Similar drop off as Saka
Similar injury problems as Saka
Gets bashed more and Saka’s given a pass
Less lazy and better than Eze even at his worst, less loved by fans
Less loved by fans than Nwaneri too
At some point some questions have to be asked about this fanbase.
Arsenal and Arteta are going to have a seriously difficult decision to make on Leandro Trossard after watching his World Cup performances.
What a player. What a performance against Belgium today.
And that's exactly the problem.
One minute I'm watching him and thinking, "There is no way Arsenal should sell this guy." The technical quality, intelligence, movement, composure in tight spaces... players like that don't grow on trees.
Then the next minute I'm thinking, "Maybe this is the perfect time to cash in." His stock is high, he'll attract plenty of interest, and Arsenal are at a stage where every squad decision has to be ruthless.
I genuinely can't make a concrete decision right now.... Lol
Trossard is one of those players that makes squad planning difficult because he's too good to let go easily, but at the same time you can understand the argument for selling if the right offer arrives.
What I do know is this: if Arsenal put him on the market this summer, there won't be any shortage of clubs lining up for him. Performances like these at the World Cup only increase the queue.
For now, I'm sitting firmly on the fence. Don't sell him. Sell him. Don't sell him. Sell him.
That's where my head is right now.
Amazon's India story is ultimately a lesson in what foreign capital can and cannot buy in the country.
India welcomes the money, the technology, and the operational expertise. What it doesn't offer is control. Foreign investment rules block inventory ownership, cap seller concentration, and create a regulatory environment that tightens every few years in ways that consistently benefit local incumbents. Amazon spent over a decade building workarounds, and each rule change made those workarounds more expensive and less effective.
The deeper problem is structural. Reliance can combine physical retail, online delivery, telecom infrastructure, and streaming into a single ecosystem because all those assets sit under one roof with no foreign ownership constraints. Amazon wanted to build something equivalent but couldn't — not without surrendering the control that its entire operating model depends on. When Bezos had the chance to invest in Reliance as a minority partner, he passed. He believed Amazon could still win India on its own terms. It couldn't.
This is the pattern India has refined across sectors: let foreign players develop the market, absorb the losses, and educate consumers — then watch as local conglomerates with government connections and regulatory flexibility consolidate the gains. Amazon is not the first company to learn this, and it won't be the last.
#Amazon #India #FDI #Ecommerce #Flipkart #Reliance #IndiaEconomy
‘Bukayo Saka: The Time Is Now’, will stream on Disney+ from June 5.
🗣️ “This film has given me the chance to tell my story in a way I never have before. People see the goals & the matches, but they don’t see what it takes behind the scenes.”
🎥 @WhatsApp
🚨 Arsenal starting XI vs PSG : Raya, Mosquera, Saliba, Gabriel, Hincapie, Rice, MLS, Ødegaard, Saka, Kai Havertz, Trossard.
Arsenal Nation Lock In. Trust in Mikel 👊🏽
Covering MY club has been a pleasure 🙏🏽
@Teamnewsandtix
🚨💣 Andoni Iraola, set to become the next Liverpool manager as revealed earlier today!
The negotiations will move forward quickly to get it done with formal steps but #LFC decision made…
…Iraola will be the next manager. 🛑🔜