«Podolski should finally look at himself and ask himself why he was not
a success at big clubs, at Bayern Munich and now at Arsenal,» Matthaus told Sport 1.
Podolski should finally look at himself and ask himself why he was not
a success at big clubs, at Bayern Munich and now at Arsenal and at Inter
Not exact matches
So if you want
success, look
at the
bigger picture and realise that the only thing that you can and should do is support the
club and stop pacifying your sensitive emotions with conspiracy theories about the board not really trying to win, which is just plain stupid if you think about it with any kind of logic.
At Barca, Bayern, Man U, Chelsea and other ambitious
clubs they could build the most beautiful golden stadium and training grounds with a balance sheet that contained hundreds of millions in cash, if no ambition and
success was shown for 10 years those fans would not give a rats as about how beautiful the stadium was in which they sat whilst losing 5 - 1 to a
big club for the umpteen time.
With the ways the other teams are shaping up: 1) New managers in EPL with quite the
success (Pep, Klopp, Conte & possibly Mourinho) 2)
Big money not afraid to spend And looking
at the way the
club, are lovely Arsenal they're playing for are doing: 1) Wenger not showing any sign of changing his approach on the market 2) Lack of accountability & ambition
at every level Delaying there contract resigning for themselves is the smartest thing they can do!
Because ultimately this
club should be about
bigger things, but to be honest looking
at some fans, who care more about the state of an employee
at the
club called Arsene, rather than the
club itself I wonder really if everyone cares about
success.
Clubs at a higher scale looks for immediate success, therefore the opportunity that use to be given for young players to develop in a squad is short and at most big clubs
Clubs at a higher scale looks for immediate
success, therefore the opportunity that use to be given for young players to develop in a squad is short and
at most
big clubsclubs nil.
there is some suggestion that wenger is backtracking on his fervent stance regarding what players would be staying
at the
club for the remainder of the season... some might deduce that this is all part of a much
bigger, more elaborate plan... by shifting the blame wenger is attempting to, not so slyly, flip the narrative... by doing so he hopes to evoke empathy from his most ardent supporters, while attempting to rally any fence - sitters, whose faith was waning unless a more legitimate agent of blame emerges... unfortunately, and incredibly insulting to the fans, when wenger attempts to spin a tale and / or tries to eat his own words, he doesn't seem to play it all the way through in his head, so invariably gaping holes emerge... say we believed his version of the truth, would that not make him either an incredibly well - paid custodian of destruction or a spineless jellyfish because what manager worth his weight in salt would stay
at a
club that didn't give him final say after 20 years of supposed «
success»... no matter the answer, neither bodes well for us... how ironic, in a way, since many pundits claim this team has lacked a «spine» for some years now... so whether we win, lose or draw on Sunday is frankly immaterial, as the problems will remain, and although it will be easier to digest if we left the Pool with 3 points, it might just be the worst result for the betterment of this
club... a fact that both breaks my heart and baffles the mind
I only get angry with wenger because I look
at other
clubs and there
success, but the
success is based on the intervention of
big spenders with a complete disregard for the managers they hire; soon to be fired.
Reus has proven a
big success since returning to Borussia Dortmund in July 2012, having represented the
club at youth team level earlier in his career, racking up 47 goals in 99 appearances.
At the end of the day, Arsenal fc are supposedly a
Big Club, Where Wenger set high standards when winning the premier league in his first year or so in charge and achieved further
success in the following seasons, up until the invincibles era!
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.
Why would a top manager turn down a
big club to go to japan especially
at that time the J - league is way
bigger now than then??? I'll tell you why because Bayen munchen wouldn't put up with excuses they expect
success on the pitch.