Sentences with phrase «start looking to the future»

But it can't be with Wenger, and if he gracefully admits, that he now realizes, this is what is needed for Arsenal, he could still leave as a legend, and we could start looking to the future with renewed optimism.
Get Wenger out now, so we can start looking to a future, that doesn't mean steady decline.
With Solo: A Star Wars Story near enough upon us - and critical consensus being shockingly good, after a deeply underwhelming build - up - it's time, once again, to start looking to the future.
With 2015 right around the corner, it's time to start looking to the future and where we might be headed.
Once Lindsay had a financial plan worked out last summer to deal with her debt and savings issues, she starting looking to the future more confidently.

Not exact matches

Together, you'll uncover the steps to make your business more attractive to potential buyers — whether you're looking to sell your business in the near future, or want to start ramping up the value of your business in order to sell it down the line.
Three years is plenty of time to start, grow and even exit a business, but having a personal as well as a business plan will help give you something positive to look back on and provide a solid foundation for any future entrepreneurial endeavors.
If I was a CEO of some big company, I would look into the future and see some pretty heavy waves coming at me, and start taking very seriously the idea that the future doesn't compute, that this $ 1 trillion sloshing around the global economy each day has turned it into a casino that needs to be dismantled.
«I consistently work with executives and start - ups looking not only to advance their product now, but leverage PR for their overall personal brand for future endeavors,» says CEO Dave Polykoff of NewsLauncher, a site that publishes stories for companies.
When it became clear in December that the tax bill would pass, major lenders like Citigroup started to incur one - time, multi-billion-dollar charges in order to offset future taxes, which could make these earnings look «horrendous,» the «Mad Money» host said.
Walmart is losing value compared to 2017, with the future looking uncertain as the brand started 2018 by closing more than 60 of its Sam's Club stores.
I looked back at the historical performance data for long - bonds to see how the future performance was affected by the starting yield level.
«With these first - quarter results, we got off to a good start in our third and final year of restructuring, and we are looking ahead to the future with confidence in our new business model and in our execution capabilities,» Thiam said in a statement.
With the future looking bright for Chinese eyeing New Zealand, agents looking to get in on a portion of this market best start investing in their brand and strategy in China now!
Just what the future holds for sidechains remains unclear, but it's starting to look like their role in the space going forward is inevitable.
If you are looking for a business where you don't have to worry about its profitability in the future, then maybe you have to start...
Faraday Future unveiled its concept car FFZero1 at the CES 2016, and it looks like it's one step closer to becoming a reality as the company aims to start its production line by 2018.
It's been another rocky start to trading in Europe on Friday and the US looks on course for a similar open, with Dow futures off around 1 %.
Although past performance is no guarantee of future results, it's still instructive to look back at how materials performed the last time the U.S. was ramping up housing starts and mortgages.
From the starting the conversation with their families around succession to exploring investment strategies, and considering business opportunities, the message is clear — it's never too early for the next generation to look to the future and start the planning process.
It was said that «the best of defense is to attack»... --- Those allowed such to be signed knew all the time that this is what was going to happen because it happened repeatedly through out history from time of the crusaders but still they continued with signing it because it meant for them money pouring in for all involved with the trading on this issue which has spoiled the life of the Palestinians and all Arabs ever started war over those lands started with swords and horses that has developed into the present arms that we became to know and only God knows how future arms would look like in few de-ca-des or cen - tur - ies that are yet to come...?!
«Instead, I knew I had to concentrate on the future and look to starting a new life.
Not looking forward to the 5 am alarms looming in my future with school starting again.
As I have looking for natural remedies for future prevention — I want to check what is your recommendation for administering the Manuka Honey (12 + — Which i am planning to start my LO with)?
With its first South Australian stores now open and its expansion into Western Australia due to start rolling out mid-year, the future is looking bright for the German supermarket chain's quest for a bigger slice of the Aussie supermarket pie.
Besides the tequila, my time at Bon Appétit has also inspired me to start a «future stock» stash, which looks like a sad bag of celery popsicles.
I guess our big hope that Wenger means it when he says he is one for the future, (like Miyaichi, Inamoto and Park Chu Young I'm guessing), and he is STILL looking for that elusive top striker to start for the first team next season.
Berahino was left out of the starting XI for the clash against Chelsea last Sunday due to the constant transfer speculation regarding his future and looks poised to remain in the Midlands until January at least.
Looking at the more distant future we need to start finding successors for Monreal, Mertesacker, Kos, Cazorla, Giroud, Cech.
