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Wigan Athletic
Posted by Ned Brown on 02/16/2012

As Latics supporters, we're used to being written off before a ball is kicked. Wigan will finally go down this year, we're told every year. Yet somehow this fantastic little club clings to its Premier League status again and again - we've become survival specialists. It was no mean feat under Paul Jewell, an enthusiasm-fueled season like Norwich are enjoying at the moment. Or under Steve Bruce, when he totally revived a team of strugglers and misfits. But in the Martinez era, it has been achieved on half the budget, allowing the club to allocate funds toward youth development and long-term sustainability.

Indeed the worst case scenario, that of relegation, is a lot less worrying than it was three years ago. The squad is deep and young, with few big name players on heavy wage packets. Latics would probably lose three or four quality players - Rodallega, Diame, Moses, and perhaps James McCarthy - but would still have a very competent side capable of winning the Championship. As evidence, Callum McManaman, who can't buy playing time with the current squad, starred during his loan stint at Blackpool, who are 4th in said league. Nouha Dicko, yet to feature for the first team at Wigan, scored on his debut for the Seasiders several days ago. Jordi Gomez was far and away voted the best player in the Championship last time he played in it.

All this said, incredibly - despite a cruel fixture list featuring the newly promoted teams in days 1, 2 and 3; a stretch of back-to-back games over Christmas against big four opposition; an 8-match losing steak; a (separate) 9-match winless streak - we're not down yet.

In fact, we’ve hung in there just long enough that opportunity knocks, and real optimism is brewing. It’s tighter this year than last, when more teams got sucked into the battle. But this year it will take less points. We are essentially in a five-team relegation mini-league at the bottom of the table, cut adrift from the other 15 not only by 7 points but a gulf in quality. Aston Villa will not get relegated despite Alex McLeish’s best efforts, nor will Fulham, Stoke or West Brom. Three of them have too much quality, and the other has Roy Hodgson. The best bet for anyone else joining the party appeared to be a collapse in form from one of the newly promoted sides, but Swansea’s strength at home should keep them safe, while Norwich are already only about two wins away from safety.

So we’re looking at a mini-league between QPR, Blackburn, Wolves, Bolton and ourselves, with the top two surviving.

The Opposition:

Bolton were poor last Saturday, with no imagination going forward and a leaky defense that Victor Moses ran rings around. The loss of Gary Cahill only makes things worse for them. The decline of Kevin Davies, coupled with the departure of Johan Elmander, has stripped them of firepower.

Wolves have been looking pretty poor too, but are likely to benefit from the galvanizing effect a new manager, after Mick McCarthy was sacked. Potential replacement Alan Curbishley has been out of the game for a while but is a decent manager, Steve Bruce has rescued teams before and Wolves’ squad would certainly suit his style.

QPR, I suspect, will win the mini-league. They bought proven quality, and Mark Hughes is a good manager. It’s hard to see a team featuring experienced players like Sean Wright-Phillips, Bobby Zamora, Joey Barton, Luke Young, Djibril Cisse going down. Look at their squad. That said, they play the top six in their last 13 matches, so there is little margin for error.

Blackburn are a bizarre bunch. Steve Kean is out of his depth, but has somehow turned an ageing, injury-prone Everton striker into a goal machine, something Harry Redknapp also gambled on with immediate success at White Hart Lane with Louis Saha. Take away Yak or Pedersen, however, and Blackburn are in trouble. Hard to predict. The away fixture at Ewood Park looms large.

A Favorable Fixture List:

Of the 13 matches left, only four are games we probably can’t win — Liverpool, Chelsea and Arsenal away, and Man United at home. Any points here would be a huge bonus. Of the remaining eight fixtures, six are at home against teams we are good enough to beat: Aston Villa, Swansea, West Brom, Stoke, Newcastle, Wolves. Leaving just Norwich, Fulham and Blackburn away, tough matches but in the scheme of things not that daunting. The normal 40 point target looks difficult to achieve, but everyone’s point total in the bottom five is so low that I doubt any more than 35 will be necessary.

Villa (H), Swansea (H), Norwich (A), WBA (H), Liverpool (A), Stoke (H), Chelsea (A), Man Utd (H), Arsenal (A), Fulham (A), Newcastle (H), Blackburn (A), Wolves (H)

* Wigan and QPR play 7 home games; Blackburn, Bolton and Wolves only play 6 more at home.

