Bernd Leno happy to bide time at Arsenal
When a new manager joins a club and immediately buys a goalkeeper, it almost always means the end for the current number one at the club. That looked to be the case at Arsenal after Unai Emery joined the North London outfit and instantly forked out close to £23m on a new goalkeeper in Bernd Leno. It was a move that would have concerned Petr Cech with the prospect of playing time with the Gunners about to be cut short.
Bernd Leno’s time will come ⏱️ pic.twitter.com/exvcWgcJVp
— B/R Football (@brfootball) August 29, 2018
The Gunners were played off the park in a 2-0 win for Guardiola’s men and at the end of 90 minutes, Cech came in for a lot of criticism for his distribution from the back. As always some of the views being shared were more worthy of being listened to than others but if the 36-year-old Cech was honest, there were things he could have done better.
A moment of madness occurred in the first half of that game where Cech seemingly with his angles all mixed up, almost passed the ball into his own net under no pressure to score one of the most bizarre own goals likely to be seen. That seemed to signal the end for Cech in goal at Arsenal but Emery once again kept faith with the veteran shot-stopper and it’s only right to say that since then, Emery’s loyalty has been repaid.
Cech has made more saves than any other goalkeeper this season after three games with 18 blocks. It has been an impressive comeback and it has even promoted Bernd Leno to say he is happy to bide his time at Arsenal. Leno was quoted as saying: “It may take a few weeks or months, but my time will come.”
18 – Petr Cech has made the most saves in the Premier League so far this season pic.twitter.com/eIcXWGJDiq
— Emery’s new era 👏🏾 (@tomgunner14) August 28, 2018
There can be no room for error at Arsenal at the moment with the club predicted to have a monumental battle on their hands to qualify for the Champions League next season. At 5/2 in football betting to finish in the top four, it looks far from certain and the role Cech will play can’t be underplayed. The goalkeeper’s shirt is his to lose but the pressure will be immense as the Gunners look to re-establish themselves as one of the Premier League’s finest clubs.
Leno may be waiting patiently but at the end of the day all a goalkeeper wants to do is play and there will come a time he finds sitting on the bench not nearly as character building as he once did.
There is life left in Cech yet and should he keep his current form up as well as distribute the ball competently from the back then Leno may well have to make do with the odd appearance in the domestic cup competitions.