Glad to see one of our academy players
at a big club though.
Not exact matches
The thing is
though, Cazorla is a top bracket player, most of them are already
at big clubs except the younger ones who'll need time.
He scored well up to now but it's much different when you're
at a
club that expects
big things, playing with players like Alexis & Cazorla can be daunting, we'll see
though because I'm wrong as much as right half the time.
However, he failed to earn a deal with the
club and ended up back in Turkey with Caykur Rizespor after being handed a contract
at the
club for the 2023/24 season, where he would play alongside a 33 - year - old Mario Balotelli,
though the
club's
big - name deals could not save them from relegation.
That is not usually the case
though, we tend to play into teams hands
at times due to the fact we are a
bigger club and capable of the more attractive football.
I was equally annoyed
at Wenger but it was just straight disrespectful that a player Wenger brought in
at 21 kept even
though injury prone, which no other top four
club would have done, developed into a world class striker and then goes to our
biggest rival citing the fact its an honour to work with ferguson and we weren't showing ambition.
Even
though he spent time
at a very good Valencia side, he never ended up
at one of the
big European
clubs which is a shame considering the talent he had.
I'm so sick of people telling those of us who are disgruntled fans to relax and give this
club time to correct itself... for anyone who believes that taking a wait - and - see approach is appropriate
at this juncture they should take a good long look
at themselves in the mirror because they are a
big part of the problem... no other «
big»
club's fans would stand for this shit for nearly as long as we have... think about it, we've witnessed a changing of the guard
at every major
club in England, Spain, France and Germany in the last several years because those «
big»
clubs failed to live up to expectations (Barcelona, Real Madrid, Bayern, PSG, Chelsea, ManU, ManCity etc...)... for some reason, many fans have become as fragile as our current manager, believing that there couldn't possibly be a suitable replacement, even
though everyone of these
clubs have found multiple replacements and still achieved far more than our
club... this mindset has been created by an organization that has been milking it's fans, telling countless lies (no world class players available) and lowering expectations every since they rolled out the
biggest lie of all: that we couldn't spend because of the new stadium but once it was paid off we could compete with any team in the world... this organization is rotting from the inside out and if we don't demand that those in charge put soccer first this despicable behaviour won't end with Wenger's ridiculous 2 year contract... I think the real fear isn't that a suitable replacement doesn't exist, but that this organization is so money hungry and poorly mismanaged that we will sink even lower by choosing our next coach the same way they choose our players, on the cheap... even so, we need to see what mustache will do if left to his own devices so he will have to show his true colours... only then can we purge this
club and start anew
Whatever it takes could mean a lot more than we previously thought,
though, as the Daily Mail is reporting that Premier League rules on wages and the limit of how much they can rise from one season to the next will almost certainly force Arsene Wenger to sell
at least two of the
club's other
big earners in order to offer Alexis and Ozil the wages they want.
Some Arsenal fans have not been happy with the
club for keeping Arsene Wenger as our manager for some time now and even
though the pressure may have been taken off the Frenchman by the team ending the long trophy drought and then backing it up with back to back FA cup wins
at Wembley, the failure so far this season to take advantage of the struggles of the Premier League
big boys has brought it all back with a bang.
At the
big Spanish
clubs,
though, buyouts are supposed to be comically unthinkable.
When the old guard led by David Dein sold us the vision, we trusted them to make it happen, we voted with our wallets, Kroenke came in and stole, and is still stealing that dream from us with Wenger as a convenient scape goat while our commonwealth is being raided, the sad part is that the situation has seen the spuds steal the template of that dream, and so far so good for them, a
bigger club would have implemented it faster
though but still, they are on course and
at this rate, while we watch after our coffers, a small pub team like the spuds will overtake us, for the first time in the Premier League era, they finished above us, a situation not conceivable previously, shows how much the institution Arsenal has deteriorated in recent times.
The French shot - stopper has established himself as one of Tottenham's best players in recent times,
though he looked to have snubbed offers from
bigger clubs by signing a new contract
at White Hart Lane this summer.
