How Edu made Arsenal great again from culling toxic flops and backing Arteta to becoming major transfer force again

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EDU GASPAR has been a MAGA man from the start.

Make Arsenal Great Again has been his mantra since returning to the club he played for 2019 – and his shock departure will hit the club hard, especially with Premier League clubs already in for him.

GettyEdu is credited with Arsenal’s rise back to the top and his presence will be missed[/caption]

GettyEdu stood by Mikel Arteta even after a tough few years early in his reign[/caption]

After a few wobbles early on – signing Nicolas Pepe will never reflect well – the Brazilian has, alongside Mikel Arteta, been crucial in the club’s transformation.

Without his contributions the Gunners may not be competing back at the top table of English and European football.

Arteta was brought in as the new manager within months of Edu’s return to North London and the former midfielder stuck by the boss when the pressure was on two years into the job.

Instead of making the knee-jerk decision to change manager again, the former Brazil international, joined forces with Arteta to institute a huge change of culture at The Emirates.

Overpaid toxic influences such as Mesut Ozil and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang were purged from the dressing room and Arsenal set about adding strong characters.

Edu may not be the man waving a lightbulb around London Colney or setting pick-pockets on his players but he has been a significant supporter of Arteta’s slightly unhinged ideas.

But after years of Arsenal having to carefully balance the books, it is in the transfer market where Edu has battled to get the club competing again – signing no fewer than 35 players.

After the questionable early signings, Edu quickly grew into the role.

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GettyThe signing of Declan Rice, tipped to join Man City, proved Arsenal were right back in the mix for signing the world’s top talent[/caption]

Martin Odegaard has been an outstanding capture for the club while the Gunners’ trio of Brazilian Gabriels: Magalhaes, Martinelli and Jesus have all made big contributions.

In landing Declan Rice ahead of Manchester City last year Arsenal showed they could compete for and sign some of Europe’s biggest talents once more.

Arsenal have become one of the most attractive clubs in the Premier League and one of the most efficient in the market.

At the end of the summer window, after signing Riccardo Calafiori, Mikel Merino, Neto and Raheem Sterling, Edu said: “We as a club have to be proud once again. The way we are working together, the way we did all the deals.

“We are in a very good situation when see all the loan players in the right clubs.

“You see the signings we have like Riccardo and like Merino, so the players that we planned to sign, our targets, they are here.

“Also the players that we decided to sell, I think we sold them for the right price, to the right clubs, in the right way also which is important.”

Edu’s 35 signings ranked

EDU oversaw the arrival of 35 players during his time at the club.

Some worked out better than others.

Here, SunSport ranks them from worst to best…

35. Nicolas Pepe (£72m)

34. Willian (Free)

33. David Luiz (£8m)

32. Runar Alex Runarsson (£2m)

31. Mat Ryan (Loan)

30. Fabio Vieira (£34m)

29. Neto (Loan)

28. Marquinhos (£3m)

27. Nuno Tavares (£8m)

26. Matt Turner (£5m)

25. Cedric Soares (Free)

24. Albert Sambi Lokonga (£17m)

23. Pablo Mari (£5m)

22. Dani Ceballos (Loan)

21. Raheem Sterling (Loan)

20. Jakub Kiwior (£17m)

19. Jorginho (£12m)

18. Riccardo Calafiori (£42m)

17. Kieran Tierney (£25m)

16. Takehiro Tomiyasu (£20m)

15. Mikel Merino (£28m)

14. Aaron Ramsdale (£24m)

13. Oleksandr Zinchenko (£30m)

12. Gabriel Jesus (£45m)

11. Kai Havertz (£65m)

10. Jurrien Timber (£38m)

9. Gabriel Martinelli (£6m)

8. David Raya (£27m)

7. Leandro Trossard (£20m)

6. Thomas Partey (£45m)

5. Ben White (£50m)

4. Gabriel Magalhaes (£27m)

3. Declan Rice (£105m)

2. William Saliba (£27m)

1. Martin Odegaard (£30m)

Click here to read more Arsenal stories.