With six Fresher's in the starting XV and a further two on the bench, the future looks good if these players can continue to develop and push for Blues places in Hilary Term 2018.
As the Premier League season gets going, CaughtOffside looks at how things are shaping up in the managerial sack race, with these seven Premier League bosses already looking like fighting for their futures after bad starts to the season...
We need a new start, Arsenal must start to do what the Spurs did which is trying to get a hungry manager with fresh ideas and who is up to prove himself, start to look up for talents other big teams might miss on, and build the team for the future slowly
Let's put that unfavourable outcome of that game behind us and start to look forward to a brighter futures that are ahead of you and the Gunners to pursue and catch them.
New Orleans will need to start looking for a quarterback of the future, and if Brees takes a step backward, moving on from the passer could be a realistic option in the 2018 or 2019 offseason.
I do not diss Reiss Nelson, who also looks to have a great future, but who is not yet in the Prem starting elevens.
This is an incredibly difficult question to answer for a variety of reasons, most importantly because over the years our once vaunted «beautiful» style of play has become a shadow of it's former self, only to be replaced by a less than stellar «plug and play» mentality where players play out of position and adjustments / substitutions are rarely forthcoming before the 75th minute... if you look at our current players, very few would make sense in the traditional Wengerian system... at present, we don't have the personnel to move the ball quickly from deep - lying position, efficient one touch midfielders that can make the necessary through balls or the disciplined and pacey forwards to stretch defences into wide positions, without the aid of the backs coming up into the final 3rd, so that we can attack the defensive lanes in the same clinical fashion we did years ago... on this current squad, we have only 1 central defender on staf, Mustafi, who seems to have any prowess in the offensive zone or who can even pass two zones through so that we can advance play quickly out of our own end (I have seen some inklings that suggest Holding might have some offensive qualities but too early to tell)... unfortunately Mustafi has a tendency to get himself in trouble when he gets overly aggressive on the ball... from our backs out wide, we've seen pace from the likes of Bellerin and Gibbs and the spirited albeit offensively stunted play of Monreal, but none of these players possess the skill - set required in the offensive zone for the new Wenger scheme which requires deft touches, timely runs to the baseline and consistent crossing, especially when Giroud was playing and his ratio of scored goals per clear chances was relatively low (better last year though)... obviously I like Bellerin's future prospects, as you can't teach pace, but I do worry that he regressed last season, which was obvious to Wenger because there was no way he would have used Ox as the right side wing - back so often knowing that Barcelona could come calling in the off - season, if he thought otherwise... as for our midfielders, not a single one, minus the more confident Xhaka I watched played for the Swiss national team a couple years ago, who truly makes sense under the traditional Wenger model... Ramsey holds onto the ball too long, gives the ball away cheaply far too often and abandons his defensive responsibilities on a regular basis (doesn't score enough recently to justify): that being said, I've always thought he does possess a little something special, unfortunately he thinks so too... Xhaka is a little too slow to ever boss the midfield and he tends to telegraph his one true strength, his long ball play: although I must admit he did get a bit better during some points in the latter part of last season... it always made me wonder why whenever he played with Coq Wenger always seemed to play Francis in a more advanced role on the pitch... as for Coq, he is way too reckless at the wrong times and has exhibited little offensive prowess yet finds himself in and around the box far too often... let's face it Wenger was ready to throw him in the trash heap when injuries forced him to use Francis and then he had the nerve to act like this was all part of a bigger Wenger constructed plan... he like Ramsey, Xhaka and Elneny don't offer the skills necessary to satisfy the quick transitory nature of our old offensive scheme or the stout defensive mindset needed to protect the defensive zone so that our offensive players can remain aggressive in the final third... on the front end, we have Ozil, a player of immense skill but stunted by his physical demeanor that tends to offend, the fact that he's been played out of position far too many times since arriving and that the players in front of him, minus Sanchez, make little to no sense considering what he has to offer (especially Giroud); just think about the quick counter-attack offence in Real or the space and protection he receives in the German National team's midfield, where teams couldn't afford to focus too heavily on one individual... this player was a passing «specialist» long before he arrived in North London, so only an arrogant or ignorant individual would try to reinvent the wheel and / or not surround such a talent with the necessary components... in regards to Ox, Walcott and Welbeck, although they all possess serious talents I see them in large part as headless chickens who are on the injury table too much, lack the necessary first - touch and / or lack the finishing flair to warrant their inclusion in a regular starting eleven; I would say that, of the 3, Ox showed the most upside once we went to a back 3, but even he became a bit too consumed by his pending contract talks before the season ended and that concerned me a bit... if I had to choose one of those 3 players to stay on it would be Ox due to his potential as a plausible alternative to Bellerin in that wing - back position should we continue to use that formation... in Sanchez, we get one of the most committed skill players we've seen on this squad for some years but that could all change soon, if it hasn't already of course... strangely enough, even he doesn't make sense given the constructs of the original Wenger offensive model because he holds onto the ball too long and he will give the ball up a little too often in the offensive zone... a fact that is largely forgotten due to his infectious energy and the fact that the numbers he has achieved seem to justify the means... finally, and in many ways most crucially, Giroud, there is nothing about this team or the offensive system that Wenger has traditionally employed that would even suggest such a player would make sense as a starter... too slow, too inefficient and way too easily dispossessed... once again, I think he has some special skills and, at times, has showed some world - class qualities but he's lack of mobility is an albatross around the necks of our offence... so when you ask who would be our best starting 11, I don't have a clue because of the 5 or 6 players that truly deserve a place in this side, 1 just arrived, 3 aren't under contract beyond 2018 and the other was just sold to Juve... man, this is theraputic because following this team is like an addiction to heroin without the benefits
He's starting to look like a future 1b too.
