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The wider issues behind Ozil 'storm in a tea cup' tweet

One tweet, a wink emoji and a GIF of Mesut Ozil drinking tea was enough to send Twitter into meltdown after Arsenal's north London derby win over Tottenham on the weekend.

The Gunners social media team sent a GIF of their Man of the Match to a journalist following the game in response to the reporter's selection of no Arsenal players in his 'combined Arsenal-Spurs XI' on the Friday before the match.

The journalist tweeted shortly after: "Re this: I picked a team. Arsenal won. I look a bit silly. Congrats to Arsenal.

"But since they tweeted it to 12m people, I've had all-day harassment on here, including anti-Semitic, homophobic abuse & people wishing me dead. I can handle it but would not advise clubs repeat this."

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A spokesman for Arsenal Football Club said: "No offence was intended and we are disappointed that the journalist has been subject to abuse which we would condemn in the strongest terms."

Firstly, the abuse received by the journalist in question is no laughing matter and should be condemned and dealt with to the fullest.

Alexis Sanchez celebrates scoring for Arsenal against Spurs. Pic: Getty
Alexis Sanchez celebrates scoring for Arsenal against Spurs. Pic: Getty

Twitter has seemingly had a problem at dealing with abuse since its inception although the social media giant claims to be punishing '10 times' more users than they were previously.

They've also introduced new features to reduce the prevalence of online abuse on the platform, including the incorporation of an algorithm that detects abusive behaviour before it is reported so that Twitter can reduce the visibility of those posts and subsequently take action against the culprits.

However, it clearly didn't stop some from posting anti-Semitic and homophobic abuse at the weekend and shows that the problem won't be going away anytime soon.

Ultimately, neither Arsenal nor the journalist are in the wrong here. While clubs do have a responsibility to maintain a respectable image across social media, the decision to engage with a media figure should be taken as lighthearted banter and not as 'punching down'.

The combined XI piece, which many websites decided to run, emphasised that journalists, like anyone else, are entitled to their own views.

Football tactics, predicted line-ups, transfer stories and any views from outside on the game are subjective and therefore open to debate – with many websites' comments sections filled with disagreements and discussion over what is right and wrong.

Whether Arsenal tweeted the Daily Mail or the journalist himself, it would have been the latter who'd have found himself on the end of criticism.

Supporters of all clubs will usually defend their team and the replies to the tweet were mostly fans revelling in the fact that Arsenal had won despite their players not featuring in many of the newspaper's predicted XIs.

Social media and Twitter in particular has its good points and bad points. The GIF tweet from Arsenal encapsulated both sides and will continue to stir debate going forward.

It is clear that there is an endemic problem with anonymous internet trolls across platforms and until the respective social media giants get a hold on the issue it won't go away.