xXx
Inactive User
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2005
- Messages
- 940
- Reaction score
- 2
Chelski - Boring to watch as they are so rigid in their formation. There is very little movement from any of the Chelski players. The wide men stick to the touchline in an effort to stretch the match. Makelele just sits in front of the back four never going ahead of Lampard. The two full backs just defend. They never get forward to support the wingers or even make a run beyond them. They show a real lack of ambition.
I wont comment on Drogba other than to say I hate the cheating, moaning, diving kunt!! He is all that is wrong with modern football.
Chelsea defend deep and show a lack of ambition to get behind the other team.
The way Chelsea keep their shape, their level of positional discipline, goes beyond the great George Graham teams, but there is less momentum, so it’s not exciting.
The introduction of Arsene Wenger to British football brought a a degree of fresh air to our game.
Arsene Wenger has long been regarded as somewhat of a football enigma. He is a respected manager, who espouses confidence in both himself and his team. He speaks like a child of the enlightenment, an apparent champion of football purity. The eleven players that he sends onto a football pitch, be it at Highbury, the San Siro or the Reebok Stadium, can always be counted on to play exciting, entertaining football. At its best, the flow of an Arsenal attack can be as graceful as a nymph and as powerful as the Mississippi.
Wenger now stands as the most successful manager in the club’s history, with seven major honours in the last nine years. He has garnished a reputation as possibly the most astute talent spotter in Europe, turning promising youth players into some of the best footballers in the world. He has banished the past legacies of ‘Boring Boring’ Arsenal by cultivating fluency and creativity in the his team’s style of play. The results have richly entertained a Highbury faithful.
The introduction of jose @ chelsea has taken british footbal back 20 years, to a bygone era that long suffered the robotic offside traps of the George Graham and Bruce Rioch days.
I wont comment on Drogba other than to say I hate the cheating, moaning, diving kunt!! He is all that is wrong with modern football.
Chelsea defend deep and show a lack of ambition to get behind the other team.
The way Chelsea keep their shape, their level of positional discipline, goes beyond the great George Graham teams, but there is less momentum, so it’s not exciting.
The introduction of Arsene Wenger to British football brought a a degree of fresh air to our game.
Arsene Wenger has long been regarded as somewhat of a football enigma. He is a respected manager, who espouses confidence in both himself and his team. He speaks like a child of the enlightenment, an apparent champion of football purity. The eleven players that he sends onto a football pitch, be it at Highbury, the San Siro or the Reebok Stadium, can always be counted on to play exciting, entertaining football. At its best, the flow of an Arsenal attack can be as graceful as a nymph and as powerful as the Mississippi.
Wenger now stands as the most successful manager in the club’s history, with seven major honours in the last nine years. He has garnished a reputation as possibly the most astute talent spotter in Europe, turning promising youth players into some of the best footballers in the world. He has banished the past legacies of ‘Boring Boring’ Arsenal by cultivating fluency and creativity in the his team’s style of play. The results have richly entertained a Highbury faithful.
The introduction of jose @ chelsea has taken british footbal back 20 years, to a bygone era that long suffered the robotic offside traps of the George Graham and Bruce Rioch days.