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How will Arsene Wenger be remembered as Arsenal's manager?

How will a Arsene Wenger be remembered as Arsenal Football Club's manager?


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MenInG

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Many different views on him.

Am sure the more recent followers of Arsenal will not have liked what they have seen.

But he does have a record to think about.


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Someone who changed English football when he started. Someone who was brilliant at finding unknown talent a chance and moulding them into something. He believed in his players , maybe too much which was a weakness of his. Always wanted his side to play football.

He will also be remembered for staying on too long.

An arsenal legend without a doubt.
 
Sad to see his last game at Emirates but maybe a win will change a few opinions.
 
Like Jose said 'A specialist in failure'

jokes - he will be remembered as a great manager but someone who could not evolve and adapt to the game as football evolved and became more commerialized.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">BREAKING: Arsene Wenger says he has had multiple job offers since decision to leave <a href="https://twitter.com/Arsenal?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Arsenal</a>. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/SSN?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#SSN</a> <a href="https://t.co/sumIN7pEYS">pic.twitter.com/sumIN7pEYS</a></p>— Sky Sports News (@SkySportsNews) <a href="https://twitter.com/SkySportsNews/status/993772204511911937?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 8, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Arsenal had been winning under Graham , yes but he took them to the next level; broke the United dominance,albeit temporarily. Also effectively planned and orchestrated the stadium move while keeping them in touch with much better financed clubs.

Poch is now emulating him somewhat but nowhere near as successful - perhaps there are more better teams but he isn't.

Arsene didn't succeed in Europe - 2006 was the one that got away , for sure.

Injuries also plagued his evolution - the new manager is finding out very quickly.

Maybe their new stadium is cursed.
 
A legend for sure whose Arsenal were the only team to challenge Man Utd for many years. He didn't however win the European Cup despite many attempts that will always hang over Arsenal. They will constantly be taunted by Chelsea fans about that. His Arsenal team had many great players like Thierry Henry, Marc Overmars and Dennis Bergkamp.
 
Out of front-line soccer since ending a two-decade coaching career at Arsenal that many credit with revolutionizing English soccer, Arsène Wenger has agreed to join FIFA to spread his gospel to a wider audience.

Wenger, a 69-year-old Frenchman, has agreed to become FIFA’s technical head, though his official title with the organization has not been finalized. In the role, he will have a broad portfolio to suggest improvements to coaching standards across the world, while also providing advice on other areas that directly influence how the game is played. An official announcement of his hiring could be made in the next few days.

There has been much speculation about what Wenger — who left Arsenal in May 2018 after 22 seasons at the London club — would do next; he had suggested in interviews since his departure that he would be open to coaching again.

FIFA has been looking to add a recognized figure to its senior ranks since the departures of the two most high-profile former players recruited by its president, Gianni Infantino. Both of those ex-players — the former technical director Marco van Basten, who left last October, and Zvonimir Boban, who quit as FIFA’s deputy secretary general in June to take up a senior management position at A.C. Milan — returned to club soccer.

A FIFA spokesman declined to comment about Wenger.

Infantino, elected to the FIFA presidency in February 2016, has made it his mission to recruit well-known figures from the game to FIFA, in part at least to help it improve its global image. In his new role, Wenger will become the public face of FIFA when it comes to coaching education, according to a person familiar with his coming role.

Since leaving Arsenal, Wenger, as he was during his coaching days, has been a regular analyst for television broadcasters, particularly in his native France. He has also been linked to a number of coaching vacancies and management positions, including the post of director of soccer operations at Paris St.-Germain. That job ultimately went to the Brazilian World Cup winner Leonardo.

Wenger arrived in London in 1996 as a relative unknown, having joined Arsenal from a team in the Japanese league. He swiftly changed the culture at Arsenal, incorporating changes not only in training methods but also in players’ recovery and social habits away from the field.

Success followed swiftly, with the Gunners winning England’s league and domestic cup double in 1998. Another followed in 2002. It presaged a remarkable season two years later in which Arsenal went unbeaten in the league. Still, by the time he eventually left, a year before the end of his most recent contract, Wenger had lost support of a large section of Arsenal’s fan base.

His move to FIFA is unlikely to surprise some of his former colleagues, who had speculated he might move into an advisory position. But it is unclear how long his relationship with FIFA will last, given his recent comments about his desire to coach again.

As recently as last week, Wenger told the Qatari-owned beIN Sports television network that he could see himself taking charge of a national team ahead of the 2022 World Cup.

“I still cannot live today with the fact that I will never be on the bench again,” Wenger said. “I would like to experience one more time the intensity of the competition.”

