
Nicolas Anelka has made the extraordinary claim that he left Arsenal back in 1999 in order to punish their fans. Even more surprisingly, he has also said that the 17 goals he scored in his final season at Highbury were scored in a spirit of vengence against the club's supporters.
Anelka was apparently unhappy with the way that the fans had voted in a poll to see who would best replace Arsenal striking legend Ian Wright when he retired. Gunners supporters didn't think, at that time, that Anelka was up to the job.
"When I started the season, there was a poll because I had taken the place of Ian Wright," explained Anelka.
"I thought the fans really wanted it to be me and were pleased with me. But seeing the result in the papers and on TV hit me hard because I had the feeling I had done things for nothing.
"I thought ‘So that’s how it is. This is how you thank me. Okay, now you watch what is going to happen. I am going to play, score my goals and just when you are saying Anelka, Anelka, that’s when I’m going to leave.’
"And that is exactly what I did because I was furious with them."
Anelka has had a peripatetic career since then, playing for, amongst others, Paris St-Germain, Manchester City, Fenerbahce and Bolton Wanderers, without ever really fully settling anywhere. Now at Chelsea, he is the Premier League's top scorer this season with 12 goals.
He has had a famously troubled relationship with Arsenal though. In his time there, he fell out with Dennis Bergkamp and Marc Overmars because he felt that they didn't pass to him during games. After that, his stock fell dramatically amongst Gunners fans, players and even directors, when he accused Arsenal vice-chairman David Dein of thinking only about money.
By the time he'd left Arsenal, fans had christened him 'Le Sulk', such was their low opinion of the French international.
Anelka, speaking in a French DVD released to celebrate his career, does acknowledge though that he now, at a more mature 29, feels embarrassed at the way he treated Arsene Wenger when his time at Arsenal was ending.
"I am not saying I was ashamed, but I felt something and had no wish to tell him face-to-face that I wanted to go. It’s as if it was a betrayal. I didn’t want to tell him because he represented someone extraordinary in my life," explained the player.
Whether it was the right thing to do or not, Anelka cannot yet be considered one of the game's true greats. And his old mentor Wenger believes that the player's time at Chelsea is his last chance to stake a claim on truly legendary status.
"I think the mark he will leave on football depends on what he does in the last stage of his career," Wenger stated.
Rofl childish!
=.= piang can he just shut up and score those goals
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joke of the day..
abit lame leh.
retarded ![]()
Lanjia0 crapped la U think Arsenal Regret u bo i tell u NO coz u noob and u think Liverpool wan u meh in 2003-2005 bullshit la !!!!!!!!!
till today he still dun get it......![]()
bullshit.
I thought Anelka was just naive when he left Arsenal - probably not helped by his team of mercenaries advising him on the move to Real Madrid. The stop-start career he has since had has probably given him a much-needed wake up call to the opportunities he missed in that "lost decade"...
That said, it was pretty much a blessing in disguise Anelka left or they'd probably never have discovered the prodigious talents of Henry.
since he left did he won any tropihes with other clubs? or maybe jus a silver UCL medal only with chelski
he wasnt and isnt really a top notch striker.
punish what?
arsenal sold him to build training ground+ buy henry.
PUNISHMENT?
he no life leh
reminds me of stan collymore..who said the same thing... ![]()