Invisiblewall.net: Gilberto Silva News

Invisiblewall.net: Gilberto Silva News

Archive for February, 2007

Gilberto in Arsenal Magazine

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

There’s more stuff about Gilberto being father to Denilson in this month’s Arsenal magazine.

Gilberto is currently the cover story – you can buy the magazine at any newsagent which isn’t rubbish.

Here are a few interesting pages from the magazine regarding Bert and Den. (Click the little picture to view it full size.)

Superb.

You will notice on the last page that there’s a nice little competition. If I hadn’t entered myself, I would tell you the answer. But you’ll just have to find the answer yourself. So there.



Gilberto doesn’t play in final…

Sunday, February 25th, 2007

It was reported on the morning of the Carling Cup final that Gilberto might play in the game; however, his wish to let the youngsters do the job was granted, and Bert didn’t even get a place on the bench.

Arsenal lost the game 2-1. Chelsea’s Drogba scored two.

That is all.



Gilberto likely to play in Carling Cup Final

Sunday, February 25th, 2007

Source

GILBERTO SILVA admits he will feel guilty if he gatecrashes the Arsenal young guns’ party at Cardiff today.

The Brazilian midfielder has only featured in the semi-final second leg against Tottenham so far in the competition as the youngsters have progressed through the rounds.

But he is likely to feature alongside his fellow countryman Denilson for the showdown with Chelsea this afternoon.

In an ideal world, however, Gilberto insists he would not mind watching from the sidelines if it meant the Carling Cup kids continuing their crusade.

Gilberto said: “For me it would be nice to see all of them on the pitch for the final because they are the ones who have done the job of getting there.

“I would feel quite guilty to be on the pitch and look at the bench and see players there who played their full part, but they don’t get to play in the final.

“If you’ve done all the hard work, you want to play in the final.”

The article also embeds some great Gilberto videos from JUNDA PRODUCTIONS, and has some other quotes from Denilson.

Good luck to Gilberto if he plays, and also to Denilson!



Gilberto: “I’m like a father to Denilson”

Sunday, February 25th, 2007

A couple of Gilberto related articles today, one from Arsenal.com on how Gilberto is like a “father figure” to Denilson at the moment:

Source

Gilberto has been both a ‘father figure’ and team-mate to Denilson this season.

The Brazilian midfielder has done everything possible to help his younger compatriot settle at Arsenal and has been impressed by the return he’s seen on the pitch.

Denilson, 19, only arrived from Sao Paulo in August but has been one of the stars of this season’s Carling Cup run.

This is despite not yet having mastered the English language, a situation Gilberto remembers all too well.

“I just make sure he is happy at the Club and that he does not feel scared of his new life,” said Gilberto. “It’s difficult not speaking the language in a new country. That’s very, very hard. I’m trying to do with Denilson what Edu did with me.

“I’m telling him everything I can about things at the Club, about London and about the Premiership. But he has settled in so very well – and very quickly too.”

“It would be the same for any English player who went to Brazil. Until they learnt the language they would find it very hard. Denilson is trying very hard, he talks to other players and that’s nice to see.”

Gilberto remembers first hearing of Denilson’s talents while away on international duty. The Arsenal vice-captain heard rave reviews and is delighted to see how quickly the youngster has become an asset to Arsène Wenger’s first-team.

“The first time I heard about him was from the physio of the Brazil team,” said Gilberto. “He told me Arsenal might be interested in him [Denilson]. Everybody told me good things about the player and he has confirmed everything that I heard.

“He is just one of many very good young players here, which is nice to know.

“The others in the squad are young but they have already shown fantastic footballing ability and fantastic character,” he added.

“When you are that age you can sometimes be scared to play with name players. I know I was scared when I was 18 and 19 and playing in the first team. But they have taken their chance.

“It is amazing how quickly. And I am very happy about that. They are quality. Sometimes it needs games to get confidence and the Carling Cup has given them fantastic experience.

“There’s been big pressure on them but they handle it very well. The future of Arsenal looks bright.”

And one mostly about Denilson, but how he Gilberto and Baptista are fitting into Arsenal.