But he also hinted at what his next role would be when he suggested he was considering taking up an “intermediate position.”

“What I want for sure is to share what I know, and what I have learned as much as I can in the game,” he said.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/11/sports/fifa-arsene-wenger.html
 
TOKYO - Former Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger is ready to return to football management and resume battle with that stubborn coat zipper, claiming he misses "wet Wednesdays at Stoke".

The Frenchman, who turned 70 earlier this week, ended his 22-year reign at Arsenal at the end of last season after capturing three Premier League titles and seven FA Cups with Gunners.

But during a visit to Tokyo, Wenger told AFP that absence had not diminished his passion for the game and revealed he has had "offers from all over the world" during his hiatus.

"I refused until now to come back because we had some family sickness problems," he said in an interview.

"The offers always came in at a moment when I couldn't really do it or didn't want to do it."

Wenger, who coached J-League club Nagoya Grampus before joining Arsenal in 1996, has previously been linked to the Japan national team job.

Asked if he might be tempted in the future, Wenger said: "I can envisage everything - I loved being in Japan. I don't rule anything out."

Wenger, in Tokyo in an advisory role on plans for a new stadium in the capital, is looking to return to the dugout early next year, though insists he is undecided about his next destination.

He admits, however, that he misses management - even those freezing, rainy nights in such unglamorous climes as Stoke or Bolton, where his artisans at times came unstuck against northern grit.

"I liked it personally," he smiled. "Because I come from an area (northeast France) where we had wet Wednesdays as well - yes, I miss that!

"You miss contact with people, being in the same boat - sharing emotions, sharing winning and losing," added Wenger.

"I'm a guy who can take the pressure quite well, because I did that my whole life, so I miss that."

'DIFFERENT LANDSCAPE'

One position he did appear cool on, however, was the French national side, noting the achievement of Didier Deschamps in winning last year's World Cup in Russia.

"I turned that down a few times," said Wenger, who was recently linked with Lyon.

"I prefer club football. For me it's a bit part-time the national team - it's 10 games per year. I'm used to 60, so I was never really a big fan of it."

Wenger denied that he has spent his time moping around the house annoying family members.

"No, I'm quite surprised," he said. "I've enjoyed a little bit more time, more freedom - it was the first time in 35 years that I woke up in morning and didn't have to go somewhere."

Wenger, meanwhile, blamed the intense media scrutiny of modern-day football and trigger-happy owners for making the job increasingly precarious.

"There's some things I don't miss," he shrugged. "The scrutiny and the definite conclusions after every game are much worse than before," added the Frenchman.

"The landscape of football has changed in the last 20 years, the owners have changed - it's more investment, more calculation. At the end of the day you cannot change your manager every week."

Wenger, who tipped Premier League leaders Liverpool to break their 30-year title wait this season, also explained one of football's great mysteries - why he could never do his jacket zip up.

"My coat was very long and usually I put it on when I was already freezing," he said with a laugh.

"Sometimes my hands were very cold. Also because you don't focus on your zip, you focus on the game - but maybe I'm a bit clumsy as well."


https://ewn.co.za/2019/10/25/wenger...t-stoke?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
 
Arsene Wenger has refused to rule out the prospect of taking over at Bayern Munich amid speculation linking him to the vacant manager's job at the Bundesliga club.

The former Arsenal boss has emerged as a contender for the role after Bayern sacked Niko Kovac at the weekend.

Ralf Rangnick has turned down the chance to speak with Bayern, while Paris Saint-Germain head coach Thomas Tuchel has also said he is not interested.

Ajax boss Erik ten Hag has also said he will not be leaving the Dutch club this season, despite interest from Bayern, with reports in Germany suggesting Wenger is now one of the favourites for the position.

Asked whether he would be interested in the Bayern Munich job, Wenger told beIN Sports: "Of course. Coaching was my whole life until now.

"Everybody who has coached will tell you the same. You miss the intensity but some things you miss a lot, some things you don't miss. I enjoyed the things I don't miss too much...

"But on the other hand, football games, winning football games, preparing the team for the game, and getting satisfaction and shared emotions. That is something that you miss."

Elsewhere, Rangnick, who is head of sport and development at Red Bull, has turned down the chance to speak with Bayern about the vacancy.

The 61-year-old's agent, Marc Kosicke, has revealed that Rangnick is not interested in taking over at the Allianz Arena.

"No, Ralf Rangnick is not available," Kosicke told Bild.

"We do not believe that what Ralf Rangnick brings is currently being sought after by Bayern. And that's why it makes no sense to hold concrete talks."

Sky in Germany reported on Tuesday that PSG boss Tuchel had been contacted by Bayern Munich.

