After a record - breaking transfer window in which more money was spent by Premier League
clubs than at any point in history, the stage is set for what should be one...
After a record - breaking transfer window in which more money was spent by Premier League
clubs than at any point in history, the stage is set for what should be one of the most exciting league battles in recent memory.
Not exact matches
I mean, Wenger's arc is pretty much well defined
at this
point, and despite all his amazing achievements
in his first decade, he fact that he doesn't evolve as the game has evolved has meant Arsenal, with all the institutional advantages a
club could ever want (great location, great
history, astounding amounts of money), have been left behind, and the evidence of that could not have been more starkly on display
than it was on Sunday.
The
point I was making is that Arsenal is owned and run by billionaires that would sooner take money out
than put money
in and while you might not need a cash injection
at this moment
in time, anyone with half a brain cell will know that your
club has had financial leg - ups
in the past so to accuse City of being somehow different to what's gone on
in your
history is both hypocritical and incorrect.