Source

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has developed a youth scouting web so sophisticated and far-reaching that the sound of a three-year-old taking his first tentative stab at a ball in a Japanese alpine meadow would bring the arrival of at least two talent-spotters in Gunners’ tracksuits. Yet even men who leave nothing to chance can sometimes reap the benefit of plain old luck.

And how lucky was Wenger in the signing of the brilliant young Brazilian Denilson, whom he discovered through a classic case of serendipity. Unconvinced by another young Brazilian, Ramon, during five days at Arsenal’s London Colney training base, Wenger went to watch him playing for Atletico Mineiro, Gilberto’s former club. Instead, his eye was drawn to a tenacious young Sao Paulo player, winning the ball all over the pitch and spraying it to colleagues.

It was love at first sight. Wenger says: “I was impressed by the way he knew where to be on the pitch and the quality of his passing. Most of all, I liked his winning attitude. You could see he was a fighter.” With his interest in Ramon gone, Wenger decided he had another job for Steve Rowley, Arsenal’s chief scout.

Now, looking every bit the former street urchin, Denilson holds court at London Colney on his plans to win today’s Carling Cup final against Chelsea in only his sixth start for the club, all but one in this competition. Not hoping to win it mind. “I will win it”, he says, sporting a black eye that shows he is prepared to take a blow or two for the cause. “Tottenham did it”, he explains almost proudly. No player has caused more excitement at Arsenal since Cesc Fabregas came swaggering through the kindergarten door. And if Denilson, 19, will not be bullied on the pitch, neither will he be patronised off it. Invited to provide a schmaltzy cliche of a headline by agreeing that his startling progress feels like a dream, he says: “No. It feels like reality to me, though it has gone better than I could have imagined. But I did not come here with the idea of waiting around, I came here to fight for a place from the start.

“The football is much faster here and I like that but you’ve also got to be more physical and have a body to deal with the battering you get. In my first game for Arsenal reserves, I got kicked more than ever before in my life. In Brazil, many players would have got red cards. But I feel no pressure. I feel like the games are just kickabouts in the street. That’s how I learned to play back home, kicking around with my friends in the dusty streets until the sun went down.”

Denilson is the latest of Wenger’s water-carrying Brazilians, joining holding midfield player Gilberto and the muscular battering ram Julio Baptista. Wenger has no time for the samba types and neither does his young protege. Denilson says: “The football is so different here. In Brazil, the players are very vain, they strut around the pitch and when they get the ball, they do whatever they want with it. Here, you have to obey orders more and play more of a team game.” Gilberto, quite naturally, has taken the boy under his wing, helping him with his English and promising to take him to Madame Tussauds when the fixture congestion eases.

Gilberto, of course, arrived at Arsenal as a World Cup winner but still understands the difficulties of adjusting. He says: “I am impressed by Denilson, he seems to find it very easy on the pitch, although all the young boys have done a brilliant job in the Carling Cup with their quality and personality. What impresses me most is that they are not afraid to play. I remember being 18, 19 and being a bit scared to play for the first team. These boys are not and that’s good to see.”

In the absence of Thierry Henry, Gilberto is expected to be captain today, although he has only made one Carling Cup appearance, in the second leg of the semi-final against Tottenham. He says: “It was great to play alongside them but I would feel guilty to be on the pitch at the start and have to look at the bench and see some of those youngsters who have been playing all the time.”

Henry, Freddie Ljungberg, Jens Lehmann and William Gallas have all been left out of the squad to fulfil Wenger’s pledge to stay faithful to the youngsters who got the club to the final, though no one has yet found an alliterative collective name for his teenagers. How about Wenger’s Whelps? Should they deliver the first victory for Arsenal over Chelsea since the latter appointed Jose Mourinho, questions will surely be raised about which group of players really represents Arsenal’s first team. Wenger says it will give him a nice headache, while Gilberto says: “It is good when you have that in a squad because if one of us has a problem, it’s easy for the manager to make a change.