However, speaking ahead of his side's Champions League clash with Club Brugge on Wednesday, the 46-year-old said he has no interest in a move to Bavaria.

"No I am not interested because I am the coach of PSG, for this season I am still in contract, you need to fact check, and the contract is still for next year so I don't even think about it," he said.

Rangnick has previously had spells in charge of Hoffenheim, Schalke and RB Leipzig.

https://www.skysports.com/football/...-refuses-to-rule-out-taking-bayern-munich-job
 
Arsene Wenger has denied rumours that he is in discussions with Bayern Munich to become their new manager.

But the former Arsenal boss avoided removing himself from the running.

The German champions are looking for a new manager after they sacked Niko Kovac on Sunday, following a 5-1 defeat by Eintracht Frankfurt.

Wenger won the Premier League three times and the FA Cup seven times in a 22-year spell in north London before leaving at the end of 2017-18.

The 70-year-old Frenchman was providing analysis for beIN Sports on Wednesday for Bayern's Champions League victory over Olympiakos.

Asked about the speculation, he said: "I never refuse to talk to Bayern Munich because I know these people who lead the club for 30 years.

"I was nearly going to Bayern a long, long time ago. At the moment, I haven't talked to them at all.

"We have not talked to each other and I don't know [if we will]."

Bayern are currently fourth in the Bundesliga, four points behind leaders Borussia Mönchengladbach.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/50330107
 
How he shaped Arsenal from a highly defensive team from the 90s to an offensive one in the 00s was remarkable.

Alot of people dont realise his business acumen too unlike many other Managers.

He did lose the plot towards the end of his time at Arsenal. But to me he is a Legend
 
How he shaped Arsenal from a highly defensive team from the 90s to an offensive one in the 00s was remarkable.

Alot of people dont realise his business acumen too unlike many other Managers.

He did lose the plot towards the end of his time at Arsenal. But to me he is a Legend

Completely agree. Kids now a days just look at his last years at Arsenal but he had to go through so many years selling his best players to jake money to pay of the Stadium. He still kept Arsenal in top 4 all along. Done a remarkable job.
 
He's unique in the sense he managed a team of invincibles who went undefeated an entire season, and then spent the rest of his career at Arsenal failing to come close to that by making dumb moves in the transfer market. The core of that Arsenal time was very strong. But since Patrick Viera stepped down Arsenal have never had a dominant CDM. Every successful team nowadays, especially one that plays possession football like Arsenal, needs a dominant CDM to recover balls and distribute. Without it the system does not work. And for 20 years he failed to produce or sign any other CDM. It's stunning that he was able to work with such a talented team so he knows what works, but then never was able to make it happen again
 
He was a good manager but not a "legend" for goodness sake always under Fergie's shadow. Great managers win Champions Leagues that he never did. Yes the invincible s were an awesome side but that does not qualify him as a legend. Before someone points out my post 10 from above I have changed my mind about him recently.
 
Former Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger will talk to Bayern Munich next week over their vacant manager's job.

Wenger, 70, told Bein Sports that he is planning to speak to Bayern's executive board chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge after the Bundesliga champions sacked Niko Kovac earlier this week.

It comes after Rummenigge said Wenger was "not being considered as coach".

"We decided together we will talk next week because I'm in Doha until Sunday. This is the true story," said Wenger.

"On Wednesday afternoon, Rummenigge called me. I could not answer and by politeness I called him back.

"He was in his car going to the game against Olympiakos. We talked for four to five minutes maximum and he told me they had assigned [Hans-Dieter] Flick to be the coach - he will manage the next two games.

"He [Rummenigge] asked me if I would be interested because they are looking for a coach. I told him I didn't have any thoughts about it - it needs some time to have a think about it."

Wenger spent 22 years in charge of Arsenal, winning the Premier League three times and the FA Cup on seven occasions before he left the Gunners at the end of the 2017-18 season.

After 10 games of the Bundesliga campaign, Bayern are fourth, four points behind leaders Borussia Monchengladbach, and lost 5-1 to Eintracht Frankfurt in Kovac's last match in charge.

However, they have a perfect record in the Champions League and their 2-0 win over Olympiakos in Flick's first game in temporary charge, was their fourth win in four group games.

At the start of October, Bayern, still managed by Kovac, thrashed Tottenham 7-2 in an away Champions League game in London.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/50354757
 
Former Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger is returning to football after he agreed to become Fifa's new chief of global football development.

The move ends speculation linking the Frenchman, 70, with a return to management as Bayern Munich boss.

Wenger left the Gunners in May 2018, after 22 years in charge, three Premier League titles and seven FA Cups.