The man has changed out of recognition from his early years et the
club.It is my opinion he has allowed himself to feel as
though he is
BIGGER than the
Club.This especially so since that dark day of David Deins departure.He seems to believe he is untouchable and answerable to nobody.The Board were s *** ing bricks he would walk away and to my mind he used this to get his own way with everything.I have met this man on numerous occasions down the years of his time
at the
club and honestly he is the most polite and well versed Manager in Football.That is why I despise him more.He KNOWS he has failed this last decade.He knows he has made far too many wrong decisions with transfers and tactics and formations etc.But he NEVER accepts he is wrong.
He played CB in that game and was actually viewed in the long run as a CB from by the
club though he's a dm.He plays CB just as well as he plays DM because of his solidity and reading of the game.Just look
at the position he played for Arsenal in the senior team.He's gonna be a
big loss but the funny thing is people expect his name to fade away.
That said
though, Lukaku has experienced life
at a
big club, and it was no picnic.
The German international, valued
at around # 48m, has long been linked with an exit from Dortmund and a move to a
bigger club,
though it seems he is set to stay where he is for another season.
The former Ipswich man is on a five year contract
at Upton Park and hierarchy
at the east London
club would reportedly be reluctant to see him leave,
though a
big enough bid would surely test their resolve.
Le Prof still has two more seasons left on his current contract and very few Gooners would be surprised if he remained
at the
club much longer than that, even
though some would prefer him to leave as soon as possible... There have been many ex-Arsenal legends that are candidates to become Arsenal's next boss, with Tony Adams, Steve Bould, Dennis Bergkamp and others already much further advanced in their management training, but even those
big names hardly know the
club better than Henry.
A superb predatory player who relishes the
big games, Bayern Munich star Thomas Muller is a
big name who would fit in well
at the Bernabeu,
though it is hard to imagine why his
club would ever consider selling him.
The
biggest name
at the
club,
though, is unquestionably their manager, Fabio Cannavaro.
The expectations
at club following the move were unrealistically high
though and maybe an assumption that we are now one of the
big boys has found its way into the psyche
at the
club.
His
biggest scalp last season was his former
club Liverpool,
though he also claimed eye - catching draws with Arsenal
at The Hawthorns and Tottenham
at White Hart Lane, so perhaps it would be foolish to write off the Baggies.
The former Old Lady caoch would certainly have a
big job on his hands
at Stamford Bridge this summer
though, as plenty of the
club's long - term players have aged past their peaks and need replacing, hence why they have struggled so much in the Premier League this season.
The so called»
Big Names»
at the
club will need to step up
though; Wayne Rooney, Ryan Giggs, Michael Carrick & Dimitar Berbatov, were all well below par on Sunday, especially the latter who spent the vast majority of the game flat on his backside.
Firstly
though, it remains to be seen whether or not he can be prised away from the Bernabeu, as although the report suggests that he could be the one seeking an exit, he's played a lot of minutes this season
at one of the
biggest clubs in the world.
Even
though The A.V.
Club's Mike D'Angelo gave it a lukewarm C + review
at Cannes — «the movie ultimately doesn't have a narrative so much as it has a Message, and while Winding Refn doesn't actually go so far as to spell that Message out in
big neon letters, he might as well have,» he writes — the arrival of a new...
Even
though The A.V.
Club's Mike D'Angelo gave it a lukewarm C + review
at Cannes — «the movie ultimately doesn't have a narrative so much as it has a Message, and while Winding Refn doesn't actually go so far as to spell that Message out in
big neon letters, he might as well have,» he writes — the arrival of a new Nicolas Winding Refn movie is still a movie - going event.
Apparently,
though, there are plenty of customers willing to pay that price for the SRT8, and I can see why: It's a
big five - passenger sedan, with a cavernous trunk, that's equally
at home
at the drag strip or carving through twisty backroads as it is
at the country
club.