Tbf, there have been precious few options for him to choose from.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk
Printable View
Tbf, there have been precious few options for him to choose from.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk
We're only 3 points behind you, tbf.
Kallstrom will create a maelstrom when he gets going.
From Football 365. Thoughts?Quote:
The manager's great victory has been to establish as a truth the notion that what some call failure is actually a manifestation of success and that winning trophies is not the primary goal but rather a secondary aim, subservient to not over-spending and playing good football. There are plenty of dissenters to this view who see through the façade but not enough for them to ever oust Wenger from his imperious position.
For me this is the paradox. Wenger can forever point to the fact that he is competing against overwhelming odds with the billionaires. The problem is that we naturally back him for this and look further than simply silverware.
You just have to look at the magnificent stadium we play in and the world class training facilities to know that what Wenger has done has been a success. Just looking at the results without the context of the massive capital investment is incredibly short sighted.
Some say he can't compete at the top of the game any more, and there might be some truth to that, but no one else could have overseen the project that Wenger has and left is such incredibly healthy shape.
Undeniably. But is AW right to insist that such achievements validly counter straight statistical success? For me, this is the dichotomy with AW. Is football now at the stage that (because of financial doping) people should consider the context in which trophies are won?
Of course. Where's the achievement in throwing unlimited funds at something? Even finishing 2nd this year will be an incredible achievement considering the opposition.