"I very much look forward to taking on this extremely important challenge," he said.

Wenger's new role at the world governing body will help to develop men's and women's football, as well as technical aspects of the sport.

He will now be a member of the technical panel of the International Football Association Board, and chairman of Fifa's technical study group.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/50404854
 
Arsene Wenger says his "heart" is still with Arsenal and he is happy to talk to interim boss Freddie Ljungberg whenever he wants.

Ljungberg, who played under Wenger at Arsenal between 1998 and 2007, took temporary charge at Emirates Stadium after Unai Emery's dismissal last week.

And the Swede says he would like to speak to his old boss before his first home game against Brighton on Thursday.

"If he has that need, then of course I will be available," Wenger said.

"Freddie is fantastic and committed and will want to do this job for a long time.

"He has an opportunity and what you want in life is that opportunity. Let's get him to work with his ideas and support him."

The 70-year-old Frenchman, who left Arsenal in 2018 after 22 years as manager, declined to comment on his successor Emery's dismissal but said his "heart is with the club and I want them to do well".

Wenger was speaking in Belfast at a meeting of the International Football Association Board (IFAB), the body responsible for determining the laws of the game.

Wenger, Fifa's newly-appointed head of global football development, also called for the Premier League to end its resistance to the use of pitchside VAR monitors.

Premier League referees' chief Mike Riley has cautioned against their use by on-field officials because of the additional time delay it would cause.

That goes against Uefa guidance and Wenger wants the league to change its stance.

"The referee needs a monitor to check if he was right or wrong," said Wenger.

Despite being in place at every Premier League ground, pitchside monitors have not been used at all in more than 140 games so far this season, and Wenger feels that is a problem.

"For me, that is the most important worry," said Wenger. "The referees on the field are there because they have the experience and they are confident."

Wenger does not want to make the use of the monitors mandatory, merely to allow the referees the option.

And he would like to see VAR decisions explained to supporters via big screens, although he acknowledged the lack of such screens at two of the league's most famous grounds - Liverpool's Anfield and Manchester United's Old Trafford - was a "problem which has to be resolved".

Discussing the introduction of VAR in the Premier League more generally, Wenger said: "I honestly believe it is working much better than people think because I have witnessed many bad decisions before.

"Let's not forget it is in its first year, so of course everything is not perfect. The adjustments will come. You have to educate people in the VAR to get them to intervene at the right moment.

"Let's not forget that it is video assistance for the referee, so they [VAR] are not the ones who should make the decision but the ones who help the referee to make the right decision."

VAR
Pitchside VAR monitors, as seen in use here during a Bundesliga match, have not been used in the Premier League this season
In a statement, IFAB accepted there was "a growing demand for more immediate information about the referee's final decision" after VAR reviews.

Ways of communicating more effectively with broadcasters and supporters will be discussed in the coming weeks, with the aim of having concrete proposals in place in time for IFAB's annual general meeting in Belfast on 29 February.

However, this is unlikely to involve referees wearing microphones to communicate decisions to spectators.

New concussion protocols were also discussed at the IFAB meeting.

An group comprising medical sports specialists and football experts will "identify possible options for in-game assessment", with trials potentially taking place next season, not by Euro 2020 as had been suggested by some.

"It's a very serious issue," said Wenger. "We are all conscious the health and safety of the players is the priority.

"We will try to do what is requested to protect the players."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/50653076
 
Arsene Wenger says that football behind closed doors is not a viable long-term solution but is the best way to finish the current season.

The former Arsenal boss, speaking on Bein Sports, believes that playing games without fans could damage football if it continues for too long.

"Will it survive long-term? Will it damage the show long-term without supporters? I am convinced of that," he said.

"But it can be a short-term solution, not a long-term one. You cannot imagine a whole season without any spectators. That's why I believe it a short-term solution.

"It is still the best possible way to get a verdict for the end of the season. It's better than any other decision."

The Bundesliga returned this weekend, becoming the first major European league to come back after suspension due to the coronavirus, with all games behind closed doors.

With the Premier League likely to do a similar thing if and when it returns, Wenger believes it is important to play without fans until it is safe to do so.

He said: "We don't have the medication for people to go to the stadiums in mid-July. You have some examples in Italy where [fans at] games provoked a disaster.

"We can't be guided too much by financial reasons and take such a big gamble. We have to first make sure this is medically safe."

Wenger, who is FIFA's chief of global football development, was involved in the decision-making process that introduced five substitutes for the rest of the season.

It was brought in to help domestic leagues cope with fatigue and games being scheduled into a short space of time, and the Frenchman says he is intrigued to watch how it will be utilised in games.

