

Wenger Says Something I Agree With. World Ends in 3..2..
By: CSD | July 6th, 2008
Normally, I take every chance I get to poke fun at Arsene Wenger. This is mostly because of his whiny, surrender monkey attitude, but I’ll admit he can spot and develop talent better than the majority of managers in football. So when Wenger speaks, I listen. After all, I can’t make fun of him if I’m not up-to-date.
In a recent interview, Wenger said, “”If I had the power to change anything basic in football, it would be the transfer system which makes mercenaries of players . . . If they are bad ones, they stay and, if they are good, they think only of leaving.”
I couldn’t agree more. This is an age in the sport, and many other sports for that matter, where the loyalty to clubs has been replaced by loyalty to paychecks. People who support rich clubs are happy and excited when their team nabs a big signing, but this practice continues to degrade the quality and development of players. If the richest clubs buy up all the talent, it not only hurts the majority of the clubs because they do not have those players, but takes away the influence that they would have on their teammates.
Torres has hailed Benitez and Gerrard for inspiring and pressuring him to be a better player. This begs the question, if Gerrard had accepted an offer from Inter Milan or Chelsea, would Torres be the striker he is today? Now, I’m sure that some would say that the likes of Gareth Barry are doing the same, but I charge you to understand the difference of motivation. It is one thing to be motivated by new challenges and quite another to be motivated by money because money does not actually encourage results so much as reward past performance.
Motivation from money does not make a player show up and push harder than he did the day before. Wenger nailed it when he called these players mercenaries. They bring along with them discontentment and prima donna egos that disrupt when they should be uniting. This is fine though, because it will eventually come to a head. Egos will run wild and the money will run out and that’s when XI lads from Liverpool will prevail.
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Is it not difficult to see where a players motivation lies, with money or with an ambition to play for the biggest clubs in the world? Playing for those clubs comes with buckets of money, but for someone like Clarence Seedorf, its clearly all about money, but on the same hand, he has moved to teams where he will have the chance to win and be an important footballer. So while I agree with you, and Wenger, it is so difficult to judge a player these days like that, as the globalization of the game, and liberalization of transfer rules has made the market a free-for-all.
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While I am with you about the sad mercenary state of player transfers, I have to disagree with you about Barry. He is a bright guy and will hopefully perform great for our team, it is not like he is moving up from the Championship league. He is moving from the 6th place team to the 4th place team. Sure, he gets to play Champions League football, but Aston Villa is not Fulham or Crystal Palace.
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“, but it is not…”, rather.
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I do comepletely agree with Wenger - The trouble is, if a club is willing to offer a stupid amount of money in the first place then this kind of behavior is only to be expected really. Its just a shame that money has had such a toxic affect on the game.
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Same old martyrdom from Wenger
Play the game, or don’t play it at all
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