Quote Originally Posted by Arse n Wonga View Post
A great manager doesn't go from winning to doing f*ck all for 7+ years sorry. The fact he's been incapable of reproducing anything makes you question his achievements somewhat and wonder whether he was just in the right place at the right time with his knowledge of French football.

When he arrived he had a massive advantage and used that well, but on a level playing field he shown himself to be inadequate and unable to compete with other teams, he's had years to build a team and yet we've been going backwards.

Like I said his successes are a distant memory, it's beginning to be hard to remember that under Wenger, now we remember failure and lack of bottle on the pitch and boring repetitive play coupled with endless excuses.
That's the truth of the matter. His legacy and genius is being called into question because of the past 7 years. His record has been that poor. It's the same with all things in life and sport. With boxing, there are many champions but the all-time greats are ranked above everyone else because they fought the best and competed in a tough era. David Haye and the Klitschko Brothers will never go down as greats because the heavyweight division in boxing is weak compared to the time Ali and Frazier were fighting. If Murray has to weight until Federer and Nadal bow out of the game before winning more grandslams, he can't be considered the best of his generation.

Wenger has had a real test on his hands over the past few years and more elite managers with experience of winning trophies have stepped into the league. More coaches have access to scouts, fitness and diet information...it's more of a level playing field and he's being made to look really bad. A manager of his supposed calibre shouldn't be dropping points to caretaker managers and rookie managers to this league.