"At FIFA, we proposed the five substitutions for one reason - because the schedule is congested. It's very difficult to play more games without more changes," said Wenger.

"I believe on the first game it's difficult to judge but, overall, it will be interesting watching over the next month how it will be used.

"I also think it's a good idea because some smaller teams wouldn't be able to play all their games if they played every three games. So for them to play with their best team in every game, it's a good decision.

"Looking at the games today, I don't think the teams are quite ready."

https://www.skysports.com/football/...sed-doors-games-will-damage-fooball-long-term
 
Arsene Wenger Q&A: Arsenal, VAR, Mesut Ozil, Zlatan Ibrahimovic and more

Arsene Wenger is widely credited with helping to revolutionise English football.

Wenger joined Arsenal in October 1996 and managed the club for 22 years, winning three Premier League titles and a record seven FA Cups. He also created history when the Gunners went through the 2003-04 league season unbeaten.

Since leaving Emirates Stadium, the Frenchman has taken up a role at football's world governing body Fifa, overseeing the global development of the game.

Here the 70-year-old talks to BBC Sport about the past, the present and the future.

What does Arsenal mean to you?

The love of my life. I gave 22 years of my life to the club. I built the training centre and I built the Emirates Stadium. I gave a lot of sweat to get the stadium money paid back and to create an atmosphere and infrastructure to allow this club to do well and invest in the future. I think we are in a good way.

I'm a little bit like a guy who's ended a relationship and has no contact with his children any more but he still loves them.

In hindsight, was signing the loan agreement for the Emirates Stadium a mistake?

I accepted it because I thought it was a challenge. The first 10 years we were competing to win the championship but I knew the next 10 years would be more difficult. I believe we played outstanding football, we were in position sometimes to win the league but we were much younger [as a squad] overall.

I may be even prouder of the second part of my career than the first part because the first was easy. The second was tougher and I was really tested in my resilience. I'm very proud to have served the club during such a delicate stage.

You haven't been back to the stadium since losing your job in May 2018...

I have chosen to keep a complete distance. It doesn't mean emotionally, just physically. It's important people don't see you as a shadow. It may look like you're still trying to influence things and have your way. I felt that the best thing to do is cut it away.

Towards the end of your stay at Arsenal there were protests and demonstrations. Did they hurt?

I don't believe you should rate highly what a fan says in the moment - a fan says something based on the moment, based on emotions. Today it seems the minority has a big dictatorship. They dictate what is talked about, therefore if you have 50 people on social media being negative it can somehow get more attention than 60,000 people in a stadium.

It doesn't mean everybody has to do what they talk about. If you look at our last three years you will see in 2016 we finished second - OK, it was behind Leicester City but every other club finished behind Leicester too and they lost only three games. In 2017 that was the first time we were not in the Champions League since 1997.

So, yes, I wish we had maintained that record but I think this year we have a good chance in order to be back in the top four.

You had a fierce rivalry with Sir Alex Ferguson at Manchester United and Jose Mourinho at Chelsea - is that still the case? Are you in touch?

I rarely keep in touch because I'm not in the country a lot. I respect them. When you're in the competition it's you or them so it's always a bit aggressive. But after, when you meet people outside the competition, it's not so.

You both suffer, you both have difficulties with your team, but you have to defend your club when you're in there at any cost and that's why sometimes it gets a bit out of control. Overall there is a respect to always talk things over.

As manager at Arsenal, you turned down offers from Real Madrid twice, Bayern Munich, Juventus, Paris St-Germain, France, England and Manchester United - which of those were you closest to taking?

Certainly Real Madrid - because you do not know many people who turned them down twice. And it was to stay with a team which doesn't have the resources to win the championship. But I told myself if I was going to go for the challenge of managing Arsenal, I would go until the end.

You have different types of managers. I was the longest-serving manager at Monaco and the longest-serving manager at Arsenal - so it's part of my personality.

Who were the toughest team or players you came up against?

Team: Wimbledon when I first came to England. Players: Roy Keane and Alf-Inge Haaland - they were always tough to play against.

With such a glittering career there can't be many regrets, but Arsenal were always linked to big names. Do you ever sit and wonder: 'What if?'

Of course I think what if, for example, Cristiano Ronaldo played with Thierry Henry, [Robert] Pires, [Sylvain] Wiltord and [Dennis Bergkamp]. Maybe we score 200 goals in a season!

You regret sometimes, you think it's your fault that you didn't decide quickly enough or sometimes financially you couldn't agree quickly enough, but overall I must say you go to Chelsea, you go to Manchester United, you go to Liverpool... every club is full of stories like this.

