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Coach Arsene Wenger |
Arsene
Wenger will bid farewell to a stadium he helped to build in more ways than one
when he leads Arsenal at the Emirates for the final time at home to Burnley on
Sunday.
Wenger's
final season after 22 years in charge is destined to end in disappointment
after Thursday's
Europa League semi-final exit to Atletico Madrid.
Sixth-placed
Arsenal are already out of the running for a top-four finish, and could even
finish below their visitors this weekend in seventh with a poor return from
Wenger's final three games in charge.
Tributes
will be paid to the Frenchman at full-time on Sunday with Arsenal's players
even embarking on an end of season lap of honour.
Once again,
though, it will be a parade without a trophy as it often has been since Arsenal
moved to the Emirates in 2006.
What a frustrating, sleepless night in Madrid! This was our last chance to
win a trophy this season, our last chance to lift another silverware with our
boss.
Still two more things to say: Thanks to all Gunners for the away support.
And get well soon.
The success
Wenger produced in his first decade at the club, winning two doubles and 'The
Invincibles' unbeaten season on course to another Premier League triumph in
2003/04, created the demand to move to a 60,000-capacity stadium from Highbury.
However, whilst
the Emirates was intended to give Arsenal the financial resources in the long
term to compete with not just England's, but Europe's elite, it significantly
hampered Wenger's ability to challenge in the short term.
Wenger
claimed it was his commitment to remain with the club that helped to secure
bank loans needed to build the stadium. He was so tied to the move, Wenger even
helped in the design of some parts of the stadium such as the dressing rooms.
However,
once the move had taken place, Wenger was often forced to sell his best players
to pay back those loans at the same time huge investment poured into Chelsea,
Manchester City and Manchester United.
"In
2006 the most difficult period of my life started. We had restricted finances,
we had to pay back a huge amount of money and we had to sell our best
players," Wenger told BT Sport ahead of last season's FA
Cup final.
"That
was, for me, the biggest period of pressure between 2006 and 2014. If you told
me today I’d do that again I would say ‘no thank you, I’ll leave that to
someone else'."
By the time
Arsenal were ready to join in the arms race in the last four years, the Gunners
were playing catch up and Wenger too far stuck in his ways to enact the change
that was needed.
Wenger is
finally leaving the job to someone else, albeit it seems against his better
judgement having conceded the timing of his departure "was not really my
decision".
He also
claimed he was going to help unite a fan base that has grown increasingly
frustrated at his inability to mould a team capable of contending to win the
Premier League.
That has
been reflected in dwindling attendances at the Emirates in recent months.
On Sunday,
though, the Arsenal fans have one final chance to gather and thank the most
successful ever manager in the stadium that stands for the legacy he leaves
behind.
Arsenal's Arsene Wenger bids farewell to Emirates Stadium he helped build
Reviewed by Mr. Poster
on
7:05:00 am
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