Sunday, July 15, 2018

1998 Yankees vs. 2004 Arsenal

Top row, left to right: Patrick Vieira, Dennis Bergkamp, Edu Gaspar,
Jens Lehmann, Lauren Etame Mayer, Sol Campbell and Kolo Touré.
Bottom row: Unidentified mascot, Ashley Cole,
Freddie Ljungberg, Thierry Henry and Robert Pires.

Somebody asked me recently, on Twitter, if the 1998 New York Yankees' achievement of a 114-48 regular season record, followed by an 11-2 postseason record, totaling 125 wins and 50 losses and resulting in winning the World Series, was equivalent to the 2003-04 Arsenal team's achievement of an undefeated Premier League season: As an announcer said, "They were, quite literally, unbeatable: Played 38, won 26, drawn 12, lost exactly none!"

I told him that this was worth studying, and that it required a lot more than the 280 characters that Twitter now allows.

The Case for The Arsenal

The Arsenal didn't lose a game. Maybe they drew some games they should have won. But they also drew some games where they could have lost. Examples: 1-1 home to Portsmouth on September 13, 2003 (no, Robert Pires did not dive, he was practically mugged, but a typically dirty Harry Redknapp-managed team); 0-0 away to Manchester United on September 21 (a.k.a. the Battle of Old Trafford, or the van Nistelrooy-Keown Game); 1-1 away to Charlton Athletic on October 26; and 1-1 home to Man United on March 28, 2004.

The 1998 Yankees' record of 114-48 was magnificent. Only 2 Major League Baseball teams have ever won more games in a regular season: The 1906 Chicago Cubs and the 2001 Seattle Mariners, both of whom won 116. But neither of them went on to win the World Series. The '98 Yanks did.

But they didn't win every game. In 29 percent of their games, they not only failed to win, they lost. The Gunners lost exactly none.

That had only been done once before in the history of English soccer's 1st division. It was all the way back in the 1st season of the Football League, 1888-89, when Preston North End of Lancashire played 22, won 18, drew 4, and lost none. But 22 games unbeaten is one thing; 38 is another. Indeed, Arsenal's League unbeaten streak ran from May 7, 2003 to October 24, 2004, encompassing pieces of 3 seasons, and stretching to 49 straight games, before Man United cheated them out of a 50th.

And it hasn't been done since. An unbeaten League season of more than 22 games? Only The Arsenal have done it. The Yankees haven't. No Major League Baseball team has.

For comparison's sake, the longest winning streak in Yankee history is 19 games, in 1947. They also had an 18-game winning streak in 1953. They won the World Series both times. The longest winning streak in MLB history, and thus also the longest unbeaten streak, is 26 games, by the 1916 New York Giants, and they didn't win the Pennant.

As for personnel: Arsenal had Thierry Henry, Patrick Vieira and Robert Pires from France's 1998 World Cup winners, and Henry was the best soccer player in the world at this point; Sylvain Wiltord, who would join those 3 on the France team that reached the 2006 World Cup Final; Dennis Bergkamp and Giovanni van Bronckhorst, members of the Netherlands team that reached the 1998 World Cup Semifinals, with Bergkamp being a genuine superstar, and van Brockhorst eventually becoming the Captain of the Dutch team that reached the 2010 World Cup Final; Gilberto Silva, from Brazil's 2002 World Cup winners, and he and Arsenal teammate Edu Gaspar would help Brazil win the 2005 Confederations Cup; Jens Lehmann, the goalkeeper who helped Germany reach the 2006 World Cup Semifinal, and was a backup on their 2002 World Cup Finalists; Lauren Etame Mayer, who helped Cameroon win the Africa Cup of Nations in 2000 and 2002; Freddie Ljungberg, who helped Sweden reach the knockout stages of the 2002 and 2006 World Cups; and Sol Campbell and Ashley Cole, then England's best centreback and left back, respectively.

The Case for the Yankees

They won every competition that was available to them. They won a Playoff berth. They won the American League Eastern Division. They won the American League Pennant. And they won the World Series.
Contrast that with the Gunners. They reached the Semifinal of the FA Cup, but lost to Man United. Understandable, as they were a great team. Indeed, while Arsenal did not lose a game in what North American sports fans would call "the regular season," they played Man U 4 times over the course of the 2003-04 season, and didn't win any of the games: They played the Community Shield, the annual season-starter between the defending winners of the League title (Man U) and the FA Cup (Arsenal), and Man U won on penalties; they lost to Man U in the FA Cup Semi; and the 2 League games were both draws.

They also reached the Semifinal of the League Cup. There, they lost to Middlesbrough. Not a good team. But then, this was not a big surprise, as Arsenal usually don't take the League Cup very seriously. It's been said that the definition of a "big club" is one for whom winning the League Cup is nice, but not a big deal; if you consider it a big deal, then your team is not a big club.

Then there was the UEFA Champions League. That season, Arsenal became the 1st English club ever to defeat Internazionale of Milan in Milan, and also gained their 1st victory on Spanish soil by knocking Celta Vigo out of the tournament. But after a 1-1 draw in the away leg of the Quarterfinal, they lost to fellow Londoners Chelsea 2-1 at home.

The title was there. Chelsea were knocked out by AS Monaco, who really weren't as good as either Chelsea or Arsenal. And Monaco lost the Final to FC Porto, who also weren't as talent-laden as Arsenal. This is the great missed opportunity in Arsenal history.

Arsenal did not win everything that was available to them. The Yankees did.

In addition, the big argument of "lost exactly none" has a flaw in it: Draws are not available in baseball. (In soccer, the game itself is often called a "tie," especially in cup matches.) If the '04 Gunners had had to play until there was a winner every time, how many of those 12 draws would they have lost?

Surely, some would have gone to penalties, and with Thierry Henry leading the way, they likely would have won most of those shootouts. But they could live with a draw, as they did on April 25, 2004, when a draw would clinch them the League title at the home of their North London arch-rivals, Tottenham Hotspur, and they blew a 2-0 lead to finish 2-2. Still, "We won the League at White Hart Lane!"

The '98 Yanks failed to win in 29 percent of their games; but the '04 Gunners failed to win in 31 percent of theirs.

The names are familiar to baseball fans: Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera are in the Hall of Fame; Paul O'Neill, Bernie Williams, Tino Martinez, Jorge Posada, David Cone, Andy Pettitte and David Wells were multiple All-Stars; while Tim Raines (also a Hall-of-Famer), Darryl Strawberry and Chili Davis were veterans playing out the string and contributing solidly to an all-time great team.

CONCLUSION: What 2003-04 Arsenal did was astonishing, and had never (really) been done before, and hasn't been done since. But what the 1998 Yankees did was even better. They didn't avoid defeat in all their League games, but they did "win it all."

One more note: When Reggie Jackson hit his 3rd home run of Game 6 of the 1977 World Series, ABC's Howard Cosell noted that all of the controversies of the season had, for the moment, been swept away. Cosell said, "Victory can bring harmony!"

Which is almost the exact opposite of Arsenal's motto: Victoria Concordia Crescit. "Victory through harmony."

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