He was also courted by Roma and Juventus but in
the end none of the clubs including Arsenal got the deal.
Not exact matches
Virtually all fans want Kroenke out
of our
club - I have seen
NONE and no posts that want him to remain and I doubt that anyone else has either — and fan polls show us that more than 80 % would like Wenger to retire (though
of this 80 % some, like me, want it today and others at
end of season BUT they all want him out by seasons
end.
I believe he fully understands that Arsenal is not a title - oriented football
club and when he has his talk with Arsene after the
end of the season, it will be a RVP situation all over again, he'll be offered a bigger wage, but won't be promised the title ambition, because there's
none and he'll bugger off to whoever offers more, even if it's spuds.
Obviously this requires the base assumption that
none of the three English
clubs will finish in the top half at the
end of the season but, whilst we would not write any
of them off, the signs right now are not good.
Arsene Wenger promised the Arsenal fans at the
end of last season that Alexis Sanchez would be staying with the
club whether he signed a new contract extension or not, but, let's be honest,
none of us really believed him going by past performance.
We Arsenal fans overrate their player's a lot.No wonder when our players leave to another
club eventually their quality always declines even if they're world class.Take a look at all the top players who have left Arsenal and look at their careers.Things start well and
end badly.It is unfair to say Sanchez is irreplaceable because
none of you can know until you give the chance to another player and no one knew he would have this impact.This should tell you that until you try you can't know.I hate it when we allow players to treat us like this.Why not sell him abroad and get a top winger to replace him instead
of allowing him to go for free?How do you know we will or won't win the league with him or if another top winger comes in.We might really really regret this season if the future
of some key players are not sorted out.We overrate our players a lot its a joke.
When Philipp Lahm unilaterally announced he was retiring at the
end of the season, his
club Bayern Munich were
none too happy.
I do thank Mick for doing what
none of our recent managers could... getting us into the Prem and keeping us here... but at the
end of last season I think the writing was on the wall and the
club should've acted then... especially if the stories
of Mick not being backed in the transfer market are true... its lunacy to have a manager and then not give him the tools to do a job!
I read somewhere that some said we're not clinical enough that is a culture at wenger has become too friendly with the players at Arsenal the players position are seldom under treat you play poorly for two weeks and you still make the team you missed a look at almunia retrospectively don't understand that hey if i get a chance to score i must take it the first time cause i may not get a next one and you want the players to be clinical it must start from the top good work or
none As was said on a website to day Arsenal should parade through the streets
of london in an open top Bus at the
end of the season the accountants
of the
club and i will through wenger in there too cause to most
of you he can do no wrong I love this
club with all my heart and i can support no other
club in football but to see for 5 seasons we can't show any vast improvement and keep making the same mistakes every year is hard to swallow it makes me sick but as wenger says judge me at the
end i wonder what
end he meant the
end of the season or the
end of his contract GO ARSENAL......................
Also i am pretty sure
none of the 3
clubs will touch 70 points at the
end.
«It's awesome, we used to joke that we all might
end up at the same
club one day, but
none of us really believed it would happen,» said Reus.
A colleague informed him
of a startling trend: liver cancer was plaguing affluent Filipinos at a much higher rate than their less - wealthy counterparts — a phenomenon that, despite a slew
of other lifestyle differences, Campbell believed was linked to their higher intake
of animal protein.1 Bolstering his suspicions, Campbell also learned
of a recent study from India showing that a high protein intake spurred liver cancer in rats, while a low protein intake seemed to prevent it.2 Intrigued by this gem
of little - known research, Campbell decided to investigate the role
of nutrition in cancer growth himself — an endeavor that
ended up lasting several decades and producing over one hundred publications (
none of which pertained to Fight
Club).3