Country: England
Player:Saliba
Here we go.Honestly some of the **** people are saying about Arteta must come from deep psychological issues.
Here we go.Honestly some of the **** people are saying about Arteta must come from deep psychological issues.
Delusion. Majority are Arteta in.
I don't see anything i'd classify as unhinged. The any AM user could do it comment is clearly sarcasm/parody to make a point, if you take any random Joe and give him Man City money in a league were everyone else only has pennies he'll win it comfortably.I strongly urge you to re-read the previous page (3744) and tell me none of them are unhinged if you still disagree I can start naming names but surely I shouldn't have to
Yeah, the difference is we’ve spent the most money in world football the past 2 years.I feel like the club really wanted to rebuild how the club works, and when we got arteta it seemed like he clicked with management and the way forward. The players seem to like him a lot. We are obviously changing, and with a new striker & LB that does the things Arteta asks for, martinelli also, probably more that's not as outspoken about it. I feel like other players will realize that most players are in on the program, and the more lazy/passive/opposing players are the minority and might step it up. "Even aubameyang was kicked".
It's taken a while, but can't you all see the difference?
We all know that Arteta's struggled. He's coming out of the other side though with a lot of help from the owners. That's it. There isn't much more to say about him.Like I said, I think Tets is alright. He's clearly got something about him tactically and his eye for talent isn't bad.
Whilst "any A-M could do it" is a gross exaggeration, I remember certain man saying "anybody could get 4th" and almost 3 years and almost half a billi later, this geezer hasn't done it.
There is some truth to saying the club will spend until it works and if you're taking a manager with no experience and clearly learning on the job then you will have to foot the bill. I think it's abundantly clear that Arteta isn't a genius manager that's for sure.
United fans would probably respond that during the same timeframe they've hired three managers. And while they're an absolute joke there's literally no other club on earth that would've watched a novice blunder and tumble around as long as the Kroenke's did in our case.It's at the stage now where you're just pushing the 'It's all down to the money we spend that we will do fairly well this season. Arteta is being carried along for the ride. He can't fail'
Ask Man Utd fans about that sort of logic.
United fans would probably respond that during the same timeframe they've hired three managers. And while they're an absolute joke there's literally no other club on earth that would've watched a novice blunder and tumble around as long as the Kroenke's did in our case.
Of course you can point to six points in two games at the start of the season as evidence of our grand masterplan working out. But so far we've finished 8th 8th and 5th, you're right in "he can't fail" is wrong, he already failed would be correct.
Reckon it’s my comment that’s sent them into shambles tbh. I’ve heard Arsenal fans care about exciting football. I’ve seen them clutching their pearls in the match threads when it’s topsy turvy, don’t know how they ever coped with Wengerball.The levels of brainlessness and delusion reached on this forum when it involves being anti Arteta is hilarious
Leaving him in the job clearly wasn't the answer unless you think there's no manager who could've done better than 8th and 5th. Managerial merry go rounds can be successful as seen with Sp**s and Chelsea.Okay, so going on the managerial merry go round isn't necessarily the answer either then.
Appointing Arteta wasn't the mistake at the time, it was a big risk but if someone saw potential in him I don't blame the club trying someone left field or inexperienced. Not cutting your losses when he was both not delivering results and alienating a bunch of players was the mistake as you've acknowledged yourself.I've said previously that I wouldn't have appointed Arteta and there are two occasions where I think he should have been sacked but he wasn't and I think over the past year or so we've seen a pretty good, though not great upswing in our fortunes.
That doesn't compute. If he's given 300m every season until 2026 and eventually wins the title at that point in time because Klopp and Guardiola retired does that mean *he* was a success? What if another manager would've gotten us there in half the time and/or funding?I don't see how he has 'already failed' sure, particularly his second season was abject but if he goes on to win the title in 2-3 years most fans would think that's a price worth paying. Until he's sacked or leaves of his own accord I don't think we can judge his whole tenure as a success or failure.
@Macho is my website for thisCan someone post this please?
The Arsenal bit
Ornstein column: Xhaka and Jesus leadership roles, Edwards rules out Chelsea job
Xhaka and Jesus leadership roles at Arsenal, Michael Edwards won't join Chelsea, City firm on Bernardo Silva, United open to Garner exittheathletic.com
Does anyone know of a site that would post all athletic articles?
Making dossiers on players indiscretions and convincing the ownership to get rid at any cost isn't something I can align with. I like our squad but I’m not a fan of the manager and the propaganda machine. It was only three months ago that we gave away a Champions League spot.
If Arteta wants to be one of the best managers in the world he must forget about his ‘non-negotiables’ and stop putting his foot down on trivialities. Imagine him handling the Invincibles. Just being strict so everyone sees there are rules for everyone will not help him in the long run. It works with our kids though. They still have idealistic views of the adults around them.
Tuchel and Klopp have handled Auba differently and it's worked out for them. Arteta looked him in his eyes and realised that the trust was gone. I'll give him a pass he's probably also a rookie psychic. It's not Arteta's fault that he was manipulated by the spirit manifestations.
For me, the most frustrating thing (and also exciting if I think about it) is that we are STILL not playing to our potential and STILL look shaky in matches. We were still too close to being beaten by both Palace and Leicester this season.
While watching Chelsea Sp**s last night, I realised where we must be in terms of control. The way Chelsea overwhelmed and controlled Sp**s in every area of the pitch was magnificent to watch. Not just because I want to see Sp**s lose always, but also because that is our football right there.
We need to control every facet of play for 95 minutes, against almost any team in the league. That's what we are training at Colney everyday, and that's what we are seeing for spells of 20-40 minutes so far this season.
Well, spending more doesn't always mean results. Plenty of teams has been spending a lot over the last 10 years and not made good steps.Yeah, the difference is we’ve spent the most money in world football the past 2 years.
Also a lot of PR.
Despite being late he scored ****loads for them, got them into CL every year and even when their relationship broke down they got 60m for him.Similarly punished with suspension. If he was their captain he'd have been stripped too.Borussia Dortmund striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang has punctuality problem, says club chief
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyangs repeated lateness is a problem for Borussia Dortmund, the clubs sporting director has admitted.www.skysports.com
Not an Arteta problem but an Auba problem.
Agree with palace game. Not with Leicester. Just look at this -For me, the most frustrating thing (and also exciting if I think about it) is that we are STILL not playing to our potential and STILL look shaky in matches. We were still too close to being beaten by both Palace and Leicester this season.
While watching Chelsea Sp**s last night, I realised where we must be in terms of control. The way Chelsea overwhelmed and controlled Sp**s in every area of the pitch was magnificent to watch. Not just because I want to see Sp**s lose always, but also because that is our football right there.
We need to control every facet of play for 95 minutes, against almost any team in the league. That's what we are training at Colney everyday, and that's what we are seeing for spells of 20-40 minutes so far this season.