Looks like Michigan Wolverines future starting quarterback Shane Morris wanted to show he's just as athletic as the high school recruit...
Even inferior teams seam to know how to cope with our attacking formula and our defence is an open book.Money will not be a no object so we're stuck with the irish jig wearing cowboy unless Arsenal start losing money.I'm afraid the future is not looking bright with him, this board and the French lacky hold the reins.
At the start of 2015 you may remember Ferrari revealing this future F1 concept, that was basically their subtle way of giving the governing body a kick up the arse to change the sport as soon as possible and make F1 cars look awesome again.
The 22 - year - old has long looked like the future of PSG, but appears to have grown frustrated with having to wait for his opportunity in Laurent Blanc's starting XI.
Lambert made just seven starts in the league last season and scored twice, although he doesn't appear to have a future at Anfield ahead of the new campaign following the arrival of Danny Ings, while Rodgers is reportedly looking to bring in another forward during the transfer window.
With the first signings of the summer starting to come through, here's a look at the ten deals we're expecting to be confirmed next after Memphis Depay, James Milner and Paulo Dybala's futures were resolved...
He would be a good start and once he is back working for us we can look to create extra roles around him to compliment the background support for the managers of the future.
There could also be the possibility that Wenger is looking for cover with Giroud injured for the foreseeable future, but with him having only started once in the league this term, I don't expect Benzema to be willing to replace him on our bench.
The Gunners have a veritable army of scouts scouring the world looking for (cheap) talented youngsters to fill the academy, and it seems that only in an utmost urgency will they start recommending experienced ready - to - play First XI players, and so us Gooners should not pay much attention to any Arsenal transfer rumours in the near future.
Look at the future squad carefully (mina, umtiti, semedo, digne, roberto, dembele, etc all 25 or a little above or below) this will be our next starting xi while instead of bench pieces we will have 20 year Olds e.g Abel Ruiz de ligt etc waiting to replace them when they are at their peak, If you look instead of hear you will see where Ev is leading us to with his signing s (which have all been world class) he is building a squad worthy of our style and one that will require only a few tweaks so we won't spend millions on players and find our selves getting rid of dead weight ala pep and luLook at the future squad carefully (mina, umtiti, semedo, digne, roberto, dembele, etc all 25 or a little above or below) this will be our next starting xi while instead of bench pieces we will have 20 year Olds e.g Abel Ruiz de ligt etc waiting to replace them when they are at their peak, If you look instead of hear you will see where Ev is leading us to with his signing s (which have all been world class) he is building a squad worthy of our style and one that will require only a few tweaks so we won't spend millions on players and find our selves getting rid of dead weight ala pep and lulook instead of hear you will see where Ev is leading us to with his signing s (which have all been world class) he is building a squad worthy of our style and one that will require only a few tweaks so we won't spend millions on players and find our selves getting rid of dead weight ala pep and lucho.
All this is starting to look bad for Giroud's future at the club and there are rumours that he could be a transfer target for some other big clubs including Juventus, so maybe Arsene Wenger is already thinking about him leaving in January.
The report adds that Chelsea could be ready to pay as much as # 131million for Asensio, and there's little question he looks to have a big future in the game after his fine start in Madrid.