Do you wish you'd signed Zlatan Ibrahimovic instead of inviting him for a trial?

Not really, because he was a 17-year-old boy playing at Malmo in the second league in Sweden. And nobody knew him. We gave trials to many players at 17 - it was absolutely normal before you make a decision.

What do you want your legacy to be?

Somebody who served his club with total commitment and integrity and honesty and who loved the club. I gave Arsenal the best years of my life. In different circumstances, but I always felt with the same passion.

Is it true you still wake up and go through the same routine as when you coached, including two hours at the gym every day?

That's true, even at weekends. Sport is like brushing your teeth - if you do it once a week it's not very efficient, but if you do it every day it's more efficient.

How much football do you watch now?

All I watch is football. In the morning I watch the games that were on last night. It's my passion. When you're born, your first instinct is to survive. Then you must find the meaning of your life. My life is football.

I grew up in a little pub where the local football team had their headquarters. From the age of four or five I heard people talk only about football so certainly in my mind it was the only important thing in life.

Is Arsenal in good hands under current manager Mikel Arteta?

Yes. He has the ingredients to be a very good manager, a top manager, but many of my former players had these ingredients. We have to give them time, let them do their job in the way they want to do it.

He's intelligent, he has big passion and a strong character. And I believe he's surrounding himself with the right people.

You signed Mesut Ozil for a then club record fee of £42.4m - what do you make of his career currently?

I feel it is a waste for him.

Firstly because he's in the years where a player of his talent can produce the most. And it's a waste for the club as well because he's a super talent, a creative talent that in the final third can create that killer pass.

The way football is going at the moment it's quick counter-pressing, quick transitions and everybody plays the same. It's kicked out players like Ozil. Although let's not forget who this guy is. A world champion who has played at Real Madrid.

He's been the record player of assists, so you have to find a way to get him involved again.

You're a huge supporter of VAR, but can you understand the frustration others have with it?

First of all, let's ask ourselves: is VAR efficient? When you look at the stats, reviews show they have moved from 84% of right decisions to 95%. It's a system above our opinions.

The second thing is it fights against corruption because one man cannot alone influence a decision. For me this is something important because that was not always the case. Yes, sometimes it can be slow but I believe if we suppressed it people would want it back.

Last year, people didn't accept the offside rule. This year nobody talks about it. It's nothing to do with money, you just want the right decisions.

Are punishments for incidents of racism enough?

We cannot tolerate racism and I believe sport, and especially football, has a huge responsibility - to show how we can live together, share what we love.

I think we cannot tolerate racism in the stands. We have to punish it. How to punish it? We haven't found the right answer yet. I believe having cameras to recognise the people who are doing it and ban them for life.

Your job now is developing the game. You want to get rid of throw-ins...

When you have a throw-in, it is supposed to be an advantage for the team in possession. But in reality you're at a disadvantage with nine players on the field to the opponents' 10. Also, you have to use your hands to play the ball. I would say you have more chance to lose the ball.

That's why I believe we always have to think how can we make the game quicker and more spectacular. So why not be able to kick the ball in when in your own half?

We always have to try to think how we could make the game quicker and more interesting, and most of the rules that have been created have led to a more spectacular game. I believe as well that you should be able to take a free-kick (multiple touches) for yourself when you get kicked down.

You want to really focus on equal access to facilities for young kids around the world and grow the women's game...

I want to give everyone the same opportunities. In Europe, we are in a bubble. There are countries where kids can't access coaches and there isn't the infrastructure. I want to create an online programme that everyone can access. It'll detail what the child should be learning at what age, how often they train, when to increase the difficulty of the exercise.

As for the women's game, the attendance at World Cup is always high but outside of the World Cup very minimal. It's not enough to invest big money, to pay good wages for girls to dedicate their lives to being footballers. That's why you need to develop the quality of the game.

We need as well to develop the infrastructure because at the moment men's pitches are fully booked over the weekends so if women's football developed and grew as much as we want it to, we will need to build new pitches.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/54513321
 
So are we missing Wenger?

I saw him last week...
Was taking a walk along Totteridge Road...

If I had the chance I would have stopped my car and begged him to come back &#55357;&#56833;
 
Arsene Wenger says he is "ready to take that gamble" over his proposals to overhaul football's match calendar "to make the game better".

The former Arsenal boss has suggested fewer international breaks and staging the World Cup every two years.

In an exclusive interview with BBC podcast The Sports Desk, Wenger said: "The risk is to make football better, and I'm ready to take that gamble."

He added the current schedule offered "no clarity, no simplicity, no modern way to organise a season".

Wenger, head of global development for world governing body Fifa, said: "I think if we go on like that we hit the wall."

