Not exact matches
After the game, Drogba revealed that he has made a
decision on his future, but was tight - lipped on where he sees himself playing for the 2015/16 season, admitting that talks
over a
new deal at Chelsea are yet to take place.
Its simple really, Wenger is a very poor manager and has been poor very almost 10 years now, he makes insanely stupid
decisions and moves than not even a non league manager would make e.g Kim Kallstrom, 40mil + 1 for Suarez, not siging an out field player last season, playing Ozil on the left wing for some time, Flamini siging, being snubbed by Vardy etc, the list goes on and on and on, Chelsea go in for Kante in within 4 days
deal is done, But noooo Wenger goes in for crack head Vardy and gets snubbed, I'm sorry but if we had to choose
over 2
new world class sigings or a
new coach I'd opt for the
new coach, Wenger is a poor poor manager, he ia lower than the level of our club, anyway thanks in advance for the thumbs down.....
Arsene Wenger's
decision to stay at Arsenal and sign a
new two - year
deal brings to the end a season - long saga
over whether he would still be at the club next year.
James Milner will announce a
decision once the season is
over whether he intends to accept City's offer of a
new deal or leave on a free transfer, with Liverpool and Arsenal leading the chase for his signature.
He noted that, in the previous weeks, he had
dealt with a minor crisis
over a US spy plane shot down by the Soviets, negotiations with the US about stationing Polaris submarines in the Clyde, fishery disputes with Iceland, alarmist Treasury papers on the economy, the reconstruction of the cabinet and a
decision to build the
new liner Queen Elizabeth II.
Titled «A
New Day,» this two - hour - and - change chapter gets the player familiar with the characters they'll be
dealing with
over the course of the game, along with its awesome dynamic of making
decisions and getting folks to side with you — or hate your guts, if you make the wrong choice.
While the Brooklyn Museum is
dealing with a
new round of outrage regarding A Fire In My Belly, conjuring a nagging sense that we are doomed to repeat the culture wars
over and
over again whether it is with Wojnarowicz, Robert Mapplethorpe, Andres Serrano or Chris Ofili, the question remains what will be the lasting effects of this battle on Wojnarowicz's work, future curatorial
decisions and the politics of art.