* Wigan have by far the most favourable crucial last game of the season: Chelsea – Blackburn, Wigan – Wolves, Stoke – Bolton, Man City – QPR

* Assuming the following big six: Man Utd, Man City, Arsenal, Spurs, Chelsea and Liverpool — QPR has the worst fixtures, facing them all. Wolves and Blackburn play five of them. Wigan faces four of them, Bolton only face three.

A Fit Squad, Raring to Go:

Martinez spoke last season of the importance of youth and fitness in the season run-in. Having struggled with injuries in the first half of the season, it appears the squad is fit and ready for the run-in. Key players such as Emmerson Boyce, Antolin Alcaraz, Hugo Rodallega all missed significant time earlier in the season but are now in the clear. Shaun Maloney recently completed 90 minutes for the reserves and was quoted as saying he is ready to push for a place in the first team. Competition in midfield is outstanding, with James McArthur staking his claim but Mo Diame returning from the African Cup of Nations, and Ben Watson — untouchable in the lineup this time last year — on the fringes. The bench against Bolton including Ronnie Stam, Albert Crusat, Mo Diame, Ben Watson, Dave Jones and Hugo Rodallega must rank as the strongest in the club’s history, and people like Shaun Maloney, Hendry Thomas, Conor Sammon, Callum McManaman didn’t even dress. The only truly irreplaceable player is Ali Al-Habsi.

#keeptheFaith

Few people expected us to be within 2 points of 16th place at this stage of the season given the horrific form before Christmas and fixtures that followed. There is still a lot wrong with the team, in particular in front of goal. But with a bit of luck in the injury and suspensions department, continued improvement from Victor Moses’ final ball, and favourable results elsewhere, we might just live the dream once again. Here’s hoping…

Blind optimism? Spot on? Leave a comment.

For more from this author, please check out the Wigan Athletic blog Los Three Amigos and follow him on twitter or on Facebook..

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Comments

Posted by Danny on 02/16/2012

Hey Ned, coming from a Fulham fan, really nice article. I really hope Wigan will stay up this year, and truly believe that they wont. Al-Habsi has proven to be one of the best goalies in the BPL, and with Victor Moses and James McCarthy, I truly think you have enough talent to beat the drop, and like you mentioned, a favorable fixture list. I do have to say that from what i've seen out of Moses, he could be one of the BPL's top young prospects, and McCarthy also.

Posted by Ned on 02/16/2012

Thanks very much for your comment Danny, I hope you're right! I've enjoyed watching Fulham this season despite the slow start. It takes time to change a style of play -- it did for Roberto here at Wigan, but I do like Martin Jol and what he's trying to do for you.

Dempsey and Ruiz can be outstanding just behind the CF. Certainly a positive start by Pogrebnyak as well. Hope you have an off day when we come to visit, but otherwise best of luck!

Posted by Thorpy on 02/16/2012

Ned - Nice work - I did a piece about the bench over on vital latics a couple of days ago, and I've also just reviewed the current position, it might go up in the morning.

You've missed that we didn't have to let players go in the window for once, and then we've consigned them to the bench. Also by doing so we are already building for next season so we don't have huge holes to fill like when charlie and Cleverley went. I feel that this might be the real start of the Martinez era, and the last couple of years were clearing out and then getting going.

Posted by Rod on 02/17/2012

Hi Ned, West Brom fan here: hope you stay up and think you will. Out of the 'mini league' at the moment you look the strongest, perhaps coming good at just the right time. It's Bolton, Wolves and Blackburn for me (although I'm hoping for QPR as I like the Lancashire clubs!).

Posted by Ned on 02/17/2012

Hi Thorphy, thanks a lot for commenting. It's a very good point about the transfer window, and I hope you're right about -- assuming survival -- the start of the true Martinez era.

My concern is that even if we survive, we will lose Moses, Diame, Rodallega without adequate replacement. Callum McManaman and Nouha Dicko are long-term replacements. But much like Moses hasn't been quite ready to fill N'Zog's big boots, nor will either of those two be quite good/mature enough to do so for Moses next year if he goes.

That said, perhaps both Diame and Moses will sign new contracts if we stay up. Fingers crossed!

