Sunday, March 13, 2016

Post Watford, Post this Season.

So it seems like the tide has finally turned and we've finally lost patience with Arsene Wenger.  The Watford defeat when the FA Cup seemingly opened up for us to make it 3-in-a-row was the final nail in the coffin for those fans who were not on the fence as to the manager's position.

In the immediate aftermath of the game, I was pretty much ready for him to go, but now I'm thinking about it, and I think he should get one more season.  

Cast your mind back to May 30, 2015.  We absolutely obliterated Aston Villa in the FA Cup final. In the run up to that cup final, we played some great stuff, including a measure of revenge (4-1) for the 5-1 defeat against Liverpool the previous season.  Ozil, Sanchez, Cazorla and the other players had shown that they were capable of great things.  They were fit, they were confident.  We had seemingly found a formation and lineup and found a useful gem behind the sofa (Coquelin) that really gave us defensive stability without taking away from our attack.  We should remember that Walcott for instance, was injured for most of this but came back with a bang with the west brom hat trick.  He then scored the first goal in the final and generally looked decent leading the line. 

We could have done with with a few quality additions in the summer, including cover for Coquelin and a world class striker but let's look at Wenger's thought process for a second.  His first team looked great in pre-season, and had looked great for much of 2015 so maybe he didn't think he needed wholesale changes.  

He didn't think Sanchez's form would drop off a cliff, or Walcott would suddenly forget how to play football and in the end, that is what is killing us.  It's probably a bit unfair for me to call out those two when the whole squad including senior players have been underperforming.  Mertesacker has been at times awful, Koscielny alternates between 11/10 and negative performances.  Coquelin is still raw and looks less assured and a top class DM when the sample size of performances is increased.  Campbell has been this years Coquelin but he's only ok, and it's only because the likes of the Ox and Walcott have been utter crap that he's looked competent. 

Walcott for instance as the central striker looked great against Spurs in 2014 before he got injured, and also looked good against Villa in the cup final.  Wenger probably felt he deserved more of a chance to show what he could do up there.  

He trusted in his squad too much.  They let him down.  It's time for him to be ruthless.  If he's willing to get rid of the under performers and recruit sensibly, to perhaps show he's willing to make different inputs to hopefully get different outputs, then he should get that last chance to go out on a high.  

All our big rivals will be going through some form of upheaval next season.  This will be out third chance to take advantage.  2013/14 saw United, Chelsea and City all change their managers.  We failed.  2015/16 saw United, Chelsea and Liverpool all implode.  City are clearly playing with a lame duck manager and also maybe just trying to win the CL.  We look like failing again.  

In 2016/17, United, Chelsea and City will all have new managers.  Leicester will probably be gutted.  Liverpool will really rejig their squad with a few ins and outs. Spurs could lose Pochettino.   We are not as far behind as it looks, and if we get rid of the worst under performers or at the very least get ourselves out of the situation where we are relying on them then we could at least have a bit of a head start.  

There needs to be a serious and possibly difficult discussion at the end of the season and both sides need to exhibit previously unseen bravery.  The board have to possibly be ready to face up to a brave new world without Wenger, and Wenger has to maybe admit that he's made some mistakes.  

Monday, June 3, 2013

The Return of Jose: An Arsenal Fan's Perspective.

A quick look at Wikipedia shows that March 9, 2004 wasn't a particularly newsworthy day.  Your basic news diet of death, minor terrorist events and political maneuvering.  The Beltway Sniper, John Allen Muhammad was sentenced to death on that day if that's your kind of thing.  

For Jose Mourinho however, March 9, 2004 was the day he entered football's A-list.  It was the day he guided his team to a shock draw against Manchester United at Old Trafford taking an unfancied Porto team past the-then English champions.  Costinha scored a last minute goal to take Porto through 3-2 on aggregate.  Before this, Manchester United had been going through on away goals.  His exuberant celebration- running down the touchline, pumping his fists- brought him to global attention.  

If the result had gone with the way everyone expected it to go, there would probably be no cult of the Special One.  In England, where he is most loved, he would probably just be another crazy foreign manager with a penchant for good interviews.  Possibly the hipster's choice.  He would be a Latin Jurgen Klopp. 

However, it was not to be.  Fate had other plans for Mourinho.  Incidentally, March 9, 2004 was probably the last time the majority of Arsenal fans ever rooted for him.  At the time, Manchester United were our rivals and any misfortune that befell them was met with glee.  