While there have been big deals for the likes of Rice and Calafiori, there have been smart ones too – picking out value where others have lost hope.

Kai Havertz appeared as a surprising signing after a dreadful season at Chelsea. But after Edu gave the German space and support to rebuild his confidence he has developed into a fine asset for Arteta.

Edu does not only have a tight relationship with Arteta – who many fans will be glad signed a new deal before the sporting director’s departure – but the players too.

Throughout injury troubles or losses of form the former midfielder is always ready and waiting to check in, keep them going.

London Colney and The Emirates will feel a very different place for all of them without Edu – the closest support for players and manager in the boardroom.

Arsenal player ratings vs Newcastle

ARSENAL fell to defeat to Newcastle in a fresh blow to their title ambitions.

The Magpies won 1-0 thanks to a fine header from Alexander Isak.

Here, SunSport’s Jordan Davies rates the players…

DAVID RAYA – 6/10
Great early distribution to go long over the Newcastle press but nothing he could do with Isak’s pin-point header.

Was barely troubled in the second half but was forced to watch a lacklustre Arsenal dawdle to another defeat.

THOMAS PARTEY – 7
Looks really comfortable in that role, even if it is only temporary, but obviously lacks an attacking threat of a full-back which hindered Saka slightly.

Moved back into midfield on the hour mark with Arsenal chasing the game.

WILLIAM SALIBA – 7
A welcome presence back in the defensive line following suspension. Covered his defensive partner well and kept his cool amid Arsenal’s frustration.

GABRIEL – 5
Lost Isak in the box for Newcastle’s opener and nearly handed the hosts another chance with a sloppy pass out.

Normally a rock, this was one of those rare jittery displays we thought were a thing of the past.

JURRIEN TIMBER – 6
Looked good in attack but arguably should have closed down Gordon’s cross before the hosts took the lead and struggled to contain the England winger in the first half.

MIKEL MERINO – 5
Unfortunate not to get on the score sheet against his former club from close range after a scramble from a corner.

But as a whole, he currently looks lost in his position, unsure of when to go and when to sit deep, meaning Newcastle were able to prize Arsenal’s midfield open.

Feels like we are not seeing the best of him just yet.

DECLAN RICE – 6
On set-piece duty, his delivery was unusually poor, failing to beat the first man on numerous occasions and struggled to impose himself in open play too, even if he came close with a deflected effort in the second half before fluffing a great headed chance in injury time.

If he is going to be the anchor of this team and dictate play, he has got to be a lot better.

LEANDRO TROSSARD – 5
Pretty anonymous other than a few surging runs. Another player that looks lost in a floating No.10 role behind the main striker.

The Belgian is at his best cutting in and using his blistering pace. He can do neither through the middle against a compact opposition set-up.

BUKAYO SAKA – 6
Looked to be getting the better of Toon right-back Hall early on but his game faded after that, along with his team’s.

GABRIEL MARTINELLI – 7
Showed glimpses of being back to his buzzing best, taking on defenders and stretching the game for Arsenal, but only lasted an hour before being taken off.

KAI HAVERTZ – 6
Never got a sniff, but got to put that down to a complete lack of service from Arsenal’s wide players. He was desperate to attack a decent cross that never really came.

SUBS:
ETHAN NWANERI (MERINO, 61) – 6

Given a nice welcome to Tyneside with a crunching tackle from Willock seconds after coming on.

Found some nice pockets of space and look sharp as he blazed one over from range, but was always a big ask for him to be Arsenal’s saviour.

OLEKSANDR ZINCHENKO (MARTINELLI, 61) – 5
Thrown on to bring tempo and control. Brought neither from an inverted left-back position.

BEN WHITE (TIMBER, 71) – 6
Had only completed half a session to prepare for this one having picked up a knock against Liverpool last weekend, so was a surprise to even see him at all.

GABRIEL JESUS (TROSSARD) – 5
Tasked with creating something special from out wide, but there is a reason the Brazilian is only a bit-part player nowadays.

JORGINHO (PARTEY, 86) – N/A

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