Arsenal 2021/22 summer transfer window grade: A success?

LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 01: Ben White of Arsenal during Arsenal v Chelsea: The Mind Series at Emirates Stadium on August 1, 2021 in London, England. (Photo by Matthew Ashton - AMA/Getty Images)
LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 01: Ben White of Arsenal during Arsenal v Chelsea: The Mind Series at Emirates Stadium on August 1, 2021 in London, England. (Photo by Matthew Ashton - AMA/Getty Images) /
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Arsenal, Ben White
Arsenal 2021/22 summer transfer window grade: Mikel Arteta spends club record £150m on six new signings, but was it a success? (Photo by Matthew Ashton – AMA/Getty Images) /

It’s over. Like Frodo sitting on the slopes of Mount Doom after ridding himself of the One Ring, the trials and tribulations of the summer transfer window can be put to bed. Arsenal are done. We’re done.

All of those pre-summer buzzwords that had toes tingling and spines shivering may also be cast aside: ‘ruthless’, ‘unprecedented’ are terms we kiss farewell to. And, £150m later, there is something very different looking in north London compared to what finished last season.

Takehiro Tomiyasu completed the final action of the summer window on deadline day and as with all transfers that take place in the last dregs of a 12-week period, questions will arise over whether or not he constitutes a panic buy, or clever control to wait for a cheaper deal, if that was even the case.

With a combined 14 first team faces coming and going over the course of those grueling 12 weeks, which carries on from what had already began in January, it certainly constitutes an overhaul.

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Arsenal 2021/22 summer transfer window grade: Mikel Arteta spends club record £150m on six new signings

It’s one that isn’t finished, however. Oh no. One does not simply overhaul an entire squad from rubble to riches in a single window. It’s impossible.

This is a start, though. The question that lingers is whether or not it’s a good enough start. Could Arsenal have done more? Is there enough mitigation to justify why certain deals didn’t happen and why others did?

A lot will depend on the bigger picture. On the one hand, signing six players for positions that fill the roughly seven areas that needed seeing to is a close to the most realistic outcome. Are they the right players, though? Could that have arrived sooner in the window with Arsenal not sat rock bottom of the Premier League after their worst start to a campaign for 67 years?

To break down a grade for the summer it’s best to look at the incomings and outgoings as separate sections and forge a consensus from there. So, starting with the arrivals.

Arsenal, Albert Sambi Lokonga
LONDON, ENGLAND – AUGUST 08: Albert Sambi Lokonga of Arsenal during the MIND series pre-season friendly between Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal at Emirates Stadium on August 8, 2021 in London, England. (Photo by Matthew Ashton – AMA/Getty Images) /

Arsenal’s Summer Transfer Window Signings Graded

The aforementioned seven areas to hit were a key aspect of this window: goalkeeper, right-back, centre-back, left-back, two midfielders and a playmaker.

These changed over the course of the window as certain outgoings would dictate their respective incomings, like the early realisation that Granit Xhaka wanted to depart, which would mean two new central midfielders. Equally, if the striker situation had changed then a centre-forward became high priority.

Focussing on arrivals, Arsenal managed to secure six out of their seven key areas. For one window, that’s fairly good going.

Crucially though, they’re all young. Ben White is the oldest of them all and he’s only 23 years old. Thus, how successful they will be is something supporters may not get to see for another one or two seasons. These are players who will all theoretically peak around the same time and will we see the fruits of those labours this season? It’s highly unlikely.

Who will make an instant impact is clearer: White is a certified starter and if his pre-season outings against Chelsea and Tottenham are anything to go on (Brentford takes a back seat) then he is someone whose impression on this team will be felt this term.

Martin Odegaard is the other obvious candidate. While we would have liked him to have arrived earlier, Arsenal had to bide their time for Real Madrid to sanction his sale and signing him on an initial £30m is excellent business. His ceiling is sky high and when fully fit he changes the dynamic of Arsenal’s attacking style: balance and brains.

£150m is a lot. The most of any Premier League club. It’s also very important to note that wages will be considerably smaller than most as these are young arrivals, while it’s money that has been spread out across six positions. Chelsea, for example, spent £100m on one player, because that’s all they need; a new engine for their sportscar while Arsenal had only the chassis to begin with.

An injection of youth has been put into this squad where the effects won’t begin to tell this term. It’s a complete rethink of strategy that has been long overdue. Is there the right balance for the now, though? Maybe not. Another midfielder would have gone down well, too.

Grade: B

Continued…