Arsenal cult hero, Per Mertesacker admits that he was a “panic buy” when the club brought him to the Emirates Stadium during the summer transfer window in 2011.
The 8-2 embarrassing defeat to Manchester United proved to be the last straw to the patience of Arsene Wenger as he quickly brought in the German to boost his backline.
The tall centre-back possessed the qualities the team was lacking and his acquisition proved to be the right thing for the club.
Mertesacker would later go on to win the World Cup with Germany during his time with the Gunners while leading Arsenal in some games as captain during his seven years.
He told Arsenal’sLockdown Podcast: “I consider myself to be a panic buy. I’ve got no problems with that whatsoever because sometimes these things are rushed.
“Football is rushed, especially when the transfer window is about too close. At that time Arsenal had two or three days to make adjustments to the squad. To join an English team, my favourite English team, and to join the Premier League was something I couldn’t turn down.
“I was with the German national team during those last three days and I had to ask Joachim Low if I could go to London and have a quick medical. In my medical, I met [Andre] Santos, I became familiar with [Yossi] Benayoun, [Mikel] Arteta, and Park [Chu-young] very quickly.
“It had to be messy, it had to be rushed. I didn’t care. I was just happy that Arsene Wenger called me and spoke to me in German. I couldn’t really believe it.
“It was so unreal those three days, as I said. To turn down an opportunity like Arsenal Football Club? I would always do it again, in the same format, in the same rush, in the same manner.”
Mertesacker, who made 221 appearances for Arsenal, becoming a mainstay in their defensive unit, says he was happy to face the questions that came his way on a regular basis – be that from inside or outside the club.
He added: “There needs to be that mentality in every single training session. I remember Aaron Ramsey was always a sounding board for me because we kept having a go at each other. Whenever we would do something wrong or not do the right thing at a certain time in training, we would feel the accountability.
“There were no hiding places really and that’s what it’s about with winning teams. You have the odd argument and as long as you’re authentic and you can back it up with your own behaviour, then there’s no problem.
“I never had a problem when someone called me out, sometimes it’s difficult to do that but once you step out of your bubble and get some perspective, I think that’s just healthy. It can be difficult, but the real leaders are the ones who always try to be authentic and honest, no matter what that means at the time.”