Dennis Bergkamp... Dennis Bergkamp… Dennis Bergkamp! The
Dutchman cannot be mentioned without this immortal piece of commentary from the
1998 World Cup coming to mind, but at club level his name was seldom heard
without being closely followed by that of his strike partner, Thierry Henry. At
the same tournament, the young Frenchman was bursting on to the international
scene: at just twenty years of age he ended up as top scorer for his country,
who of course went on to win the trophy. A defeat on penalties for the
Netherlands at the hands of Brazil meant that the pair were not destined to
meet in the final - it would be another year before they united at Arsenal,
forming a partnership that would shape the club for the next seven seasons.
In fact, the year preceding his move to Arsenal was a tough
one for Thierry Henry. He could not recreate his form for Monaco and France at
new club Juventus, where he was forced to play wide against defences far more
disciplined than those he had grown accustomed to facing. Bergkamp, meanwhile,
was having no such problems at the English club – he achieved the impressive
feat of reaching double figures in the league in both goals and assists, only
missing out on the title on the final day of the season. This success was
coming under the tutelage of Arsene Wenger, who had given Henry his senior
debut for Monaco five years previously. He opted to gamble upon the striker
once more following his tough spell in Italy, paying a club record fee for the
forward: the decision proved to be one of his best.
The connection between Henry and Bergkamp, which grew to be
almost telepathic, was not instantaneous. The strong form of Kanu, an
out-and-out striker if ever there was one, thwarted any hopes of a regular
pairing up front between the Dutchman and the new acquisition – Wenger started
the season with all three of them, shifting Henry out wide to accommodate all
of the talent, but settled upon rotation as the policy for much of the
campaign. None of the trio surpassed twenty-six league starts. Nonetheless,
there were glimpses of what was to come; on an individual level it was an
excellent campaign for Henry, who managed seventeen league goals, while
Bergkamp exerted much creative influence as well as chipping in with six league
goals of his own. The team never looked capable of posing a threat to
Manchester United, however, who won the league by a very comfortable margin of
18 points.
In many ways it was a similar story in the following season.
As if starting places had not been hard enough to come by already, Robert Pires
and Sylvain Wiltord were added to the strike force. This surfeit of attacking
talent was particularly damaging to Bergkamp – he was reduced to fewer than
twenty league starts, and managed just three goals on the way to another
runners-up finish for The Gunners. At thirty years of age, it seemed likely
that his time at Arsenal was coming to an end: fans were left ruing the fact
that Henry had not come to Highbury just a little sooner, as another
seventeen-goal haul had established him as a firm favourite amongst the fans.
The prospect of him in a partnership with Bergkamp in his prime was a
tantalising one, but appeared to be little more than a pipe dream. However,
this failed to account for the remarkable renaissance of the Dutchman.
2001/02 marked the start of the golden age for Arsenal under
Wenger. Plenty of purists argue that this was truly the best Arsenal side of
the last two decades, surpassing even The Invincibles that were to come two
seasons later. Central to the success were Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp,
finally playing together up front as a bona fide duo. It was Wiltord who
transitioned into a wider role to allow the partnership to flourish, and the
result was arguably the most iconic strike partnership of the Premier League
era.
Each knew his role: Bergkamp was the creator, calling upon
his wealth of experience to lay on chance after chance for the finisher, Henry.
This came naturally to the Frenchman – he tucked away twenty-four goals in the
league to secure the Golden Boot. More impressive than individual accolades,
however, was the league title. The pair combined to help finally wrest the trophy
from the hands of Manchester United, to whom they had been runners-up for the
previous two seasons. Some moments of sheer inspiration took place along the
way, not least amongst which was one of the goals in a 2-0 away win over
Newcastle. Bergkamp, so often the provider, found the net himself with a goal
that epitomised his supreme talent. Having received the pass from Robert Pires,
he deftly flicked the ball past defender Nikos Dabizas; he then went around his
man on the other side, but instinctively knew where his own flick would end up
and latched on to it before slotting it past the goalkeeper. Ironically, Henry
was absent through injury for this moment of magic – however, it encapsulated
the joy and creativity upon which the partnership thrived.
This, surely, was a final heroic send-off for Bergkamp. It
had been a remarkable campaign, during which he and Henry had combined in ways
that moved the parameters of what it meant to form an effective pairing up
front, but the veteran was now 33. Unbelievably, however, he was not done yet.
Henry, meanwhile, was truly hitting his prime. As Bergkamp amazed by refusing
to burn out, the French forward’s star shone brighter than ever: the 2002/03
campaign saw him end on an astounding 32 goals and 23 assists in all
competitions, finishing runner-up for the World Player of the Year award. As a
team, Arsenal were unable to retain their title – they did take home another FA
Cup, however. The mutual admiration that the pair had for each other could be
seen both on and off the pitch – Henry has declared Bergkamp the best player
that he has ever played with, while the Dutch maestro insisted that his strike
partner was “the complete package”.
In truth, though, the package was only ever complete when
the two played together. Each was blessed with their own immense individual
talent, but the combination took them onto a new plain altogether. Indeed, in
the 2003/04 season, the whole team were propelled to something never achieved
before or since in the Premier League. Much ink has been spilled over The
Invincibles season, but in truth the headline record speaks for itself: an
entire league campaign unbeaten. It would be a disservice to the phenomenal
squad that Wenger assembled to place all of the praise on the duo of Bergkamp
and Henry, but they were undoubtedly the talismans. In a team of greatness, the
master and his apprentice stood out. Henry, by now, had become the more
important of the pair, but Bergkamp still featured in well over two-thirds of
the games on the way to the unprecedented feat – he sealed the team’s immortal
place in folklore by setting up the winner in the final game of the season
against Leicester.
The next two seasons proved to be the swansong for the clinical
partnership. Bergkamp, fittingly, was beginning the process of passing the
torch to another Dutchman: Robin van Persie had arrived on the scene, and had
started to turn heads very quickly. Nonetheless, Bergkamp still had a wealth of
talent to offer – in the final game of 2004/05 he scored once and laid on three
assists in a 7-0 routing of Everton, and was met with chants of “one more
year”. This was quite the vote of confidence in the longevity of a
now-36-year-old Bergkamp. It was in this campaign that Henry overtook Ian
Wright as Arsenal’s all-time top scorer – it is no coincidence that he, and
Wright before him, achieved this impressive record with Bergkamp providing the
service. That is not to downplay Henry’s talent as an individual: he hit 25 and
27 league goals respectively in the last two seasons with his partner,
reinforcing his status as one of the all-time great goal-scorers. It was little
surprise when, a year after Berkgamp’s retirement, Henry moved to a Barcelona
side emerging as one of the greatest club outfits ever assembled.
There was some poetry in the fact that Bergkamp’s career,
and with it his beautiful partnership with Henry, came to an end in the same year
that the club finished its time at Highbury. Arsenal had been based there since
1913 – the exploits of Henry and Bergkamp were a final flourish in an
illustrious list of achievements at the ground stretching back nearly a hundred
years. The stadium is no more, the ground upon which it once stood now a block
of flats; the memories live on, however, memorialised in the minds of the fans
who experienced such joy there. In much the same way, although Bergkamp
eventually had to call time on his remarkable career, his partnership with
Henry is an immortal one: it will forever be remembered as one of football’s
greatest duos.
First published on These Football Times as part of the Duology series: https://thesefootballtimes.co/category/duology-footballs-greatest-partnerships/
Follow me on Twitter @JamesMartin013
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