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Wenger: 0-0 is better than 2-0

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    Wenger: 0-0 is better than 2-0

    Arsene Wenger has managed to convince himself that a 0-0 draw at the Emirates against AC Milan was a better result than a victory as they go into the second leg.


    The Gunners go to the San Siro needing a goal to guarantee their advance into the Champions League quarter-finals, and Wenger insists that is a healthier situation than trying to defend a 2-0 lead.


    That could explain why Arsenal fluffed chance after chance in that first leg - was it manager's orders?


    "What is good from the first result is we know every time we get the ball we are incited to go for a goal," said Wenger.


    "When you win 2-0, away from home sometimes subconsciously you think you only have to defend. On that basis 0-0 is not a bad result because you know defence is not good enough. You know you will have to attack as well."


    Wenger welcomes Robin Van Persie back into his squad, though the Dutchman will only be fit to start on the bench.


    He believes the key to the match will be not allowing Milan to dictate the pace as they did against Manchester United last season.


    "Milan have shown in Europe that they can deal with all sorts of opposition, they can slow the game down," said the Frenchman.


    "What Milan do well is put you to their pace, and when Kaka gets the ball they can have sudden acceleration which can kill you.


    "We will have to adapt to that because we like to play always at a high pace. In the end we should have won the first game because we were able to keep the game at a consistent high pace. We like to play at a consistent high pace, they like to play slow-quick.


    "We have to be tight defensively out there because they tore Man United apart in the first 20 minutes of the second leg at the San Siro last season.


    "It is important for us to start strongly in defence, but also not to hide every time we win the ball."

    #2
    **** me I wish we hadnt scored those two goals against Inter now, it might really cost us in the away leg!

    Comment


      #3
      He's a bit of a loon when he wants to be.

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        #4
        I heard this press conference and he seems pretty confident his side will have to play attacking football instead of hanging in there and playing with a bit of doubt in their sub-conscious mind.

        With that in mind, I think he is having a sly dig at us.

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          #5
          Great manager. Annoying ****e talker as well mind you.

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            #6
            I think he's losing the plot a bit. When they throw away the league, he may go proper nuts.
            Trey Nyoni: countdown to stardom- 2 years 1year 0.5 years

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              #7


              Unfortunately, Ancelotti said the same thing :duh:
              Well, here we are in a room with two manky hookers and a racist dwarf. I think I'm heading home.

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                #8
                Arsene Wenger's appliance of science pays off
                Matt Dickinson, Chief Sports Correspondent

                "Technical superiority can be measured,” Arsène Wenger claims in a fascinating interview. He does not mean by the number of goals that may separate Arsenal from AC Milan in the Champions League this evening.

                The Frenchman is talking about computer data that may, for example, tell him exactly when to drop Alexander Hleb or why Gilberto Silva deserves to start ahead of Abou Diaby in the San Siro. His disclosures amount to a revealing insight into how science underpins the beautiful art of the Wenger regime.

                We can thank Total Youth Football magazine for this glimpse inside Wenger's laboratory. They failed only to persuade the professorial Frenchman to pose in a white coat. We all know that ProZone and Opta bombard Premier League managers with numbers, but Wenger admits being like a drug addict in his yearning for statistics.

                His analysis is far more detailed than which player has run the most miles or who has completed 75 per cent of passes, although those numbers form part of the picture. What counts to Wenger is knowing where they passed (was it forward or sideways), how long it took them and - down to a decimal point - at what speed.

                “If I know that the passing ability of a player is averaging 3.2 seconds to receive the ball and pass it, and suddenly he goes up to 4.5, I can say to him, ‘Listen, you keep the ball too much, we need you to pass it quicker.' If he says ‘no', I can say look at the last three games - 2.9 seconds, 3.1, 3.2, 4.5. He'll say, ‘People around me don't move so much!' But you have the statistics there to back you up, too.

                “It works well with your tactical observations, too. You see that a guy never loses the ball, so you look at the number of times he passes the ball forward. You can get to the point where you can say, ‘I prefer the one who loses the ball a bit more but tries to play it forward.' It is a concrete observation.” And there was Martin O'Neill at the weekend telling Wenger, who has an economics degree, that he was not good at statistics.

                “In the past, it was just about feelings, opinions,” Wenger explains. “So I thought, ‘That's not good enough,' and I wanted to know a little bit more. I am always in the situation where I have to judge people, and the more concrete objective numbers you have the better you can achieve that.

