Top post POL. It's not about the not winning, it's about the same old mistakes season after season and the refusal to change.
I know this seems to be the common argument but I don't see it. You guys will probably jump all over me for this post but hey, do your worst ;)
"We can't win the big games" is not the issue at all for me, it's just not correct. Two seasons ago we had a terrible run in the big games, with big losses to Chelsea, Liverpool and Man City. Wenger publicly identified it as an issue and said they were putting a lot of work into it. We've improved remarkably since then in the big games. It's been frequently noted after big victories that our style for the big games had altered to a more pragmatic approach, and it's working. So far this season, against the other members of the top 4, we've taken 10 points from a possible 12. We also beat ManU already, and won backs-to-the-wall games in Europe when we needed wins to get to the next round, including beating Bayern Munich.
We lost to Chelsea twice, but they aren't a big game this season, and both times we were down to 10 men. Those things can and do happen, and the first game was a travesty as shown by the rescinding of Gabriel's red, and the post-match ban for Costa. They shoulda had 10 men, not us, and the game would've been a lot different.
The performance against ManU was absolutely dire, and I am so p*ssed off at how bad that was, but just a week earlier we played in a much bigger game, against the league leaders, and won! Then we got run around by the best team in the world, and travelled to OT 3 days later. Still a really poor performance, but lets take some perspective! Not forgetting we absolutely bashed a much better ManU team a few months earlier, and we knocked them out of the FA Cup at OT last season.
The loss to ManU was not a repeat of anything in my opinion. It was a sh*t performance, and yet we still probably should've got a result with the possession and chances we had.
The other argument seems to be that we fall away every year, again not true. We have done that a couple of times since 2004, notably 2008, 2011 and 2013 (from memory), but the funny thing is that we've more often started poorly, and then come on really strong in the second half.
I for one am a big proponent of assessing the season at the end of it. If we pull out of this and win the title, then what a waste of breath and angst this stuff is. If we don't, then keen to look back at individual performances like the ManU game, the Soton game, and a couple of other bad ones, and use those as reasoning to get rid of the manager. If that's the way the board goes I can understand that. Sad for Wenger, but entirely possible, and understandable, should we fail to win a trophy at all. I think I'm more on the fence were he to win a third consecutive FA Cup but no title, not really sure how I would feel in that situation.
I just think that the culture of us fans now is to dredge up old issues and blame those for every loss, when we're just over-analysing really. The common thing with past problems and current problems is Wenger, so I guess it is only natural to look at him, and if he doesn't win the league this year and is sacked, I wouldn't be too surprised, that is the way of the world now.
But I'm more interested in just getting ready for the next game, supporting the team, and judging the whole thing at season's end.
I will never forget the opening day loss to Villa a cupla years back, and the crazed way we all reacted to that, everyone wanted wenger sacked - I think that's the closest I came to saying it, only for the team to put in a decent title challenge against the odds, we signed ozil, and won our first trophy in ages, including the amazing comeback in the final after we'd gone 2 behind. Those three things were so unexpected after that start to the season, and the history of us not having the cash to sign guys like Ozil. Amazingly we didn't repeat the same mistakes the next season... we signed Sanchez who carried us through our team's post-world cup daze, and then won the FA Cup in a canter, putting the terrible Hull final behind us.
Now here we are, expecting a title win, and justifiably so. It's the logical next step to what Wenger has been building since the infamous squad revolution of 2011.
Cmon Wenger. This is it pal, pick these lads up and get it done. Games don't get bigger than tomorrow and Sunday.