officepest wrote:Keown.
I can't stand to listen to his contradictory propaganda.
"The players have let the manager down".
He's been trotting this out for fucking years now.
But he's right though isn't he.
officepest wrote:Keown.
I can't stand to listen to his contradictory propaganda.
"The players have let the manager down".
He's been trotting this out for fucking years now.
Not sure if you’re being serious.Midz wrote:officepest wrote:Keown.
I can't stand to listen to his contradictory propaganda.
"The players have let the manager down".
He's been trotting this out for fucking years now.
But he's right though isn't he.
Based on what experience?Pierre32 wrote:Known should be our next manager. He LOVES Arsenal and would kick so much Arse, the under performers would shit themselves!
Excellent post mate. It's great to see that not all Gooners believe the hype about Ian Wright. Yes he was a great player individually but we were a much better team without him. Totally agree with your point about the 1998 season.VoiceOfReason wrote:I was there the day we won the title in 1998 and was so pleased for Wright to finally get his league winners' medal, as his career (and being our record goalscorer) more than deserved it. It was a fitting send-off.
But because I'm so angry at the club these days - and Wright in particular, lately - I start to see things from a more bitter perspective. For instance, I recently saw the 1998 title celebrations, and was almost embarrassed for Wright by the way he was over-celebrating. Let's be honest, we were sixth in the league before he got injured in December 1997, and weren't really going anywhere with him up front. He wasn't playing badly, and was still scoring goals, but it wasn't the right formula having him in the team. He even had a massive go at the fans from the safety of the dressing room after the Blackburn game, which was good of him - but at least he cared.
Anyway, he gets injured, Anelka, Bergkamp and even Chris Wreh make MASSIVE, title-winning contributions that won us the league, and then Wright pops back on for the last 10 minutes of the Everton game, made it all about him (nothing new there) and basked in the glory of everyone else's hard work and success.
I'm glad he was so passionate, and I was legitimately happy for him on the day, but it's weird how your perceptions can change once you get pissed off with someone. Again, his career as a whole definitely deserved the medal, but would we really have won the league if he'd stayed in the team? I really doubt it. That was his last season for a reason.
It makes me laugh when I hear people say 'Be careful what you wish for, you might do a Man Utd.' Apart form not getting in the CL one year and losing some home matches - which we do regularly anyway , we're not that much different now. When Fergie left they had just won the title, and had won things for the previous ten year + before he left. In the last 12 year we have won one league title and 2 FA cups.Ikechukwu1 wrote:Wow AKB HQ is getting increasingly desperate eh? Gazidis and Wenker furiously churning out the PR machine and wheeling out the big guns now! The latest Superstar endorsement of Wenker has arrived:
http://www.espn.co.uk/football/arsenal/ ... ene-wenger
![]()
![]()
Maybe they could get Eboue, Giles Sunu, Aliadiere and Remi Garde next
Unfortunately, Keown is a true believer in TOFSean wrote:I recommend you listen to the first half an hour of the March 4th episode of 5 live's Football Daily, it was nice to near people finally questioning TOF and even had a couple of supporters on the phone saying that it was time to go. It was sickening to hear Keown relentlessly defending TOF even though he knows the man is blinkered as fuck, doesn't respect the art of defence, does almost nothing that any other manager would do and makes the same mistakes season after season. He still rates him as his best ever manager![]()
I wonder why Boa Morte (our scout in Portugal, employed by Wenker), would be in favour of keeping Wenker as managercasgooner wrote:It makes me laugh when I hear people say 'Be careful what you wish for, you might do a Man Utd.' Apart form not getting in the CL one year and losing some home matches - which we do regularly anyway , we're not that much different now. When Fergie left they had just won the title, and had won things for the previous ten year + before he left. In the last 12 year we have won one league title and 2 FA cups.Ikechukwu1 wrote:Wow AKB HQ is getting increasingly desperate eh? Gazidis and Wenker furiously churning out the PR machine and wheeling out the big guns now! The latest Superstar endorsement of Wenker has arrived:
http://www.espn.co.uk/football/arsenal/ ... ene-wenger
![]()
![]()
Maybe they could get Eboue, Giles Sunu, Aliadiere and Remi Garde next
THE HYPE about Ian Wright ?Jumpers For Goalposts wrote:Excellent post mate. It's great to see that not all Gooners believe the hype about Ian Wright. Yes he was a great player individually but we were a much better team without him. Totally agree with your point about the 1998 season.VoiceOfReason wrote:I was there the day we won the title in 1998 and was so pleased for Wright to finally get his league winners' medal, as his career (and being our record goalscorer) more than deserved it. It was a fitting send-off.