                “For me, it's an integral part of the game. And I must say when I come in the next morning after a match I am like a guy who is after his doses! He needs to inject! I have a feeling of a performance and then I want to check if that feeling is right or not. So I get all the numbers I can.”

                None of this number-crunching contradicts the notion of Wenger the aesthete. His brilliance is to turn statistical measurements into some of the most joyous, breathtaking football this country has ever seen.

                It is a brave and singular vision of how the game should be played, even more remarkable given that Wenger spends Arsenal's money as if it is his own. But it cannot gloss over a jarring number - the big fat zero next to Wenger's Champions League triumphs despite one semi-final with AS Monaco and one defeat with Arsenal, in the 2006 final in Paris.

                Against Kaká and company at the San Siro this evening, there will be an expectation that they will fall short yet again. There would be no shame in that.

                But perhaps defeat will raise the question of whether Wenger, in his search for fractional improvements, is neglecting power in his obsession with speed.

                Welcome to the season of the Bad Owner

                We all think we could turn our hands to the big jobs in football. We could all be a more precise referee than Mark Clattenburg, a more astute manager than Steve McClaren, a more honest agent than Paul Stretford and just as rich.

                Some of the time we may even be right, and never more so than if you have played at being the owner of a Barclays Premier League club this season. Has there ever been a run of more bone-headed boardroom decisions?

                “Get the manager right and the rest usually follows,” a former Premier League club chief executive once advised. “It is your one big call.” And yet we have still seen the appointments of Sammy Lee, Chris Hutchings, Avram Grant and Kevin Keegan.

                To the above list we could also add the woes of the Gadsby regime at Derby County and the erratic lurchings at Fulham, where Chris Coleman's dismissal last year began a steady decline towards the Coca-Cola Championship.

                A common explanation of these dunderheaded mistakes is that bright executives check their brains in when they enter the emotional maelstrom of the football directors' box. Having walked into the Bigg Market as a leader of business and come out a lairy Geordie, Mike Ashley seems hell-bent on proving this theory. Certainly there can never have been a more ludicrously populist decision in the history of the English game than reappointing Keegan as the Newcastle United manager.

                But sometimes it is the chairmen looking to please themselves as much as the fans that lands them in trouble. Lee was not a crowd-pleasing decision so much as Phil Gartside, the Bolton Wanderers chairman, looking for a yes-man after turbulent times under Sam Allardyce. Grant was a personal hunch by Roman Abramovich.

                Hutchings, meanwhile, was a rushed decision by Dave Whelan, the Wigan Athletic chairman, because, as he explained on the day of the unveiling, he wanted matters sorted before season tickets went on sale. And to think Whelan was shrewd enough to amass a personal fortune of £200million.

                Each executive had his own misguided reasons, but one thing unites them all. Thousands of us could have told them, and many did, that they were making a terrible mistake. Anyone with a brain knew that Lee and Hutchings would not last until Christmas, that Grant would not turn Chelsea into Barcelona and that Keegan would be disastrous (although not even the most sceptical of us thought he would have so little impact).

                Perhaps we say this every year, but 2007-08 will surely go down as the season of the Bad Owner. And we have not even got around to discussing Tom Hicks.

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                  #9
                  I'm not reading all that. Give me the gist Ben...

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by DJS View Post
                    I'm not reading all that. Give me the gist Ben...
                    Wenger looks at speed more than power and that could cost him tonight against Milan.

                    Weirdly, I am looking forward to this match. I think its going to be a cracking tactical match between Ancelotti and Wenger.

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                      #11
                      Interesting...

                      I cant decide what game to watch, there's 3 contenders, either this, the mancs or Barca v Celtic.

                      I'll probably start with the mancs and then switch over when they score

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                        #12
                        Typical that the Mancs game is the main match on ITV1 when the Arsenal game is the much more attractive fixture IMHO.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by Slim View Post
                          Typical that the Mancs game is the main match on ITV1 when the Arsenal game is the much more attractive fixture IMHO.
                          Just a bit. More attractive full stop, and the game is much more evenly poised. Absolutely typical.

                          I suppose it boils down to ratings.

                          I'll be watching Arsenal anyway.
                          Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by ShaggyAlonso View Post
                            Just a bit. More attractive full stop, and the game is much more evenly poised. Absolutely typical.

                            I'll be watching Arsenal anyway.
                            Ratings possibly? More Scum fans means more advertising money, something ITV has been lacking for quite some time

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                              #15
                              I think Wenger was schooled at the same place Ged was [the school of bizarre excuses].
                              Bring Back Rafa Cakes

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