Arsène Wenger: ‘A sense of anger, humiliation, hate … every defeat is still a scar on my heart’ | Donald McRae

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Former Arsenal manager reflects on his 22 years in charge of the club, how hurt he was by malicious rumours when he first arrived and how he has managed to move on from his life’s obsession

Arsène Wenger still believes he could milk a cow but, as he says with a smile: “I haven’t tried for a long time. I might have lost the technique a little bit.” Wenger is one of the most humane and original thinkers in football and so it is not surprising that, moving beyond his “obsession”, we should spend 100 minutes talking about much more than the game that consumes him.

Whether describing how he learned to milk cows as a boy in the Alsace village of Duttlenheim, or reliving his first memory as a five-year-old watching his local football team while clutching a prayer book, Wenger stresses his life has been built on the pillars of hard work and faith. “It’s amazing that you make your life with the values from childhood. I think all the champions I have met have been the same. They had the root of their motivations in childhood.”

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Written by Donald McRae
This news first appeared on https://www.theguardian.com/football/2020/oct/20/arsene-wenger-a-sense-of-anger-humiliation-hate-every-defeat-is-still-a-scar-on-my-heart under the title “

Arsène Wenger: ‘A sense of anger, humiliation, hate … every defeat is still a scar on my heart’ | Donald McRae

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