Context: Russian football at the end of the 2000s To understand Arshavin's statements, one must recall the atmosphere of that time. The late 2000s to early 2010s: Russian football was experiencing a resurgence after the bronze at Euro-2008, where Arshavin was a star. Fans believed in a rebirth and began to demand victories at every tournament, comparing with top teams. Clubs ("Zenit", Arsenal London) expected miracles from Arshavin. It was in this atmosphere that he made his famous statements. His exhaustion from exaggerated expectations spilled over into a formulation that many perceived as arrogance. But is that really the case? "Your expectations are your problems" Arshavin's most famous statement was made in an interview after the match between the Russian national team and Northern Ireland (2012), where the game was boring. The journalist asked why the football did not impress. Arshavin replied: "Your expectations are your problems." The meaning: fans and journalists themselves come up with grandiose scenarios and then are disappointed when reality does not match. Arshavin pointed out the dissonance between expectations and possibilities. He did not say "I don't care." He said "you are deceiving yourself, projecting your dreams on us." The phrase was distorted: many thought he was saying that about his indifference to fans' opinions. But in fact, it was a call for a rational assessment: do not expect from footballers what they cannot give for objective reasons (fatigue, opponent's level, weather). This is the philosophy of stoicism: do not suffer for what is not in your power. "People expect me to be brilliant, but I'm not a wizard" In another interview, Arshavin said: "Fans think I can come out and beat five like in 2008. But I'm not a wizard, I'm just a footballer. I have bad days." Here he speaks about the gap between image (Euro hero) and reality (a person with form dips). The meaning: sports idols are not superheroes. They are subject to injuries, ...
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