Friday, October 2, 2009

13 years and counting..

article taken from soccernet. i find this article interesting.

Link: http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=681331&sec=england&cc=3436

Arsene Wenger
Born: October 22nd, 1949, Strasbourg, France

Honours: Premier League: 1998, 2002, 2004; FA Cup: 1998, 2002, 2003, 2005; Manager of the Year: 1998, 2002, 2004.

Wenger, who broke George Allison's record of 4,748 days at the helm - from June, 1934, to May, 1947 - to become the longest-serving manager in Arsenal's history on Thursday, has become one of the most highly respected coaches in the game during his time in England, but claims he was lucky to be given the chance.

"Yes, it was a big gamble,'' he said. ''When I think retrospectively, that is the biggest surprise to me. At that time what Arsenal did you needed to be a little bit crazy. Crazy in the sense that I had no name, I was foreign, there was no history. They needed to be brave.

"First I had to convince people I had the needed quality to do the job. I am still trying to do that. It has not changed. It is difficult to put into context today because when every foreign manager comes in, it is the red carpet for him.

"But it was not like that when I arrived. There was a history and belief in England that the foreign manager could not be successful. Now you have a different feeling. Now you think only foreign managers can be successful and that is wrong as well.

"I believe I contributed to the change in attitude about foreign managers. That can look pretentious but I don't think it is at all. I can show some articles where people tried to prove that the foreign managers can never win an English championship. That has changed and I have certainly contributed to that.

"But I am also one of the few who defends English managers. I was lucky to find at Arsenal the support I found and that is important for success. I have stayed at Arsenal for all different reasons since but that is one of them."

David Dein, former vice-chairman of the Gunners, instigated the move to bring the Frenchman to Highbury in 1996 and hailed the French boss.

"His legacy will be that he has transformed Arsenal Football Club," Dein told Sky Sports News. ''He has taken it to a completely new level but the style of football has been so entertaining.

"He changed their diet, training habits - he changed their lives. When you consider in his first full season he won the double, that is a remarkable achievement.

"He can talk about a dozen things apart from football. He has studied medicine, which is why he knows about the anatomy of the body, which is why he knows about injuries, he studied economics - he can read a balance sheet, which is unusual."

Arsenal managing director Ken Friar insists that the club will always be in Wenger's debt.

"He is so special in so many ways," Friar said. "He is even-tempered and probably the best man-manager I have come across. He is a thinker - he doesn't get excited when we get a bad defeat, everything about him has got success written all over him. He is a man that instils confidence in everyone.

"There is a place here for him always and we will be very sad when he decides to hang up his boots."

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Henry has determined to one day return back to arsenal to work with wenger.

when henry first sign with arsenal by wenger.

Henry spent eight years at the club before joining Barcelona and admits he still loves the club where he forged his reputation.

"I'm trying to finish what I started nearly 15 years ago but we will see," Henry told Sky Sports News.

"I always said you go back to where you belong. I never stopped saying I love Arsenal and I will one day go back there.

"How? I don't know. Maybe a waterboy. Who knows. I just love the club and eventually one day I will go back for sure."

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