Crystal Palace: Hodgson should have signed Arsenal’s £55k-p/w “warrior” over Holding
Crystal Palace could have signed someone better than Rob Holding…
HIGHLIGHTS
- Crystal Palace signed Rob Holding on transfer deadline day but were interested in another Arsenal star throughout the window.
- Dubbed a warrior, the player boasts great quality on the ball and defensively than Holding.
- He is also a more versatile player than Palace’s new summer signing.
Crystal Palace have made a strong start to their Premier League campaign, defeating Sheffield United at Bramall Lane and despite tasting a narrow loss against Arsenal, followed that up with a respectable point at Brentford and a thrilling 3-2 victory over Wolves.
For their strong start to the season, the Eagles have soared up the league table without significantly strengthening in the transfer window compared to their rivals.
Who did Crystal Palace sign this summer?
Making four acquisitions for a combined cost of £32m, it’s fair to say that the purse strings have been tight at Selhurst Park this summer having ended the window without a direct replacement for Wilfred Zaha.
Although Michael Olise and Eberechi Eze are more than capable of shouldering the weight of goal contributions in his absence, the lack of ambition shown in this window was underwhelming to say the least.
Palace brought in attacking midfielder Matheus Franca, box-to-box midfielder Jefferson Lerma, goalkeeper Dean Henderson and lastly, centre-back Rob Holding.
For all of his top-flight experience at Arsenal, it was the latter of those signings who raised the most eyebrows and that isn’t surprising given his career has gone on a downward spiral recently.
How many games did Rob Holding play for Arsenal?
In his seven-year stay at Arsenal, Holding made 162 appearances and scored five goals but has never really shown the ability to become a regular starter for the Gunners.
He was frozen out for the majority of last season, until star defender William Saliba sustained an injury in April and the Englishman was entrusted into the starting XI, going on to make seven starts in the last month of the season.
Despite scoring a consolation in the 4-1 defeat against Manchester City, Holding has struggled to become the ball-playing defender that Mikel Arteta desires, ultimately leaving him surplus to requirements.
During the Gunner’s London derby defeat against Tottenham in May, which was a result that handed Man City the initiative in the title race, Holding’s reckless sending off for making two silly fouls cost his team in their biggest match of the season.
After the game, many pundits heavily criticised Holding as Jamie Redknapp made his thoughts known on Sky Sports.
He said: “‘That’s a silly thing, he’s doing judo moves on the football field. Then he gets caught again, and it becomes an accumulation.”
With Holding enduring a reckless end to his Arsenal career, a fresh start in the Premier League is what he needed and got, but it still begs the question as to why Palace didn’t take up their interest in fellow Gunner Takehiro Tomiyasu, who would have been a huge upgrade on the Englishman.
How good is Takehiro Tomiyasu?
According to a Daily Mail report in late August, Palace were showing an interest in signing Tomiyasu but following the injury to Jurrien Timber, Arsenal were reluctant to sell the Japan international.
Since joining the club from Bologna two years ago, the £55k per-week “warrior” – as he was once lauded by former teammate Mitchell Dijks – has gone on to make 56 appearances under Arteta and during the 21/22 season, Tomiyasu made 20 Premier League starts. He was impressive during that spell, averaging an impressive 1.7 tackles per game, completing 60% of his dribbles and winning 55% of his duels, as per Sofascore.
However, after a promising debut season, his second term was hampered by separate knee and calf problems, making only 21 appearances in the top flight with the majority of those coming from the bench.
Despite this, the 33-cap titan has still been highly regarded by many during his time at north London with Martin Keown waxing lyrical about his performance against PSV in the Europa League last season, saying:
“Tomiyasu is probably Arsenal’s best out-and-out defender, in a one-on-one situation. Look at how dominant he is in the air. He’s a big boy actually. They have dealt with that problem [of Gakpo] really well,” he told BT Sport.
Keown’s comments are supported by Tomiyasu’s defensive and attacking metrics, ranking highly when compared against his positional peers across Europe’s top five leagues for the former of those. He places in the top 10% for tackles per 90, top 19% for interceptions per 90 and top 1% for aerial duels won per 90, via FBref.
While his defensive capabilities shine through, his ability to progress the ball up the field is second to none, ranking in the top 8% for passes completed and the best 1% for progressive carries.
In a Crystal Palace team that has to do a lot of defending, Tomiyasu would excel at both winning possession back and being proactive with it, unlike Holding, who falls well below his former teammate for those aspects of his game.
During the last 365 days, Holding has only recorded one tackle per 90, 0.69 interceptions per 90 while falling lower for progressive passes than Tomiyasu (4.37/7.76) and progressive carries (0.54/2.00).
When being tasked to defend, the 27-year-old has fallen well short in the past year and will find it difficult to dislodge Marc Guehi and Joachim Andersen, who are forming an indispensable partnership at the heart of the Eagles’ defence. Indeed, the former has played so well over the last year that he’s now in and around the England squad, even being touted at an eye-watering £50m during the summer window.
Although Holding and Tomiyasu predominantly play different positions across the back line, the defensive solidity and dependability that the Japan international would have brought to Selhurst Park is levels ahead of the declining Englishman. After all, the latter does present you with more versatility too, boasting the ability to play in the centre-back role and on both sides as a full-back.
Leave a Reply