(And for that matter, incidentally, we may one day be analysing his successor's reign and talking
about greatness too).
Not exact matches
He is «outside the Universe» and any time I am faced with something
about my Leprechaun belief that makes no sense, I don't dare question it, I just close my mind and tell myself that my mind is
too small to understand the
greatness of the Leprechaun King.
This all story will finish soon because with the means (thanks to the fans
too, let's no way forget
about that) at our disposal and the fans base, this club will achieve
greatness as it was supposed to do long time ago.
(3) this team is rotting from the inside out and it's going to take some unprecedented moves on the part of this board and the fans to facilitate the necessary changes... this club must rid itself of it's absentee billionaire landlord before we become just another sporting wasteland in this man's collection of flailing clubs... when this is done it will expose just what exactly has been going on behind the scenes and I'm afraid of what will be uncovered because if Wenger's business model is as antiquated as his football philosophy it could look an awful lot like and old Monty Python sketch in the backroom... we need to replace the owner with someone who actually cares
about this club and isn't afraid to wear their emotions on his or her sleeves or spend their own money to achieve
greatness... this new owner needs to find someone who represents the same sort of cutting edge that Wenger represented in his early years then pair that individual with someone who knows how to conduct transfers in the modern era... then and only then will we find a way to escape the malaise that has permeated our once storied club for way
too many years
You are the only man who can promise and bring
about the change our democracy needs and you are risking this opportunity for
greatness by being far
too calculating and prudent.
I've talked ad nauseum
about the
greatness of horizontal progression many times so I won't delve
too far into this.
When he draws back equally from the mainstream art of his own time and from tradition, he could well be refusing
greatness for the same reason as Olitski, because he cares
too much
about what he sees.