Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger gestures during a training session ahead of their Champions League soccer match against Borussia Dortmund, at their training facility in London Colney, north of London November 25, 2014.
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger gestures during a training session ahead of their Champions League soccer match against Borussia Dortmund, at their training facility in London Colney, north of London November 25, 2014. REUTERS/Eddie Keogh

Approaching his second decade in the Premier League, Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger is still full of enthusiasm and passion for England’s top-flight.

The premiership had its share of downs in the past when top respective leagues in Italy and Spain were the ones that were playing poachers of some of the greatest players. Nevertheless, with its sustained growth and with investors eventually coming in, the Premier League is now the preferred top-tier destination for most footballers.

“I think the quality and the audience of the Premier League all over the world is big,” Wenger told Arsenal.com.

“Maybe Europe is getting poor but the rest of the world is getting richer.”

“The rest of the world invests in football in Europe, and at the moment, only in England. Will that last? I’m not completely sure.”

“The second reason is that it’s down to you - to television - and down to the fact that the television [companies] in England pay the money that makes us richer.”

“I’m always a bit cautious to use the word ‘best’, but it’s certainly the most spectacular and certainly the most attractive to watch for sure."

Currently, the Premier League boasts of being the most unpredictable league, with a host of quality clubs capable of snatching the crown year-in and year-out.

Meanwhile, Wenger is looking to stick with the Gunners’ attacking style, ahead of their FA Cup clash with Championship side Brighton and Hove Albion FC.

"I go from too romantic to too pragmatic," he added.

"We are not going to change our style. Of course we want to be defensively strong, but we want to play."

"Last year we conceded many goals in big games, so maybe we were a bit more focused on defending well together, but it is not the basics or philosophy of our game, that (attacking style) will always remain."

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