The project's leader, who remains anonymous, has described centralization as a less
obvious weakness for bitcoin, but a weakness nonetheless.
Mesut Özil: Antonio Valencia is
the obvious weakness for Manchester United, having to face Arsenal's player of the season in Alexis Sánchez as the left winger, but Arsenal have the opportunity to control this game in the middle of the park.
and I should add
the obvious weakness for Liverpool is their left back who gets plenty of help every time Ramsey runs into the middle.
Not exact matches
Even though growth is nearly 3 %
for the first time in two years, there are a lot of pretty
obvious signs of
weakness in the U.S. economy.
There is, in other words, actually quite a lot that we know and understand about the model, even if many of us seem to have forgotten much of it — including its typical
weaknesses, one of the most
obvious of which is the tendency
for over-investment in the late stages of the miracle - growth period leading to an unsustainable increase in debt.
Although the study had some
obvious weaknesses,
for instance, (the sample inexplicably included only women), it seems...
He could «see» in a fisherman with
obvious weaknesses an underlying potential
for rocklike strength.
let's face it, everyone and his brother has known what our deficiencies have been
for several years, so why can't our management team seem to identify our
weaknesses and aggressively target the necessary additions... the only plausible answer is we aren't willing to pay even close to market value
for the players we clearly need and if we do actually get to the table we seem to make insulting bids that simple infuriate the team in question...
for years Wenger has said he couldn't find any world class players to fill our voids, which seems to suggest that he thinks we currently have upwards of 40 world class players on our existing roster... if that is the case he should never be in charge of making personnel decisions... buying late in the window is so problematic,
for obvious reasons, and especially since this year was supposed to be different (sarcasm)
The Blues have registered three straight wins to start the season, but the
weaknesses in their squad were
obvious as the frustrating wait
for new signings went on.
I don't need to be a coach to see the outrageously
obvious weakness before reacting but we have a proactive manager in wenger, even if he decided not to start bellerin but d
weakness on chambers wing was calling
for him to come on.
For a number of seasons we have all been crying out for a new centre forward, but with Alexis Sanchez relishing his new role there, and with Olivier Giroud, Lucas Perez and the imminent return of Danny Welbeck in the squad, that is no longer our obvious weakne
For a number of seasons we have all been crying out
for a new centre forward, but with Alexis Sanchez relishing his new role there, and with Olivier Giroud, Lucas Perez and the imminent return of Danny Welbeck in the squad, that is no longer our obvious weakne
for a new centre forward, but with Alexis Sanchez relishing his new role there, and with Olivier Giroud, Lucas Perez and the imminent return of Danny Welbeck in the squad, that is no longer our
obvious weakness.
My main concern is that the glaring
weaknesses were
obvious a year ago (incuding long term injury to welbeck) and finances were available then, so we could have made signings
for these positions a year ago.
On top of missing some
obvious «tools» (needed players), the true and essential
weakness right now (and
for a long time) is Arsene Wenger...
For as long as I can remember, we have never really started a season without
obvious weaknesses in major positions in the team.
That tandem isn't good enough to get 4th place let alone win the EPL... the fact remains that when they play together Ramsey spends far more time inside the opposing teams's final 3rd which means that Xhaka has to drop even deeper to compensate
for the freedom Wenger gives to his beloved Welshman... the
obvious problem with that is it exposes the
weakness of both players
much like when a country can't divulge highly classified information publicly
for obvious economic and military reasons, a professional soccer organization must keep certain things in - house so they don't devalue a player, expose a
weakness, provide info that could give an opposing club leverage in future negotiations and / or give them vital intel regarding a future match, but when dishonesty becomes the norm the relationship between cub and fan will surely deteriorate... in our particular case, our club has done an absolutely atrocious job when it comes to cultivating a healthy and honest relationship with the media or their fans, which has contributed greatly to our lack of success in the transfer market... along with poor decisions involving weekly wages, we can't ever seem to get true market value
for most of our outgoing players and other teams seem to squeeze every last cent out of us when we are looking to buy; why wouldn't they, when you go to the table with such a openly desperate and dysfunctional team like ours, you have all the leverage; made even worse by the fact that who wouldn't want to see our incredibly arrogant and thrifty manager squirm during the process... the real issue at this club is respect, a word that appears to be entirely lost on those within our hierarchy... this is the starting point from which all great relationships between club and supporters form... this doesn't mean that a team can't make mistakes along the way, that's just human nature, it's about how they chose to deal with these situations that will determine if this relationship flourishes or devolves..
Having already described United as a team with «no
obvious weaknesses» earlier this season, Wicky used the same compliment
for their Manchester neighbours.
Sensing her
weakness on this front, the first minister has spoken of the need
for powers to tackle «tax avoidance» (which, given the scenario outlined above, is an
obvious red herring).
Few people bothered to vote
for them, because their
weakness was
obvious.
One
obvious weakness that the Yes camp should have in the Labour camp is its promotion of «coalition politics» which Nick Clegg is doing an outstanding job of making a by - word
for breaking your word.
He's made perfectly palatable pictures, but never a truly great one, partly because he has such a
weakness for the commercial and a consequent gift
for the
obvious.
«The most
obvious weakness of the paper is that the experiment is done
for a single model.»