If you look at the narrative that followed, we would probably have taken a United victory.  However we feasted and grew drunk on our excellent season.  While there was some bitterness in going out of the Champions League, and the FA Cup semi-final, winning the league unbeaten (and becoming Champions at White Hart Lane to boot) ensured that we weren't too bothered about that Mourinho chap.  We had Le Professeur.   We had a team composed of 5 or 6 World Class players, and promising youngsters coming up.  All was well at Highbury. 

The coming of Mourinho to England signalled the end of those good times.  His brutal, effective teams destroyed all before them.  This is a man who popularised the Makelele role in football.  His sides played football that was the antithesis of what Arsenal were doing (before we slipped into parody of ourselves).  It saw a change in tactics.  Football in England became more defensive.  Frequently we had no answer.   Wenger and the team would whine about the increased physicality and deep defenses, which probably led to the dumb 'don't like up them' tag that has been affixed to us.  

His 'voyeur' comments and his tapping up of Ashley Cole didn't endear him to Arsenal fans either.  Then there was the dominance.  Mourinho seemed to have the measure of Wenger.  Whatever the reasons, Mourinho engenders a feeling of antipathy and though they will be loathe to admit it, a fair bit fear in Arsenal fans.  

Next season was supposed to be our big chance.  With the top 3 teams changing their managers, and Spurs and Liverpool possibly improving their squads in the summer, it was looking like an open title race- one that we could have benefitted from assuming we had a good summer.  The appearance of Mourinho has to have cast a doubt in our minds.  But should it?

Mourinho comes back to a markedly different premier league than it was in 2004.  In 2004, Chelsea had the most money to spend, not just on transfers but on wages.  There was no Manchester City.  Outside of Real Madrid and Barcelona, who had their own projects anyway, there was nowhere really for the next big things to go to other than Chelsea.  

Not only did Chelsea buy the biggest talents- Drogba, Essien.  They also bought players on a level below that like Shaun Wright-Phillips for no reason except maybe to keep them from playing for other competitors.  Wright-Phillips is a case in point.  The links to Arsenal were there because of his dad.  There was talk of him replacing Ljungberg and getting the number 8 jersey.  All of a sudden Chelsea came in and offered more money than we could even fathom offering and SWP was a Chelsea player.  Maybe we dodged a bullet but there's no denying that Chelsea's transfer policy of stockpiling great players made things really difficult.  

This is not the case today.  Not only are Chelsea not the only rich team in England, they are no longer the only rich team in Europe.  PSG, Monaco and Anzhi can all offer comparable wages.  Ditto the Spanish Giants, though probably wincing a lot more.  And the likes of Bayern and Manchester United still make a lot of money and in the case of Bayern aren't afraid to spend it.  The 25-man squad rule also means Chelsea can't stockpile players like they did in the first Era of Jose.  

Then there's the whole aura about the team.  Mourinho introduced Chelsea to success, but its fair to say they got used to it and kicked on in his absence.  A double in 2010, the Champions League in 2012, the  Europa League in 2013.  These players are winners.  Lampard and Terry aren't wide-eyed youths anymore.  Where do they go from here?  Will his sometimes abrasive personality work, especially when rumour has it that Terry was reponsible for Jose leaving initially? Only time will tell.  

All I know is Jose Mourinho won't have it so easy this time.  So fear not.    





Saturday, May 25, 2013

Too Much of a Good thing?

I had long since wanted to play a Swords-and-sorcery type game for a while, and as long as Skyrim was buggy, unpatched and unloved on the PS3, I wasn't going to be buying it.  Instead, I went for Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning, a game from the now defunct 38 studios.  38 Studios was founded by baseball legend Curt Schilling, an avid gamer, to create an MMORPG like World of Warcraft.

38 studios got onboard luminaries like reknowned fantasy writer, R.A. Salvatore and Todd McFarlane, who created Spawn, on board and acquired the studio Big Huge Games, to produce an introductory game to the Amalur universe.  The single player game would introduce players to the universe before the launch of the MMORPG at a future date.

Sadly this would never happen as 38 studios and Big Huge Games had to file for bankruptcy in May, 2012.  Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning is the only game they ever produced.

I got it at Christmas, and from then till about March it took pride of place in my Playstation.  However, in the end, I ejected it unfinished, with maybe a third to half the story left to be told.

