Irish Sunday Mirror

EXCLUSIVE: ARSENAL LEGEND GIVES SAYS DENNIS BERGKAMP

- BY SIMON MULLOCK Chief Football Writer

ARSENAL legend Dennis Bergkamp still dreams of buying a Football League club.

Bergkamp, the brilliant Dutch striker who served the Gunners with distinctio­n for 11 years, wants to return to the English game as an owner and coach.

The 54-year-old failed with a takeover attempt at Wycombe Wanderers four years ago, after a consortium, which also included iconic names Henrik Larsson, Dirk Kuyt, Ronald Koeman and Phillip Cocu saw the club’s shareholde­rs strike a deal with a rival bidder at the 11th hour.

Bergkamp has also confirmed in an interview with Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf that, in 2021, he supported Swedish Spotify tycoon Daniel Ek in his unsuccessf­ul attempt to convince Arsenal owner Stan Kroenke to sell the London club.

Bergkamp claims he still has the backing of his powerful pals – and that he is in the market for a League One club.

He said: “Wycombe Wanderers was a nice project – and we were very far along with it. It only fell through at the end.

“Together with Phillip Cocu, Ronald Koeman, Dirk Kuyt, Henrik Larsson and agent Rob Jansen, we were going to buy the shares.

“It is still a dream of mine to develop players, run an academy and use all our knowledge and experience to get promoted.

“Not with a foreign billionair­e who puts in a lot of money just to go up quickly. If you have a group of former top footballer­s together, then you just start lower.

“I am convinced that, with a club in League One, with real football knowledge, you can get promoted to the Championsh­ip within five years, 10 years at most.

“We are not talking about the Premier League. That is a very difficult league to enter. I did go into Arsenal with some other

Arsenal legends, together with Daniel Ek, but you can hardly move the owner of such a big club to sell in this day and age with the amounts that apply.

“The sale of Manchester United is also still not complete.”

Bergkamp, who joined Arsenal from Inter Milan in a bargain £7.5million deal in 1995, won three Premier League titles during his time at Highbury and was a huge influence on Arsene Wenger’s Invincible­s.

He insisted he would never contemplat­e a move into coaching when he retired in 2006, but two years later he joined the staff of Ajax, the Amsterdam club that kick-started his playing career.

Bergkamp worked in Ajax’s academy before becoming Frank de Boer’s assistant when his former team-mate was made senior coach in 2011.

But his role changed when Peter Bosz replaced De Boer – and he has not worked in the game since being sacked six years ago.

Now, the Dutchman is hungry for a return to the game he graced – and is ready to pass his genius on to the next generation.

Bergkamp added: “I have never felt the need to make teams better. I have often had discussion­s about whether I can do that and, honestly, I don’t think I can.

“I am much more content working with the ball. I’ve never been much into it, systems – 4-3-3, 4-4-2 – I don’t feel it.

“What I do want is to explain in detail to the boy how he can function best.

“That is what I find almost beautiful. The bridging role at Ajax – from the youth in training to the first team – suited me best.

“That was also how I played, between the lines. I was not a midfielder, not a striker.

“What I want is to command respect and to know that people listen when you say a player is arriving from the youth and that they don’t just move on to another older player.

“If I return to football – and I think I will – that is one of my main ambitions. “I think I’m good at that.”

‘I looked at buying Arsenal with Daniel Ek, but it’s not easy with the Prem’

 ?? ?? 2002 Bergkamp with the FA Cup and Premier League trophy
2002 Bergkamp with the FA Cup and Premier League trophy

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