Time for some brutal honesty... this team, as it stands, is in no better position to compete next season than they were 12 months ago, minus the fact that some fans have been easily snowed by the acquisition of Lacazette, the free transfer LB and the release of Sanogo... if you look at the facts carefully you will see a team that still has far more questions than answers... to better show what I mean by this statement I will briefly discuss the current state of affairs on a position - by - position basis... in goal we have 4 potential candidates, but in reality we have only 1 option with any real future and somehow he's the only one we have actively tried to get rid of for years because he and his father were a little too involved on social media and he got caught smoking (funny how people still defend Wiltshire under the same and far worse circumstances)... you would think we would want to keep any goaltender that Juventus had interest in, as they seem to have a pretty good history when it comes to that position... as far as the defenders on our current roster there are only a few individuals whom have the skill and / or youth worthy of our time and / or investment, as such we should get rid of anyone who doesn't meet those simple requirements, which means we should get rid of DeBouchy, Gibbs, Gabriel, Mertz and loan out Chambers to see if last seasons foray with Middlesborough was an anomaly or a prediction of things to come... some fans have lamented wildly about the return of Mertz to the starting lineup due to his FA Cup performance but these sort of pie in the sky meanderings are indicative of what's wrong with this club and it's wishy - washy fan - base... in addition to these moves the club should aggressively pursue the acquisition of dominant and mobile CB to stabilize an all too fragile defensive group that has self - destructed on numerous occasions over the past 5 seasons... moving forward and building on our need to re-establish our once dominant presence throughout the middle of the park we need to target a CDM then do whatever it takes to get that player into the fold without any of the usual nickel and diming we have become famous for (this kind of ruthless haggling has cost us numerous special players and certainly can't help make the player in question feel good about the way their future potential employer feels about them)... in order for us to become dominant again we need to be strong up the middle again from Goalkeeper to CB to DM to ACM to striker, like we did in our most glorious years before and during Wenger's reign... with this in mind, if we want Ozil to be that dominant attacking midfielder we can't keep leaving him exposed to constant ridicule about his lack of defensive prowess and provide him with the proper players in the final third... he was never a good defensive player in Real or with the German National squad and they certainly didn't suffer as a result of his presence on the pitch... as for the rest of the midfield the blame falls squarely in the hands of Wenger and Gazidis, the fact that Ramsey, Ox, Sanchez and even Ozil were allowed to regularly start when none of the aforementioned had more than a year left under contract is criminal for a club of this size and financial might... the fact that we could find money for Walcott and Xhaka, who weren't even guaranteed starters, means that our whole business model needs a complete overhaul... for me it's time to get rid of some serious deadweight, even if it means selling them below what you believe their market value is just to simply right this ship and change the stagnant culture that currently exists... this means saying goodbye to Wiltshire, Elneny, Carzola, Walcott and Ramsey... everyone, minus Elneny, have spent just as much time on the training table as on the field of play, which would be manageable if they weren't so inconsistent from a performance standpoint (excluding Carzola, who is like the recent version of Rosicky — too bad, both will be deeply missed)... in their places we need to bring in some proven performers with no history of injuries... up front, although I do like the possibilities that a player like Lacazette presents, the fact that we had to wait so many years to acquire some true quality at the striker position falls once again squarely at the feet of Wenger... this issue highlights the ultimate scam being perpetrated by this club since the arrival of Kroenke: pretend your a small market club when it comes to making purchases but milk your fans like a big market club when it comes to ticket prices and merchandising... I believe the reason why Wenger hasn't pursued someone of Henry's quality, minus a fairly inexpensive RVP, was that he knew that they would demand players of a similar ilk to be brought on board and that wasn't possible when the business model was that of a «selling» club... does it really make sense that we could only make a cheeky bid for Suarez, or that we couldn't get Higuain over the line when he was being offered up for half the price he eventually went to Juve for, or that we've only paid any interest to strikers who were clearly not going to press their current teams to let them go to Arsenal like Benzema or Cavani... just part of the facade that finally came crashing down when Sanchez finally called their bluff... the fact remains that no one wants to win more than Sanchez, including Wenger, and although I don't agree with everything that he has done off the field, I would much rather have Alexis front and center than a manager who has clearly bought into the Kroenke model in large part due to the fact that his enormous ego suggests that only he could accomplish great things without breaking the bank... unfortunately that isn't possible anymore as the game has changed quite dramatically in the last 15 years, which has left a largely complacent and complicit Wenger on the outside looking in... so don't blame those players who demanded more and were left wanting... don't blame those fans who have tried desperately to raise awareness for several years when cracks began to appear... place the blame at the feet of those who were well aware all along of the potential pitfalls of just such a plan but continued to follow it even when it was no longer a financial necessity, like it ever really was...
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