Hang on, he's not that shit!!!Vince wrote:If he wants to play for France, he's welcome!





radford has been sying this since the lad started, fuck the compassion bollocks he's a professional and was and is picking up a huge wage for what he does.proudtosaythatname wrote:Everyone continues to post about Theo's footballing ability - or alleged lack of it.
I was talking more about treating a pleasant young man with decency, respect and compassion than about footballing ability.
If Theo can't cross a ball properly what the f*** was he even doing in Austria?
radford respects quartz but he says quartz has got this wrong. this lad has not got the ability. it has been painful watching him play for Arsenal.QuartzGooner wrote:That's what I was talking about with a fellow Arsenal fan at work today.proudtosaythatname wrote:
The Croatia game, plus his goals in Cardiff etc shows that Theo potentially does have it in him but Theo needs motivating not destroying.
He clearly has the ability, but he needs to add confidence and consistency.
MM9 yes radford has little sympathy for mr walnut as he has had enough of watching the theo theo show. players are paid to perform walnut does not perform and therefore deserves all the critisim that he gets.MM99 wrote:Rob wrote:
Sure, we can slag him off for running into defenders countless times, and for being frustrating to watch, but like i said before, his inability to be a world class footballer should not amount to him being labelled a c**t or make him void of any sympathy. This is the point that Radford seems to be missing. Just because Walcott is not producing what is required at this top level, it does not mean that all of a sudden he should be hated. If he was doing an Adebayor and strolling around like a lazy c**t then fair game, he would deserve not to go to the world cup, and deserve to be slagged off to the heavens, but when, in my personal opinion, he seems to be trying his hardest when he's out on the pitch, then there is no need to slag him off like that, because at the end of the day he simply isn't a world class player and that isn't his fault.
I agree it has been very frustrating watching him play. He is capable of top notch stuff, but too often his final ball is not good enough.Radford149 wrote:radford respects quartz but he says quartz has got this wrong. this lad has not got the ability. it has been painful watching him play for Arsenal.QuartzGooner wrote:That's what I was talking about with a fellow Arsenal fan at work today.proudtosaythatname wrote:
The Croatia game, plus his goals in Cardiff etc shows that Theo potentially does have it in him but Theo needs motivating not destroying.
He clearly has the ability, but he needs to add confidence and consistency.
QuartzGooner wrote:QUARTZ SAYS:Rob wrote:
So he's a decent lad with his feet on the ground is he ?
And where were his feet - as opposed to his ego - when Wenger publicly and privately told him this time last year not to go on the England under 21 tournament, because having just handed him a 5 year £3 million per year contract, he - Wenger - felt his - Walcott's - priorities should be Arsenal; and not something else ?
QUARTZ SAYS:
It is believed he was put under pressure by the FA to compete in the tournament, and my guess is he would think not competing would affect his world cup chances.
Walcott thought he knew better. And the result was injury, followed by missing pre-season, followed by lack of practice followed by injury.....etc etc.
If he's so demure - as you suggest - why do we see lots of him in Nike Ads, OK Magazine with his dippy bird and Beckhamesqe ventures into publishing kids books (which are ghost written for him !).
QUARTZ SAYS:
He is a very down to earth bloke. If he is able to earn a few quid advertising sports gear or England related products (Nationwide ad), or fronting some kids books about football then good luck to him.
His "bird" is far from dippy, she is a physiotherapy student.
Wouldn't it be nice if we saw him out on the pitch playing well for Arsenal ? Or is that just superfluous to the lifestyle choices, he otherwise prefers ?
QUARTZ SAYS:
Walcott has come back from serious shoulder injuries. That would have taken a lot of hard work in the gym and rehab. Whilst his skill is debatable, no one can accuse him of not running around the pitch.
If he wants a roll model, forget Beckham and try DB10. Arsenal to the core. Total commitment. Astonishing skill, Real dedication. And NO ego.
