in fairness i don't like being questioned
why did you beat that hooker black and blue?
You do you and let me do me....
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The most ridiculous part is that he still believes his teams are providing some extra special service to football and society at large by playing some revolutionary type of football. How special is your game when you have been tanked 15-3 in 3 consecutive games by a team you like to consider your equal?.
The questions are coming thick and fast, not out of the blue, but as a result of years of watching the same shit happening and wondering why Wenger hasn't reacted or done something about it. Questions like, why don't you play players in their proper positions? Why do you keep starting that gimp when he's consistently off form? It's legitimate to question him on the back of a catalogue of failures, relative to where we should be in the stated plan and given our resources. Same goes for all of them, they should all be questioned. I mean, WTF is going on? We have money now, for a few seasons now some of our key opponents have been in disarray, yet none of these advantages have been seized and if anything we have tumbled backwards. Questions most certainly should be asked. Tougher ones than the media will stick their necks out to ask.
Been catching with the debate on here and there is some great points being raised, arguments and coster-arguments. Pound for pound and all well reasoned and expressed, GW at it's finest! top stuff fellas.
PS* Unmask the seven
we will finish 4th, wenger will sign a new contract and we can have this fun again next year.
although I wouldn't mind finishing 5th, think Europa league we have a chance in. And football should be about winning things more than just playing CL football each year.
Leave.
Saw this in a comments section.
Classic.Quote:
Once more a top 5 finish. How is that a bad thing?
http://www.skysports.com/football/ne...r-club-arsenal
Tony is thinking along the same lines. Wenger doesn't want anyone around to challenge him.Quote:
Tony Adams says Arsene Wenger did not want him coaching at his former club Arsenal
Arsenal great Tony Adams says he does not think he will be able to return to the club in a coaching capacity while Arsene Wenger is in charge.
Adams claims Wenger is "essentially not a coach" and prefers an assistant who will not "ruffle feathers".
The 50-year-old made the comments in his autobiography Sober, which has been serialised in The Sun.
Adams is currently managing La Liga club Granada, who he has been unable to save from relegation, but is closely identified with Arsenal, where he won 10 major honours during a 19-year stay.
There is a statue of the former central defender outside Arsenal's Emirates Stadium but he has not been granted the opportunity to coach at his former club.
And he wrote: "Perhaps Arsene thought I might be too challenging for him.
"He seemed to like an assistant such as Pat Rice or Steve Bould, both great club men who were not going to ruffle feathers.
"Arsene is so dominant that he was probably not going to like it if I said, 'We're conceding bad goals, I'm going to take the back four today and organise them'.
"Because Arsene is essentially not a coach - and that is the second reason why I believe he didn't want me.
"Back in the day, I said in an interview coaching wasn't Arsene's strong point.
"Actually in the original draft, I said he couldn't coach his way out of a paper bag.
"And, though I modified that in the final article, it didn't go down well.
"It all left me feeling that I would never get a chance in any capacity while Arsene was there.
"Much as I respected him for his long and successful tenure, my occasional willingness to pass comment on him and the team probably counted against me."
Steve Bould is currently Wenger's assistant at Arsenal
Adams also claims that Manchester United tried to sign him on two occasions, initially in 1991 and then again in 1996.
"I turned them down both times because I was Arsenal through and through," he wrote.
"At the time, the wages weren't going to be much better, and I was stuck in my drinking and the London life with my mates and family around me.
"I wouldn't have had the tools to cope up in Manchester on my own.
"The second United approach came in 96, in the autumn just five weeks after I had stopped drinking, and in that period of uncertainty when Arsene Wenger was taking over from the sacked Bruce Rioch.
"I guess Sir Alex [Ferguson] might also have wanted me because, as well as feeling he might be strengthening United, he might be weakening Arsenal."
Pretty much what a lot of us think about Wenger. Only weak insecure people act the way he does. Confident people want to be challenged, especially if it makes them reach higher achievements. Ferguson was always changing his assistants and backroom staff. Wenger always falls on his many excuses for failure. Now he cant even secure the coveted 4th place anymore.
#End the Ineptitude