He said he would tackle "chaos" and "congestion" in the game.

"What is absolutely detrimental to the players is repeated travelling and jet-lag. With reducing the qualifying period, I believe that the clubs will benefit, the players would benefit."

According to a survey commissioned by Fifa, a majority of fans favoured holding a men's World Cup more frequently than every four years - although the most popular response across all age groups was to maintain the status quo.

When asked whether he risked devaluing football's showpiece tournament by doubling its frequency, Wenger said: "The World Cup is such a huge event that I don't think it will diminish the prestige. You want to be the best in the world and you want to be the best in the world every year.

"I'm not on an ego trip. I've been asked to help to shape the calendar of tomorrow, I consult the whole world."

Arsene Wenger's World Cup plan - what's it all about?
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'Emotional response' to World Cup plans
On Wednesday European football's governing body Uefa said the plans created four significant "dangers" for football, including a potential loss in prestige for the World Cup and concerns over player welfare.

It rejected Wenger's suggestion the new schedule would improve the competitive chances of smaller nations, and said the development of women's football, with tournaments "deprived of exclusive slots and overshadowed by the proximity of top men's events", would be impacted.

It also accused Fifa of a lack of consultation.

"I'm confident, but I do not know the forces who are for or against. I just make that proposal because I think it's good for the game," insisted Wenger.

Arsene Wenger
Arsene Wenger felt as a manager that there was not enough separation between club and international competitions
"I was a long time manager at Arsenal and I felt always that the separation between international competition and club competition was not good enough.

"After the proposal for the World Cup every two years sometimes [there is an] emotional response.

"I'm not surprised. Many people who were completely against it changed their mind after having seen my proposal.

"Some people have judged only based on every two years of World Cup and it was more emotional because 'we've all grown up in that cycle', and I can understand that.

"But many responses who were negative came out because they had not completely seen the whole concept. This concept of course, every two years a World Cup makes only sense if you see the whole proposal and if you regroup the qualifiers."

'A proposal to make football more meaningful'
After 166 member associations voted to approve a feasibility study when it was proposed by the Saudi Arabian federation earlier this year, Wenger was tasked by Fifa president Gianni Infantino with finding the best way to change it.

His ideas include:

A biennial World Cup in even years;
Confederation tournaments (including the European Championship) in odd years;
Either one (October) or two (October and March) mid-season international breaks, for a month in total, when qualifying for major tournaments will take place, rather than the current five windows;
Guaranteed rest periods of 25 days for players once tournaments are over.
Fifa will hold an online summit with its member associations on 30 September to discuss the international men's and women's calendars.

The current match calendar for the women's game runs to the end of 2023, while the men's expires in 2024.

"The international match calendar is fixed until 2024. So until then, nothing can change. I've been guided by a few ideas to propose a plan to reshape the international match calendar," said Wenger.

"The first one is to make football better all over the world. The second one is to have a more modern way and more simple way to organise the calendar. Therefore, I want to reduce the number of qualifiers and to regroup the qualifying periods."

When asked if he would support such an idea if still a club manager, Wenger said: "I would agree with what I propose because I think for the club, it's much better. There is no interference during the season and I suffered a lot from interference during the season.

"It's not about me, it is about the proposal to make football better, clearer, more simple and more meaningful to the world.

"I am convinced that the clubs gain in it because they can focus completely, they have their players available for the whole season and the national teams benefit from it as well.

"There's no increase of number of games, there's a better rest period, less travelling and more quality competition. That's why I think this project is really defendable.

"Yesterday I was in a very long meeting with Fifpro [the players' union], we consult everybody. We are conscious that we need to talk to everybody. I think I've convinced Fifpro that in my programme the players were my first worry."

Addressing concerns - Wenger's response
Q. What about the cost to fans who are desperate to see World Cups and now face double the cost?

Wenger: "I have a huge sympathy for that, of course, and that is a factor that has to be analysed. That's why I told you, I have plenty of logistics still to be studied and the financial aspects of the fans is one of them."

Q. What about the concern that it will 'muscle in' on Women's World Cups and Olympics?

Wenger: "We wouldn't. What you signalled to me now is quite interesting, because when I asked people, 'do you think the World Cup for women every two years would be good?' everybody says yes, it would help to improve women's football. That's what we want to do. We want for them as well to organise the World Cup every two years."

Q. Do you believe an agreement can be reached?

Wenger: "I hope so. I consulted Uefa as well. I spoke to them, I explained my project so we have a dialogue going on. After that, how we will work with Uefa and all the federations in Europe, that's down after to Gianni Infantino and people who are responsible for that."

