What’s different at Arsenal After Emery’s Arrival?

It has been a summer of immense change at Arsenal. Unai Emery is leading the Gunners into the new season after 22 years under Arsene Wenger, and the new era begins this weekend to backdrop of upheaval at board level.

From the ownership to the playing squad, we assess the changes at the Emirates Stadium ahead of their Premier League opener against Manchester City on Super Sunday.Arsenal supporters are generally more interested in what happens on the pitch than off it, but on the eve of a massive season, the news of majority owner Stan Kroenke’s deal to take full control of the club has sent ripples through the fanbase.

 

Stan Kroenke is expected to complete a full takeover of the club

Kroenke, who owns NFL franchise Los Angeles Rams and NBA side Denver Nuggets, has made a cash bid of £550m to buy out rival billionaire Alisher Usmanov’s 30 per cent stake, with sources close to the Russian saying that he has decided to accept the offer and pursue other opportunities.

The purchase of Usmanov’s stake will give Kroenke 97 per cent ownership and lead to the compulsory purchase of the remaining shares, many of which are owned by Arsenal fans. The deal will give Kroenke, a deeply unpopular figure among many supporters, a free rein over the club.

A statement from the Arsenal Supporters’ Trust read: “This news marks a dreadful day for Arsenal Football Club.

“The most dreadful part of this announcement is the news that Kroenke plans to forcibly purchase the shares held by Arsenal fans. Many of these fans are AST members and hold their shares not for value but as custodians who care for the future of the club.

“Kroenke’s actions will neuter their voice and involvement. It is in effect legalised theft to remove shareholder scrutiny on how Arsenal is managed. The AST is wholly against this takeover. Arsenal remains too important to be owned by any one person.”

Kroenke’s takeover bid is not the only boardroom change in the offing. According to Sky in Italy, Ivan Gazidis, Arsenal’s CEO and the man who has overseen the transition from Wenger to Emery, is set to leave the club in September to become AC Milan’s executive director.

With Emery signing a three-year contract to succeed Wenger in May just as the Gunners seemed set to appoint their former midfielder Mikel Arteta.

Emery won’t wield anything like the same level of control as Wenger did, but the hope is that the focus on coaching will benefit a group of players who lacked direction under the old regime.

Emery arrives from French giants Paris Saint-Germain, where he won a Ligue 1 title and six other domestic trophies in two seasons, but his work at previous clubs Valencia and Sevilla was perhaps more appealing to the decision-makers at Arsenal.

At Valencia, he secured three consecutive third-place finishes in La Liga despite the club’s perilous financial situation, and the fine work continued at Sevilla, where he inspired an unprecedented run of three Europa League wins in a row.

Emery is known for a high-intensity playing style and an obsession with video and tactics, which should make Arsenal a very different proposition from last season.

Emery has retained Steve Bould as a first-team assistant head coach but there is a host of new faces on Arsenal’s coaching staff.

Arsenal players receive instructions from their new coaching staff

Juan Carlos Carcedo, who has worked with Emery since his Valencia days, has taken the same job title as Bould, with Pablo Villanueva joining as a first-team coach, and Julen Masach taking care of strength and conditioning under new director of high-performance Darren Burgess, who previously worked at Liverpool.

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