Arsène Wenger and the moral dilemma over Suárez

Dominic Sanchez-Cabello I hate to disagree with Tony, as the man speaks a lot of sense. Perhaps our differences arise through our age and the moral degradation that has occurred between them! I write this cautiously; worrying that people may believe I am on the payroll of Suárez and contracted to defend his every action. …

Clubs treat fans with contempt as they sell the notion of the individual over the team

By Tony Attwood Why sign a player?   Well, obvious, isn’t it.  Because he helps make the team better, either by being first choice or a good backup, now or in the future. Look at Santi Cazorla.  Those against Arsenal have written him out of Arsenal’s transfer dealings because he was such a brilliant transfer …

Ian Wright in contradictory mood, but the media makes its anti-Arsenal stance clear

By Tony Attwood You have to feel sorry for Ian Wright. Well, actually no you don’t.  He was a beautiful footballer, passionate, exciting, brilliant.  I was there when he scored his goals that took him to the top of the Arsenal scorers’ chart, and there again when he stood in the centre circle for what …

What You Tube has done to football; “Sergio Busquets – The Quiet Man”.

Dominic Sanchez-Cabello Growing up in the YouTube age, with everything at the mercy of the search bar, I soon realized that days could be stolen clicking between obscure videos. Mostly they concerned football and music, but they could be anything. A growth of ‘recommended videos’ on my side bar and the incessant bombardment of intriguing …

Should Fans Be Making Decisions for Football Clubs?

Should Fans Be Making Decisions for Football Clubs? By Bootoomee Untold is my default and most frequented football blog. I have a tab on my browser permanently dedicated to this site. But I also like to visit TeamTalk.com because of the format of the site. It is a neutral site (in my opinion) that houses …

Football management: that most exquisite affair that can make tears fall

By Tony Attwood Sometimes in football I cry.  Not very often – but I did when the whistle went at the end of Arsenal 2 Leicester 1 on May 15, 2004.  I tried to cover my tears at first, but then I realised the guy in front on me was crying even more, and I …