He just assumed the role.

Kieran Gibbs put Arteta’s influence on this team thusly, “There are players like Podolski, who’s a bit of a joker, and there’s Arteta, who’s more the father of the group and tries to nurture the young ones and make sure they’re behaving.”

In a way I see Arteta as an extension of Wenger on the field. He epitomises Arsene’s desired playing style with his tidy little passes and busting-a-gut tracking back to break up the opposition attacks. But he is also expansive and expresses himself with pinpoint long passes and perfectly timed forays forward – the few that I remember almost all seemed to result in an Arsenal goal at a crucial time.

For example, he scored the winner against QPR in the first meeting and set up the winner in the second. He also took all of Arsenal’s penalties, thus winning the West Brom match and the Wigan match.

“He’s calm, professorial with the players, leads by example and is someone who puts his body on the line day in and day out for the Arsenal”

He’s calm, professorial with the players, leads by example and is someone who puts his body on the line day in and day out for the Arsenal. He made others around him better, most notably Ramsey, but also gave Cazorla the platform from which he could create, and gave the back four the player in front of them who wasn’t going to go off in search of the Hollywood pass as Song had the year before – giving them the confidence they needed to make one of the best defensive run-ins I have ever seen.

He was the first player Wenger went to when Arsenal beat Newcastle to secure fourth place and their embrace was one of teammates who had worked out the plan together and seen it executed perfectly on the field.

For all of that, I pick Mikel Arteta as my player of the year 2012/2013.

Qq