I could not agree more that not losing players in this last window is an excellent sign, though. Of course, Rodallega would have left if Andy Johnson hadn't snubbed us. But to emerge with a stronger, rather than weaker, squad after the window is a huge victory. Beausejour looks a decent addition and a much more natural fit in that left wingback role. Just hope Rodallega delivers.

Posted by Ned on 02/17/2012

Thanks Rod,

I hope you're right! Those would be my picks too, though I think a lot will depend on Wolves' new manager. Steve Bruce is capable of tightening up their defense and motivating them out of the drop zone. We'll have to see. We're all silently hoping Blackburn and Bolton don't sack their managers for the same reason.

By the way, what do you make of Paul Scharner?

Posted by Dan Furino on 02/18/2012

Huge Latics fan, but this season has been a disappointment. There are a lot of games we've played hard and caught a bad break and just mentally collapse. Even in the Bolton game, the Bolton goal was well taken, but it bounced off a players back onto the strikers foot.
And don't even get me started on the Sammon incident against Man U. We were set to go into the break 1-0 down at the time.
I think if the team can stay mentally strong after a bad call, bad bounce, then we definitely stand a great chance of staying up.
I know this may be unpopular but GET RID OF MOSES. Martinez seems to enjoy playing a creative style of play, emphasizing opening space and getting some crosses in. Moses can't/won't pass and his crossing is atrocious. He has a million dollar body in terms of athleticism and skill and a 5 cent brain. Get rid of him while he's still young and get some decent money for him.

Posted by Josh on 02/18/2012

Wolves fan here; your guys' recent form has me worried. It's a nail-biter for all of our clubs in this mini-league of doom and I think I agree with your point that a lot is going to come down to whoever Wolves appoint as Mick's successor. That and whether our uncanny ability to take points off of the big six sticks around.

I have to disagree that Bruce would be a good choice though; it seems to me the only Wolves fans who want him are the local fast-food joints and pie shops. We need both motivation and tactical know-how to keep us up and Bruce is questionable on the former and does NOT provide the latter. Look at Sunderland.

It also wouldn't shock me to see Aston Villa slip into the mire-- they got lucky at Molineux as we completely outclassed them in that first half then had an unfortunate 2nd, and now they're missing Dunne and Clark. But this is a fantastic analysis nevertheless, great read, and good luck in the run-in! Think we'll all need it.

Posted by tech on 02/20/2012

have to say its always tough to find a football fan who doesn't have a soft spot for the latics. here's hoping your lot can stay up for another year! nice article

Posted by Rod on 02/20/2012

Hi Ned,
For me, Paul Scharner has been one of our best players this season; we always look a little more solid when he's in the team. He's a very committed player and - important in these days of mercenary footballers - he hurts when we lose.

Interesting point Josh made about Villa dropping in too; I think that's a real possibility. And as for the next Wolves boss, that's a difficult one: there doesn't really seem to be anyone out there that could do the job that needs doing ... or that Wolves fans want (as a 'local' WBA fan I have a number of friends who are Wolves fans - but don't tell anyone! - and they all seem very depressed about the options).

Posted by robby on 02/20/2012

great article. Sometimes its hard to get quality articles and I find myself shifting through the poorly written articles looking for gems like your article. It provides a breath of fresh air. Thank you for your research. I love that you broke some of it down for us. It's a weird year this year, and I believe that will help you. You will take a big teams scalp this year. Anyway hope Wiggan stays up. Love me some latics.

Posted by alfie on 02/21/2012

greeting from Indonesia here. nice article, hope the Latics will survive another season. cheers!

Posted by azhar on 02/22/2012

Wigan will survive,but they have to play their hearts out.Mental strength vital.Winning mentality to uplift.No lapse of concentration.True to the winning ways

rgds

Posted by Torsten on 02/23/2012

Nice article. I'm optimistic, as the only Wigan fan in the United States! Still, for all the talk about how few goals we score, we need an improvement over Gary Caldwell. He tries hard, but a proper partner for Alcaraz would do wonders. If we want to improve goal form, a striker who is good in the air would help. Nobody on our squad currently has that.

Posted by Ned on 02/23/2012

Torsten-- agree on both comments 100%...where in the US are you? I know some fans in various cities, would be glad to put you in touch.

Alfie-- same goes for Indonesia!

Robby-- thanks very much for the kind words. If you enjoyed it feel free to subscribe to our blog threeamigoswigan.com (lower right on site),

tech-- I hope you're right, we need all the support we can get!

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