Now hail Wenger for prudence

Now hail Wenger for prudence

Amidst all the talk of football and finance over the past week or so, it’s been interesting to hear the outrage of fans and pundits alike at the state and prognosis of football clubs in England.

One man who could be forgiven for a wry smile and a shrug of the shoulders is Arsene Wenger – a manager who has run the club he works for like a burgeoning enterprise. Wenger sees it as morally imperative and the proprietary duty of a manager to ensure a club does not exceed the limitations of its own revenue stream. He is fond of the term financial doping, and there is always a zephyr gleam of malice in his manner when he talks about clubs who spend lavishly and inflate the transfer market.

In this, he resembles the self-made millionaire who sneers at and abhors the rich kid with distorted values and a sense of entitlement; whose days were not spent grafting in rational self-interest for stability and success, but rather, covetously eyeing the produce of others and expropriating it for themselves.

That was why the offer of a move to Real Madrid was never really likely to turn Wenger’s head, and it’s why Manchester City can eye him up all they like – he, quite simply, is diametrically opposed to the philosophies of both, and would surely equate any offers from them as sinful temptation.

Of course, Arsenal are actually £400 million odd in debt, but rather than being the result of grandiose and unsustainable transfer schemes, their sizable loans were initiated under the auspices of sound financial principles: speculation with a view to accumulation. Investing in the Emirates and selling off property developments on Highbury (although currently affected by the financial climate) was initiated in a bid to increase revenue and enable the club to compete at a higher level.

Wenger is held in high reverence in business circles. At an LMA summit last year aimed at expounding upon and furthering the links between football and business, many a gushing businessman cited the incredible profit he has generated at the club over the years from player transfers.

Buying someone for £600,000 and selling them on for £24 million, as was the case with Nicolas Anelka, is the sort of economy that makes rich suits flush in the face and sweaty palmed. Equally, the sales of players like Patrick Vieira, Marc Overmars, Emmanuel Petit, and Kolo Toure were all done to massive profit. And he has rarely bought big, in fact, the only times he has, he has been stung quite badly. Think Francis Jeffers and Jose Antonio Reyes.

For Wenger, the difference in satisfaction and enjoyment is the difference between instant gratification and delayed gratification. Which would please you more – buying David Villa for 40 million or developing Lionel Messi from the age of 12? Pride, such a formidable motive power, is surely stronger when cultivated in the bosom of the latter method.

But Wenger is never really acknowledged as a bastion of principle and sound practice; instead he is often lambasted for the length of time it takes his projects to come to fruition.

Spend spend spend cry the newspapers and the fans: on defenders to plug the gap left by Sol Campbell’s departure in 2006; on midfielders to plug the gap left first by Vieira, then by Flamini last year; on strikers to plug the gap left first by Henry, then by Van Persie this season.

The whirlwind of accusation that follows defeat to expensively assembled teams like Chelsea or Manchester United, is seldom measured against the principles of the club and its manager.

What’s really interesting to speculate however, is that as a fan – which would you prefer? High profile signings and – possibly – instant success, but the instability of foreign ownership and dubious loan schemes, or the nurturing of youngsters toward an eventual goal, that may, or may not yield success – definitely not in the short term – but that will ensure the stability of the club and the traditions you hold dear?

Topics: Arsenal, Arsene Wenger, English Premier League, Features, Help Football

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13 Comments

  1. FE Gooner

    Give me Arsene anytime!

    January 20th, 2010 @ 00:10
  2. erwf

    You put this more eloquently then i ever could.

    Brilliant article.

    January 20th, 2010 @ 00:55
  3. Donovan

    Excellent article! As a Arsenal supporter i have been laughed at…its good to know that the club is in good financial compared to the others who continue to “half-cheat”

    January 20th, 2010 @ 04:15
  4. Gooner1982

    This article is spot on – I would love to see Arsenal winning trophies every season – but not at the expense of the club in the long term – when Abramovich walks away from Chelsea, the Glazers screw up Man Utd and the Hicks and Gillet get refused their next loan Arsenal will still be standing strong and self supporting.

    January 20th, 2010 @ 08:52
    • Ahmed Bilal

      Three doomsday scenarios that won’t happen.

      January 20th, 2010 @ 10:01
  5. arsenal

    wont happen? its happening rite now. man u is comin close to sellin oldtrafford and rooney and chelsea banned from transfers til 2011

    January 20th, 2010 @ 13:54
  6. arsenal

    brilliant article btw. didnt know tht arsenal is in debt. sure about that one? and didnt arsenal get their money back for reyes by sellin him to r madrid?

