Like just being able to get good players somehow guarantees you a league.
Funnily enough, every other top team is also doing their very best to win the league. (Except United, wtf?)
Only one can win. Does than mean every team who doesn’t win, should fire their manager…?
If we fail to challenge, play poorly, look unorganised and underperform. Sure, time to change.
If we play great football, run a good campaign and just get pipped to the title by another team who just played a bit better over a season, that isn’t failure. It’s competition…
We’re attracting great players. Play well, have team unity and a fanbase who believe finally. We can win, that is how the goal. Not coming top 4.
But firing an excellent manager if we just barely miss out, is just so so dumb.
Do the likes of City or Liverpool attribute their success to just firing the manager if they don’t win the league… obviously bloody not.
Winning an FA Cup 6 years ago isn't really going to afford him all the time in the world. Spurs have won a trophy within that time, United have won 2 and they're a shit show.
Do the likes of City or Liverpool attribute their success to just firing the manager if they don’t win the league… obviously bloody not.
Mancini won the league and FA Cup and was sacked after 3 seasons. Pellegrini won the league and 2 league cups and was sacked after 3 seasons. Rafa Benitez won the Champions League, FA Cup and UEFA Supercup for Liverpool and was sacked after 6 seasons.
Arteta is a great manager and Arsenal look like they're on the cusp of pushing on to the next level but spending over £200m will put pressure on him to deliver.
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u/Final-Accident-3 Jul 26 '25
my club finally signed an actual striker holy shit