Q. There will be many Arsenal fans who still see you as a legend but who will be wondering why you are meddling with the game's best loved competition. Why risk ruining it? What would you say to them?

Wenger: "Until now, club football is 80%, national team football is 20% and I want to keep that balance. What I want to keep to the fans, to the Arsenal fans and to the fans all over the world is better competition and more meaningful competition. And overall, I care about the Arsenal fans but I care about football fans all over the world. We have to prepare football for 2028 and after."

Q. Would your proposals help the development of young players?

Wenger: "Of course. I would say federations go to a big competition, they see why they do well and why they don't do well, when they come back, we'll see what can we do for our football.

"They do basically develop a youth team program. I can give you examples of many federations who have improved their football because they have not done well in the World Cup. They came back and say 'what can we do for our youth to develop players?'

"The competition, the World Cup is only the end of it. I believe you can improve football by improving the level of education inside the countries by giving better access to better competitions and by improving the rules of the game. What we are talking about is about the quality of competitions and the program and the calendar."

BBC
 
Arsenal had been in a middling club for a few years before he came and changed it all. They could well have gone in to a Liverpool malaise or disappeared like Everton.

People fail to realise with or without Ferguson, Manchester United had started a financial model never seen before. They'd become a multinational company in a parochial League and so the dominance once the EPL formed was almost inevitable.

Arsenal couldn't compete on a financial footing but Wenger was the only one to trouble the United monopoly, other than Blackburn who were no paupers. He won on an ideology and principles now taken as granted.

The arrival of Abramovich removed Arsenal from the equation as they simply weren't in the same league anymore. Not beating Barca in the UCL 2006 signalled a terminal decline; the ultimate sliding doors moment.

Roman was the worst thing to happen to the premier league with Man City just a consequence and now EPL is full of dodgy hedge fund and foreign mafia owners.

Only Klopp will ever compare to Wenger.
 
Arsene Wenger: Mikel Arteta says former Arsenal boss inspired him to become a manager

Speaking to Sky Sports News at the premiere of "Arsene Wenger: Invincible" on Tuesday night, Arteta said: "If it was not for him I would not be in the position I am today and I wouldn't have enjoyed the career I had.

Pushed on whether Wenger is the reason he became a manager, Arteta added: "100 per cent. I was still young and I had my ideas, but he was a different level of inspiration on how I looked at the game.

"He was very good at being able to transmit what a football club meant into the players and he put different question marks on me. That is why I started to study and take coaching much more seriously.

"I would like him to be more present at the club. I think the players would love him, benefit, and be inspired to have him around and I think for the club it would be a huge boost.

"It was so intense for him for over 20 years and you need to get away a little bit, but I think it would be so beneficial for all parties to have him more present."

https://www.skysports.com/football/...arsenal-boss-inspired-him-to-become-a-manager
 
That invincible is one heck of an achievement not gonna happen in infinity
Arsenal 2003/04 domestically was a beast completely bossed every team
 
Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta says he wants to bring former Gunners manager Arsene Wenger back to the club in some capacity and has already spoken to him about a possible return.

Wenger, 72, guided Arsenal to three Premier League titles and won the FA Cup on seven occasions in his 22 years in charge of the north London side.

Arteta spent five years playing under Wenger at the Gunners.

"We would be delighted to have him much closer," Arteta said.

"I think he would have a great time just seeing the environment that he can create around him when he's around this place because of the respect, admiration and the love that everybody at the club has for what he's done, as well as for what he represents as a person."

Arteta replaced Unai Emery as Gunners boss in December 2019, 19 months after Wenger's 1,235-game reign as Arsenal manager came to an end at the conclusion of the 2017-18 season.

As manager, Arteta guided the club to FA Cup success in 2019-20 but after a second successive eighth-place finish in the Premier League last term the Gunners failed to qualify for European competition for the first time in 25 years.

Arsenal are fifth in the table after 12 games this season and next face bottom side Newcastle on Saturday.

Arteta said "there has been communication" with Wenger when he was asked if a formal offer had been made to bring the Frenchman back to Emirates Stadium.

The Spaniard said they had spoken at the premiere of the documentary about his ex-boss, who now works for Fifa as chief of football development.

"I talked to him when we went to see the film and it was incredibly pleasant to see him and chat to him, and hopefully we can bring him close," he said.

Arteta, however, added that he "cannot tell" what role Wenger would take up at the club.

"What I can say is that I would like him to be much closer, personally, to me because I think it would be a great help, I think it would be a great help for the club," he said.

"Things take time and I think he has to dictate those timings. What I can say is from my side and I can say, I think, on behalf of everybody, is that we would be delighted to have him much closer."

BBC
 
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