Thursday, November 14, 2013

Arsene Wenger is the reason Arsenal were ever great

Pressure in football takes its toll on managers in different ways. For Arsene Wenger, it has meant less time for the prayers that were such a big part of his childhood.

The Arsenal manager is currently trying to end a trophy drought stretching back to 2005 that has sorely tested the patience of the club's fans. Although the task has not shaken his religious beliefs, it's not been without its consequences either.

'I prayed a lot when I was a kid because I was educated in a Catholic area,' Wenger said in an interview with The Associated Press.

'Religion was very strong to us, to ask the priest if I can play on Sunday afternoon ... now I am a bit less (religious) because when you are under pressure you only think of our game. How can I win the next game? And you try to be a bit more pragmatic.'

The religious upbringing in eastern France has left Wenger with a principled outlook that he has tried to uphold in his football career.

'Belief is important, and I am forever grateful for the values my religion has given,' he said. 'And basically if you analyse it, all the religions spread good values and positive values, and that is important that you find that in our sport.'

The 63-year-old Frenchman was speaking on a visit to London's Jewish Museum surrounded by an exhibition exploring the role of British Jews in football: Football, fans and faith.

Wenger talks fondly about how 'in every religious community sport is an occasion for people to get together and of course defend the values.'

For some in football, in an era of rapidly expanding pay packets for players and ticket prices for fans, the sport can seem to have lost its soul. Wenger is not so disconsolate.

'Sometimes you see that professional football has moved a little bit away from very, very important values that have existed at the start of the game,' he said.

'The values that are important in the game today are the same (as always),' Wenger said. 'It is a respect for others. It is learning to lose. It is learning to cope with pressure. It is learning to cope with a team sport. So that is exactly the same. Of course the environment is completely different. Why? Because of professionalism and the money.'

With an economics degree and as a long-time advocate of greater financial responsibility in football, Wenger has tried to adopt what he calls a 'socialist model' for Arsenal's wage bill.

That becomes harder when the need the deliver success saw Wenger break Arsenal's transfer record last month to sign Mesut Ozil for £42.5million. Retaining the best talent in the squad also requires salaries to rise in turn.

'I always say to the players, "Forget the money",' Wenger said. 'What is important is how well you play together, what you share together is much more important. The money is only a consequence of your experience. The real experience is the game.

'And I see that with many players who have stopped their careers. It's not the money they miss - because they have money. It's that kind of experience. To share the values of our sport, to share the values of being together. And achieving something together.'

Wenger built his reputation in England on unearthing talented foreign prospects and turning them into Premier League stars.

Not everyone was impressed. Selecting an entire match-day squad without an Englishman for the first time in Arsenal's history in 2005 helped stir a debate over foreign players that continues to this day.

Only this week one of Wenger's leading players, Jack Wilshere, expressed unease at calls for young foreign-born players to be naturalized and become eligible to play for England.

For Wenger, it's a complex issue in a world where national identity has become increasingly blurred.

'We live in a global world,' Wenger pointed out. 'I have players who have three different nationalities. And at the end of the day I ask them, "Where do you really feel you belong?" And that is for me where you are from.

'I have boys who have come from Africa. Many immigrants now come to Europe, they stay four or five years in one country, then they move to another country and they have three different passports,' he said.

'At the end of the day, I believe you are from the country where you feel the most comfortable with the culture of the country.'

Wenger never reached a high enough standard as a player to be called up by his country. Success has instead come from the dugout, although his team's last trophy was the 2005 FA Cup - and they haven't won the Premier League since 2004.

This season started with jeers at the Emirates Stadium when Aston Villa inflicted a defeat that prompted questions about how long Wenger would remain in a job he has held since 1996.

However, since that opening day setback, Arsenal have reeled off 10 successive victories in all competitions before drawing at West Bromwich Albion on Sunday. His side entered this two-week international break at the top of the Premier League.

There is no gloating, though, at proving wrong the fans who seemed to lose faith in him.

'It's not a personal battle,' he said. 'My desire is I love to win. I love to do well. I just feel I am happy if I can give some pleasure and happiness to people who love Arsenal. That is my main target. When I don't achieve that I am very disappointed.'

Plucked from the relative obscurity of Grampus Eight in Japan Wenger has delivered three Premier League titles and four FA Cups over his 17-year reign.

As for the future, it's one he clearly envisages in his adopted homeland.

'I can see the rest of my life in England, why not?' Wenger said.

'I feel comfortable in this country because we share a common passion for football and as well I am very thankful for this country for having accepted me and giving me a chance.

'I am happy on the football pitch.'

And he shows no desire yet to leave it.

No comments:

Post a Comment