Qwiss
But that's Burn's point - part of being an top level footballer is having the right attitude and character. Even someone like Cristiano Ronaldo, surely one of the most obnoxiously arrogant sportsmen of all time, started off knowing he had it all to prove; working like a dog on his weaknesses and emulating and learning from superior team mates to try to reach their level.
Balogun, in my estimation (obviosuly, this is a view from afar!), is like a lot of the kids who come through today - they think they're Ronaldo... before they're Ronaldo. And that's partly why nearly all of them never become much at all.
Arteta, going by the accounts of an endless list of the coaches and players he's worked with, is a pretty damn extraordinary coach, who's right at the sharp end of the game in terms of innovating to find an edge for the team and the individual players he's coaching. And Balogun, a 22 year old kid who has done nothing of any real note in his short career, isn't humble enough, or smart enough, frankly, to see the unbelievable opportunity that circumstance has placed in front him and grasp it with both hands. He wants to go and be Ronaldo (the Brazilian one this time) at Inter because he thinks he's the shit already.
It does not bode well for his future, in my opinion. It is not normal for arrogant or foolish 22 year olds to go on to become elite footballers. If I was guessing now, I wouldn't, as a comparison, be shocked if Nketiah ends his career with more goals and more medals despite not quite having some of the same gifts.