The story is pretty interesting if a bit generic and maybe leans on the fourth wall a bit.  You play the Fateless One.  At the start of the game, you're dead, only to be revived in the Well of Souls by a scientist.  At this juncture, you are introduced to the wide range of customisation in the game.  I must have spent that first afternoon mucking about with my characters face.  In the end I got a rather scary looking black man.

In the world of Amalur, everyone is a slave to their fate till they die but since your character has already  been there, done that and got the t-shirt, you have no fate.  This apparently means that you can change the tide of the war that's been going on and maybe save the mortal races from the bloodthirsty and immortal Tuatha Fae who are feeling rather genocidal at the moment.

The story is pretty serviceable.  Salvatore was tasked to create 10,000 years of backstory for the world and some of it is pretty interesting if you like that kind of thing.  NPCs rush to give you all sorts of backstory and all around there are lorestones- magic stones that narrate the story of the land and those who have come before.   It would make a pretty decent series of books with prequels, interquels and sequels coming out the wazoo.   The art and world are bright and nice.  The combat is amazing, and there is a lot to do.  Loads.

And therein lies the problem with Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning.  There is too much to do, there is too much customisation, too much freedom.  I played, as I tend to do in these kind of games, as a Rogue- the game calls it Finesse, and it is one of three classes in the game, the others being Might (fighter) and Sorcery (Mage).   Despite this, I could use my level up points in any of the classes to unlock abilities in that class.  For instance, say I just reached level 10, I'd have 3 points to spend in any of those classes I wanted.  While I got some stat boosts from my class initially, I could soon wield greatswords and hammers like the best warrior, despite being a character more attuned to weapons like daggers and bows.

The weapons themselves are pretty neat.  You're allowed to carry two into battle, although you can pause and swap others from your pouch if needed.  Some of them are overpowered though.  Daggers and Faeblades may not do as much damage as greatswords, but are super fast, and in this game speed is everything.  Then there are the chakrams which are mid-range throwing weapons, that come back to you like a boomerang causing damage on both the departure and return journeys.  Almost gamebreaking.

Another thing the game allows you too much freedom with is skills.  there are a bunch of skills in the game but 3 stand out as really important to activities in the game.  Sagecrafting, Blacksmithing and Alchemy.  Alchemy allows you to make your own potions, blacksmithing allows you to make your own weapons, and Sagecrafting allows you create gems that you can then insert into your weapons and armour to give you various boosts as long as they are equipped.

Each of these skills can be allocated points as you level up, which eventually allows you to make better weapons, more complicated potions and better quality gems.  Even before then though, quite early in the game, you can make pretty decent items if you have enough of the easily attainable components.  Want to make a health potion?  get 2 of those plants, and 1 of this plant (both  of which were as prevalent as grass on a savannah) and bobs your uncle.

Early in the game, when gold was tight and health potions randomly dropped were low, death was feared and frequent.  By the time I stopped playing, I had become almost a death seeker in my playstyle, charging into hordes of enemies, provoking trolls that I used to run screaming like a chicken from.  Once I created about 30 health potions at the alchemy lab, and crafted a couple of restoring gems that basically regenerated my health each second, I was almost unkillable.

Perhaps if the designers had restricted each class to one craft it would, and made the other crafted items expensive it would have been better.

Maybe they could have also reduced the number of quests.  Quests make up the gameplay of Amalur. there are story quests, which advance the plot, guild quests, which are a series of related quests that make up a small self-contained story, side quests and tasks.  Each of these gives you loads of experience.  And they are all accessible.  If you're a completist like me, you'll want to do everything and halfway through the game, you will probably be the most powerful being in the area.

I stopped playing at the Battle of Mel Senshir.  All through the lead up to this key event in the game, characters talk in despair about a Creature of Mass Destrutction the Tuatha are going to unleash on the fortress (Mel Senshir is basically all that keeps the Tuatha from overrunning the mortal lands.).  I fought the monster, having moved the difficulty to hard a few hours earlier, and maybe died once.  I was just too powerful.  My weapons too nifty, my armour too restorative.  The monster barely hit me and only messing up on the execution Quick Time Event gave me any difficulty.

