Not exact matches
Chinese tech giant Alibaba has entered a
big club that already
counts Apple and Microsoft
as members.
If you consider spurs
as big club than we have fallen for real.barcelona are also dominating but what
counts is a win.in football you only celebrate wins, so stop trying to look for a positive in a defeat accept and how
big teams think (winning mentality) @goonsquad8
We are the only
big club that has the stability coming to the new season (not
count Spuds
as big) and we have to grab that chance to go ahead of our rivals.
I can only hope that this attempt is taken more seriously than the largely muted and clearly unsuccessful protests of late last season... although the plane writing escapade brought some much - needed attention to the matter, it failed to resonate with fence - sitters and those who had just recently fell off the Wenger truck... without a
big enough showing of support the whole endeavor appeared relatively weak and poorly organized, especially to the major media outlets, whose involvement could have significantly changed what was to follow... but I get it, few wanted to turn on their
club, let alone make a public display of their discord... problem is, they are preying on that vulnerability, in fact, their
counting on you to keep your thoughts to yourself... who are you to tell these fat cats how to steal your money... they have worked long and hard to pull the wool over your eyes... they even went so far
as to pay enormous sums of cash to your once beloved professor to be their corporate spokesmodel so that the whole thing would be more palatable... eventually the
club made it appear
as if this was simply a relatively small fringe group of highly radicalized supporters, which allowed the pro-Wenger element inside the
club hierarchy to claim victory following the FA Cup win... unfortunately what has happened to this
club can't be solved by FA Cups or a few players coming in, the very culture of this
club needs to be changed and that starts at the top... in order to change the unhealthy and dysfunctional narrative that has absorbed this
club we need to remove everyone who presently occupies a position of power... only then can we get back to the business of playing championship caliber football, which should always be the number one priority of this organization... on an important side note, one of the most devastating mistakes made in the final days of this hectic and poorly planned transfer window didn't have to do with the
big name players like Sanchez or Lemar, but the fact that they failed to secure Jadon Sancho, who might even start for Dortmund this season... I think they might seriously regret this oversight... instead of spending so much time, energy and manpower pretending that they were desperately trying to make
big moves, they once again lost the plot due to their all too familiar tunnel vision
We don't expect lightning pace from the
big defender and some fans think he is not really good enough for a
club as big as Arsenal, but we have previously been able to
count on him in aerial situations at least.
Historically, Arsenal, and Liverpool, along with Man Utd, are the
big three of English football, but I'd only
count Man Utd
as a top
club at the moment.
A shortage of players is an interesting idea which I honestly find hard to believe,
as I saw today that Premier League
clubs have already spent over 700 million in this transfer window, and that is not
counting the money from other
big leagues in Europe.
Liverpool are not the
biggest club in England; yes, the
club has an immense history, rivalled only by Manchester United, but that
counts for little now; there is no rule ensuring teams with great history will always continue to do so, we need only look at fallen giants, such
as Leeds United, Nottingham Forest, or Aston Villa to see that; only teams with immense financial and corporate power can sustain success, through investment that other
clubs can not — this is the model that Real Madrid adopted, and so too have Manchester United recently.
Generally, processors do not
count big - box stores (Target and Wal - Mart) or warehouse
clubs as grocery stores or supermarkets.