QUARTZ SAYS:
You think DB10 had no ego! Get real. I have met both, Walcott was very down to earth.
As it now is, he's on the slippery slope to nowhere and he needs to be - just like DB10 - first on the training ground and last off it come pre season - and indeed the real season, until next May - because he has an awful lot of catching up to do.
Agree that he needs to work hard pre season and hopefully it will be good for him and Arsenal.
MM99 wrote:WTF has that got to do with him having an 'ego'?Rob wrote:
So he's a decent lad with his feet on the ground is he ?
And where were his feet - as opposed to his ego - when Wenger publicly and privately told him this time last year not to go on the England under 21 tournament, because having just handed him a 5 year £3 million per year contract, he - Wenger - felt his - Walcott's - priorities should be Arsenal; and not something else ?
Walcott thought he knew better. And the result was injury, followed by missing pre-season, followed by lack of practice followed by injury.....etc etc.Is wanting to play for your country an ego issue now? No. It's just a player who wanted to represent his country. How that amounts to having an ego i will never know.
If he's so demure - as you suggest - why do we see lots of him in Nike Ads, OK Magazine with his dippy bird and Beckhamesqe ventures into publishing kids books (which are ghost written for him !).
Rob wrote: I'll pick you up on that one point otherwise this will become a game of ping-pong without and end.
Glad that we're in agreement over that point at least!You say that playing for your country is no sign of an ego. And I would agree.
Erm, i'm not, i can assure you that. Wenger DOES NOT know that he shouldn't leave subsitutions until the 85th minute. Wenger DOES NOT know many things that he has gotten wrong over the past few seasons, he SHOULD NOT have played eboue as right mid in the 2007/2008 season. He SHOULD NOT think that diaby can play on the wings. I actually do see faults in Wenger's choices, so i'm not sure why youre labelling me as being in the AK brigadeBut I would also glean that you are one of the 'Arsene Knows' brigade and therefore you can't have it both ways.
Yep, fair enough, but i still don't see how that makes him have a big ego or big headed etc... It just means that he made a stupid mistake in joining up with the U21 international squad. Maybe it was a desire to do too much, to try and play as many games as he could, to actually strive to play for his country. I would put that down to naivety and a bad choice, i wouldn't put it down to him having a big ego.If I am wrong, in telling Walcott - having played for the full England team, not to revert to the England under 21 side, then I am not alone. That's what Wenger did. And he did so for very sound reasons not the least of which was that he wanted Walcott fit and focused, for the beginning of last season.
This is all well and good, but isn't relevant to what we were original debating about. You've moved onto something completely different now.Thanks to his inclusion with the England Under 21s he was neither. And he stayed neither, until about February 2010, 7 months after the season started.
Now you tell me how this benefited Arsenal who pay his weekly wage - England don't - but we do. So where was the benefit ? Answer - NONE ! For us.
And that - and not the England Under 21s, is all I care about.
Again, i agree with you that in Walcott's case he should be concentrating on Arsenal first and foremost before anything else, but this doesn't make him a bad character because he's looking forward to playing at the World Cup. It's not like he's saying he wished he could play for another club, is he? He's wishing he could play for his country. It's totally different.And Wenger confirmed that when at a November press conference he reacted with considerable anger to a journalist who asked him about Walcott playing for England by suggesting that he - Walcott - and the journalist do what he - Wenger - says he tries to do - concentrate on delivering for the people who pay his/your weekly wage.
I disagree with Wenger on a lot of things but on that point he is right on the money.
http://www.skysports.com/story/0,19528, ... 18,00.htmlEriksson, who is now in charge of the Ivory Coast, admits that he is surprised to see Walcott struggling, but insists the young Gunner still has the potential to be a star.
"Yes I'm surprised because four years ago he was the golden boy, or (showed that he) can be the golden boy," he said.
"Maybe the expectation on him was too big, I don't know. The only person that can speak about that is Wenger.
"Four years ago I thought he could be a great player - and he still can be of course."