Of course there are ways to avoid this.  Avoid doing some quests, ignore that person with the exclamation mark above his head.  Refuse point blank to do some.  I'm actually curious as to what the NPCs say when you select 'I have better things to do' on the conversation wheel.  If you do that, you won't have levelled up as much, and hopefully the game will remain a challenge.  It also means you can  replay the game without doing the same quests over and over, a fact I just realised as I wrote this *facepalm*

I really enjoyed my time playing the game, and I'll definitely play it again sometime.  I'll go about doing quests and owning the crap out of any enemy man or beast that steps in my way.  Maybe I'll even finish it.  It's a great game, I just overindulged.  I was gluttonous.

Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning is like going to an all you can eat buffet and really trying to eat all you can.  At the end, you're almost like I never want to see food again.  However, if you don't pig out, you try a bit of everything your experience will be infinitely better.  

Saturday, January 12, 2013

YA Fiction Reviews: A preamble.

I'm a huge fan of YA (Young Adult) Fiction. I'm not the only one. Gone are the days when people would tut and shake their heads when they glimpsed an adult reading Harry Potter or something similar. Adults reading books aimed at younger people is not as taboo as it used to be. Perhaps it is because it has gotten a lot better in quality. YA fiction when I was growing up would have been Sweet Valley High, maybe some Point Horror if you wanted to feel a bit older- it had more gore and Adult Situations, dontchaknow. Let's face it, they were pretty formulaic and not great.

 Jessica did something stupid, Elizabeth rolled her eyes (the colour of the Pacific). Elizabeth was 4 minutes older, but sometimes it felt like 4 years. Blah, blah, blah. No matter what, it was always resolved in the end (mostly). Sometimes it dragged on for a few books but the plots (evil twins, ancient romances, earthquakes) were more day-time soap than blockbusters like Harry Potter or the Hunger Games.

Somewhere along the line, YA fiction started to improve. Maybe it was because of Harry. Maybe it showed that young people could expect more from their fiction, and their success showed publishers that they could look out for, and promote weightier and better quality books than the ghostwritten stuff they'd been peddling for years. While the earlier Harry Potter books were very good children's books, as the character grew so did the target audience of the books. The last four are definitely YA fiction in my opinion. Since 2000, when Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire came out, and the series hit puberty and became a bit darker and edgier, young people have had their fill of great stories and characters. The Hunger Games, Noughts and Crosses, The Gone series, even Twilight. Where a young person had to re-read their copy of Are you there God, It's me Margaret till it fell apart, if they wanted above average stuff to read, they suddenly had shelves upon shelves of stuff to read.

 New worlds, new ideas, new characters; YA fiction is not afraid to experiment, to set stories in worlds far removed from ours, all the while still dealing with topics that are relevant to young people, and that older readers can appreciate. It's not War and Peace, or 100 years of Solitude, but not every movie is The Seven Samurai or Citizen Kane. I'm young at heart. The heroes and heroines of these books allow me to relive my childhood and the triumphs and mistakes without actually having to go through any of the consequences.

I guess that's why I'm a fan and why in the spirit of writing more this year, I've decided to start reviewing them. Hopefully, you might pick up something you didn't know about, or you might just be pushed to tell me I'm a blithering idiot with my opinions. Either way, it should be interesting.

Friday, January 4, 2013

Back from the dead.

Let's keep this short and sweet. It's a new year, so what better time to start writing again. As a writer, my output is disgraceful. It's time to put what sits in my head on paper, or rather, in this case, in cyberspace. Happy 2013 to the 5 people who read this.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

RIP Borders.

I was going through my email half-heartedly, clicking on a litany of ever more vague Gumtree job adverts when I saw an email from Borders- 'A fond farewell...thank you.' I heaved a huge sigh. In truth, if you've kept even half an eye on the publishing industry over the past year or so, you'd know that the bookseller has been on life support. I wasn't shocked, but I was sad.

If you've ever shopped at Borders and signed up for a store card, or vouchers and coupons you probably received the email from CEO Mike Edwards detailing the factors that led to the fall. Bottom line: no one thought that the store was a worthwhile investment, no one was willing to keep it afloat.

Now, I am probably in the minority of those lamenting over the company's demise. Big corporate behemoth with 399 stores, putting little indie bookstores out of business. I can see their point. However, cast your mind back almost 10 years to the wastes of 2003. I was a 19 year old either just emerging from what I like to call a mini-nervous breakdown or right smack dab in the middle of it (your mileage may vary). Alone and depressed, spending entire Saturdays at the newly opened Borders at Ithaca's Pyramid Mall was one of the few bright spots. Finding a nice cosy spot with books too new for the public library to have acquired yet, I would spend hours lost in the pages, only breaking to have a decadent albeit overpriced chocolate muffin.

