It's long because it deserves to be. That's a fucking superb article of professional quality, one that deserves to be in OSM or When Saturday Comes or somesuch...you should send it out and see if anyone's interested.
Frankly, I feel somewhat privileged to be able to read something at this level, on here, for free.
I would agree with you too, we are not at level 3 yet, and while our signings this season point in that direction, I don't think we will be there this season yet either. Like you say, the quality and adaptability to be seamless throughout all levels of the squad isn't quite there yet. Reading through the level 2 description is particularly interesting. If that isn't a more or less point by point description of our last 3 seasons I don't know what is, yet, we have been seeing more and more signs of geting closer to level 3 all the time.
One could almost use this to point to why in some ways we appear to have gone slightly backwards or sideways since the 05/06 season. That would seem to me like a level 2 side playing at almost peak efficiency, but never truly making the leap to level 3. The next season we start a transistion to the next level...points and consistency suffer, next season we are further along the road, and we manage to get very close or equal to 05/06, despite horrific problems off the field.
This should be a clarion call for patience. As brilliant and inspiring as much of this article is, there is also an very huge unspoken warning. To get rid of Rafa now would, almost certainly, be an absolute unmitigated disaster, unless we could bring in a successor who believes in this type of team building with the same intensity as Rafa does.
Interesting to make the comparison with our rivals too.
Man Utd, galling as this is, are at level 3. There is no coubt in my mind, all the hallmarks are there. However, even for them this is not something they have achieved consistently and seamlessly. I would argue that this current side is only one of perhaps 3 ever to truly reach this peak, and I would further argue that this is because a lower risk, higher finance strategy is being taken. Namely, the youth production is not that described for a level 3 side, it has been achieved over the years almost entirely through transfers. The longer Fergie goes on, I think, the fairer it is to describe their golden generation as an exception rather than a rule.
Chelsea, well, I would say that so far they have been a level 2 side of exceptional efficiency. They have so far not attempted to truly implement a level 3 style, and Mourinho is a level 2 manager all over...a strong reason why he shouldn't be considered as a replacement. It would be a backward step for us. A transition to level 3 is demande by Abramovich, yet the youth is not there, and the squad is still all about level 2. As we have seen from ourselves and indeed Man Utd this transition is not an easy one. Phil Scolari may be a genius (although I have my doubts) but he is going to have to be to achieve this transition under the pressure and time constraints he will have.
Arsenal seem to be a level 3, as you say, but clearly lack that ability to vary, and especially lack that transition from level 2 which enables them to fall back on those tactics when they are playing poorly or up against an opponent of phenomenal ability. The only time they have ever had that was just after Wenger had built on Graham's foundations. Since then level 2 has been abandoned, and doesn't seem to be coached into their youth. You see this as well with the kind of quotes their players always come out with...to paraphrase 'We play the best football. We love beautiful football. It's unfair when we lose because our football is beautiful and the other team played unfairly by not playing beautiful football.' Which to me misses the point of football: To win. There are no judges on the sidelines holding up cards for artistic merit, so until you learn to cope with teams who couldn't give a shit about the prettiness of their football you are never going to fulfill your potential. Their signings so far this summer are just a repeat of the same old same old. We will develop next year, MAn Utd are already there, Chelsea are trying, but Arsenal haven't developed since Arsene took over. In fact, they have gone slightly backwards, and in my view will never reach the next level for as long as Wenger remains in charge.
Therefore, although I am terrified at the thought of losing Rafa, I'm also optimistic that we can put a real challenge together, because quite honestly for this season I think we could be the ones who develop by far the most out of the top 4, and given how small the gap actually was last season, and given some semblence of off field stability, and with the media spotlight likely to be elsewhere again, I think this could be our best chance in a long while to realistically challenge, maybe even win.