As soon as he joined Arsenal, Arsène Wenger set about transforming the face, not only of the Highbury club, but, indirectly, all of English football.
By ditching the old ways of training and adding special diets to the mix – as well as calling on the services of outside experts, which was unheard of in England at the time – football clubs in England started to rethink. It helped his cause, needless to say, when Arsenal won the League and FA Cup double in only his second season in charge.
Gradually, Wenger was able to change what had been a predominantly cautious Arsenal side into a vibrant attacking force, without losing the ability to defend when necessary.
The greatest achievement of his Premier League career – and widely regarded as one of the most outstanding feats in English football ever – was to go the whole of the 2003/04 campaign without suffering a single defeat.
Arsène Wenger belongs to that tradition of managers who were never great players and therefore took to coaching comparatively early in their lives.
With degrees in both Engineering and Economics, and with fluency in Spanish and German as well as French and English, education was very much a priority for him as a young man and he didn’t become a professional with RC Strasbourg – his home town – until 1978, when he was 29 years old. Even then his first team career spanned just 12 matches – in their title-winning season of 1978/79, which included an UEFA cup match.
There can be few football club managers anywhere in the world who are as identified with their team and their style of play as Arsène Wenger. In a profession in which staying in a post for more than two years should qualify you for a testimonial match, the urbane Frenchman has now been at Arsenal for nearly 13 years.
In any other country – that is one with no Sir Alex Ferguson in it – he would be by far the longest-serving manager. You can buy Arsenal tickets online and see his great team for yourself.