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No chance. Arsenal haven't played like Spurs did against Real Madrid since about 2006.Would also say that on the best of days Arsenal's optimum level of performance is higher than Spurs'.
No chance. Arsenal haven't played like Spurs did against Real Madrid since about 2006.Would also say that on the best of days Arsenal's optimum level of performance is higher than Spurs'.
Yeah possibly, although Alderweireld coming back in would tilt it back to Spurs for me. There's not much in it.Maybe. I honestly believe the lineup Arsenal played in the NLD was better than theirs. Says a lot about what they've done that people expected Spurs to rock up there with Sissoko in midfield, a 21 year old at CB and Trippier and Davies as wingbacks and win easily.
I mean we can get very subjective here, but we did beat Pep's Barca and Bayern at the Emirates.No chance. Arsenal haven't played like Spurs did against Real Madrid since about 2006.
Still within their reaches. They just haven't reached it for a whileNo chance. Arsenal haven't played like Spurs did against Real Madrid since about 2006.
Yeah I mean I wouldn't want to go down the route of digging through Arsenal's best games of the past ten years to find something that might compare. My point was just that taking 10 points from four games against Real Madrid and Dortmund is indicative of a team with a very, very high ceiling.I mean we can get very subjective here, but we did beat Pep's Barca and Bayern at the Emirates.
Said team did just get comprehensively outplayed by Arsenal thoughYeah I mean I wouldn't want to go down the route of digging through Arsenal's best games of the past ten years to find something that might compare. My point was just that taking 10 points from four games against Real Madrid and Dortmund is indicative of a team with a very, very high ceiling.
What makes this even more hilarious is the fact that they went on to lose the match. Serves him right, insufferable smug bastard.
Haha maybe I have imagined it, but I swear he's always made out to be this decent, reasonable, down to earth, salt of the earth type bloke.Has he? The only reputation I know of is the one for (allegedly etc) sleeping with his players’ wives.
It's equally baffling that he's carved out a career as a football manager, despite years of achieving precisely **** all.What makes this even more hilarious is the fact that they went on to lose the match. Serves him right, insufferable smug bastard.
Up there with David Moyes as one of these people who has inexplicably managed to carve out a reputation as being a nice man, despite the fact that he's an utter prick.
Haha holy ****. I either never knew about this or blanked it from my memory. Either way it's absolutely dire.Pardew's finest moment!
I've said some stupid shite in the heat of the moment at times, but genuinely think this was planned which makes it even sillier. Was banned by the BBC iirc.
By being good and showing said goodness over time. People harp on about the foreign coaches tekkin' all the jerbs, but it's not like the majority of them just magically fell into managing a big club without paying their dues and establishing their credentials elsewhere, and those that did for the most part end up being really ****ing good anyway (e.g. Pep).And Allardyce at Everton apparently.
I don't follow other leagues much but do the lower-league/relegation threatened clubs in Spain/Germany/Italy also keep cycling between the same 5-6 guys every few years? How are young British coaches supposed to break into this carousel? It seems Moyes, Pardew, Hodgson, Pulis and Allardyce will never run out of PL club owners who are ready to hire them.
It's a bit weird that Eddie Howe hasn't got more job offers, having achieved promotion then sustained mid-table finishes playing good football at a tiny club. When they got promoted everyone thought they were nailed-on relegation fodder. He doesn't even seem to get a lot of hype, you'd expect the media to be all over an English manager performing at that level.By being good and showing said goodness over time. People harp on about the foreign coaches tekkin' all the jerbs, but it's not like the majority of them just magically fell into managing a big club without paying their dues and establishing their credentials elsewhere, and those that did for the most part end up being really ****ing good anyway (e.g. Pep).
The problem with English managers is that so many ex players just turn out to be total crap as coaches (e.g. Merson, Adams etc.), or just do not have the tactical nous to compete at the elite level (e.g. Keegan, Hodgson, Warnock, Curbishley etc.), or just play utterly turgid football (e.g. Pulis, Allardyce etc.), or are just genuinely complete crap (e.g. Iain Dowie, Les Reed etc.), or they are just a bit/averagely crap (e.g. Brent).
I'd argue that in Dyche and Howe there's 2 who've broken in in recent times.And Allardyce at Everton apparently.
I don't follow other leagues much but do the lower-league/relegation threatened clubs in Spain/Germany/Italy also keep cycling between the same 5-6 guys every few years? How are young British coaches supposed to break into this carousel? It seems Moyes, Pardew, Hodgson, Pulis and Allardyce will never run out of PL club owners who are ready to hire them.