However, it is the people who implement proven strategies that
actually achieve greatness in the profession.
Not exact matches
(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
There's
actually a lot of pretty to really good films on there, even if they fail to
achieve genuine
greatness.
I just have a feeling that if he put his mind to
actually saying something or making sense, he could
achieve consistent
greatness.
It is unrealistic to expect that all of their games to
achieve greatness, but it is impressive that so many of them
actually did.
Molyneux continued to suggest that 5 million sales is an automatic benchmark for
greatness - and that one of his games might be «considered» for
greatness rather than
actually achieving it.