“He has trust in all the players and the relationships between the players in the squad is fantastic. There is friendship and honesty and we tell the truth to each other at all times. There is no one stabbing someone else in the back. I describe Arsenal like a family. Some players have left since last season and some new ones have come in but we have kept the spirit of the team, which is amazing.”

Gilberto claims he has learned as much from the tyros as they have from him. At 30, he and goalkeeper Manuel Almunia are the oldest members of the squad but do not try describing him as the group’s spiritual father. “No, father is too old. Maybe older brother, but not that old.”

As for Denilson, a full house at Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium, Mourinho’s multi-million pound Chelsea as opponents and a global TV audience will not, he says, deflect him from his job in midfield. Even such a confident and apparently fearless young man is bound to feel the butterflies before the game but once the action starts, he intends to treat even an occasion as big as this as if it were just another kickabout on the dusty streets of Sao Paulo.

Spiff!



Gilberto on Carling Cup final

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

After the Carling Cup “Brawl”, which the media have treated like a bloody gun battle to the death, Gilberto has spoken out about it. He wasn’t part of the game, but that didn’t stop the shit-stirrers in the media asking everyone then can about it.

(Source.)

Question: Is it true that the Carling Cup final is the worst, most bloody disgrace of a match you’ve ever seen in your life?

Answer: The Carling Cup is still a sad memory for us. Now we must think only about the FA Cup. Our aim is to go to the next round by beating Blackburn however we can at their ground.

It will be a very positive thing [to beat Blackburn], especially for our fans after we lost against Chelsea in Cardiff. In the first game we played we deserved to win because we were more dangerous, but the Blackburn keeper was very good and saved them.

Everybody in the Arsenal dressing room is very ambitious and we want to win the FA Cup and the Champions League. We are only thinking of winning both of the games.

I don’t know what the coach will do, but I know that whoever plays on Wednesday Arsenal’s aim is to win and go through to the quarter-finals of the Cup.

Question successfully deflected. Good work, Bert… and good luck for the game against Blackburn!



Gilberto, Baptista and Denilson hanging out!

Monday, February 19th, 2007

This is a cool little video off Youtube if you have not seen it, I think maybe at Gilberto’s house, with the Arsenal’s Brazilian trio playing and singing Brazilian style! Check out Denilson’s little dance, classic!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RiCQZkaF7M



Gilberto has tea with the Queen

Friday, February 16th, 2007

Bert meets the Queen

There’s nothing more to say, other than this: Gilberto looks good in a suit.

That is all.



Gilberto captains Arsenal in Bolton game

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

Gilberto captain in Arsenal thriller

Arsenal played Bolton in the FA Cup – and wow! What a game. Some main points regarding Gilberto were:

Gilberto was captain in Thierry Henry’s absence.

Gilberto played in central defence in Senderos’ absence.

Arsenal got a penalty, Gilberto took it – and blazed it over the bar.

Arsenal got a SECOND penalty… but Baptista blazed it over the bar!

Gilberto attempted to clear the ball in extra time, but mis-kicked it, and almost scored an own goal.

Gilberto played for all 120 minutes in the game, and helped Arsenal win 3-1 thanks to two goals from Adebayor, and one from Ljungberg.

It was an absolute thriller of a game, and though Arsenal were arguably the deserved winners, the 3-1 result was possibly flattering to Gilberto’s side.



Gilberto can’t see his future at Arsenal

Thursday, February 8th, 2007

Source: The Guardian Online (via Rick Carter)

Here is a very praise-worthy article from The Guardian:

If it remains faintly ludicrous that the captain of Brazil cannot get a regular game at Arsenal, Gilberto Silva does not see the funny side. As he prepared to lead his country at Croke Park in tonight’s friendly against the Republic of Ireland, the midfielder could not conceal his frustration.

“At the moment I cannot see any future for me at the club,” he said. “I will see what will happen in the next few months and until the end [of the season], if I will get the chance to come back in the team. If not, I will see what I am going to do at the end. It’s been painful for me and to stay another season like this would kill me. I will sit down with Arsène [Wenger] and see what we can do to manage the situation.”