But because I'm so angry at the club these days - and Wright in particular, lately - I start to see things from a more bitter perspective. For instance, I recently saw the 1998 title celebrations, and was almost embarrassed for Wright by the way he was over-celebrating. Let's be honest, we were sixth in the league before he got injured in December 1997, and weren't really going anywhere with him up front. He wasn't playing badly, and was still scoring goals, but it wasn't the right formula having him in the team. He even had a massive go at the fans from the safety of the dressing room after the Blackburn game, which was good of him - but at least he cared.
Anyway, he gets injured, Anelka, Bergkamp and even Chris Wreh make MASSIVE, title-winning contributions that won us the league, and then Wright pops back on for the last 10 minutes of the Everton game, made it all about him (nothing new there) and basked in the glory of everyone else's hard work and success.
I'm glad he was so passionate, and I was legitimately happy for him on the day, but it's weird how your perceptions can change once you get pissed off with someone. Again, his career as a whole definitely deserved the medal, but would we really have won the league if he'd stayed in the team? I really doubt it. That was his last season for a reason.
And don't forget how brainless he was in 1994, getting himself suspended from the ECWC final for a stupid and needless foul in the semi against PSG. I disliked him from that moment on because it was always all about him - he was never a team player like Alan Smith.
Yes Ian Wright that scored the crucial away goal. You was annoyed with him, how do you think he felt? Amazing how people pick at faults in former players when they don't say what you want to hear. Very harsh on Wrighty, the managers set the team up to play that way (Graham, Houston, Rioch) not the player.Jumpers For Goalposts wrote:Excellent post mate. It's great to see that not all Gooners believe the hype about Ian Wright. Yes he was a great player individually but we were a much better team without him. Totally agree with your point about the 1998 season.VoiceOfReason wrote:I was there the day we won the title in 1998 and was so pleased for Wright to finally get his league winners' medal, as his career (and being our record goalscorer) more than deserved it. It was a fitting send-off.
But because I'm so angry at the club these days - and Wright in particular, lately - I start to see things from a more bitter perspective. For instance, I recently saw the 1998 title celebrations, and was almost embarrassed for Wright by the way he was over-celebrating. Let's be honest, we were sixth in the league before he got injured in December 1997, and weren't really going anywhere with him up front. He wasn't playing badly, and was still scoring goals, but it wasn't the right formula having him in the team. He even had a massive go at the fans from the safety of the dressing room after the Blackburn game, which was good of him - but at least he cared.
Anyway, he gets injured, Anelka, Bergkamp and even Chris Wreh make MASSIVE, title-winning contributions that won us the league, and then Wright pops back on for the last 10 minutes of the Everton game, made it all about him (nothing new there) and basked in the glory of everyone else's hard work and success.
I'm glad he was so passionate, and I was legitimately happy for him on the day, but it's weird how your perceptions can change once you get pissed off with someone. Again, his career as a whole definitely deserved the medal, but would we really have won the league if he'd stayed in the team? I really doubt it. That was his last season for a reason.
And don't forget how brainless he was in 1994, getting himself suspended from the ECWC final for a stupid and needless foul in the semi against PSG. I disliked him from that moment on because it was always all about him - he was never a team player like Alan Smith.