    January 20th, 2010 @ 13:57
    • Ahmed Bilal

      Arsenal are in considerable debt.

      January 20th, 2010 @ 16:21
  7. Josiah

    @ arsenal:

    Yeap Arsenal are in debt as a result of the funding of the new stadium. However, the nature of the debt is quite different from that of Liverpool and Man Utd. Arsenal’s debt is part of an effort to generate more revenue with the larger stadium and they do have plans to make up for the deficit in the form of the Highbury properties among others. Add to this the fact that Arsenal are one of the top clubs in terms of generating revenue, the debt could well be paid off in a few years time.

    Contrast this to the Man Utd situation. They are in far greater debt than Arsenal and this isn’t even the result of any financial investment (i.e. a new stadium) that could see their income rise. As a result of the loans, they have to pay millions in interests every year and just about made a small profit last season thanks to the 80million deal for C. Ronaldo. This puts them in rather dire straits financially as they are under enormous pressure to generate massive amounts of income just to service their loan interests which was at an astronomical 68million last year. In fact, I believe that the newly released accounts put man utd debt at 716.5 million.

    January 21st, 2010 @ 05:57
  8. Josiah

    With all due respect Ahmed, one of the doomsday scenario appear to already be happening. I would certainly term an ever increasing debt “screwing up”. I would say that the Glazers have already “screwed up” at Man Utd, turning a once extremely healthy balance book into 716.5 million debt plus extremely high loans. And all this without a clear source of increased income in the foreseeable future (unless you count a potential takeover by Arab billionaires).

    As for the other two, I agree that it is unlikely that Abromovich would walk out on Chelsea but resting one’s clubs future on a single man seems rather risky no? God forbid, should harm befall the man, Chelsea fans better pray that he has decided to donate his fortunes to the club in a will somewhere. As for Hicks and Gillet securing future loans, I agree that it is unlikely that they will be refused a loan. However, this again leads to increasing debt and subsequently, more interests to pay. Given the already dire straits Liverpool are in financially, this cannot be a good thing at all.

    January 21st, 2010 @ 06:05
    • Ahmed Bilal

      Josiah – do you seriously think that someone would buy out a club without a long-term plan to make things work? The debt refinancing will solve a lot of pressing issues for the club.

      Given that the Glazers have been very professional about everything else (no Mike Ashley or Hicks / Gillett or even Abramovich), I’d give them some leeway here.

      I don’t like them being in charge and I don’t like the debt, but I’d expect them to have a plan and they haven’t been the outrageous idiots that some of the other owners have been, so maybe they’ve got their heads screwed on right.

      January 21st, 2010 @ 09:15
  9. BD Condell

    Nothing like a quick cut and paste from a response to a previous article:

    Utd and Liverpool are very profitable busineses. The growth potential (and it has still got some way to go) is what attracted their investors. The model is simple. Buy the asset using debt borrowed on the back of other business collatoral; don’t worry about interim profits….and sell at a BIG profit in a number of years. Ensure that the asset stays valuable = success on the pitch…..otherwise the final profit will diminish.

    So the financial crisis has put some pressure on the highly leveraged financial model and both sets of owners have had to address this. In the event of them finding themselevs in a corner they have a number of options.
    1. Invite in other investors to share the load.
    2. Sell the asset early with potentially less but still a very respectable profit. There would be no shortage of buyers for these two clubs.
    3. Float the companies on the market. Again, the take up would be substantial.

    The one thing they won’t do is let the team decline and sell major players en masse. All of the above options will come into play before that…..purely for financial reasons. Right now in terms of the decision making process regarding the above both are sailing close to the wind….hence all the press hype and uninformed (endless) speculation and conjecture based largely on ignorance.

    The bottom line is that Utd and Liverpool are both very attractive going concerns as businesses and will remain so. Rumours of their demise are greatly exaggerated.

    Meanwhile Wenger has not won anything for 5 seasons….and probably could have with a little more investemnt in the team and a little less obsession with youth. Will that change this season….maybe but you Arsenal fans keep getting ahead of yourselves. I mean it’s not even March yet and isn’t that when you crash and burn?

    I like Wenger and wouldn’t begrudge him success but you Arsenal fans never fail to enetertain me!

    January 21st, 2010 @ 13:34
  10. erwf

    how much as benitez won for liverpool in the past 5 seasons?

    After spending so mucch more then Wenger…

    How about Spurs? They pretty much outspent Wengertoo…

    January 22nd, 2010 @ 05:02

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