Gilberto, 31, who has 18 months to run on his contract, is one of football’s nice guys. Polite and respectful, he bears no grudge towards Wenger, the manager, or Mathieu Flamini, the Frenchman who has ousted him from the starting line-up. When potential suitors approached in January, most notably Juventus and Roma, he pledged to stay and fight. There have been no histrionics.
“I am not happy in the position I am in but I am trying to manage the situation,” he said. “I am very calm and I’m being professional as I’ve always been. We’ll see at the end of the season what is going to happen.”

Gilberto was Wenger’s first choice at the start of the season for the midfield anchor role alongside Cesc Fábregas. Flamini had grown frustrated at his own lack of opportunities and, although Wenger persuaded him to stay, he could not offer any guarantees that he would start ahead of Gilberto. Wenger even signed Lassana Diarra from Chelsea on August 31, as he feared that Flamini would not stay the course.

But when Gilberto missed the opening three matches of the season, because of his involvement with Brazil at the Copa América, Flamini seized his chance. Wenger had promised Flamini that, if he did so, he would stay in the team and, although Gilberto’s return in the final week of August presented him with a dilemma, he remained true to his word.

Flamini has been one of Arsenal’s players of the season; he is not only keeping Gilberto on the bench but he has seen off Diarra, a player ahead of him in the pecking order for France’s Euro 2008 squad. Diarra moved to Portsmouth last month.

Gilberto has been restricted to five Premier League starts, two of them out of position at centre-half, and it seems that only an injury to Flamini will offer him a route back. He refuses, though, to lament the timing of the Copa América, South American’s premier championship, which Brazil won with a 3-0 victory over Argentina in the final.

“I never regret to play for my country, this is inside of me, this is my pride,” Gilberto said. “If I receive a call from the [Brazil] manager, I never refuse that. That is why I don’t regret to play the Copa América.”

Gilberto, a World Cup winner in 2002, does not take his international responsibilities lightly and he will be called upon tonight to marshal an inexperienced team, as Dunga, the manager, bloods players for the Beijing Olympics, a tournament that Brazil are desperate to win for the first time. Anderson, the teenage Manchester United midfielder, is expected to win his third cap.

“It is fantastic to see how Anderson is adapting after his transfer from Porto [last summer],” said Gilberto. “He has changed completely his style but I think he can produce much more, given his quality.”

Gilberto anticipates a “tough test” from the Republic, who remain under the caretaker charge of Don Givens, as their efforts to appoint a successor to Steve Staunton drag on. He is well aware that “everybody wants to beat Brazil”.

Well done to David Hytner for writing such an unbiased article.

And on the note of Gilberto expressing his doubt at his Arsenal future; I think it is very easy to sympathise with him. It’s a credit to Gilberto that while he’s spent most of the season on the bench, he’s kept so professional (as he kindly points out). If he wants to go to another club to actually play football, he cannot be blamed.

Good luck Bert – but keep trying to break back into the team at Arsenal!



Gilberto expects tough Portugal game

Tuesday, February 6th, 2007

Source

Gilberto will proudly show his international team-mates around his new ‘home’ when Brazil take on Portugal at Emirates Stadium.

The Arsenal vice-captain is expected to start Tuesday night’s prestige friendly and is confident that a sell-out crowd will be treated to an entertaining encounter.

“It will be a good match, that is what everyone is expecting,” Gilberto told Arsenal.com.

“When Brazil and Portugal it is always a fast game, a hard game, because there is a lot of history between the two countries which comes from a long, long time ago.

“I really hope everyone enjoys the game. We will try to do our best, we want to win the game because our last game didn’t go so well and we lost 2-1. We want to make up for that against Portugal.”

Gilberto played a full 90 minutes when Brazil beat Argentina 3-0 in the first international at Emirates Stadium back in September. Shakhtar Donetsk midfielder Elano scored in either half and Kaka added a third late on.

Julio Baptista came on as a late substitute in that game to make his first appearance at Emirates Stadium following his loan switch from Real Madrid.

Also: Wenger hails Arsenal’s three Brazilians. Check it out.