Or there was the night the fifth Harry Potter book came out and I went all the way to the next town, in Binghampton to pick it up, and meet this girl I'd been chatting to online. It was a rainy night, but the Borders was packed. Children dressed like Hogwarts students. It remains a vivid memory eight years on.

Or how about the fact that it was the only place I could pick up FourFourTwo and World Soccer. Or that it stocked British Maxim which was at the time infinitely funnier than its American counterpart.

Or getting the second PJ Tracy novel, Live Bait half price with my 30 percent off coupon combined with a 20% off sticker. Little victories, but at the time I felt like I was WINNING.

To be honest, it would have been bad business sense for anyone to step in. They would have been basically giving a terminally sick entity something for the pain. The rise of digital media rather than hard copy means that retail outlets are probably going to go the way of the dodo.

It's not just Borders, HMV is rocking, stores like Zavvi have had to close or become online retailers. Ebooks, digital music downloads they've changed the way we consume media. Remember when we used to listen to whole CDs? Or when we'd curse our choice of book purchased in the airport before going on vacation. Those things are a thing of the past. Put your mp3 player on shuffle, and you can go from electronica to country by way of opera. Can't decide which summer blockbuster to read. Why not load them all unto your Kindle and if you get bored with one, just close it, and try the next one with a few clicks or swipes. It all plays in to our increasing ADDness as a society.

I will miss bookstores when the last one finally closes its doors, most likely in my lifetime. Ditto libraries. Imagine a future where there are no more shelves, no smell of old paper, no sound of books being scanned. Just a sterile room with a wifi hub you can download your time-sensitive book from. No browsing, no having your eye caught by an odd looking spine. No recommendations from people. No sitting on the tube and sneaking a peek at the synopses of the paperback the person opposite you is reading, as it'll be the nice black matte finish of their eReader case that you'll be looking at. No more socialising or recommending books you love to others in the store (which is truly not that weird).

It's weird, as the internet becomes ever more prevalent we become ever more insular and closed off personally. Take video games. When I got my PS3, one of my first purchases was a second controller, harking back to the days of 2 player games on nintendo and super nes. I picked up the excellent Burnout Paradise to play with my sister who likes racing games only to put it in and find out that its much vaunted multiplayer was over the internet. I refused to buy last years F1 game for the same reason- no local multiplayer. What ever happened to your friends coming over for a gaming session? Most games to dont allow for that, preferring to make you play against some snot nosed 13 year old on the other side of the world.

Books are like that. Soon our libraries will be personal- intangible files on a device. No more having people go through your bookshelves and asking about this book or that and like that the social aspect of books will be lost or changed forever.

Thanks for the memories, Borders.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Thundercats footage.

When I saw the art for the New Thundercats series about a year ago, I instantly facepalmed. Gone was the classic 80s cartoon style, replaced by cookie cutter anime-esque artwork found in shows like Ben10.

However, having seen this clip I have to say it might not be as bad as I thought, and in fact, could be an improvement.

For one thing, Snarf doesn't speak anymore- Thank you, Jesus! I liked Snarf as a pet, rather than whiny nursemaid. He still retains the skittishness and desire to avoid danger that the original does, but that comes from hanging out with Lion-O who seems to like danger.

Lion-O is an improvement. It is easy to dismiss his new look as some emo Naruto knock-off but by making him a young man? cat? as opposed to the manchild (due to the stasis tube he was in malfunctioning) he was in the original, the series changes the dynamic between the characters in interesting ways. Witness his first reaction when he meets Cheetara.

The series makes Tygra his brother- possibly adoptive since Lion-O and his father don't have any tiger characteristics. Also, Tygra is older but not the heir to the throne. A few things he said in the clip indicate (to me, at least) that he might be jealous of Lion-O, and this could lead to some interesting storylines down the line.

By starting on Thundera, it gives the characters a bigger backstory, even the mutants, who we didn't see much of apart from a scene of two lizards in stocks. The Thunderans also seem to be none too tolerant of other species which should lead to some interesting storylines at least, and at least raise the mutants beyond ineffectual villains for the week.

I wasn't so sure about Wilykat and Wilykit having tails, but apart from that, I thought this new series had potential. Hopefully, a new generation will like it just as much as we liked the old one, but hopefully us 80s kids will give it a chance too.